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FFIN.
Capital of the Garden Soot
of the World!
R1FFIN is
county seat
Georgia, Npuldit.g
and is
uated in the
to,, oi the best
tion of the
llHw Jp ^e Empire ^ .State
j. B. oat, b.
osa. I ail its
-1 and varied indus-
tries meet nnd
carried on with inducement, greatest success, and is tuns
abW to offer toall classes
inu a home and a proflable career. These
aie tho teasons for a growth that is
ing in puhition almost daily. railroad facd
Xt has ample and sufficient
ties- the second point in importance on the
Central railroad between the capital of the
State forty miles distant, and its principal
seaport, 250 miles away ; on independent
line to Cltattanooga and the Weet by way ol
the Savannah, Griffin and North Alabama
Railroad; tae principal city on the hundred Georgia
Midland ail'd Gulf railroad, one
miles long, built largely through its Atlanta own
terprise and soon te be extended to
and the systems of t.b* Northeast, direct
with the great East Tennessee. #
connection and < reoigia railroad system; an)
Virginia road graded and soon to le built—all
other in trade aud carrying out goods
bringing manufacturers.
and this is the very cream and flower o:
Tnat agricultural and hor-icultural portiout
the State is evidenced by the fact
of the CTnited
that the State of Geo* ;ia and the
States unanimously e’jose it as the site loi
the Experiment Station, agaiust the strong
efforts of every other section. It has two
crops that never tail, being cotton, the most
important crop in the South, aud grapes
which are glowing to surpass cotton in tin
county. record during the half decade
Gritnu’s th^most past progressive
proves it to be one of
cities in the South.
It has bnilt two large cotton factories rep¬
resenting $250,000 and shipping goods all
over the world- large iron and brass foun¬
It has put up two
dries, a fertilizer factory, a cotton seed oil
mill, a sash and blind factory, aplowfactory',
an ice factory, bottling works, a oroom
factory, a mattress various smaller factory, enterprises. a wire fence
factory and ,
It has put in an electric brilliantly tight plant by
vhich the streets completed are lighted.
It has an extensive system
of waterworks, giving complete protection
against Are, and furnishing water every
where. laid . miles railroad
It has several of street
for convenient transportation over its large
area- opened the finest and largest
It has on
granite quarry in the State, for building,
ballasting and macadamiziug purposes
It has secured a cotton compress w.ta e
full capacity for its large and in< reusing re
ceipts of this Southern staple.
It has established a system of graded pub¬
lic schools, with a seven years curriculum,
second to none, and has just erected one o
the largest and liuest school buildings in the
State in addition to the foi mer commodious
structure.
It has organized two new banks, makings
total of four, with combiued resources o)
half a million dollars.
It has built two handsome new churches,
making It has a total of several ten. handsome
built business
blocks and many beautiful residences, the
$160,000. building record of each year averaging
It has attracted around its borders fruit
growers from nearly every Slatein the tJnior
and Canada, until it is surrounded on every
aide bv orchards aud vineyards, and has Ik-
corae the largest and beskfruit sectioif in the
8tate-.a8inglecar load of its peuches netting
$1,280 in the height of the season.
It has doubled its wine making capacity,
makingb.v both French and German, methods
both by individuals and by a large wine
company incorporated in 1891.
It has been exempt from cyclones, floods
and epidemics, and by reuson of its *opo
graphy will never be subject no them.
With an altitude of 1,150 feet above the
sea level, its beaithiuiness has attracted gen¬
eral attention.
It baa just secured the permanent military
encampment of the State, adding about
$100,000 to its revenues every year.
With all these and other evidences of <
live and growing climate town, with a heaitb'ul and
pleasant summer and winter, a
hospitable and cultured people, and a soi
capable of producing any product of thi
temperate or semi-tropic zone, Griffin offer,
every inducement and a hearty welcome t
new citizens
Heirs of Miss Sallie Dun¬
can Take Notice.
8.* Grantland, Administrator of
Miss Sallie Duncan, deceased,
vs.
All heirs at law of Sail.e Duncan,
deceased,
□Application by the Administrator foi set¬
tlement, in the Court of Ordiuarv ofSpalding
county, Georgia, June Term, 1894.
To Mrs. Sallie B. Tebcault, New Orleans,
La.; Mrs. Aunie B. Voorhies. San Francisco,
Cal.; Mrs. Mary Woodward and Mrs Emily
Williams, D&deville, residence unknown; F. Brookin, T. J. Bailey. Bar¬
Ala.; Mrs. V. ti.
tow, Fla.; Fla.; Mrs. L. B. Covington, Bartow,
R. E. Bailey, Silver Run, Ala., also
the heirs cf Thomas Bailey, deceased, whose
residences are uhkuown; also the children ol
Mrs. 8. E. Tidwell, residences unknown; Mrs.
W. C. Granger, Cottonwood, Ala; Mrs.
Mary Hartwell, residence unknown; Julia
Carter, Orlando, Fla.; Bedford H Darden,
Cottonwood, ala., and all other keita of
Sallie Duncan, deceased, who reside out of
the State of Georgia. You and each of you
are Adminiatrator hereby notified al Sallie that Duncan, Seaton Grantland,
ready deceased, is
to distribute and pay out the monies
of the smd estate to those entitled to receive
the same, and to have a lull settlement with
he heirs.
Ton are therefore notified to be preeent at
the Court of Ordinary of Spalding county,
at my office in Griffin, Georgia, either in per-
son or by Attorney, by 10 o’clock, a. m., on
the first Monday in June, 1894, then and
there to take jart in and abide by the set¬
tlement that will then be made by the said
Court.
It is further ordered by the Court, that
this Citation and Notice be published in the
Griffin News and Sun, the officiel gazette of
this Court, and in the Morning Call, the
newspaper which the Sheriff of Haid county
publishes his advertisements in, for twice a
mouth tor two mouths, prior to Sitting of
said Court.
March 16,1894.
E. W. HAMMOND,
Ordinary S. 0., Ga.
A true copy from the minutes.
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G.A.R.NOTICE
We take this opportunity of informing
our subscribers that the new Commissioner
of Pensions has been appointed. He is an
old soldier, and we believe that soldiers and
their heirs will re<*eive justice at his bands.
We do not anticipate that there will be any
radical changes in the administration of
pension duairs under the new regime.
IVe would advise, however, that V. 8. sol¬
diers, sailors andtheir heirs, take steps to
make application at once, if they the have benefit not
already done so, in order to secure
oi the early filing of theii claims in case
there should he any future pension legisla¬
tion. Such legislation is seldom retroactive.
Therefore it is of great importance that ap¬
plications be filed in tbe Department at the
earliest possible date. Sailors, their Widows,
It U. S. Soldiers, or
Children, or Parents desire information in re¬
gard to pension Press matters, they should Wash- write
to The Claims Company,
ngton, I). Cl, and they will prepare they find and
send the necessary application, if
them entitled und“r the numerous laws en¬
acted for their benefit. Address.
PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY,
John Wedderburn, Managing attorney,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
P. O. Box 385.
?*TENTs
W maCAVtAI COPYFUGHTS.^ a, I HAUL MARKS
PAnr a patent?
_ vrbo*h»ve had nS?' 0 ^’
i the patent bnameaa.
confldential. A Han4
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I notice in the ficintif lean, and
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ANSWERED !
Trivial Charges Against
Atkinson’s Record
COMPLETELY DEMOLISHED IN
HIS SPEECH AT FORSYTH.
Plain, Square Facts Against Anuony-
moui and False Chargee
Scattered in circulars.
Mr. Atkinson took up at Forsyth Wednes¬
day the attacks which had been me de on his
legislative record, which had been dietribu
ted all over the county by the Evans Atlan¬
ta campaign clnb. He aaid:
“These Atlanta lawyers who thought I
was a pretty good Democrat two years ago
now, wh'le they seek to uut in an Atlanta
man for governor, who has never done any
thing for the party, suddenly discover, or
claim to discover, that my rteoTd is a bail
one. If my record Is vulnerable, why is Gen,
Evans himself unwilling to meet me face to
face and discuss it before the peopfe of Geor¬
gia? Why does lie prefer that charges be
made behind my back? And why is it they
are flooding the country with circulars at¬
tacking mv record immediately before tho
day that the county acts, and too late to
pemit me to reply to them? < •
They are sorely pressed. So much so that
a short time ago they tried to get out a third
candidate. So much so that they have turn¬
ed their hand to slandering their own candi¬
date. They are ciiculating the deliberate
falsehood that I stated in my speech at
Gainesville a few days ago that Gen. Evdbs
was a ‘superannuated idiot.’ It is an insult
to Gen. Evans for these papers, who claim
to be his friends, to state that any one
thought so lit Je of him to make this state-
My trtataent oi Gen. Evans has been, and
shall continue tci he, entirely respectful.
While I shall discuss his record, 1 shall de¬
fend his personal character.
“In their desperation they have also charg¬
ed that I stated that Gen. Evans was a cow¬
ard. On the contrary, I have always said,
and now say, that he made a good and vali¬
ant soldier, and I have not one word to say
derogatory to his record as a soldier.
You can understand from this the state
of their desperation, and better determine
the weight to be attacbeo to their so-called
attack upon jny legislative record. ,
“I am frank to say that during my eight
yeurs’ service in the general assembly if, out
of perhaps 6,000 votes, these cited in their
circular were all that were questioned, it
would be the highest proof that I had exhib¬
ited some jadgment in my action as a mom-
ber of the legislature, and had been faithful
to the interests of the people.
“i will brifly allude to some of t he points
made. It is charged that 1 did not vote on
a bill tohmendtne act in reference to the
disabled. Confederate veterans. It is true
that of ths many bi Is looking to the inter¬
ests of the Confederate veterans on one oc¬
casion I was absent when the bili wag voted
upon, but this argues nothing, as the bill
had been agreed upon in committee, and ev¬
ery member of the house was in accord with
the committee’s action and there was do op¬
position lo the bill.
“There were sixtv-meml>ers of the legisla¬
ture who did not vote upon this subject, a
number of whom were Confederate veterans
themselves; men who faced more bullets than
were ever seen or heard of by tho little At
lant.a lawyers that are making this attack
upon me. They had faced nt least os many
bullets as the distinguished general who op-
popes me,even iihe was a general. To charge
me with being opposed to the pension be¬
cause I was absent is to make the same
charge upon these battle-scarred heroes who
happened to be absent at the same time that
I was.
“It comes with poor grace for Gen. Evans’
friends to talk about my pension record, lo
1878 in a speech made in the city of Newnan
on Memorial day, for the first time, ho far as
I know, in the State of Georgia, I expressed
myself as in favor of granting pensions to
disabled and indigent old veterans. As a
member 1 1 the legislature I aided to increase
these pensions until the »um, which was
$25,000 the year when I entered public l.fc,
now amounts to the princely sum of $450,-
000 per year.
“What has Gen. Evans done to putmonev
in ttie pockets of these old heroes? When he
was a trustee of the so-called Atlanta borne
and was trying to induce the State to accept
it and send private soldiers who needed help
to this Atlanta poor house I opposed it and
argued that the State ought to give them
the money in their own pockets in pensions.
1 voted for an amendment to tne constitu¬
tion to extend the pension system so as to
grant additional pensions so all disabled and
indigent soldiers who needed it. From this
you can see the character of the slanders
that they are circulating upon me and form
some idea as to what means they are resort¬
ing to in this campaign.
“The next charge against me is that I
dodged a vote on the bill to establish a per¬
manent school iund. The charge itself shows
that the men who make it are either simple¬
tons themselves or take the people to be
such. The bill would have been worth noth¬
ing il it had passed. Each legislature must
make appropriations for tbecommon schools
for the term for which it is elected.
“Charge third is that I voted against the
bill ior the inspection of fertilize!s. Tbere is
not one word of truth in this charge. Look
at the record on the page and year to whieh
they refer you—house journal 1889, page
875, and you will see that the bill against
which 1 voted was to the very opposite ef-
fet to that stated to yon—it was a bill to
abolish the office of inspector of fertilizers
and to abolish the office of inspector. These
Atlanta lawyers, perhaps, would not know
what fertilizers was if they saw it. But in
runuing a campaign they ought to hav-
sense of honesty enongh about them that
when they qnole the record, they quote it
truthfully This, however, is but a sample
of the treatment which I have been reciving
from my opponents in this campaign. They
have not only told untruths about me, tbu
seek to deceive the people and refer to rec¬
ords that do not exist.
“Charge four is that I voted against the
Brady bill, which provided for the pleading
of failure of consideration for purchase of
fertilizers. That question was involved in
the campaign in my county when I wa* a
candidate for the nomination of my party.
My position was known and I was .nominat¬
ed by a vote of two to one, which was virtu¬
ally an instruction from iny constituents to
vote against the bill. On this measure I
voted in compliance with the wishes of my
constituents, and they approved of it and
three timet re elected me afterwards. I vot¬
ed in accordanoe with the wishes ol my con-
»tituonts, and if I am elected governor l
Ki4 W; « -
shall oonform mv actions to the people «!
Georgia; be responsible to the jieople who
elect me, and not permit these self-constitut¬
ed Atlanta bosses to dictate my course and
control the governor of your State. The
people of Georgia have re tided mv position
on this bill and have defeated it tor the last
sixteen years. The author of the bill himself
was a member of the last legislature, and
did not even introduce the bill, which seemed
to me to be a confession that 1 was ri.tit
anil tha«. tbe bill war h dead issue. Members
ol the General Assembly of Georgia Irom
Richmond and Fulton, both ol which coun¬
ties aye claimed by Gen. Evans a* his home
roomy, voted pint as 1 did on this measure.
If his own representatives voted wrong, why
did be not attack them for it then? Why
does he wait to attack me how, when he has
never attacked them? As this is one of the
few times that I votid with the representa¬
tives from Gen. Evans' home counties, it is a
little strange that they should now bo at¬
tacking ice for it.
“Charge five is that I did not vote on tbe
Twitty bill. I drew a bill on this question
for member, of the legislature, which was in¬
troduced in the house beiore Mr. Twitty was
ever elected a member ot the Georgia legisla¬
ture, and was a friend to the bill Irom that
time to tbe time it was passed. Mr. Twitty
will doubtless remember that at the time
the bill was p assed I was at home sick.
These gentlemen refer you to the time when
I did not vote on that bill. Why are they
not honest? Why do not the manpgers of
Gen. Evans’ headquarters act honestly
about the matter, and also refer yon to
the House Journal of 1889, page 1428,
where it will be seen that I did vote for a
bill to declare void agreements to pay attor
ney’s fees; a bill which was more far-reaching
and sweeping than the Twitty bill, which
finally passed? Is it a part of their cam¬
paign not to tell the truth?
“Charge sixth, is thot l came down out of
the speaker’s chair and made a speech in fa
vor of repudiated bonds. This is another
untruth which they tell for the purpose of
misleading and deceiving the people. These
bends were never repudiated. There was
never a question ss to whether they were re¬
pudiated or not. They were bonds issued
before the days of reconstruction, when the
State was in the hands oi Georgians, a num¬
ber of them issued by the illustrious Charles
J. Jenkins. The only question w»b not
whether they had been repudiated, but
whether or not tney had leen paid. That
question had been referred by a previous legis¬
lature to tiie Hon. W. A. Utile, attorney
general. He made a report to the general
assembly, giving all tbe points bearing upon
this point, and giving it as his opinion that
they were valid, snbeisting, outstanding, un¬
paid obligations of the State. A special
committee was then appointed by the house
to investigate further. Hon. Milton A Can¬
dler, who was a strong supporter of General
Evans, wns chairman of the committee, and
the committee made a report to the same
effect os that made by the attorney general.
The bill to provide for the payment of tnese
bonds was bsloio the house; this bill provid¬
ed for the payment of principal and interest.
I took the floor and argued simply the legal
question involved; . argued that as a matter
of law, however much the legislature might
want to do it, we had no legal authority to
pay the interest on these bonds after alt the
“coupons had been exhausted; that the State
was sovereign, and debt* against her drew
no interest except where she agreed to pay it .
This argument was directed agaiust the
payment of any interest, in case the house
agreed to the prqposition to pay tbe princi¬
pal of the bonds. My argument was not
made on the question ol the payment of the
bonds, because the hi use generally conceded
that the evidence was conclusive on that
question. And while it was not necessary
for me to make argument on that question,
it is certainly true that no evidence was ob¬
tained to show that the State had ever paid
these bonds, but the books in the treasury
show that if tbe bonds wets ever paid by
anybody, that tne Stite had never paid
them. This is the truth about the bond
mutter.
If elected governor, I shall seek to main¬
tain the honor oLthe State; and if anyone
desires a man elected governor who has not
a sufficient sense ol honor to pay valid debts
of the State, 1 am not the man that they
would seek to elect. No fraudulent, tainted
or questionable claim would be fora moment
entertained by me. But the State’s debts
are debts of honor. She cannot be sued, and
she should maintain an untarnished honor
and an unquestioned integrity.
“I call attention, in connection with tilts,
to the fact that ths Atlanta Coostitution,
which is Gen. Evans’ chief champion, was
t he chief champion ol the payment of theec
bunds, and there was not a single newspaper
now suppoiting Gen. Evans that spoke out
in opposition to the payment of the bonds.
“Charge seventh, is that I am the friend of
the corporations against the people' This
charge is too pueri e, too contemptible to
deserve notice at my hands. I simply refer
yon to my weli known record on these ques¬
tions, and refer you to yonr representatives,
withwhooi I have served in the general assem
bly of Georgia.
“One other point to which I shall call your
attention, to show the disgusting and dis¬
reputable methods which they seek to use
against me is that while they make these
att acl s on me, they have not the munlinees
to coroe forward snd tell you where Gen.
Evads stood, or stands now, on any one of
theee questions. The representatives of
both his counties voted as 1 did on the
Brady bill, the representatives from both his
counties voted for the payments of these
bonds, which they now charge to be fraudu¬
lent; tbe representatires from both of bis
counties voted agaiust tbe Twitty bill, and
every bill on that subjeirit during the eight
years 1 have been a member of the legisla¬
ture, while I have been oti the other side.
“Then it is proper lor you to a»k the ques¬
tion: Where does Gen. Evans stand on any
of these questions, and why is it that he does
not come out and state his postion? As
yon a-k this question it might dawn upon
you that one reason why he was not willing
to meet me in joint debate was itecause he
was unwilling to answer questions ns to
where be stood on anything.
“When a'man fights me. I only ask him to
come -ip before my face, and not try to dodge
behind anonymous circulars and little At¬
lanta] polkse lawyers.”
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UNDER THE Biff DOME
LATEST GOSSIP FROM THE NATIONAL
CAPITOL
A Combination of Interests Pressing Pot
Early Action — The Hawaiian Matter.
Union Pacific Railroad Complication..
The Henate HrllK-ry Case, A
Washington, May 81.— [Special,] —
There is a deal of complaint that the sen¬
ate committee on commerce has gone out
Of business. The complaint is a little ex¬
aggerated, it is true, hut for some time a
huge class of bills has been waiting on the
fiction of that committee, and those which
authorize the construction of bridges across
navigable rivers are considered especially
important because the season for that kind
of work is well advanced, material is said
to he phenomenally cheap, and skilled la¬
borers by the thousand ate eager for em¬
ployment. After a very unusual delay
Senator Ilansom named the last day of
May for a meeting of the committee, but
neither he nor any other member would
give any positive promise of final action
soon. Most important of the waiting Mils
is that providing for the Hudson river
bridge from Now York city. It will he re¬
membered that the first bill was vetoed by
the president, and the house passed an¬
other framed with the utmost care to nioet
every objection urged in tho veto. The
preliminary surveys and soundings should
oven now be In progress, and the condi¬
tion of the money market makes this *
most favorable time to negotiate the securi¬
ties.
__ The Printing Office Site.
There is also a provoking delay as to the
new government printing office, though
everybody agrees that there ought to be
speedy action. Pursuant to a vote of the
house its committee on public buildings
and grounds some time ago selected for a
site tbe government land near the fish
commission building and on the same
square as the Pennsylvania depot, but the
senate oonunlttee still insists on the pres¬
ent site and hopes to bring the senate to
its views. Senator Manderson of the com¬
mittee, however, prefers the baseball
ground, but would accept the present site
if an agreement could be reached, While
the senate, having voted onoo for the
Mahone lot, Is naturally reluctant to give
it up.
The reconsideration of that vote moved
by Senator Harris over a month ago is still
pending. Meanwhile the retained em¬
ployee In the present building cannot en¬
joy their good fortune for dread of a catas¬
trophe, and the hnndreds who have been
discharged are moving all they can get at
with appeals for reinstatement or places
elsewhere. The women In particular make
affecting pleas and often throng the lob¬
bies, but these are times when the force is
being cut down in almost every depart¬
ment, and the rule is—once out permanent¬
ly out, or at least for a long time.
“Great Cry, Little Wool."
Senator Kyle's resolution declaring it
the sense of the senate that the United
States should not uso force to restore
Queen Liliuokalani and would regard the
influence of any other government as an
unfriendly act did not excite so much
Interest as was expected. The senate took
it rather coolly, in fact, and speakers on
both sides assumed as a matter of course
that all Americans agreed with tho reso¬
lution. If one may judge from the dis¬
cussion.and the absolute silence about it
in the conversation of members, the Ha¬
waiian question has ceased to be an excit¬
ing topic. The same, only much more so,
may bo said of the much heralded conven¬
tion of the Pail-American Bimetallic
league, which was notable for the absence
of almost everybody who had been adver¬
tised to lie present. In place of the alleged
hundreds of delegates from Spanish Amer¬
ica and the far west, there were dozens
of letters of regret, along with a pain¬
fully large number of statements that
the writers would have oomo if they could
have raised the money. There were, how¬
ever, enough present to organize, abuse
the administration to the taste of the most
frantic antis, listen to on able argument
in favor of a grand transcontinental rail¬
road paid for by new greenbacks and pass
some spicy resolutions. Perhaps tho dele¬
gates did not know it, but the government
is in a fair way to own a transcontinental
railroad in spite of itself; for every prop¬
osition before tho committees looking to¬
ward Settlement with the Pacific railway
companies has been fought with snch vig¬
or that the matter is now a little farther
back, if any odds, than it was at the be¬
ginning of the session.
In • Chaotic State.
President Huntington seems to have al¬
most convinced the house committee that
the bill they had favored will not do at aii,
and the senate committee is very slow In
taking to the plan which he presented be¬
fore it. He has maintained, and others
before the two committees continue to
maintain, that to retire the first mortgage
bonds It would, be necessary to tax the
shareholders, of whom there are some 10,-
000, and take the property out of their
hands. The last figuring is to the. effect
that a mortgage bond Usuoof $110,04X1,000
at 2'A per oent would cover the debts of
the road, Including that to the govern¬
ment. Of course tho government would
have to guarantee this issue before it
would float.
Some very curious testimony was devel¬
oped by tho inquiry as to how soon the
rood could expect a great local traffic', and
some surprising opinions were given by
far western men. Mr. Huntington claimed
that the trouble had risen through tho loss
of businoss by competition and then gave
powerful reasons for believing that there
would be no more competing roads built
because the matter had been overdone, and
the revulsion would keep capitalists out of
it for many years. He also thought that
long before the time of the proposed mort¬
gage bonds ran out the Joaquin valley
alone would contain 10,000,000 people, and
that all the far west would be so thickly
settled that people would laugh at such •
trifle as this debt. So far as a common rnafi
can e«e, the whole matter Is still in chaos.
The journalists have not been able to
stew much fun out of the Investigation of
the senate bribery matter, although Mr.
E. J. Edwards, who wrote the article In
the Philadelphia Press which started the
investigation, was examined at great
length by the committee. The whole affair
has been conducted with an awful serious¬
ness, and the witnesses have kept their
counsel and obeyed the instructions of the
committee much more than is usual. Ho
far as ran be s&m, no one in or out of con¬
gress is much impressed by the inquiry,
and the debate runs on about the same as
if no charges ha4i been made. Those who
amuse themselves by speculating on tho
final vote continue to assert that of the
Populists Mr. Peffer certainly and Mr. Al¬
len possibly will vote against the bill, but
their Populist supporters declare with pro-
!ane emphasis that they will never dare to
lo it so long as the income tax feature ifi
n it. ~
.HQWjsYourBjpp.d?
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MANN, i.
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