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A Practical Little Mia*.
Little Girl—“Mamma, we is goin’
to have a church fair, to get money for
Manma-“That’s a lovelv idea, mv
angel, but what can you get to sell?”
Little Girl--“Oh,we is goin’to have
the people to bring their own things,
an’ sell them to theirselves, an’ give
ns the money.”
Somkhow, this tinkering with the
currency and the great fear that our
dollar wasn’t an honest one reminds
us of the epitaph found on an old
tombstone: “I was well, wished to he
better, took physic and died.” — Ex.
Vital Enel's? •* Renewed,
When strength and health have run down,
by a timely resort to the helpful, bracing
tonic, Hostetter’a Stomach Bitters, particu¬
larly peptic. adapted bilious to Invalids. the wants If of nervous, out dys¬ by
worn
mental strain, the cure of business or over¬
work, nihilates seek its prompt and benign and aid. is It effi¬ an¬
cient malarial complaint, rheumatism an and
neuralgia. remedy for incipient
If you cannot make money these time* try
and make happine-s.
W hen Nnlur*
KmA* assistance it may be best to render it
prumptly.butone should remember to use eves
the most perfect remedies only when needed.
The best and most simple and gentle remedy Is
the Syrup of Figs manufactured by the Call
fern! a Fig Syrup Co.
Businei-i men who have lost their trade
should advertise for it.
I» your Bsc.k Aches, or you are all worn out,
trood fur nothing, it in general debility.
Brown k Iron Bitters will cure you, make you
strong, cleanse your liver, and give a good ap¬
petite-tones the nerve*.
Tbo waiossof *ln ia death, and itis the only
wages a person is wilting to have reduced.
“Teach your boys that which they will
practice when they become men.” This re¬
mark of Plutarch, the ancient philosopher,
shows that the needs of his day were similar
to those of the present. We are g ad to note
providing that mttny places of the more where progressive the schools are
young men and
women may learn that which they will prac¬
tice In I er In life. Our old friend, the North
Georg has a Agricultural such addition College, Dahionega, Ga.,
thorough ma ie an to their already
did literary lmve been and military course. Splen¬
rooms fitted up, experienced
teachers engaged, special furniture put in,
aud the department everything possible has been done to make
business college equal and to that much of any flrst-ciass
tuition. at lower rates of
cheerfully Any given desired application information will lie
ident. Dahionega upon to the pres¬
is a great, health resort and
a free very from cheap the place temptations in which to live. It is also
lie which arc always to
found in our large cities.
You can boast of noblo blood when you are
ilifi hero of noble deeds.
ljuiiea needing a tonic, or children who
want Bittern. building It is pleasant up, should take Brown’s Iron
Indigestion, Buion-ness to tiiko, cures Malaria,
and Liver Complaints,
makes the Blood rich and pure.
The love for money doesn’t seem to be recip¬
rocated just now, for money Is shy ami keeps
at a distanOB.
1 Am Truly Thankful
For Hood’s Sarsaparilla. During the war 1
contracted typhoid fever, and fever
KS
.Wv*
Ur. Stillman.
me any good. Stnoo I began taking Hood's
Sarsaparilla 1 have not lost a day's work in
three months, weigh ten pounds more
HoocTs s iS> Cures
than for years and am In better health than
any time since the war.” J. H. Stillman,
Cheltenham, Pa. Oct onl y Hood’s.
Hood’a PUU become the favorite cathartic with
every one who trie* them. 25 cent* per box.
Unlike the Dutch Process
No Alkalies
— OR —
Other Chemicals
are used in the
preparation ot
W. BAKER & CO.’S
mkfastCocoa
trhich is absolutely
pure and soluble.
BUS M fpnRIj eft It has more th an th ree times
Kthf, the strength of Cocoa mixed
‘ WLj-y’l P~M with Starch, Arrowroot or
nomical, costing Sugar, less than aud is for more eco¬
one cent a cup.
It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY
DIQESTKD.__
Sold hjr Grocers eferywhtr*.
W. BAKER & CO., Dorcheiter, Hass.
HowisYcur Blood?
I had a malignant breaking out on my leg
below the knee, and was cured sound and well
with two and a half bottles of ss.s.
Other blood medicines had failed
to do me any good. Will C. Beaty,
Y.lk.UU, S. C.
MS.S S. rl
I was troubled from childhood with an «g
gravutod ca se of Tetter, nnd three bottle* of
cured me permaueti^
^
Our book on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. Swift Bntemo Co.. Atlanta, Ga.
PHILAD A 3£Sr2M. fail! tuts- to
BIRD FOOD
DID t4r “* with th« drlmkiR* w*t«r will •▼ok*
S31 r\ mjf »flood of awe«t molodiM. nnd will now
n On iff I I pnO ClxOipH. lift nnd Tory vitality ofton into their th« magical household ef¬
fects Bird a?e produced in a few mlnutoe. 8«nt bv mail for 35e.
Beek Free. Bird Food Co., 41)0 N. Sd St., Philnd’a. Fn.
Xngleside For Dtfle&ses of Women. Retreat.
Scientific treatment and
cures guaranteed. Elegant apartment* for ladiea be*
fore and during confinement. Address The Real*
dent Phyb ician, *1-78 Baxter Court, NaaHviUet Tenn.
Risibps®.
Do Not Be Deceived - ^___________
with Pontes, Enamels anil Paints which stain the
hands. Injure the Iron and burn red
The Rising Sun Store Polish is Brilliant, Odor
less, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin
or glass package with every purchase.
ague, leaving me with
malarial and mer¬
curial poisoning
from which I have su”
fered ever since, in neu
ralgla, rheumatism,
nervous prostra¬
tion and general debil¬
ity. Much of the time 1
have been unable to
work, and the doctors’
treatment
LADIES’ DEPARTMENT.
] wrxkb wjpows newer rabrt.
i ** i. a law of good/ocity « Chin.
0lmt 7 ottn K widows never many again.
Widowhood is therefore held in the
highest esteem, and the older the wid
ow grows the more agreeable does her
position become with the people.
Should she reach fifty years she may,
by applying to the emperor, get a
sum of money with which to buy a
tablet on which is engraved the sum
of her virtues. The tablet is placed
over the principal entrance to her
house.—[Courier Journal.
MATERIALS HG«H IN VOGUE.
Crepons of all colors and kinds,
crocodile, striped, shot, flowered, goff¬
ered, plain and dotted, are great favor¬
ites this season and are worn alike by
maid and matron. A lovely toilet
worn at a stylish wedding last week
was made of mauve crepon dotted with
white ant) made up over pink and
mauve shot taffeta, the changeable
foundation imparting a beautiful glow
to the oropon. A charming cape of
ecru silk lace was worn with the dress
and a tiny capote of mauve tuUe, with
a standing fan shaped trimming of
lace and crush roses. —[New York Ad¬
vertiser.
HALF-OENTKKY * OF BEAUTY.
The physical beauty of women
should last uutil they are past fifty.
Nor does beauty reach its zenith un¬
der the age of thirty-five or forty.
Helen of Troy comes upon the stage
at the age of forty. Aspasia was thirty
six when married to Perieles, and she
was a brilliant figure thirty years
thereafter. Cleopatra was past, thirty
when she met Antony. Diant de Poic
tiers was thirty-six when sho won the
heart of Henry VII. The King was
half her age, but his devotion never
changed. Annie of Austria was thirty
eight when described as the most beau¬
tiful woman in Europe. Mme. de
Maintenonwas forty-three when united
to Louis, and Catharine of Russia
thirty-three when she seized the throne
sho ooeupied for thirty-five years.
Mile. Mar was most beautiful at forty
five, and Mme. Recamier between the
ages of thirty-five and fifty-five.—
[Science Monthly.
ABOUT AMERICAN WOMEN.
Whorovor we meet the American
woman—and we meet her everywhere,
in the ranks of the English peerage
and of the highest European aristoc¬
racy, as well as in mdre modest condi¬
tions—we are struck with that marvel¬
ous adaptability in which wise men
see the sign of the superiority of a
race or of a species. It is revealed
notably by that good humor with
which sho accepts the numerous petty
annoyanoes that every change of me
' dinm implies, and which put the best
characters on trial. She submits to
them without effort, and criticises
them without bitterness; she is, fur¬
ther, prepared for them by her educa¬
tion, and does not expect to find eve¬
rything easy. Then the necessity of
manual labor does not seem to her
like a degrading condition; at
most only one or two genera¬
tions separate her from the time
when her grandmother kneaded
the family bread in the primitive set¬
tlements. Theso lessov.s are familiar
to her, and the lessons deduced from
them are not discouraging or humiliat¬
ing. She is the daughter of a race of
immigrants who have become a great
people through work, energy and deter¬
mination. She has in this at her corn
mand a whole treasury of traditions
from which she draws not without
pride. We might sav, in listening to
these stories, that we are hearing one
of those grandes dames of the past cen¬
tury, emigrants and poor, telling with
pride in their memoirs how, to supply
their wants, they worked in London
or in Germany, utilizing their accom
plishments and their correct taste,
and making trimmings and embroider¬
ing robes, with their own aristocratic
hands.—[Popular Science Monthly.
A WOMAN IN THE AFRICAN DIGGINGS.
The most cordial assistance was ren
dered my sister in every detail; her
tent was pitched in a quiet, secluded
spot; she was advised in the selection
of a claim; initiated into the formali¬
ties of pegging out and registration;
and thus found many anticipated diffi¬
culties considerably ameliorated. The
cheapness of native labor lessened in
a great degree the hardships of living
at these gold-fields. The Ainatongas,
a very intelligent tribe on the East
coast, came in freely to work, offering
their services at the rate of £1 per
month, with the usual rations of rnealie
meal; and having paid the digger’s
tax of five shillings for the month,
and hired several of these natives, my
sister found herself settled down to
the life of a digger. She superin
tended the work of her claim herself,
and in th« process of washing the dis
integrated soil she personally took
part.
My sister lived for two years in her
little canvas tent on the creek, which
she had in the mean time enclosed by
means of a fence of laced boughs, and
planted about with vegetables, She
found gold for the most part steadily,
but only in small quantities of a few
ounces »t a time. It existed very in¬
definitely, and there were no indica¬
tions that proved of the slightest value
in searching for it.
At one time she hit upon the expe¬
dient of meeting her expenses by mak¬
ing ginger beer and pastry, a difficult
task where kitchens are not, and with
cooking utensils of the most primitive
kind. The sight of such delicacies
raised the livliest emotions in the
diggers, whose life condemned them
to a monotonous and sorry fare,
and the Kafir, who became the itiner
ant vender on these occasions, grew
inflated with the importance it con
ferred on him. He was hailed in all
directions, and when he could no longer
meet the demands of importunate cus¬
tomers, he would toss tne basket into
the air with a smile of ironical pity.
In the meantime, several claims had
passed through my sister’s hands, and
the last of these realized some of the
expectations the hope of which gives a
flavor of excitement to the monotony
of gold-digging. This claim contained
a rich lead, from which some very fine
nuggets of almost pure gold were tak
en, solid lumps of metal averaging in
weight from eight ounces to four
pounds. She was now in possession
of a moderate competency, and her
success was the theme of considerable
comment throughout the entire press
of South Africa.—[Century Magazine.
FA8HION NOTES.
White is so much liked for dresses
that even cambrics and nainsooks are
being used.
Quill-feathers, wings and small birds
are among the most popular hat and
bonnet trimmings.
Browns of all shades and blue and
green in the darker hues are preferred
for street wear for girls.
The newest idea in hats is the sun¬
burn color, and white satin ribbon and
Mercury wings are used for trimming.
Growing girls, quite as much as
their grown-up sisters, need have spe¬
cial attention paid to harmony in color.
Girls wear hair-ribbons matching the
leading color in the dress. It is also
well to have the ribbon on the hat to
match.
Tiny girls may bo picturesque aud
fluffy-looking, but it is much better for
growing girls to bo dressed in the sim¬
plest fashion.
Skirts of medium-weight wool ma¬
terial with shirred waists of cheviot or
blouses of surah or any of the pretty
cambrics are much liked.
The new tints of yellow are as be¬
coming to blondes as brunettes. They
are in very delicate shades of canary,
pale corn color and primrose.
The belt is a standard article of
dress, and most ladies, especially those
who are young, have one or more fan¬
cy belts for almost every costume.
Hair cloth or very stiff materials
are less used in skirts than they were
during the spring, and will, it is said,
be entirely abandoned before very
long.
For wash dresses choose ginghams,
the ruffles aud capes made of ging¬
ham with the lace sewed on the edge.
These can be laundered to look as
well as new,
There is nothing more becoming
to a growing girl, who may be some¬
what angular and possibly a trifle awk¬
ward in her movements, than the soft
blouse and jacket.
Girls of twelve and fourteen years
wear challv, gingham and similar cot¬
ton goods, aud for travelling or moun¬
tain wear, flannel, serge or medium
weight eamels’-hair.
The return of the Victoria coiffure
is another abomination hovering in
the air, and many of the Parisian ac¬
tresses are already wearing their hair
drawn down over the eyes.
There is a new English silk im¬
ported this season for tailor gowns.
It has a soft, rather dull finish, aud is
considerably heavier than an ordinary
summer silk, having some of the body
of a cloth.
Very wide leather belts, rounded
out above and fastened with several
small straps, have lately been intro¬
duced for young ladies, and are to be
worn with blouses or blouse bodices
stiffened with whalebone, which make
a corset unnecessary. Such blouses
are of the simplest description, being
mere full-front bodices ending at the
waist and with very full gigot sleeves.
CHILDREN’S C OLUMN.
IXICa‘8 CAT.
Jis? Alice loves me
But If I were she
A nd had a kitten as white as milk,
I would give her this house of lace and silk,
Bound as a ball and light as a leather,
To keep her dry in rainy weather.
There are plenty of cats
Who go hunting rats,
TRih noses keen and well-sharpened naC.9,
And see just the tips of their flying tails,
Then stand watch all day lor their dinners
Or go without, which is hard for beginners.
I sleep in the bouse.
' And eat chicken, not moust
No kit can show more velvetv paws.
A butterfly couldn’t feel the claws;
Well, some must work while others are think¬
ing;
I can do that when I’m dozing and winking.
—[Our Little Men and Women.
A monkey’s small ears.
l the middle of Africa—way in the
heart of the country, where no white
mau except the great Mr. Stanley has
ever gone— there lives a family of
apes that have ears very much like the
ears of a man. These apes, or monk¬
eys, are very large, and if you were to
see one of them a little way off, per¬
haps leaning against a lamp-post, you
would tako him to be a dark-complex¬
ioned gentleman, with large ears aud
short whiskers.
The colored men of Central Africa
have a story which they tell about
apes, and which they think ex¬
plains the fact of their having ears
quite unlike the rest of their species,
They say that when the Great One
made the earth and put the animals
in the centre of Africa, these
apes had long, awkward ears,
of which they were very much
ashamed, as they were intelli
gent creatures and did not want such
big ears. As years went by and the
family of apes continued to grow wiser,
their ears grew smaller. One day
there was a meeting of all the monkeys
of the forest and a terrible chattering
went on all day and night, but these
wise monkeys kept very quiet, listen¬
ing to all that was said, and hoping to
find out something which they did not
know. And when the meeting wag
over ana the next day had dawned
their ears were small and shapely
just like a man’s ears. This was their
reward for silence. — [New York
Ledger.
kitty’s roses.
Last year Kitty lived in the city
and had only a bit of back
yard to play in. She grew so pale and
thin that the doctor looked grave and
shook his head and spoke of fresh air
and sunshine and several other things
which are all Greek to many city
children. As Kitty is the only daugh¬
ter, mamma and papa could not afford
tt^Tun of any risks of losing her for the
sake a few minutes more on the
train every morning for papa and a
few matinees less for mamma, so they
moved to the country. Kitty planted
the wee garden and grew flowers in
boxes on the window sill of her ena
shiny bedroom, She became such a
gardener that now ehe has
the most lovely roses you ever saw;
they clamber all over the fence and
greet you with their sw eet breath as
you enter the gate. But Kitty lives in
the country and there are no end to
the flowers; after the roses are gone
other flowers will come and the little
house is always in tho midst of a bow¬
er of beauty and fragrance. But
somehow although Kitty is very happy
the beautiful green country makes her
think of her old home, of the hot, dir¬
ty streets, the glaring sun and the
poor little sick children living and
breathing in small, crowded rooms in
the narrow streets.
It seems too much for one little girl
to have so much to enjoy, so every
week Kitty and her mother spend a
day in town. They come laden down
with flowers. Great, towering bunches
of daisies, cowslips and geraniums,
sweet peas, cowslips and buttercups
and every field flower that grows. She
ties them up with cord, and besides
sending them to several missions,
where flowers are given to the poor
people who attend it, they go them¬
selves to the hospitals.
Wlwt happy days those are for those
white cheeked, bright eyed little suf
ferers. The flowers seem to bring
country air and freshness in their
bright colored bells, and the
children handle them lovingly, seem
ing to enjoy them as they would some
beautiful, wonderful toy which they
felt was too good for them. The nurses
arrange a few in a cup of water near
each bed and place the large bunches
where every weary pair of eyes may
see them, and how fragrant and fresh
the air grows in those hot wards! and
how much easier it is to sleep in such
aii;, and then wake to find the place
sweet with posies. This is what Kitty
did with her June roses this month.
So if you should pass her little home
on the shady road near the river, you
will know why the tall, green bushes
are bare and the window boxes empty.
—[New York Advertiser.
TT HE Powder ROYAL surpasses C CYJ 11
others in leavening power, in
purity and wholesomeness,
and is indispensable for use
wherever the best and finest
food is required.
411 other Baking Powders contain
ammonia or alum.
To Clean Turbid Water.
Dr. Leffman recommeuds to house
wives a simple means of precipitating
turbid water by the solution of alum,
One hundred and thirty grains of
chrvstalized alum dissolved in one
pint of water will produce a large
quantity of the purifying liquid, as it
is only used in the proportion of one
to two grains of alum to a gallon of
water. That would require three tea
spoonfuls of the solution to every two
gallons of the water. After stirring it
in let the water stand a few hours.
and it will be perfectly clear and
ready to be poured off from the thick
deposit in the bottom. If it is then
filtered it will be in good condition
for drinking.
Even without filtering it. will be safe
to drink the water if it has not stood
very long, as it has been found that
the addition of the alum greatly re
duces the number of bacteria. The
taste is not affected, as the alum de¬
composes the water and sets free com¬
pounds that attach themselves to the
muddy elements in the water and
cause them ., to . settle ... This remedy , is .
not for contaminated water, which
should always be boiled .—New York
Post.
HETJBN IN ONE BANK.
A Nasbyille Rank Nliow* It* Preference
for jcniiing*’ student*.
The Fourth National Bank, Nashville, has
in its employ seven ot the graduates of Jen
nines’ Trey Business College, Nashville, Tenn.
are ecatlere ! all the way trom the Tell
er’s desk back to that of collections. Some
of them receiving salaries as hi<h as $1,6J0 per
yt ar. There are many other Banks and prom
Snout firms In Nashville and In the South who
have with them graduates of this noted school.
Deafness Cannot be Cure*
bf diseased local applications, portion of ihe as they There can not ia r^ach only the
oar. one
tumal way to remedies. cure Deafness, and that is by constitu
Deafness is caused by an in
Ku9tach?ai?*Tube? f When U< tJiU ft
flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper
feet hearma, and when it is entirely closed
Deafness is the result., and unless the inflam¬
mation can be taken out and this tube re¬
stored to its normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever; nine cases out ten are
caused by catarrh, which Is nothing but an in¬
flamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can¬
not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for
circulars, free. D^gi'S
I3F-sold & Co ” Tol * d °’ °
by
Beecham’s Pills with a drink of water morn¬
ings. Beecham’s—no others. 25 cents a box.
“German
I Syrup” st
must say a word to the ef
ficacy of German Syrup. I have
used it m my family for Bronchitis,
the result of Colds, with most ex
'client success. I have taken it my
self for Throa, Troubles, aud have
derived good results therefrom. I
therefore recommend it to my neigh¬
bors as an excellent remedy in such
cases. viile, James T. Durette, Earlys
Va. Beware of dealers who
offer you ‘ ‘something j ust as good. ’ ’
Always insist on having Boschee’s
German Syrup. (g.
—
Will You Marry Soon?
If ■■ o. you are obliged to bare a solid
18 karat gold ring. You will want to
feel sure that it IS 18 karat, pure
and genuine. Write to us for our
catalogue of wedding rings.
J. P. STEVENS St BRO., Jewelers,
ATLANTA. GA.
$io A Day Free 1
Enclose in a letter containing
your full name and address, the
outside wrapper of a bottle of
Smith's Bile Beans (either site).
If your letter is the first one opened
in" the first morning mail of any
day except Sunday If $5 will 3d, be
sent vou at once. the ad,
4th. 5th or 6th, $T. Ask for the
SMALL site. Full list mailed to
all who send postage for it (2 cts.).
Address J. F. Smith & Co.
No. 255 Greenwich St., New York.
44 Not a gripe
li in a barrel of
them”
WHISKY
AND OPIUM
HABITS CURED
At your home without pain or confinement.
Patten ts continue business while under treat¬
ment. immediately Whisky and all other drugs stopped
need them. No on beginning treatment—do not
treatment yet discovered to
compare with it. Have given special study
and practice to these diseases l’or the past
twenty increase years, with continued and successful
in practice. Write for my book
of cures, free.
B.M. WOOLLEY, M. D„ Dep’tA
Office, No. 1043^ Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga.
€3 A f^S OE R C“ r ed Permanently
NO liNIKE, NO POISON, NO PLASTER.
4X0. B. HARRIS, Fort P»yue. Ala,
Embalm ini' in Egypt.
It is estimated that the number of
bodies embalmed in Egypt^ from B. C.
‘-,000, when the art is supposed to hava
keen first practiced, to A. D. 700,
wben it ceased, amounts to 420,000,000.
Another estimate places the total
number of mummies at 741,000,000,
trat this is based upon the extention of
the beginning of the practice to a much
earler date. The traffic in mummies
is very profitable to the modern
Egyptian dealers.— Exchange.
Began Work at Once,
Fond Mother—‘‘And so my little
angel joined the Little Defenders to
day, and will always be kind to dumb
animals?”
Little Angel—“Yes’m. Cornin’home
I met a man wif a bag full of kittens ’at
he was goin’ to drown, and he promised
to bring them here for us to be kind
to .”—Street A- Smith's Good News.
A Careful Boy.
Mother—“How in the world did you
get your coat sleeves so dirty?”
Little Boy—“Walkin’ ’cross the
puddles on my hands, so’s not to get
my feet wet.”
The Rugged Gil
Jo Tnrrrolsr largely an iw
“outdoor" <*■
OrOClUCt. ,
JK ,
f G S II a 1 T
and ,
CXCI'ClSe 1
,, ~
USUally duee sound pI'O- - 2^
rj nnpf if** cilitl a n A J
cm S'-'Uiiu in rl cIa^t-a sleep.
drpn Sickly chil
ulcu nhinin ODLdm
great benefit from
Scott’s Emulsion
of cod-liver oil with Hypo
phosphites, of a fat-food rapid
assimilation and almost
as palatable as milk.
Y. All drua*i 8 t 8 .
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
1 THOMSON’S SLOTTED WITH ff
CLINCH RIVETS.
«5 0 chH? ,* uic h ‘ immer kiy, leaving needed the to clinch drive
ma de in
“ ,n f h >* durable. amnom e stron tr* &
an now i n us©
‘‘‘nml? a* you? toJKTj&'SLE* TSn d 40c. In
1 01 ‘ “ lzc *- b v
JUDS ° N „'i , JS^S 80 ,'!.,? 0 C . °"
'
3R&
The Best for Ether Heating or Cooking.
Excel in Style, Comfort and Durability.
TO Show you SHEPPARD’S LATEST CATALOGUE.
If no dealer near you write to
ISAAC A. SHEPPARD A CO..
LARGEST UJ.NVFACTURKRS BALTIMORE, MB. IN TBS SOUTH.
2552 POULTRY YARD
108 Page., 4 oOl Edition. Writ
ten Are years after I had learned
to make piain. Hogs and Poultry a sue
cess. A practical system,
easily their diseases learned; and describes their remedies. all of
KgPCw Hew Cholera, to make 41 apes lions and Mona lay Egga.
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CANCER
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