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WHmm ■•• •• : •
EVENINGS AT HOME
are made more attractive
to husband and family when
cosily and handsomely fur
nished, . and you can do it at
such a small cost, when pur
chasing irom our new and np-
to-date stock of furniture, that
it will pay you in satisfaction
and content. We have many
handsome styles in pal or and
bedroom suites, buffets, couch
es, rockers, hall stands, exten-
ison tables and fancy chairs that we are selling’ ai bargain
prices: Write or call.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
WHY THEY .1IARKIED-
W00D-PEAVY FURNITURE COMPANY
MACON-, GrEOKGIA.
Tlio Hind Ton A] jgfqijgj.t, an& wlilelx lias t>eea
in use far by£0 yftos borm the si£Traiare of
r.rui has heedIpade tmclci' Xus peu-
aoaaiaapervision since ihs infancy.
Aiiewiio on.o to ilec.c'.vz you in. ihir,.
All Counterfeits, Jiuifca. lions and cun
Experiments tliat trine witli and endange*.’ fciie Ii-caltu of
Infanta and Ciiildren— Experience against .Rxperiuneiii.,
WMmm*
What
31 C***?
?3 w* a
i. U
%j n§
A
Castoria is a harmless suLvitiiirte for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, 3IorpIiino nor other Rareotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Vv orms
and allays Feverishness. It cares Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. Jt relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—Tho Mother’s Friend.
CENpNE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears iko Signature of
Years.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, HEW YORK CITY.
PAR MELEE
Oor. Second and Poplar Streets,
MiLCOlT, Gr-^w.
From Our Regular Correspondent. “ j Metropolitan and Eural Yorker.
Tbe Cuban scandal gives place to j We recently sent out postal cards
the Paris one. In tho latter, as in i to the married men in a small town
the former, the causes are identical jin western New York with the in-
arid similar results inevitably fulh.W, j qaify, “Why did you marry?” We
as they will follow in Porto Rico | give a few of the responses:
and the Philippines. In each a pol- j that’s what I’vo been trying- for
itiflian was put in charge of the dis- j eleven years to find out.”
FISHES WITH LUNGS.
How Lincoln Won HXs Wife.
Mr. Lincoln used to take great de-
! light in telling how he gained-a knife
QUEER CREATURES THAT LIVE ON j by his ugly looks. That has been pub-
LAND OR IN WATER. ! lishea, but I have not seen another in
] print telling.how he gained his wife.
Sirs. Lincoln was a beautiful lady, at-
Carriage Experts
pronounce our Surries to be well
built in every detail. The style,
comfort and quality of our ....
SMtS, PHAETONS HU! BUGGIES
arc such as will please you and
insure ypii good round value for#
your mone^. . . . .
posal of immense sums and given a
practically free hand in appoiriting-
his assistants and in spending the
government money, and in each the
money has disappeared. It would,
perhaps, be pushing the simile too
far to say that in each case the ad
ministration had denied that it was
responsible. That goes without lay
ing. In the case of Paris, over
§800,000 of the $1,448,000 appro-
J priated for the commission has been
expended without being accounted
for. The law appropriating for the
exposition is specific in. its direction
to the commissioner-general to re
port to congress a detailed state
ment of expenditures. Yet the first
detailed statement consisted of only
11 items, showing that $240,000 hail
been spent, the period covered being
one year to November, 1899. When
the Senate called for move definite
and itemized accounts, the expense
account was brought up to Decem
ber, 1899, and showed the disburse
ment of $396,700. Up to that time
the toial appropriations had reached
the sum of $1,280,000, and yet with
$800,000 unaccounted foi;, Commis
sioner-General Peck came to con
gress and secured an urgent deli-.
| ciency appropriation of $169,600.
'The total appropriations for tbe
j commission now aggregate $1,448,-
000, of which less than $400,000
have been accounted for to congress.
This is not the only case in which
the republicans have been extrava
gant. The democratic leaders have
managed to place in the Congres
sional Recox-d a statement showing i s i{ e
the amount of money spent by the
administration in connection with
the lavgp number of commissions
and special commissioners appointed
by the president since the beginning
of his term. The democrats think
the people have a right to know
what these various bodies have ac
complished' and whether the -game'
was worth the candle. There have
been 22 separate commissions, with
a ?total- personnel, including clerks
attaches and experts of various
kinds, of probably 1,000. The fol
lowing is given as an approximate
but conservative estimate: William
J. Calhoun, special commissioner to
Cuba, $10,000; Monetary Co mm is
sion, $50,000; Queen’s Jubilee Com
mission, $25,00(1; Special Commis
sioner M. P. Hand} 7 , Paris Exposi
tion, $10,000; Reciprocity Cominis
sioner Kasson, $20,0U0; Commission
er to Japan in connection with seals
Hamlin, $10,000; Commissioner to
Russia in connection with seals.
Foster, $10,000; Paris Peace Com
mission, $150,000; Cuban and Porto
Rican Evacuation Commission, $65,-
000; War Investigation Commission
$100,00(1;- Philippine Commission
$150,000; High Joint Commission,
$100,000; Commission to Disarma
ment Conference, $25,000; Samoan
Commission, $25,000; Nicaraguan
Canal Commission, $250,000; Isth
mian Canal Commission, $1,000,000;
Hawaiian Commission, $25,000; Par
is Exposition Commission, $950,000;
Tariff Commissioner to Cuba, R. P.
Porter, $5,000; Industrial Commis
sion, per annum, $100,000; Insular
Commission, $25,000; present Phil
ippine Commission, $150,000; Total;
$3,305,000.
: ‘The old maid of the past—sour,
scandal-loving^ sharp of temper and
of features-—is now almost an un
known quantity,” says Mrs. Mary E.
Bryan. “The unmanned woman of
to-day, who has passed her twenties,
is cheery, active, busy and useful.
Generally, she is in business, or has
some special art, profession or ac
complishment to which she devotes
herself. Anyway, she is not idle.
She finds many things to employ
her hands and brains. She has littla
time for gossip and less .inclination.
Culture and occupation have broad
ened her nature, and given her char
ity and wisdom.
The Southern States Land and
Lumber company of Pensacola, Fla.,
has determined,, according to the
Pensacola Journal, to engage on a
somewhat extensive scale in raising
fine beef cattle. The company has
enclosed with barbed wire fencing
eighteen thousand acres of land in
Baldwin county, Alabama, which
will be used for the cattle range.
The cattle will be fed by a special
system, including the use of the vel
vet bean and • cassava.
To the Deaf.
A rich lady, cured of her deaf-
DesS and noises in till head by Dr
Nicliofaoii’s Artificial* Ear Drome,
gave $10,000, to his Institute, s<>
that deaf people utmhie to procure
the Ear Drums may have (hem free.
Addm-s-No. 1474," The Nicholson
Institute, 780 Eighth Aveuue New
York.
A colony of. Germans from Cin
cinnati will be settled in Franklin
county, Tenn., 1 twenty thousand
acres of land haying been purchased
for them. The event is the more
notable in view of the fact that it
has never been possible to induce
foreigners to come south in large
numbers,, they being unwilling to
compete with negro labor.
Bearing down pains iudicaie dis
placement of the womb. Curable
quick I v by using Simmons Sqnrii
Vine Wine or Tablets., • .
“Married to get .even with her
mother, but never have.”
“Because I was too lazy to work.
- “Because Sarah told me five other
young men had proposed to hex-.
“The old man thought 8 years’
courtin’ was almost long enough.
“I was lonesome and melancholy,
and wanted someone to make me
lively. N. B.—She makes me very
lively.”
“I was tired of buy ing ice cream
and candies and going to theaters
and church, and wanted a rest.
Have saved money.”
“Please don’t stir me up.”
“Because I thought she was one
among a thousand; now I sometimes
think she is a thousand among one.”
- “I think it was because I was
cross-eyed; now I am afflicted with
two pairs of cross-eyes daily.”
“Because I did not have the ex
perience I now have.”
The governor was going to give
me his foot, so I took his daughter’s
hand.”
I thought it would be cheaper
than a breach of promise suit.”
“That’s the same fool question
that my friends and neighbors ask
me.”
“Because I had moi - e money than
I'knew what to do with. Now
have more to do than I have money
with.”
“I wanted a companion of the op
j-posite sex. P. S.—She is still oppo
“Don’t mention it.”
“Had difficulty xmlocking the door
at night and wanted somebody to let
me in.”
“I was embarrassed, and gave my
wife the benefit of my name so that
I could take the benefit of her name
signed to tj check.”
“Because it is just my luck.”
“I yearned for company. We now
have it all the time.”
“I didn’t intend to go to do it.
“Have exhausted all the figures in
the arithmetic to find an answer to
your question; between mnltfplica
tion and division in the family and
distraction, in addition, the answer
is hard to arrive at.”
“I married to get the best wife in
the world.”
“Because I asked her if she’d have
me. She said she would. I think
she’s got me.”
Quotations from an English med
ical work published a century ago
show how marvelous is the advance
which has been made in the know!
edge of practitioners. One sover
eign remedy of olden times was that
of “blood letting” in cases of hemor
rhage of the lungs. Another plan
was to make consumptive patients
live for a few months in a stable
with cows, -the supposition being
that the exhalations from the ani
mals would cure- those afflicted with
pulmonary diseases. People of rank,
and education submitted to such
tx-eatment. *
The republican plurality in Ore
gon is smaller than it was in the
election of 1898, but considerably
larger than it was in the last pre
ceding presidential election. In 1898
the plurality was 10,551, and in 1896
it was 2,117. The republicans fought
upon a gold standard platform .two
years ago, and this year upon a plat
form endorsing the national admin
istration’s policies with respect to
finance and the new island posses
sions. As compared with two years
ago, it will be seen that the republi
cans have lost approximately 3,000
votes.
The Houston (Tex.) Post (Dem.)
says: “During , the past eleven
months of the present fiscal year the
government hae'eoilected over $63,-
000,000 more in taxes than was nec
essary. But congress has adjourned
without any effort to reduce the size
of this burden. The surplus is pos
sibly being reserved for the addi
tional bounties and subsidies that
are to come next for the pampered
favorites of the administration.
» a ^
Starvation never yet cured dyspepsia.
Persons with indigestion are already half
starved. They’need plenty of wholesome
food. Kodol Dyspepsia Pure digests
what yon eat so the body can be nour
ished whiie the worn out organs are be
ing reconstructed. It is th9 only prep
aration known that will instantly relieve
and completely cure all stomach troub
les, Try it if yon are suffering from in
digestion. It will eertaiuly do you good
Holtzclaw’s Drugstore.
Subscribe for tbe Home
Statistics compiled by the Ger
man government show that the oak
is more likely to. be struck by light
ning than any other tree. The beech
is the most seldom- struck", and next
in exemption is the pine. Of the
lightning-struck trees upon which
tha calculation was based 58 per
cent, were oaks, 21 per cent, firs, 10
per cent, pines, and 7 per cent,
beeches.
About 350 women servants are en
gaged by Emperor William- to look
after the twenty-two royal palaces
and castles belonging to the crown.
Suicide by poison is not more censur
able than by refusal to cure yourself of
Female Trouble with Simmons Sqnaw
Vine Wine or Tablets.
One Specimen That Liven llnried Un
der the River Ded During tlie Dry
Season—India’s Climbing: FercJi and
Siam’s inland Traveler.
Every one knows, that most fishes
breathe in a different manner from
that of the greater number of animals
and that they get the oxygen necessary
-for their life from the water and “not
directly from the atmosphere. Water
dissolves a certain amount of oxygen,
and the gills of fishes take this out of
the water as our lungs take it from
the mixed air we breathe. The giHs
are bundles of flue blood vessels, cov
ered by a delicate membrane that per
mits oxygen to pass through it to the
blood so long as it is moist, but usual
ly when a fish is taken-out of-water
the giUs dry, and suffocation follows.
The gills are very thin and may be
torn or injured by slight violence. Mud,
sand, sawdust or any of the many sim
ilar impurities in water may lacerate
or irritate them, so nature has put fil
ters, like combs, just in front of them
to strain such foreign matters' out of
the water before reaching the real giUs.
These filters are caUed “gill rakers”
and act as do the gratings put over
gutters’ to hold back trash that might
block them up, but the gutters grat
ings get clogged sometimes, and so do
the gill rakers. When this happens,
the fish must die; and it is well known
that the sawdust iii our streams has
been a chief factor in.the destruction
of our fresh water fishes.
But ail iisiies are not dependent on
their gills. Some of them, like our
common carp and goldfish, come to
the surface nbw and then to take in
.draft's of air. and eels can travel over
land around dams or other obstruc
tions. These efforts are trivial com
pared with those of some fishes found
in other part.-; of the world.
These are the lung fishes, or dipnoi,
as naturalists call them, and the ac
counts of them seem to border on the
marvelous. In one group of these ani
mals the ffswimbladder” is a kind of
Lung instead of a mere float, as it is in
most fishes, and in some strange fishes
in India there is a hollow space in the
skull that acts as a lung, the walls of
it having clusters of blood vessels
about it. just as tbe vesicles of our
lungs have. These fishes can bury
thomselves deep-in the mud .when the
•dry season comes ou and live through
it till the rains fill the rivers again.
A fish in the Gambia river makes a
cocoon of mucus and mud, in which it
has been brought from Seuegambia to
Loudon, where the cocoon was gently
washeJ off ami the fish found to be
living. The naturalist Natterer dis
covered a similar fish in the Amazon,
but this one, the Iepidosiren of sci
ence. is one of the rarest specimens
in museums.
In the United States there is a fish,
the bowfin, that can be drowned by
stretching a net below the surface of
the water so that it cannot get to air.
Dr. Hector, the government geologist
of New Zealand, reported finding some
fish about 5% inches long among the
roots of trees at a depth of four feet
in stiff clay. The place where they
were found was some 37 feet above
the Hokitika river, where there had
been a backwater during a time of
flood. The mud fishes are common in
New Zealand, and the early settlers
were surprised. to dig up fish with
their potatoes, as farmers on Long Is
land are said to he in doubt whether
their spades will unearth potatoes or
clams. •>
The most famous of- the lung fishes
is the climbing perch of India that has
often been found several feet up the
mangroves. These animals migrate
overland* when their -own streams fail
and are captured in great numbers by
the natives, to whom they are great
delicacies. Ceylon has several species
of them. The island is dotted over
with bogs of thick, chocolate colored
mud, covered by a sod of reeds and
grasses, and this mud teems with fish.
The Cingalese clear off a space and
wait till the fish come up to fill their
air bladder, when they catch them in
strong dip nets. ,
Sir John. Bowring says that some
lung fishes in Siam go as much as
three miles from water and that they
have been seen flapping along a dusty
road.
Tbe lung fishes constitute a wonder
ful and interesting group of animals
and show the wide range through
which nature can adapt creatures to
their surroundings. Biology is fuU of
such instances, but few are more strik
ing than this.—Washington Star.
tractive, sharp, witty and relished a
joke even at her own. expense. She
was staying with, her sister, Mrs. Ed
wards. She had not been there long,
before everybody knew Miss Mary
Todd. She often said: “When a girl, I
thought I would not marry until I
could get one of the handsomest men
In the country, hut since I became a
woman I learned I-can’t get such a
man, which has caused me to change
my mind. I have concluded now to
marry the ugliest looking man I can
find.”
Later on Lincoln came to town. She
had never seen him before she met
him on the street She was told who
he was and went home and told her
sister she had seen her man, “the ugli
est man I ever saw, Abraham Lin
coln, and I am going to set my cap for
him.’’
That became a common saying in
street gossip. When they were mar
ried, instead of'taking a bridal.trip,
they went to the Globe hotel, owned by
the writer and occupied by a tenant
They took board at $4 a week. When
he got able, he bought a lot for $200
and built a four' room house costing
less than $1,000. When he received
$5,000 from his great railroad case, he
spent $1,500 of it in putting a second
story on his house, and there he Hved
until he went to Washington.—Thomas
Lewis in Leslie’s Weekly.
TO PATENT Good SSL-
may be secured by
our aid. Address,
THE PATENT RECORD,
Baltimore Md
Subscriptions to Tbe Patcat Record «L0Q per aa’mmv
ISAACS’ CAFE,
413 Third Street,
MACON, CA.
I have recently returned in harness to
meet my old friends, and will endeavor
to make as many new ones as possible. 1
am now prepared to
FEED ALL WHO COME,
and will give them a cordial greeting and
satisfy the rimer man with the best in the
market at most reasonable prices. My
Restaurant is more
ESPECIALLY fob LADIES,
having no connection with saloons
If you want anything choice to eat, you wi
know
That Isaac’s s the place to go.
Old Veteran Caterer,
E. ISAACS.
Morphine and Whiskey hafe
its treated without pun or
confinement. Cure guaran
teed or no pay. B. H. VEAL,
| Man’gr Li this Springs San-
A. K. HAWSCES
Tlie ^Famous" Atlanta Optician
lie Telegraphed Up One Flight
That New York is a big city which
the stranger seldom learns very well
was quite forcibly Impressed upon
certain well known Californian a few
days ago. He visits New York twice a
year and has long since learned to find
his way about.
He was charging about in the busi
ness district and suddenly remembered
that he wanted to telegraph to a friend
whose offices are at 195 Broadway.
The Californian dashed Into the: near
est telegraph office, wrote ont his dis
patch and, covering it with the coin,
passed it through the wicket to the
receiver. The receiver smiled.
“What is the matter?” demanded the
Californian.
“Why, this is 195 Broadway,” said
the receiver, “and your man Is np just
one flight of stairs.”
There was a confused period that
lasted about a secondh and when the
Californian got his nerve back he calm
ly said: “I know that. Let it go any
way. I guess I can telegraph across
the room or this counter if I want to
and have the money. We do. that thing
out in California every day for a joke.”
The receiver may have been bluffed,
bnt as receivers go they are hard to
impress.—San Francisco Chronicle.
.Remembered the One ai Home.
A Lebanon man tells the following
for a fact: One day a Linn county
farmer bought a banana at bis store,
the first one lie had ever eaten. After
finishing it he threw the peel on the
floor. After gazing at it a moment he
picked it up and wrapped it in a piece
of paper and remarked:
Guess I’ll take that home to my-
wife and let her see what a banana
looks like. She never seed one.”
And the man had an income of sev
eral thousand dollars a year.—Portland
Oregonian.
Benny’s Status.
Papa,” said Benny Bloobumpar, “I
saw two bad boys flipping cents, and
after awhile .they - went away, and
when they had gene I found a penny.”
'Did you play yourself, Benny?”
asked Mr. Bloobumper.
“No. papa.”
“Then you were an in-a-ceut bystand
er.”—Harper’s Bazar.
A brass plate in the Alabama capitol,
in Montgomery, marks the place where
Jefferson Davis stood when be took
the oath of office as president of the
Southern Confcdeiac-y.
Easily Managed.
House Hunter—But are you sure that
the cellar is perfectly dry?
Real Estate Dealer—Oh, you may be
sure of that! Never was a drop, of wa
ter ever seen in it, even in the wettest
kind of weatljer.
House Hunter—Sorry about that. Do
you know I have a theory that a damp
cellar is the healthiest thing in the
world. In my opinion the water in a
cellar absorbs noxious gases, and, be
sides, it so moistens the whole atmos
phere of the house as to make it more
grateful to the lungs.
Real . Estate Dealer—Come to think
of it, it was that other house on the
other side of the street that has the
dry cellar. The cellar in this house is
never free from water. Really, sir, I
think it will suit yon immensely.—Bos
ton Transcript '
Reports show that over fifteen hun
dred lives have been saved through the
use of One Minute Cough Cure. Most
of these were cases of grippe, croup,
asthma, whooping cough, bronchitis and
pneumonia. Its early use prevents con
sumption. Holtzclaw’s Drugstore.
Lady Betty.
In prerevolutionary days there was
a woman public executioner in Vir
ginia. At that time death sentences
were respited on condition that a crim
inal should perform this office.
“Lady Betty,” as she was afterward
called, was sentenced to death for mur
der." She offered instead "to become
public executioner and held this office
fox’ many years.
It is said that on the scaffold she
officiated without a mask.—Chicago
Tiines-Herald.
RECEIVED
Gold Medal
Highest Award Diploma of Honor
For Superior Lens Grinding and Excel
lency in the Manufacture of Spectacles
and Eve Glasses. Sold in over 8,000 cit
ies and towns in the United States.
Established 1870.
These Famous Glasses for Sale by
H. 11. HOLTZCLAW, Perry,5Sa.
Eye Sight Tested Free.
Whiskey Habits
:d .at home with-
pain of par
lors seat FREE
Lfifl. WOOLLEY CO^
04 North Pryor SL
15S4 MILES
OF
ftZOBERH RA3LWAY
TRAVERSING THE
Finest Fruit,
Agricultural,
Timber, and
itinera! Lands
SOUTH.
IN THE
Small in size and great in results are
DeWitt’s Little Early Risers, the famous
little pills that cleanse the liver and bow
els. They do not gripe. Hollzclaw’s
Drugstore.
It rests with you whether yon
nerve-killing: tobacco habit. M C
removes the desire for tobacco,
out nerrous distress, expel, nice
tine, purifies the blooc
stores lost manhood,
makes yon stre
In health, nerve
continue the.
wiU vouch to
11, patiently,-
box, 81. usually cures; S boxes', *5.50,
S'T Rbaranteed to cure, or we refund money,
sterile, Remedy Co., Chlcsso, Hoatreal, Hew York.
All who suffer from piles will be glad
to learn that DeWitt’s Witch Hazel
Salve will give them instant and perma
nent relief. It will cure eczema and. all
skin diseases. Beware of imitations.
Hoitselaw’s Drugstore.
- - ’ v #'—•
A Cuban newspaper declares that-
there has been more rascality among
United States officials on that island in
eighteen months than their Spanish op
pressors perpetrated in five years.
Health, Strength and Nerve Force" fol
low the use of Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver
Medicine, which insures good Digestion
and Assimilation.
$1.23 a Bay
AT THE -
StubblBfleld House,
Next to Academy of Music,
MAGON, GA.
. Table supplied with the
best the market affords.
No more comfortable
beds in the city.
MEALS^ 25c.'
LODGING 50c-
Mrs. A. J. JSparks,
PROPRIETRESS.
C A TT i ISilM'B ’•‘■v™ mouth’s treatment of
LA I AnKni i Cutarriiof the head and nose
x 8 for 50c. Best and simplest
TIT 1 P1|-j“ remedy ever discovered.
tY'Ajil ! Booklet and sample for 2 cents.
ii nwu j ATLANTA PREPARATION CO.
U3 N. Pkyoi: St., Atlanta, Ga.
DROPSY!
CU2ED with v«cefabl<
Kemedief. Have cored
.many thousand ea-es
called hopeless. In tea
at least two-thirds of all symptoms rernov
jd- Testi monials.-md TEN DAYS treatment free
DE. H. E.-G2B£N'S SONS, Box K, Atlanta. Ga
THROUGH RATES AND TICKETS
FURNISHED UPON APPLI
CATION TO ALL POINTS
Moa^th, S&aath,
East, West»
" ' Central of Georgia Railway,
• Ocean Steamship Co.
FAST FREIGHT
AND LUXURIOUS
PASSENGER ROUTE
TO j
the
AND Ernst
Complete Information, Rates, Schedules o!
Trains and Sailing Dates ot Steamers Cheer
fully Furnished by any Agent of the Company.
THEO. D. KLINE,
Genera! SupL
£. H. HINTON,
Traffic Manager,
SAVANNAH, CA.
J. C. HAILE,
Gsn’l Pass Agt
PATENTS'
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TRADE-MARKS I
AND COPYRIGHTS 4
OBTAiNED J
ADVICE AS TO PATENTABILITY PnfP I
Notice m “ Inventive Age ” ME gs; SS® <
• Book “How toobtain Patents” KB Fac Wm j
Charges moderate. No fee tHl patent is secured. 1
Letters strictly confidentkL Address, 1
E. G. SIEGERS, Patent Lawyer, Washington, D.C. j
50 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
Trade Harks
Designs
Copyrights Ac.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion tree whether an
Invention is probably patentable. Communica
tions strictly confldentlaL Handbook on Patents
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