Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 October 1914 — Page 3
S VTIKDAY. OCTOBER 10, 1!M4.
GREENCASTLE DAILY HERALD.
PAGE THREE.
PCULIRY AND EGGS BUILD HOME
, n 24 Veart Couple Educates Two Children and ErecU $5,000 House From Profits.
Kaunas City. Mo—Mr and Mrs T j Murphy, who Uee at Sixty seventh ami Monroe streets, hove proved that money iau be made from chickens vutboul heedlUK the rules of sclent ,ii, poultry-raising. Common sense Is ineu i- ipe for success Without trapuesims keeping books, using incuba toir oi preparing elaborate menus, tnir couple has erected a $6,000 home »ud educated two children from money saved on eggs and poultry during the pusi twenty four years. tu addition to this they have niateriSlly decreased the high cost of living by using some of their eggs and chickens on their own table. Both the childicii were given musical educations and the son is now an instructor lu the West Side Conservatory of
Music in Chicago.
Starting in 1800. the Murphy's pm-cba-e'd a few hens and have gradually Increased their flock, although it Is still a small one. They make no pretense of being poultry farmers, bin have hopes some day of going into the business on a large scale. “One can't Keep high bred poultry unless he has separate pens and yards for different strains and breeds, and I’m not fixed to do that now,'' declares Murphy. Tui no* a scientific poultryman at all 1 watch (he hells and do the things it seem to bring the uiosl egr he besl chicken meat For
•s, 1 ttnd that I have to mix hut I always use the very Every spring 1 get a new
roost hi or so - good ones, not closely rclaid to my hns 1 never use roosters hull lied from eggs laid by my ow n hens I always use Barred Itoek malm- hui I have several breeds of hen chiefly Barred Bocks, for goii dal purposes. Black J.angshans for iht- iiieui and Columbian Wyaudolles foi laying Every once in a while I get a stuing of some other breed The roosters I buy or raise from tuiiighr eggs serve Just a year and Hieu are sold or traded We eat the y...iiig roosters related to the llock. Uid the hens are usually gotlen rid
tu afiei l he second year
I i any al least live pullets over every winter, and in summer there are usiiuily around two hundred chickens I lie i,< lei . one l»i cvei y dozen liens, i mi vtnli Iheni all (he year. The pnl lt-n in these winiei hatches will lay Ihe fall, and set next winter - n,t ie always one ready to set about
the time I need her
I haven't any special feeding rules 1 Jusi give llieni a variety, lu the v> iner Uiej gel plenty ut black or n >1 prppei In Wan mash twice a wee!,, sml plenty of warm water And I lurn Vui loose m the forty loot lol they UiUat scratch and team a bit to keeu
til) pn
the bit -, best stoc-
nealtby aniThappy I’m careful about leeding the young chicks, for too early feeding causes more losses than any thing else I leave th« hens and chicks right on the Deal for twenty-four hours after hatching; then 1 let them run for another twenty-four until they are forty-eight hours old bfore giTing them anything to eat And no wet mod then. Their lirst food u dry . oatmeal flakes or crackers ” The Murphy’s have done all this on a forty-foot "farm”- a varaul lol next lo tiie one on which their hodse stands. GIANT sells his own coffin Undertaker Would Avoid Inconveni. ence to Friends. Birmingham, Ala Sam Foley, a Birmingham undertaker, Is 6 feel 6 inches tall Several years ago. when he was ill, he had buill a special giant coffin for himself A few days ago a neighhui, an inch or Iwo lallei i,iau Foley v. a - killed Nowhere could a eotlin be seemed lo tit him And so it cam,* about that Sam Foley h id In give up his i ofliu for the occasion. BOY ATTACKED BY HAWK; FATHER SAVES HIS LIFE Parent Goe* to Rescue With Ax After Bird Fastens Talons in Lad's Fate. Milford, Uel A hungry hawk nearly killed a small son of L. N. Horsey, a farmer near here The bird was eating two chickens Horsey started to gel ills gun. Meanwhile, his sou, Edward, 8 years old, ran into the pool try yard and threw snowballs at the hawk. The bird (urned on the boy. It sank its talons into his face and began digging him with his hill The lad foughl back as best he could, but the battle was all in'favor of the hawk The youngster's screams brought his father with an ax Horsey slashed Hie hawk and broke ils wing He ti nally killed it. Measures His Money As Farmer Would Oats Bridgeton. N. J. Benjamin Bonham, a storekeeper of this city, has the unusual hobby of collecting pennies. Not orjly does he procure all of them he ran, but he often u^es them in returning change to customers. He paid one bill ot $44 in pennies, and the persons who sought to buy postage stamps or small articles for ihe sake of gelling a ten dollar bill cashed were often peeved by recejv Ing their change in a paper bag all pennies. Bonham measures his money as a farmer would oats by the bushel M>- declares he has Ti bushel of one cent coins and says Iherc are exactly !i3,i>41! of Iheni He counted them himself and enjoyed the experience.
NiMH C OI UlMI.MXTKATIOV Noli., is hereby given flint the in-In i. icd |,;i been appointed hy Ihe Judge of Ihe Circuit Court of I'utnum (uunty, -itule of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of i.evi F. Linder, late of Putnam County, Indiana, de ceased. Said estate is supposed to he solvent. Hated this 28th day of September, 1914. V N. NEW, Executor. H m M. Rulherlin, Atty. fit Wkly, Oct. 3rd.
\\ loit W ould You Do? C- : ■ are many times when one I n - nueMiuns another’s actions and nictiv. Men act differently under j different circumstances. The question' i what would you do right now if •' - had a severe cold? Could you do than to take Chamberlain’s ' < a h Remedy? It i- highly recomn " “h'd by people who have used it for 11! "l know its value Mrs. (). K. Pi Fnd., v “i hambt i i- 1 ' t ough Remedy is worth its 1 In in gold and 1 take pleasure in K ommemling it.” For sale by all dealers.
For Sale or Exchange
The "Iiullillg |IUW • r" id the Herald Want Ad column is unquestioned. It is a sales medium of the highest ottlcieney.
WANTED
The enst is vary trifling cimi|mred to lie- resiills oltInilied— <too-half rent a word. No advertisements for less than 10-eelits
Lost, Strayed, Found
For quick results try a Herald Want Ad. They are wonders.
“No Hunting ON This Farm”
Do you intend to post your farm with “No Hunting signs this winter. If you do you can get signs at this office—Printed on either cloth or cardboard Cloth Sigins-IOc each. Cardboard Signs-5c each. [All other hinds of signs al same prices.]
The Herald Office Printers & Publishers.
Helpful Beauty Hints ♦ + + Some Valuable Information On Ibe Skin—What to Do for Roughness In Hair—Good Points for the Stout Girl To Develop Arms and Shoulders —To Live in Perfect Health
Live up stairs If you wish to be In good health! “Up how many flights?" Only one flight of seven steps. I will describe them. kirst Step—Eat wheat, oats, corn, fruits, beef and mutton, plainly cooked in moderate quantity, and but two meals a day. Third Step—Exercise freely In the open atr. Fourth Step Retire early and rise early. Fifth Step Wear flannel next your skin every day of the year, and so dispose your dress that your limbs shall be kept warm. Bathe frequently. Sixth Step Live in the sunshine. Let your bedroom be one which receives a flood of light, and spend your days either out in the sunlight or lu a room which is well lighted. Seventh Step Cultivate a cheerful temper. Seek the society of Jolly people. Absolutely refuse to worry, and above all don't be afraid to laugh. Go up this flight of stairs. Live above. Sickness cannot craw-l up there. Disease prowls about in the basement, rarely does It get "up stairs.”
Would Like to Get Thin. Will you please tell me how to get thin? 1 weigh Kla pounds and am only ll! years old. Please tell me what to eat and what not to eat. Is battling good? Are oranges and bananas fattening? What Is good for freckles? N. Y. If you had given me your measurements, including your height, I would be able to tell you whether or not you nhould weigh 139 pounds. However, taking It for granted that yon should not, 1 will advice you to diet. Eat iiitle or no white bread, drink no milk or cream, avoid all sweet and and starchy foods. Bananas are fat’ening because they contain so much 4tan h, but oranges and lemons may be eaten, for they have tendency to reduce the weight. Physldal exercise Is the best thing to decrease the weight. It quickens the respiration and Increases the quantity of oxygen taken Into the lungs. Oxygen eonsumes carbon, which Is thus prevented from being converted Into fat. Applications of buttermilk are very good for removing freckles.
To Develop Arms and Shoulders. Will you kindly publish some ineth od of falteuiug the arms and shuul decs, and also a way to get rid of goosefle h" on the arms? Is there any way to make the eve lashes grow long? . CLAIRE. To develop the arms and shoulders, massage them every night with cocoa butter, and exercise in the morning with dumbbells. I cannot tell you what to do to get rid of gooseflesh, for in each case the cause of It may be slightly different and therefore each case may need a different treatment. Sometimes It Is caused by the poor condition of the blood, and then again by Improper circulation. 1 advise you to consult a physician and have him prescribe. If you will apply vaseline to the edge of tiie eyelids it w-lll Increase the growth of the eyelashes. Be sure that (lie vaseline is pure, so that if any should happen to touch the eye Itself no harm will be done.
DOUBLY PROVEN.
For Rough Hair. When there Is a roughness tn the hair and It fails to grow it should be brushed with a brush having stltT pig bristles, which reach the scalp but do not scratch It. The brushing should be done at night, Hrst applying a few drops of sweet almond oil to the scalp with the tips of the Angers, massaging \t well. This inassuging Is not rubbing. but a sort of pinching process, where the thumbs and Anger tips are placed about lluee Inches apart and then brought together at Intervals all over the head. Pass the brush with long even strokes clear from the roots to the end of the hair, and give at least 60 light strokes, then pass the palms over the hair from the scalp down. When a shampoo Is needed, add a teaspoonful of glycerine to the rinsing water and dry the hair in the wind and sun when pos slide, and never with the heat. For Irritated Skin. Many women are quite unfortunate In the summer In that their skin be comes Irritated witb Ibe warm wealli er. There are several soothing nppll cations to reduce the Inflammation One of these is bicarbonate of soda made Into a strong solution. A ta blespoonful of soda to about half a pint of water Is an excellent mixture, and the applications should be used cold. The wash should he allowed to dry In the skin Oxide of zinc ointment is both cooling and healing Warm water and rastlle soap should be used, w ith an old piece of soft inns lln as a wash cloth. It Is often best to dust the face with talcum powder. If the skin Is subject to chafing use a great deal of the powder. Cream of tartar water Is cooling and It Is mixed the same way as the soda.
Greencastle Readers Can No Longer Doubt the Evidence. This Greencastle citizen testified long ago. Told of quick relief—of undoubted benefit. The facts are now confirmed. Such testimony is complete—the evidence conclusive. It forms convincing proof of merit. George W. Wood, farmer, Greencastle, says: “For the past ten or twelve years I had disordered kidneys I Buffered from severe pains in my hack and about four years ago 1 was in bad shape. 1 was hardly able to bear the pain in my back and a too frequent desire to pass 'be kidney secretions caused me annoyance. I finally got Doan’s Kidney’s Pills at Jones, Stevens Co.’s Drug store and less than one box relieved me. 1 am now well.” Confirmed Proof. Later Mr. Wood said: “Doan’s Kidney Pills are a fine remedy. 1 willingly confirm all I said in my former public statement, recommending them.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan’s Kidney Pills the same that Mr. Wood had. Foster Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.
ELECTIVE AFFINITIES.
NOTICE OF EXECUTOR’S OF RF! AT. EST \TE.
SA1.I
An Excerpt from Artemus Ward of Contemporaneous Appositnest. The exsentrlc female clutched me frantically by the arm and holloerd: ’You air mine, O you air mine 1 '’ "Scarcely," 1 sed, eudeverln to git loose from her. But she clung to me and sed: "You air my Alflnerty!" "What upon arth Is that?" I shout-
ed.
"Dost thou not kuow?” “No. I doestent!" “Listen, man. & I’ll tell ye!" sed the strange female: “for years 1 hav yearned for thee. I knowed tnou wast in the world, sumwhares, tho I didn't know whare. My hart sed he would cum and I took courage. He has cum — he's here—you air him— you air my Alflnerty. O, ’tis too mutch!" and she
sobbed agin.
“Yes,” 1 ansered, “I think It Is a darn site too mutch!" "Hast thou not yearned for me?" she yelled, ringin’ her hands like a female play-actor. ' Not a yearn!" 1 bellered at the top of my voice, throwin’ her away from me. Artemus Ward. His Book: Among the Free-Lovers.
His Grump.
"For years and years," grouched the Old Codger, In his usual pessimistic way, “we have been sending missionaries to tin* Chinese- plank-shaped and tub shaped ones, both with sidewhiskers, who spake in nasal tones and acted with the chastened intolerance of hyenas; young, dried-up ones with weak eyes and weaker intellects;
The undersigned, executor of the last will of Mary E. Etter, deceased,! hereby gives notice that by virtue of the power by said will conferred, he will at the hour of 1(1 o'clock a. m.l
on the 27th day of October, 1!)14, at the Foster Company’s store in Man-• slimy, sliding ones, who were gathhattan, Indiana, and from day to day j er'ntf material from which to lecture thereafter until sold, offer for sale at! nnd vvi,h whl, ’ h to furnish a house or private sale, all the interest of said two when tliey KO ' back: oldnlal11 i , , i . , ones that looked like flying-machines
decedent in and to the following described real estate, in Piitnan
County, Indiana, to-wit:
The south half of lots numbers ninety-two (!I2) and ninety-three (!i!l| in the Town of Manhattan, Indi-
ana.
A part of tiie east half of tiie southeast quarter of section twentylive (25), Township thirteen (13) north, Range five (5) west, in Put-| nam County, Indiana, and a part ofi the southwest quarter of fractional i section thirty (.'10) Township thirteen (13) north, Range four (4) west in said county and state. Bounded as follows, to-wit: Beginning at the northeast corner of said southeast quarter of said section twenty-five (25) and running thence west three (3) chains and seventy-nine (79) links. Thence south 3 degrees east twenty-five (25) chains and fortynine (49) links, thence north fiftyseven degrees east, one (1) chain and twenty (20) links, thence south G8 degrees east three (!!) chains and six (Of links to the township line, thence north with said township line two (2) chains and sixty-two (02) links, thence east seven (j) chains and seventy-seven (77) links, thence north twenty-one (21) chains and thirty-five (.35) links to the north line of said southwest quarter of said fractional section thirty (30), thence west seven (7) chains and seventyseven (77) links to the township line, thence north with said township line to the place of beginning containing twenty-six (20) acres more or less. Said sale will be made subject to the approval of the Putnam Circuit Court, for not less than the full apprai ed value of said rqal estate, and upon tiie following terms and conditions: All of said purchase money shall be paid in cash. JOHN L. FELLOWS, Executor. It W Sept 25th Posters
Distressed. The electric needle Is teb only way by which superfluous hair can be permanently removed There Is no danger attached tu this treatment.
or old fashioned churns, Just as it happened; and a glorious list of others, all of whom needed the money and cost ns a great deal. And. still, in spite of our beneficence to themward, the ungrateful Chinese 'pear to be Just as unregenerate and almost as peculiar as they were in the first
place. What say?" Professional Query. ■
Among the papers of R It. Stoddard that Ripley Hitchcock edited there is a letter which Oliver Wendell Holmes, the poet-physician, is said to have received This letter was written many years ago by an ignorant country practitioner, and it is interesting because it shows the low level to which lu the early part of the last, century. It was possible for medical education
to fall.
The letter, verbatim, follows: "Dear dock I have a pashunt whose physlco! sines shoze that the winplpe Is ulcerated of and his lung hav dropped into his stuiuh h. He Is unabel to swaller and 1 fear his stumivk toobe is gone I have giv him everything without efeck bis Father is wealthy tumble and inllueushul. He is an active member of the M E. church and God noes I don't want too loose him wot shall 1 do?" Pour Uncle Ed. A Ballbuoie man was recently show lag his nice new opera-hat to his Iiitle nephew, and when he caused the toppiece to spring open three or four times the youngster was delighted. A few days thereafter the uncle, during a visit to the suiiie household, brought with him a silk hat of the shiny, nun-collapsible kind When be was about to leate the house, he encountered the aforesaid youngster running down the ball with what looked like a black accordion. Uncle Ed," obsei ved the boy, "this one goes awfully hard. I had to sit. on It; but even then l couldn't get It more than half-shut." UNAVOIDABLE DELAY.
DR. O. F. OVERSTREET —Dentist— Office in Bence Building, South Vine Street, Greencastle, Iml.
W. W. TUCKER I’hysirian and Surgeon. Office Vine sheet, between Wash ington and Walnut St., Greencastle, Ind.
W. M. McGAUGHEY I’hysirian and Surgeon. Telephone: Office, .327; Res., .3.39. Office in Evans' Block, No. 24 South Jackson street. Residence, corner Bloomington and Seminary streets.
OSTEOPATHY. II. L. Betzner, resident osteopath, graduate in three years’ course at Kirksville, Mo., member of staff of Spaunhurst Osteopaths. I.ady attendant. Phone 22(i day or night. Donner Block, Greencastle.
Best results
may be realized ^ through want B
ads in the Herald
m i I m is
h i m t to
i e 1 ' J
“Dotte’s case of brain fever lasted a long time, didn't It?" "Yes, the germs lost a lot of time finding bis Drain."
How Strange. A woman who visited the British museum recently inquired of uu at tendunt: “Have you no skull of Cromwell? I have been looking all around for a skull of Oliver Cromwell." "No, madam," replied the attendant. "We’ve never had one.” "How very odd!” she exclaimed; "they have a flue one in the museum at Oxford." A Shifted Burden. "So you sold that miserable old mule of yours?" "Yawslr," replied Mr. Erastus Pink ley; "fob real money." “Doesn't It weigb on your conscl ence?" "Well, boss. I’s done bad dal mule on my mind so long. It's kind of a re lief to change off an' git him on my conscience." Division. “The automobile is rapidly dividing the public Into two classes " "Yes. the quick or the deed."
MIKES UK 8i RAISING VIOLETS
Michigan Woman Has Good Annual Income From Growing Dainty Flowers STARTED WITH $2,500 OUTLAY From First Her Plant Has Been Sue ceseful and She Has State Repu tation Lansing, Mich.—Violet culture—ee peclally the large double violet—Is having its own troubles these days, and to tlnd anyone who is succeeding when so many are abandoning (he business is like feeling the proverbial "needle in a hay mow.” It was a pleasure a few weeks ago to stop olt at Die lillle town of Lawton, Mil'll . and xlsit Miss Isabel Hitely and her violet greenhouse. Miss Bitely’s father died when she was only 15 years of age and her mother when she was 20 Being then the only child living she was left without a home One day. while standing In a florist’s store admiring a huneh of violets, the thought came to her "I wonder if I could grow violets ” Once the Idea had taken hold of her, she spared no effort In equipping herselt w ith the necessary knowledge regarding the culture peculiar to the violet In the spring of 1909. with her small savings of $1,700, she made Ihe venture. Her total outlay for one and a quarter acres o! land and her present greenhouse. 24x110. was $2,600. This left her. when ready to do business, with considerable indebtedness. It was thus that this plucky woman launched out into this very precarious branch of horticulture with the courage horn of necessslly. From the first her work lias been successful. She is, however, a most painstaking and methodical grower. Nothing that Insures the right conditions is neglected Her methods are simple rather than complicated, but are followed scrupulously. Only those who understand the peculiar and Insistent demands of this little plant can fully realize the exacting life she leads Miss Hitely grows only the old reliable Marie-Louise variety Directly after Easter cuttings are taken from the old plants for the next season's crop The earth Is removed from one end of one of the benches lo the depth of two and one-half inches filled in with sharp, clean sand In this the cuttings are placed for tooling, being set about two Inches apart each waj When the old plants are through oloomiug, they are thrown out, and the soil down lo six or eight inches below the surface is removed, and then refilled with decayed -ed and well lotted haili.bld feitllizer Early in .In o the tunings, which by that lime have nici i lean loot-- are set Into their permanent beds During all the growing sea on. that Is. up to about October, the plants must be syringed very frequ ntly to daunt the red spider, which i one of the most formidable foes of the violet To keep off other insects the house is treated with hydrocyanic acid gas ev cry two weeks In summer and once a inonth in wintt-i Once in lln- > irl> full and once sgain late in November Miss Bilely spreads a thin routing of well-rotted barnyard fertilizer over all the benches. This insult's bloom and foliage of a dark rich color The iiuh't plant begins to produce the first of October, coutiuulng lo in crease in quantity till late tn March, when tiie ravage of the sun's heal liegins lo tell on the bloom until, by Hie llrsl of May the blooms will be ueai |y, or quite gone Miss lliteli hum-lies Hie bloom in Hat-topped bunches of fifty, with a con ventlonal row of leaves around them For I lie wholesale Irade each bunch has Its steins wound with wet paper, then oil paper EARLY FURNITURE RETURNS
Horaebalr Chairs, Landseer Engrav logs and Wax Fruit and Flowers
in London Shops
lamdon \ sign of relief went up t quarter of u century ago when the ugly furniture and ornaments of the early and mid-Victorian era went out of fashion and horsehair-covered turn Bure was replaced by better designs and comfortable leather and stuff oov erings, and people began to look around them for less hideous decora lions for their rooms. Nowadays, however, Victorian things seem to be returning lo favor, and most of the small dealers In antiques are slocking them to a large extent The early Victorian drawing-room chairs, inlaid with mother of pearl and having gilt designs, an- fetching quite high prices, and the mahogany and walnut work-tables which the present generation remembers their grand mothers using, and given a place of
honor In the window
Baskets of wax flowers and fruit under glass and white stone figures and vases are also In demand, and, without their glass rovers, find a place . In the collector's cabinet The copper |X breakfast service and hot-watei kel *,*
ties are much sought after.
The hideous early Victorian mahogany and horsehair furniture also has returned It disappeared because the mahogany was used for making the popular reproductions of Chippendale
and SUeiator chairs
The Progressive Ticket
State Ticket. U. S. Senator—Albert J. Beveridge. Secretary of State—William A. Pierson. Attorney General—Arthur Q. Manning. Auditor of State—George W. Latt. Superintendent of Public Instruction—John W. Kendall. Treasurer of State—John Bower. State Geologist—Jethro C. Culmer. Clerk of Supreme Court—Edward R. Lewis. Judge Supreme Court—Fifth District Lou \s. Vail* Judge Appellate Court—Second District—George H. Koons. Judge Appellate Court—First District—Elias D. Solsberry. Judge Appellate Court—Second District—Willis E. Roe. Judge Appellate Court—First Dis-trict-Henry P. Pearson. Judge Appellate Court—Second District— Homer C. Underwood. District Ticket. For Congress Fifth District—Otis E. Gulley. County Ticket. Representative—Ulysses S. Young. Prosecutor—Ross Peck. Sheriff—Frank Scott. Clerk—Lloyd Summers. Treasurer—A. R. York. Recorder John L. Gallion. Auditor -Ashton Priest. Assessor Win. 11. Peck, Sr. Coroner—Dr. F. L. McAntnch. Surveyor— Rut ph 1 )onnohue. Commissioner Second District— Jesse Herriott. Commissioner Third District— Greenberry Meeks.
County Council
Grant Williams.
County Council
R. F. Wells.
County Council William S. Collins. County Council
William Johna.
County Council
First District— Second District— Third District Fourth District at Large—Mori
Fordice, Cyrus OTlair, Robert W
A lion.
Greencastle Township Ticket. Trustet Oscar Williams. Assessor Robert 3’. Hamrick. Justice of Peace Joseph Donnohue and Thomas Thompson. Constable Eck 11. Welch and < harles Toney. Advisory Board John McAlindei, Elmer Crawley, R. A. Davidson. —(Advertising.)
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Judge of the Circuit Court ot' I’utnum County, State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of Samuel Right sell, late of Putnam County, lu diutiu, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Dated this 21st day of September. 1914. WILLIAM B. VESTAL, Administrator. 3t W. Sept. 25.
PAINT Your Wagons and Implements this Fall
Don't neglect your vehicles and implements so that they are worn out before their time. Each year some people must .j. buy new wagons, new binders x and new cultivators, simply heY cause they didn’t take care of •j. the ones they bought only a few X short years before.
| } i
It will pay you to paint your wagons and machinery this full with LOW1 BROS., WAGON PAINT. It is especially adapted to resist the severe action of the elements insures maximum life and service from your equip-
ment.
WE SELL IT.
JONES STEVENS COMPANY
Is
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