Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 51, Number 27, Jasper, Dubois County, 2 April 1909 — Page 2

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WEEKLY COURIER

HUN KU. 1IOANH, Publizier. jAsrBn. INDIANA. The valu of money depends on tho inattua nf 1 . . . I . - i. b v ic limn nuu iitriiua tu No wonder spring Is pure. Think of tho number of new leaves the turns! No mntter what happens, keep on hoping and trying. Despair Is tho height of folly. No man ever lived who wns able to break Cupid and Reason to the samo double harness. Why are some learned people like a mnrblo top? Because they are very hlghl iKllhed. New religious movement is started to cure you of diseases you ouly think you have and that's about half. Judging by the deaths among the French immortals, Immortality in Pram-.- is rather a risky business. A school of applied aeronautics has opened in New York. Its curriculum Is at present all up in the air. Marriage Is n queer sort of lottery after all, because those who draw the prizes hardly ever appreciate them. There was the deuce to pay in the house on tho verge of the cold wave. The ashes got mad and choked the furnace. If Nancy Hanks Lincoln could have looked forward 100 short years. February 12. 1S00, would have been a yet prouder day for her. A new railroad has been opened between West Virginia and North Carolina, but .Mr. Harrlman will get It If it don't watch out. A Massachusetts man complains that his wife tied him to a bedpost and whipped him. Otherwise she seems to have treated him fairly well. A Pennsylvania fanner has had one of his sons sent to prison for two years for stealing ono of his hogs. Good chance for the uplift movement there. An Eastern paper's financial editor reports a "sudden drop in eggs." It is to be honed in the Interest of nil concerned liiat the eggs wore strictly fresh. Toothbrushes for cows strike a London medical Journal on Its funnybone. But tho cows In America scrape their hoofs on the doorsllls before ontering our host barns. Oregon legislators have passed a law lUnltlng the length of women's hatpins to ten inches. Now the men of that State take up the struggle for existence with renewed courage. The navy is courageous to the core, but none will blame the naval authorities for quailing before the battery ol indignant eyes of the Annapolis girls nor see any other course they could take but meek surrender to enraged feminine onslaughts. More than COO women are roported to be studying medicine at French universities. Paris alone is said to have 100 women practitioners, most of them holding official places of more or less importance. Women physicians are preferred In girls' high schools, normal schools and public schools generally. An exchange, commenting on the the fresh air fad. says It is not shared by the bird that smothers itself under Its wing or by the bear that buries itself in a cave for the winter. Nor, it might be added, by the cat which sleeps by the hour with Its nose hlddon In Its fur and the dog curled up Into a ball. And none of those creatures, so far as known, over suffers from tuberculosis. In his various plays Shakospearo used about 15.000 words. Milton used only about half as many In his writings. A person of culture and education has a speaking vocabulary of about 5,000 words; an ordinary person uses from 2,000 to 3,000 words. This would Indicate that tho 300,000 words or the English language Include a good many that are seldom employod except in Presidents' messages. Frank Wentworth. of Wlnstod, Conn., has doped it out that in 2,000,000 years the human race will have developed so far that instead of walking on a pair of alternate pendulums, as now, mon will have on their lower extremities wheels actuated by turbines driven by hot air. Here's a chanco for some people to get just 2.000.000 years ahead of the rest of us, merely by standing on their hoads and talking rapidly. New York woman suffragists advocate taking babies to tho polls In that emancipated ago when womon vote. There is no rooson why a checkroom for babies couldn't be provided tho same as in tho department stores, where tho precious bunches of swoptness could bo deposited while the mothors woro chewing up pencils in efforts to make up their minds as to how thuy should vote.

"HOOSIERISMS"

Little Items of Interest All Over the Length and Breadth of Indiana.

New Laws In Effect. Indiana's now laws went into effect Inst Saturday by proclamation of the Governor. Mrs. Hinkle Found Guilty. The Jury at Sullivan In tho case of Mrs. Helle I linkte, on a chnrge of ar son, returned a verdict of guilty. Theatre Pays Big Rent. A ten-cent theatre will bo opened In Indianapolis, April 1. which will pay rent in excess of $10,000 yenrly. Makes Record in Indictments. Tho Oraud Jury In Dekalb county has established a record In tho returning of seventy-oight indictments. Manufacturers Optimistic. Indiana manufacturers with few exceptions are Unding trade conditions good and report prospects good for a good season. Little Girl Burned to Death. Sarah, the eight-year-old daughtor of Frank Lowdur, of Greenfield, was burned to death. Her clothlug caught from a fire under a kettle in the yard. Went Up With the Stumps. Goorge Tremaln, a well-known young farmer living near Alert, was killed In an explosion. He was blowing stumps with dynamite. Bars Kidnaping Pictures. Indianapolis authorities have orderoil moving picture theatres not to show pictures of kidnaping scenos. The Whltla caso caused this order. Lots of Those "Blind Tigers." Seventy-five pleas of guilty for il legal sales of whisky wero entered by three druggists at Winchester. The fines nuu costs Imposed aggregate $1,200. Faces Murder Indictment. John Greenwood, who shot Andrew Parker while the two men were in a buggy accompanied by Parker's Avlfe, was indicted at Washington for second degree murder. Marion Going After 30,000. Marion 30 ftofl in 1910. This is the Rlnenn of thf boosting chamber of ' commerce which Is now engaged In ' an endeavor to increase lis mem dot ship from 3SQ to 500 members. Who Wouldn't Resign? Chauncey Bolnsett, an employe of I tho Ft. Wayne Knitting Mills, resigned his position following tho receipt of Intelligence from Germany that he has fallen heir to an estate of $60,000. Building Boom In Gary. George Mayer, a prominent attor ney of Chicago, announces that he has completed arrangements for building GO houses this spring In Onkdale addition, suburbs of Gary, the work of construction to begin at once. Fighting the White Plague. Tho Antl-Tuberculosis Society of Smith nnd has Inaugurated a stren uous ramnnlcn ntrninst tho ravages of the white plngue. In every protesti 1 ant cnurcn ministers mauu appeals for tho cause. Birds Set House Afire. A bird building its nest in the rain trough of John Tyler's house at Torre Haute incautiously used a match as part of the building material. Later It nocked the match Into a blaze and set fire to tho straw In the nesL This sot the house ablaze. All Looking for Jobs. Tho number of applications filed with Governor Marshall for appoint ment under his administration ha3 broken all Indiana records. He Is swamped with them and is now trying to select good mon for tho placos at his disposal. Woman Hermit Dies In Fire. Her clothes lcnlted from the hot c.rmU In a nan of ashes. Mrs. Eliza beth Hollowell, a wealthy South Bend recluse, wns burned to denth whilo alone at her home. Mrs. Hollowell was 7S years old and was known for her charitable acts. Killed In Odd Accident. Frank Hoguo. a miner near Torre Haute, was Instantly killed and Isaac Morris, a companion, was seriously burned In tho explosion of a keg of blasting powder which wns Ignited from a snark from tue inttors cap lamp as the two men woro talking. Will Round Up Horse Thieves. Ttm runners of Clav county are or ganizing to resist the work of horse thieves. In the last few weeks a num ber of valuable horses have been stolen In Clay county and tho snmo is true of Putnam. Vigo, Greene. Montgomery and other western Indiana counties. This Reform Surely Needed. An nppoal for better air In tho intorurban cars of tho Stato was made to tho State Hoard of Health last week. It came In the form of a letter addressed to Dr. J. N. Hurty, secretary of tho board, from a woman In Lebanon who patronizes tho interurbnn cars nnd expresses tho belief that the air whtch the passengers brentho Is detrimental to the honlth of the public. She asks for Information as to whether there Is not snmo law to compel the companies to ventllnto their cars more effectively.

An Airship In Lawrenceburg.

J. K. Scott, of Chicago, has arrived in Lawrenceburg with his airship. Ho win take it to tho Henry Hobrink farm between Lawrenceburg nnd Aurora, where ho will experiment for tho United States Government. Mr. Scott says the spot selected is tho best suit ! olkln ...1,1.1.. Mn II. . t ...II.. . t Cincinnati, as there are about 1.000 acres of level land without trees or brush. Big Land-Owner Dead. W. B. Fowler la dead nt his homo In Earl Park, at tho ae of 72 years, heart disease bclnir tho cause. Tho death of Mr. Fowler closes another chapter in the history of one of Henton county's- oldest and most inlluentlal families, dating back to when the county was a wild country. Ho was vice-president of the Hank of Benton County, of Fowler, and owned land In this Stato and Illinois aggregating 10,000 acres. Big Gas Well at Petersburg. Tho, Queen Oil Company, drilling on William Lamb's farm, two miles west of Petersburg, struck gas at such a pressure that largo piecos of stone were thrown from the derrick. All drilling had to be stopped and attempts are now being made to cap the well. The pressure exceeds four hundred pounds to tho cubic inch, and the volume Is estimated at 5.000.000 cubic feet. The well is one and onehalf miles west of tho famous Jumbo as well, which for seven years had a pressure of 575 pounds and was tho biggest woll In the State and is sixteen miles north of the gas and oil wells In the southern Pike county field. Indiana's School Report Out. The biennial report of the State Superintendent of Public Instruction4 for 1S07-190S, a volume of 1,017 pages, has been received from the State printer. Much space I nthe report is given to the progress mndo In tho State In the matter of centralizing country schools, a system which was combated unsuccessfully in the last Legislature because of unsatisfactory conditions which prevail In tho methods of carrying children to and from the centralized schools. This part of the volume is profusely Illustrated by half-tones of centralized school buildings and country school buildings which have been abandoned. Testing Indiana Maple Sugar. Dr. H. A. Bryan, of the Bureau of Chemistry of the food and drugs department of tho Federal Government, has Just completed n tour of several days of the mnplo sirup district of the State, in which he collected a large number of samples of sirup from the Indiana camps for testing purposes In tho national laboratory. The department of food and drug Inspection of tho Stato Board of Henl'h has Just completed tests of a large number of samples of maple sirup collected from Indiana camps, and the report is that the product this year Is singularly free from adulterants. Tho product is hardly up to the usual standard In tho matter of quality, due to the comparativo Varly date at which the buds began to appear on the trues. Agar Acquitted of Forgery. Henry E. Agar was acquitted on the charge of forgery at Princeton last week after the Jury had boon out three hours nnd forty minutes. "It was what I expected." said Mr. Agar to newspaper men as ho was leaving the court-room. "I must telegraph my boys In San Benito, Texas, the glad news." This is only one of the fifteen cases of forgery and Intent to defraud charged against Agar, but it is not announced at this time whether the other cases will be taken up. Agar Is still under bond of $500 on seven of the remaining cases. It is doubtful however. If any other cases are taken up, as this was regarded as the strongest Tho verdict generally was anticipated. Seven More Counties Go "Dry." Seven Indiana counties voted out the Baloon Inst week. Elkhart and Orango by good majorities and Ohio by Just 32. Benton, Greene and Montgomery also joined the arid ranks. The drys had effective organizations in all the counties nnd their vote wns In early. Sunrise prayer meetings were held by women In all the counties and during the day there woro parados of men, womon and children. Interest thus aroused proved so strong that fully 95 per cent of the total voto was polled. Thirty-eight counties have boon voted "dry" by local option, while twenty-one have been made "dry" by remonstrance. Tho counties voted "dry" recently follow: Wabash, Lawrence. Pike, Hamilton, Putnam, Decatur. Tipton, Noble, Randolph, Park, Huntington, Switzerland, Clinton Daviess, Grant, Howard. Adams, Morgan. Hendrcks, Fountain. Fayette. Carroll. Gibson. Bush, Sullivan, Jay, Marshall. Whitley, Hancock. Shelby, Miami. Ilenton. Montgomery, Greene, Ohio, Elkhart, Orango. "Cheap John" Goes With Coffin. Max Gibbs, better known as "Cheap John from Texas," for many yoars keeper of a store In Indianapolis, started for his sixty-eighth trip to Europe. Mr. Glhbs took along with him his famous elghtoon-lnch copper coffin, which lias miide fifteen of the annual trips to Vienna and which Is destined ultlmaloly to contain the ashes of Its owner. This cofiln lias boon photographed In many of tho cities of tho Unltod Statos and Europe nnd now constitutes a recognized passport.

ITEMS OF INTEREST. Tho highest splro In tho world Is thai of the Cathedral of Cologne 511 foot. Two ounces of attnr of roses represent tho rollnod product of a ton of rosobuda. Vory few children who have boon brought up on goats milk over havo tuberculosis. Some of tho best sausages exported from Germany to the United States are made of horses. Tho nvornge weight of n Greenland whale Is 100 tons, which Is equal to that of SS elephants. Barking Is an acquired habit with dogs. Wild dogs never bark; they morel v howl or whlno. Plates made of compressed paper nro used In some of tho choap roatnurants in German citlos. Tho Pacific ocean covers 7S.000.000 square miles, tho Atlantic 25,000,000 and the Mediterranean sen 1.000.000. When gambling is suspected In a prlvnte house In Melbourne, Australia, the police are empowered to enter It In quest of proof. The most nutritious nnd strengthgiving food Is beef. It can bo enten continuously lougor than any other kind of meat. Paris is to erect a public monument to the memory of tho carrier-pigeons that rendered "such signal service during the siege of Paris. Of all the people In Europe tho Dnne8 soem most nddictod to suicide. Their average is 25G self-murders por 1.000,000 persons per year. A man does not fully attain his growth until after the ago of 25, and athletic exercise extends the period of growth to 30 years. A recognized humorist runs a hotel

In Montana. Over his clerk's desk Is a sign which reads: "Boarders taken by the day, wook, or month. Those who do not pay promptly will bo taken by tho neck." Steel ties for street railroad tracks In Cleveland, O., have been Intro duced In connection with an extensive reconstruction on thoroughfares where wooden ties Imbedded in concrete had been used. Many of the latter bad become decayed. A teething ring which emits music Is tho Invention of A. W, Anderson, of Seldovla, Alaska. When tho child bites on it pleasing sounds nro emitted, so delighting tho youngster that It acquires a taste for harmony and cuts Its gums at tho same time. An Invoice of whalebone. Just sold at Dundee, Scotland, realized only $10.000 a ton, which Is considerably below last season's average. The decline la tho Industry is shown by tho fact that 'tho American whaling fleet, which once numbered 73C vessels, has now fallen to thirty-three. Governor Harris, of Ohio, proposes that convicts who nre not professional criminals be put at work on tho State farm. He says: "Tho conditions of our cities breed crime. Most of It can bo traced to idleness and drink, and Idleness Is frequently the cause of drink." An excellent bill for Improvident working people has been Introduced In tho Austrian Chamber of Deputies. It makes Insurance against Illnoss nnd tho Inability attending old age com pulsory on all workmen and domestic servants whose annual incoino does not exceed ?500. A model park Is In course of constructlon In one of the worst slum districts on the North Side of Chi cago. To make room for It, six acres of tenements havo been razed. In place of tho tumble-down structures there will be, in tho course of a few months, a playground, a swimming pool, a clubhouse, a library, a lunch room and a baseball field. The White Plains Dally Record as sures us that the following Is a ver batim copy of a local real estate agent's letter from a tenant in tho Fourth war: "Dear Sir: I wat them seller steps flgsd right of my wife fel down last nlte and like to brake her dam nee Please send a Blumbcr nnd figs our bath tub it soon bo time now for us to use ngen." Tho University of Breslau, Ger many, has made a contract with an ac cident insurance company to insure its students. All students of mathematics, astronomy, physics, chemistry or phar macy, botany, zoology, mineralogy and geology must pay a fee of 3G cents each term and be insured against accident occurring in tho line of duty. Tho policy lapses as soon as the holder's connection with tho university Is severed. Tho ease with which divorces are obtained works much evil, In tho opinion of Chief Justice Emery, of Maine. He suggests that tho divorce laws can bo perfected in three ways first, by granting no divorce until husband nnd wife havo lived apart far a year; second, by publishing the suits In tho daily papers; third, by giving the court authority to delay hearings, if necessary, so that they cannot bo rushed through, as is sometimes the case now. Too Light a Sentence. That Boerbohm Tree, the plnyer, has a caustic wit Is evidenced by an incident wherein ho and an unknown playwright figured. Tho writer had obtained permission to read his offering to Tree. The actor evinced no great degree of enthusiasm either during or after tho readlug; but he did take tho manuscript, upon which ho scribbled hastily a few suggestions for its betterment. "Seo here, Mr. Tree," was the indignant ejaculation of tho ambitious playwright, "It's hardly fair of you to dispose of my work in this summary and nonchalant fashion. I'd havo you know that this play cost mo a year's hard labor." "So?" queried Tree. "My dear fellow, any Impartial Judgo would give you at least live!" New York Press. The Brakeman's Joke. "Ran over n cow this morning tip above Coffeyville," said tho brakoman to a reporter. "How did It happon?" nsked tho reporter. "Sho was drinking out of a crook hntlor a bridge." shouted tho brakemnn as ho swung on to tho last car and went grinning out of town. Kansas City Times. Dirigible Balloons. The first nttompt to steer a balloon was made In Paris In 1781.

SACRED FLOWERS ' In Eojfcr Essay

In these sunny dnya life grows reorioni rrom the dust, u latent consciousness of wines stirs in the buried sooil, and as If from very gladness of heart tho sup in tho naked trees mounts upwnrd. over upward, into tho goltlon light. Tho tlnv loaves, close clasped together in the bud. flutter timidly apart, to grow bravely green, and Haunt their color on tho passing breeze. Tho mnplo treu in tho yard now hears a voice out of the unseen, calling from the blue skies, bidding it como up higher, nnd gladly does it mako answer in the green tassels and shining loaves, telling of now growth and broader horizon. Out on the old arbor, tho rough and scraggy grapevine is sending forth little gray tendrils, reaching farther toward heaven and away from the earth that hides Its foothold. How blithely does nature echo forth her yearly message to every waiting heart hor message of resurrection, joyous activity, high-mounting aspiration! Her myriad voices cry throimh ovorv sense, to touch and penetrate the spirit with gladness nnd'good cheer. New readings from tho Gospel of etornal hopo aro seen on every side, In tho growth of plant, the unfoldincr of leaf. the blossoming of ilower. Tho woods are lull of these shy spring .darlings violets, dandelions, adder's toncuos. spring beauties, bluebells and mnnv a nnmeless Wildling, nil hurrying gayly to tiecic tho earth and celebrato the Eastertide. Certain flowers and plants havo always been set apart as sacred thlnus. and from the vory dawn of history wo near or tiower-decked altars and wreaths of sacrifice. Tho heathen temples wero ndorned with earth's fairest blossoms, scattered on tho altars, and twined around the brow of priest and acolyte. Tho amaranth bloomed in deathless beauty upon tho Olympian heights, the myrtle was beloved of Apollo, the roso, tho lily, tho mlstletoo wero favorites of legend nnd myth. Tho flowers onco sacred to 1- roya, the spring goddess of northern mythology, wore chosen for their spotless purity, In form and color. And when heathen myth gave place to Christian truth, these sacred treasures wero transferred to the Virgin, and be came symbols of tho queen of heaven. So it is that In every story of saint or madonna we find either tho lily or tho roso tho lily with its fragrance, Its bonding, bowing, waving bells. seems to whisper of puritv and worship; the rose, with Its faint and far away odor, which seems to hint ol eternal hope. One might nlmost fill a garden with Ilowers all named for the Virgin Mary, generally because they chanco to blossom on Our Lady's days (such as the visitation, the assump tion, her birth, baptism, purification). There aro lady's slipper, lady's mantle, lady's fingers, lady's smock, lady's tresses. Virgin's bower, or clematis, begins to bloom In July, tho feast ot visitation, and Is nt full bloom at as sumption In AugusL Tho Illy was first found In connec tion with the Virgin In the story of her ascension to heaven, and It originated probably In the second century. According to this legend, It was three days after the burial of our Lord's mother than the apostles visited and opened her grave and found It filled with fragrant, spotless lilies. Since then' these matchless flowers havo been called "Madonna lilies." or "flowers of tho Virgin." Tho common white lily of our gardens, that blooms In July, and Is the sweeteBt and most graceful of all flowers, might well be called "holy." No ono seems to know Its origin. It is never found wild In Palestine, nor can wo find just where it grows without culture. But we seo It in the faded pictures of old Italian masters and Notherland palntors, made long before the discovery of this

New World. Nearly all of our great poets havo praised this flower. Chaucer and Spenser speak of it us a mystical blossom in their far-away gardens and lady's bowers. Shakespeare it was who first said: "To gild rofined gold and paint the lily," and these lines from one of his sonnets tell a truth that can never bo forgotten: For sweetest things turn sourest by their deeds; Lilies that fester smell far worso than weeds. Milton loved the lily nnd always spoke of It In connection with tho rose as did also Swinburne when he talks of Tho lilies and languors of virtue; Tho roses and raptures of vice. And Tennyson says of Maud's garden that It was Fairer than aught In the world beside, All made up of tho lily and the rose. Dear Old Herrick, that sweet singer of spring, hag ono lily thought that is Uko a sigh: But vanished man, Like to a lily lost, never can bloom anew Or bring his dnys to a second spring. Shelley has the Illy In his wonderful garden along with his sensitive plant. Wordsworth often praises It. Burns mentions It frequently. Tennyson has lovely lily thoughts; but our own Longfellow draws tho prettiest picture of maidenhoodBears n lily In thy hand Gates of brass cannot withstand Ono touch of that magic wand. James Russell Lowell nlways comes near to tho heart of things and left us moro than ono sweet Illy poem nnd nlluslon, nnd our minor poets all tell their love for this perfect specimen of nature's handiwork. "Our Sweet Will Shakospearo" was born In April, and It was of April's (lowers that he sang most frequently and most sweetly. Back, Backl "Pa, what Is an Intorlor decorntor?" "I'm not qulto sure, Wilfred, but I think It's a cook." Now York Times. The Gem Reset. Taft's phiz Helps biz. Now York Sun.

PARIS FASHION HINTS,

2779. Ladles' Dressing Sack, n.n Is a chnrmlng little garment su'- it,u for flannel, flannelette, China s' . or albatross, the collar and cuffs f. .uh.-r. stitched in a contrasting shade n broidery silk. Four sizes Z2. : , o and -14. 2751. Ladles' Dressing Sack. Th-s Is a stylish and dnlntv little i.nr-M. developed In light-colored llannel nana nntl cutis of dotted ila:neL Four sizes 32. 30, 40 and 41. 27G7. Ladles' Work Atiron Ii, ..i. oped in striped, chocked, dottt ' r piain unon, duck, Indian-head c - .n or chambray. This is a delightful ;m tlo work anron and ono that wv h found most useful. Four sizes-;j 36. 40 nnd 41. 2539. Ladles' One-Piece Cir iiar Open Drawers, with nlaits t,r i.-h fullness at tfick. Jaconet, thin imbric. Lonsdale muslin, Persian l.iwn or nainsook aro all good material- for this dainty undemirment. w'.rh should be finished with a deep r ltn oi lace. liiglit slzs 22 to 3f. 2104. Misses' Four-Gored Pefi,.. Wltll or Without flounce. This is an rr. cellent model for a petticoat of s'lk. messailno or sntln, as w.-ll as for ratasook. batiste. Persian lawn or iarunL Three sizes 13 to 17 years. 820. Design to bo transferred to corset-cover of thin cambric, Persian lawn, nainsook, jaconet, batiste or China silk, the model to bo slippe i on over tho head or buttoned In th- l ack, the edges to be scalloped and embroidered In eyelet design with mercerized cotton, the ribbon, regulatms tho fullness nt the neck and waist being run through worked buttonii' 1-s. Tho scallops at the edge should bi padded before being worked, an ! If desired the model may be embroiJ red with silk floss Instead of niereer;id cotton. (SB 17 530. Grape design, to bo transferred to centerpiece; size lSvIS 1r,(l'i or 22x22 inches, border worked In -" Ha embroidery and center In on stitch, with mercerized cotton or fiio silk, according to whether it is ieveloped In linen, scrim or silk. Fashion Editor. 400 Century Builüns, Indianapolis Ind.: Enclosed plonso find ten cenu. Please send Paris Pattern No SIzo Name Address '" Peppermint Farms. Tho world's peppermint Is grown ca peppermint farms In the neighbor! .. J of Kalamazoo. Over 300.000 pound, of peppermint oll. orth $5 I'0'1 ' produced annually from the innist Ink-black soil of Southwestern Mi-"" Peppermint farming is simple. Je roots aro planted in the spring. bushes, which aro about three ft high, are cut down In tho late sumrre' Tho stilling goes on through Aur -m and September. fl An aero yields about twenty IM pounds of oil. The cost of this luctlon-plantlng. weeding, still -is about ?ir. Tho oil Itself b $125. THUS every " . , fit ' mint farm Rlvo. the farmer a rr

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