Plymouth Tribune, Volume 1, Number 3, Plymouth, Marshall County, 24 October 1901 — Page 4
The Tribune.
Established October 10. 1901.HENDRICKS & CO., Publishers. R. B. OGLESBEE, Editor. Telephone No. 27. OFFICE In Bissell Block, Corner Laporte Street. Center and SUBSCRIPTION: One Year In Advance $1.50; Six Months 75 cents; Three Months 40 cents, delivered at any postoffice. Plymouth, Ind., October 24 1901. "We can see no immediate necessity for tariff tinkering, even if the Free Trade league does endorse it. Bryan's gush over C. A. Towne the other evening was surpassed only by the gush of Towne's 70,000---barrel oil well in Texas. The selection of Mr. Reid, of South Bend, as warden of the state prison at Michigan City is highly gratifying to the republicans of the thirteenth district and of northern Indiana. It will be gratifying to right-minded democrats as well, for his official duties will be well and faithfully performed. People who are determined to believe in spiritualism whether or no will of course be little disturbed by the confessions of Mrs. Piper, the greatest medium of all, but most folks will conclude that the episode proves flatly that the unknowable, is still unknown, just as it ever will be, world without end. Mr. Dooley, in discussing the prospects of democracy, says: "'No, sir, the dimmycratic party is not on speakin' terms with itself. Whin ye see two men with white ties go into a street car and set in opposite corners, while one mutthers 'Thraitor' and the other hisses 'Miscreent,' ye can bet they are two dimmycratic leaders thrying to reunite the grand old party." Mr. Fiske Warren, the American who was required to take the oath of allegiance a few days ago at Manila, where he arrived after associating with the Filipino junta at Hong-Kong, proves to be a member of the Boston aristocracy who has been closely identified with the anti-Imperialist movement and until recently a member of its executive committee. The oath of allegiance is good medicine for men of his kind. A clear-headed Christian writer draws the following picture of selfishness: "Selfishness is the most utter destitution of a human being. It can bring nothing to his relief; it adds soreness to his sorrows; it sharpens his pains; it aggravates all the losses he is liable to endure; and when goaded to extremes, it often turns destroyer and strikes its last blows on himself." The selfish man is always his own worst enemy. He is sure to cheat himself when intending to serve him-self.---The Restitution. The Columbia City Post observes that the man who earns $1.50 a day is not as well off now as the man who earned $1.25 a few years ago when all living expenses were lower. Coal, wood, all kinds of vegetables, canned goods, meats, clothing, lumber, hardware, glass, paints and all through the list, there is a noticeable advance, and there is no denying the fact.---The Democrat. Neither may it be denied that the bank deposits and other savings of laboring men aggregate more now than ever before. "Where is the witless man who would willingly return to the cheap days of 1894? The men most prominently identified with the Democrat as owners have been Thomas Platt and Daniel McDonald, D. E. VanValkenburgh, M. W. Downey and A. C. Thompson. Of these Platt is the only one who did not get a public office, all the rest having been in office while owning the paper. They, with a few others who were officers, deputies or mortgages of the Democrat, were the leaders who organized and maintained the ring which has never lost its cohesive power to this day. Dan is the only one of the originals left, the others having died or been cast out, and he holds on 1 to the graft with the unrelaxing grip of a bloodsucker. He has to. He has nothing else left. The hundred thousand dollars he had out of the public funds, and which he might easily have saved and doubled had he been a man of ordinary business abilty, has all been dissipated. The owners of the Republican had to and pid live out of the legitimate proceeds of their business. He might have done the same and kept his salaries and perquisites, but he could not do that or even keep his plant up to the times or improve his paper as other papers are improved. In his declining years he is largely cut off from his public revenue but he still taxes his party by requiring them to pay him two dollars for a paper that is not so good as is sold in surrounding counties for half that price. He is the man who dares to talk and to lie about the debts of others! Poorhouses and penitentiaries are built for such as he.
When factories are prosperous and railroads are busy the farmers share in the general good times. Workingmen must eat. Republican policies benefit the masses.
There are six thousand thrifty, law abiding energetic people permanently located within easy driving distance of Plymouth but who do the bulk of their trading elsewhere. It will cost no more to get their regular trade than to locate half a dozen factories here employing fifty men in each. The factories might burn, fail or move away, as other Plymouth factories have done; the farmers will steadily increase in numbers and in wealth. Factories are all right and we want all we can get of them, but the farmers are infinitely better. Business men, take your choice. Now some of the metropolitan papers have something to talk about. President Roosevelt actually had a colored man, Booker T. Washington, dine with him at the White House. This is awful! Roosevelt and Washington have been warm friends for years. They have had much in common. But it hasn't been "customary" for a colored man to receive social recognition in the presidential mansion. Hence the tempest in a tea pot. All the same the sun will rise and set just as if nothing of the sort had happened. Mr. Washington is a gentleman, every inch of him, and as such he is worthy of any consideration that may be given him.---South Bend Times. AN INFAMOUS TRIAL. In the second trial of Caleb Powers for the murder of William Goebel the state has completed its side of the case and rested. Every item of evidence presented by the prosecution falls within one of these three classes: (1) hearsay; (2) circumstantial, of a remote character; (3) testimony of witnesses against whom at least reasonably credible charges of perjury rest. This trial has not been one whit more fair than the former, though possibly no worse. Briefly recalled, the following facts appear beyond dispute. Powers was forced into this trial with unnecessary and unusual haste, though but six out of more than two hundred of his witnesses had been heard from. Judge Cantrill denied a motion for a change of venue in spite of the widespread and notorious charges of unfairness in the former trial, though any right-minded judge would have welcomed the opportunity to secure release from a most unpleasant duty or would have assigned the case to another judge without a request. The jury as finally made up was composed of twelve Goebel democrats, and that in a county almost equally divided between the two parties and in which the democrats are equally divided between the two factions. Notwithstanding the very palpable proof that the jury was packed, Judge Cantrill overruled a challenge and ordered the witnesses to be sworn. The judge's rulings in the trial have been uniformly against Powers and every intendment has been taken against him, while no courtesy has been accorded him or his counsel. Cantrill is a candidate for the United States senate and the only ground of his claim for that honorable office is that he has earned it by his dishonorable conduct in these trials. The feeling against him is so intense among the people that he is fearful of losing his life and dares not trust his own partisans, but has all onlookers in his court searched for weapons. His only way to secure the favor and the votes of the Goebelites who control the legislature is to stand by them and the position they have taken against Powers and other accused republicans so he is compelled to be biased. With these facts and conditions plainly in view Governor Durbin would be violating the most common impulses of humanity were he to send Taylor into that sinkhole of injustice to be tried for his life by a partisan Judge, a packed jury and perjured witnesses for political ends. No law requires such a sacrifice. Dearth of Aged Pair. Mr. and Mrs. Robert McKinnie were found dead Monday in their home at Princeton, Iowa. Mrs. McKinnie was seated at the dinner-table, death having been caused by a bullet in the stomach. Mr. McKinnie was found dead in bed, but without any visible wounds and a rifle lay on the floor. It is supposed that McKinnie killed his wife with the rifle and then took poison. McKinnie had been despondent recently and had threatened his life. Each was 80 years old, and they have been residents of Princeton for twenty years. Ethel Broadbeck, of South Bend, a niece of the dead couple, was visiting friends in Plymouth and went at once to the scene of the tragedy. Notice to Whom it May Concern. All parties who had any abstracts, deeds or legal papers with Mr. Amasa Johnson will find them at Judge Hess's office to be delivered to whom they belong when called for. 3t1
STORY OF A GRAFT
How Dan McDonald Got Kept The Democrat. and A Fifty-year Hold on the Public Treasury and Its Bloating Effect on the Man Who Has Always Lived as a Public Charge. The arrogance of Daniel McDonald in assuming superior airs among newspaper men in this county and his lying claim of 25 years of continuous editorial control of the Democrat lend some degree of interest to the history of that sheet and of his connection herewith. The Plymouth Weekly Democrat, vol.1, No. 1, made its appearance Jan. 26, 1860, with A. C. Thompson as editor and publisher. The Republican and its immediate predecessors had been in existence without missing an issue or decreasing in size since June, 1851. A paper known as the Marshall County Democrat was established by Thomas McDonald and H. B. Dickson in November, 1855, and died in 1859 from pressure of debt. Dickson sold it to McDonald early in its first year; McDonald leased it to A. C. Thompson and Platt McDonald Nov. 13, 1856; Dan McDonald was taken in as reporter early in 1857; the whole establishment was presented to Platt and Dan Nov. 12, 1857, M. A. O. Packard was installed as editor and the paper was reduced in size to save expense; June 3, 1858, it became necessary to cut expenses still deeper and the luxury of an editor was dis pensed with; Aug. 11, 1859, McDon aid & Bro., being unable to make the thhing go, unloaded it upon Wm. j Burns and December 1, of the same year, the failure was complete and the paper ceaed publication. The Re publican was then well-established under tbj management of I. Mattingly and was sailing free. Alec. Thompson, as we have said, established tne Weekly Democrat in January, 1860. In April of the following year, Thomas and Piatt McDonald acquired the paper, Thomas, tne ratner or Piatt ana Dan, being a substantial man and having some means, but they were glad to sell it in July, 1862, to I). E. Van Valkenburgh, who gave it some life by employing John G. Osborne as editor until the succeeding November. In October, 1863, Mr. Osborne took the paper and plant into his own possession and ran it until one S. L. Harvey came along and bought it in Mav, 1865, and Har vey controlled it until October 1867, when he sold out to John McDonald, a brother of Dan. John was com pelled to close out in July, 1868, and was relieved by a syndicate composed of M. W. Downey, A. C. Thompson and 1). E. Van Valkenburgh. While they owned it Piatt bought an inter est but sold it again, and in October, 1873, William Geddes was taken into partnership with Van Valkenburgh and the others nominally dropped out' Piatt tried it again in July, 1874, Mr, -w f 1 if... 1. t . van vaiEenouisrn retiring in nis favor, ani in the following May Mr. Geddes was glad to get a sahried po sition elsewhere and he likewise re tired, leaving the entire burden upon Piatt for a period of three months. Now comes Dan to the. rescue. He had never been connected with the Plymouth Weekly Democrat and since August, 1859, had been connected with no paper, a period of 14 years, lie had learned the secret of living at the public expense and had been carefully working up the greatest graft that any Marshall county man ever had. Piatt had the old plant, worn out and antiquated, and Dan had saved some money or knew how to get some, so, Aug 1, 1875, Daniel McDonald assumed a half interest with Piatt, a new press, engine and fixtures were put in and the Democrat entered upon a new era. No Improvement has ever been made since except a couple of changes in the power used; the press, now 26 years oldj is still there and the paper is the same. In October, 1877, Piatt had had enough and sacrificed his interest to. get away, leaving Daniel the sole proprietor and editor. Having had a salary from the public taxes continuously, or nearly so, since his "eighteenth . year; leaving all of the county and town advertising and most of the legal advertising having the contracts for all the town and county printing and stationery at more than ten times the .present cost, rnd having the same opportunities lor job printing, advertising and sub scription that the Republican had, it would seem that Daniel had a good thing in the . Democrat and' might have held it. He was able to hold it about 14 months and January 1, 1879, it was taken off his hands by Henry A. Peed and he went back to sit in the office of county clerk, which office he held eight years, retiring toward the end of 1879. Mr. Peed could not hold the paper, either, and it fell back upon Dan in 1881. The claim lately set up by Daniel that he has been in the editorial harness' continuously for a quarter of a century lacks at least five years . of being truthful, and his other claim of forty years' ex
perience as an editor is much farther from the truth. He was a reporter and typesetter for two years, in 1857-8, and was not with the paper again until 1875, after which t.'me he was without any proprietory interest for at least two years. Neither has Daniel's editorial will been the final law of the sanctum during all the time that he has been in nominal control. Until within a very recent time, and even yet so far as we know, the place has in one way or another been plastered with mortgages, and the mortgagees have had very much influence in the policy of the Democrat, particularly in politics. One of the most notable cases of that character occurred in the campaign of 1876. 'Horace Corbin, to whom McDonald was heavily obligated personally, was the regular democratic candidate for judge and A. C. Capron was running on an independent ticket. Daniel, the sanctified censor who hates a bolter, bolted the regular ticket and supported Capron. A. L. Wheeler held the mortgage then and Daniel was his slave. Other incidents are readily recalled but space forbids their mention. Enough has been stated to puncture some of Daniel McDonald's mildest pretensions. There are many editors in this state who have been longer in the service than he has, but none has had fifty years of continuous support from the public treasury, as he has had, and few can still tax the members of their party by imposing a twodollar price for a one-dollar paper, as he does. Had he been a business man of ordinary ability he would now be wealthy, for in the past 25 years he has drawn from the public funds nearly a hundred thousand dollars and has had the legitimate proceeds of his business besides; the Republican lived all that time on its legitimate business alone. TnE Tribune starts off as the largest home-print paper in Plymouth, with the largest and newest printing establishment, and it will maintain its lead by being the best paper, without any aid from the public taxes.
recent clippings about Mckinley. The good that men do lives after them. President McKinley is gone, but McKinley prosperity is still with us and in robust health. Kansas City "Journal." "No one could help loving him," is the way Senator Sewell briefly hut eloquently sums up'" the life of William McKinley. .Jersey City,(N. J.)"Journal. Today we mourn President McKinley, but we can also be thankful that his spirit the spirit of true Americanismyet lives. Grand Rapids (Midi.) "Herald." President McKinley 's forgetfulness of self, even in the hour of pain, won the hearts of tne nation. From him came the only words of compassion for the wretch in the Buffalo jail. - Fall River (Mass.) "Evening News." Hon. Grover Cleveland's sympa thetic tribute to President McKinley was the more Impressive because he never uttered a word while Mr. Mc Kinley was living to bring him into hatred and ridicule. Indianapolis Journal." In this hour of the nation's sorrow, when all the world is paying homage to the memory of President McKinley, how can the Anti-Imperialist League of Boston review, with any satisfac tion, its literature of vituperation directed against him? They should cover their diminished heads in shame. Terre Haute, (Ind) "Tribune." One of the unique tributes paid President McKinley was that by Sena tor Tillman of South Carolina, who as long ago as 1899 said of the President: "The President embarrasses me with his consideration and confidence. He is the most loveable man I know." Wilmington (Del,) "News." Senator McLaurin,of SouthCarolina, tells how President McKinley desired to unite the whole country and wipe away the last traces of the bitterness of the war. He told the senator that the people of the south would know that he was their friend before his administration was over. The chief ambition of the President seems to have been to act as a messenger of . good will toward men. Wilmington (Del.) "News." The south 's love for McKinley has been shown by the many demonstrations of heartfelt grief in Miatsec;:on. That tho southerners, as good Amerians, should mourn the loss of the nation's chief magistrate was M . be expected, but in this instance the personal note is so marked that it cannot be overlooked. The grief is as much for William McKinley the man, the political opponent of nine-tenths of the prominent southern people, as for William McKinle? the President. Troy (N. Y.) "Times."
INDIANA SUPREME: STAGE AND BOOKSHOP. Indianapolis News. Indiana is much in evidence on the stage just at present as the fruit of her literary excellence. With Mr. Mansfield's production of Booth Tarkington's "Beaucaire" in Philadelphia, it is pertinent to note that at the same time Lew Wallace's "Ben Hur" is still playing to full houses. Julia Marlowe in Charles Major's "When Knighthood Was in Flower" is duplicating her success of last season, while Virginia Harned is this week to appear in Maurice Thompson's "Alice of Old Vincennes." Three of these plays thus dramatized from books by Indiana authors we know have won popular approval. There is-hardly a doubt that the dramatization from Maurice Thompson's book will be represented on the stage by a "big four" indeed. There is great encouragement in all this. No single community is more prominent in the literary work of the time than Indiana. So striking has been this manifestation in recent years that it has attracted universal attention, and anything from Indiana now can get a hearing and is awaited eagerly; in advance is held to be worthy of consideration. It is an enviable reputation. While "Alice of Old Vincennes" may remind us that we have suffered in the death of Maurice Thompson a severe loss, every success is an encouragementto all who may have gifts to improve them to the uttermost. The brilliant example of Mr. Tarkington is particularly gratifying, for it is in an incident in a career that promises goldenly.
KING OF CHICKENS What the Agriculture Department Say$ About Plymouth Rocks. The bureau of animal industry of the United States department of agriculture has just made an interesting report, the first of its kind ever issued, on American breeds of fowls' especially the Plymouth Rock. This breed is the most popular creation of the fancier's art. It is not only a beautiful bird, but as a fowl is unsurpassed. In beauty and symmetry it heads the list of our domesticated birds. The government now calls attention to the fact that the time has come when Americans no longer need to g abroad to obtain either beauty or re productiveness in fowls. The best breeds that exist have been produced in our own land, and when their merits are fully understood there will be an increasing demand for them in other parts of the world. There seems to be no condition, surrounding or climate unfavorable to the Plymouth Rock. Their constitu tional vigor appears to have no limit. Where any fowl can live thev will prosper. They stand confinement, ana wnen anowea ireeaom prove excellent foragers. They are prolific in yielding medium-sized brown eggs of the richest flavor. Under all conditions they will produce as many eggs as any thoroughbred fowl. The broad deep and well rounded breast gives these fowls their value as table poultry. The notably rounded keel bone that extends well forward helps to build out the foundation for plenty of breast meat. The government's efforts for the advancement of home bred fowls will undoubtedly awaken renewed interest among farmers and skilled American fanciers in producing this the best specimen of poultry. Brooke's Marine Band. A disgracefully small but highly appreciative audience listened Saturday afternoon at the opera house to one of the half dozen best concerts ever given in this city, that by Brooke's Marine band. The program was a wide one, traversing the entire field between classical music and sensational trick effects, and every number was carried through with a perfection of finish that was instructive and delightful. The visits of such excellent organizations to Plymouth are, like angels' visits, few and far between and the paucity of the audience must4 be attributed to the fact that a pleasant Saturday afternoon in October is a busy time in an agricultural market town. State of Ohio. City of Toledo, ) Lucas County, ) Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and States aforesaid, and that said firm will pa the sum of one hundred dollar for each and every case of Catarrl. that cannot be cured by the uet of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J.CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subcribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, j Seal j A. D. 1886. TXT r i OtUAL h V-4 T.. Ui: Hall's Catarrh Curs is taken internal ly and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Bold by Drugjesta, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best.
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signs or distinguish objects as far away as you used to, you need glasses. If you cannot distinctly see the features or expression ot a speaker at any public gathering, you need glasses. It is a serious matter to postpone wearing them a single day. The eyes rapidly lose their power and vitality from inaction and vision is soon permanently injured. Lenses which fit perfectly place the eyes in focus an&keep them in natural tone and vigor. Examination Free. Saiisfaction Guaranteed J. R. Losey & Son,
ß 109 Michigan St., PLYMOUTH. IND.
Grand Cora Exhibition
Bring in your best ears of corn before Dec. 1st 10 Big Prizes will be awarded on December 2nd for the biggest ear of corn. A souvenir free to every farmer bringing in his best ear or ears of corn. Everybody invited to see the grand display of fine Marshall county corn. Attend our Great Winter Supply Sale of
Overcoats Suits Dry Goods
CLOAKS AND SHOES. Allman's Big Store PLYMOUTH
M CHILDISH COMFORT. it Never Mind, Mamma, Baby Loves You." Eut the childish voice is almost unheeded. The wife and mother has come to a place where love cannot comfort her, where even the voice and words of love are so blent with her own misery that they seem to increase it. Imagine a magnificent orchestra playing in a factory amid the ring of hammers and the rattle and groaning of machinery. The discords would dominate the harmony and the harmony itself merge into discords. That is the way it is with all the music of love when a woman is wrenched and racked by pain. It seems to become part of the very discord of her life. When the cause of this suffering is ought it will almost always be found to be womanly disease. The throbbing head, the aching back, and the draggingdown feeling are but symptoms of a disordered and diseased condition of the delicate womanly organism. When this fact is understood the one thing for the weak and sick woman to do is to look for a cure of the disease which causes her misery. WHKRS 8HAI.I. SHX TURN for healing? If a woman were lost p a western prairie and found several paths which might lead to safety, she would take the well-trodden path in preference to the one which showed faint signs of travel. Why not the same in sickness? There is a road to womanly health which has been traveled by hundreds of thousands of women. Read what some of these women say. "I take ereat pleasure in recommend ing Dr. Pierce's medicines to other suffering women," writes Mrs. Mary Adams, of Grassycreek, Ashe Co., N. C I had internal trouble very badly until it resulted in ulcers of the uterus. I was troubled with it so that I never slept a night for seven weeks. The doctors said I could not be cured, but I commenced taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and Pleasant Pellets. Af ter taking two bottles X could sleep all night, and after taking six bottles of 'Golden Medical Discovery and three vials of ' Pleasant PeUets. my case was cured. I thank God and your medicine ior saving my me." "Words cannot tell what I suffered for thirteen years with uterine trouble and dragging-down pains through my hips and back," writes Mrs. John Dickson, of Grenfell, Assiniboia Dist, N. W. Terr. I can't describe the misery it was to be on my feet long at a time. I could not eat nor sleep. Often I wished .to die. Then I saw Dr. Pierce's medicines advertised and thought I would try them. Had not taken cne bottle till I was feelIrj well. After I had taken five bottles
WELL?
of Favorite Prescription and one of Golden Medical Discovery I was like a new woman. Could eat and sleep and do all my own work. I would entreat of any lady suffering from female weakness to gjve Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription a fair trial, for I know the benefit she will receive." Mrs. Mattie Venghaus, of Tioga, Hancock County, 111., writes: "I had been sick for seven years, not in bed but just . dragging myself around. At last I took three bottles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and five of 'Golden Medical Discovery, and was well. It is impossible to describe in words the good these medicines did me. No praise is too high for Dr. Pierce's medicines." WOMAN'S CONFIDENCE JUSTIFIED. The woman who begins the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is justified in feeling that she has taken the first step in the path to perfect womanly health. All womanly diseases medically curable yield to the. healing power of this wonderful rem-dy. It establishes regularity, dries disa-fret-able and weakening rains, heals inflammation and ulceration and cures female weakness. The periodic headache, the distressing backache, and exhausting bearingdown" pains are cured permanently with the cure of womanly diseases by "Favorite Prescription." Mothers find in this medicine the best preparative for maternity. It gives abundant strength and makes the baby's advent practically painless. W omen suffering from chronic forms of disease are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter, free. All letters are privately read and privately an. swered and womanly confidences are guarded by the same strict pro- , . iessionai privacy which is observed by Dr. Pierce and his staff in personal consultation at the Invalids Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. Address all correspondence to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. In a little over thirty years, assisted by his staff of nearly a score of physicians. Dr. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., has treated and cured hundreds of thousands of sick and suffering women. There is no similar offer of free consultation by letter or free medical advice, having behind it an institution such as the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo N. Y., with its fine equip- " ment and skilled medical staff. The free consultation by letter, offered by Dr. Pierce, puts it into every sick woman's power to have the opinion of a specialist on her condition specialist whose great success in the treatment and cure of womanly diseases, is in itself an encouragement to every sick woman. Of the hundreds of thousands of women treated by Dr. Pierce, ninety-eight per cent have been permanently cured. Favorite Prescription" contains no alcohol and is entirely free from opium, cocaine and all other narcotics. If you are persuaded to try Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription because it has cured other women, do not allow the dealer to foist on you a less meritorious medicine which he claims to be njusi as good." There is no motive for such substitution except the little more pfit made by the dealer on the sale of the less meritorious preparation. A VAXUABIÄ GIFT : for any young couple is Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, containing iooS large pages and over 700 illustrations. This book will be sent free to any address on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 31 one-cent stamps for the work bound in durable cloth, or only 21 cents for the P!- covers. Address Dr. IL V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
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