Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 10, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 August 1896 — Page 2

DEATH.-

A

[To a tboooopblat.]

Booth, there are bodies of the dead, you aay, *f That, loitering, waft as filmy evidence, Jingling and ciphering to a mortal

Mechanic murom rt^of a parlor play. No! To oar life, to a holy day

Wo all know from

1

Of godly wisdom and of penitence, Is given nosijhtof the Supreme, bat tbenoe Bhlne symbols manifest, and as she may Faith builds in emblem true and miracle

Mysteries, where the soul itself doth glass. Where art, stern eyed, and visored dnty well Discourse of things eternal, tin til death Eings for the veil to fall, the show to pese—

Discite et dincedite, he saith. —George C. W. Warr in Academy.

THE GHOST OF WAYNE

As the small sailing yacht drifted slowly past the bluff at the entrance of Presque Isle bay the two men sailing her stood breathlessly watching the strange lights which seemed to rise and fall at intervals on the spot where the old blockhouse stood in the days when Mad Anthony Wayne, with his troops, was stationed at the fbrt and where he was bnried in 1796. As the boat drew close to the shore Herbert Manning, the younger of (he men who had been striving in the semidarkness to make ont what the unusual lights were, grasped his companion by the arm, exclaiming excitedly: "Look! Look quick, captain! There are three persons on the ground where the old blockhouse was burned down. How queer they look. You can almost see through them. I move we get away from here it makes my flesh creep." Captain Boss, who had a most profound contempt for the superstitions most of the sailors are imbued with, looked long and earnestly at tfee group before he spoke. At first he thought perhaps some hot headed feud was being settled with firearms at an hour of the night when they could best elude the vigilance of the authorities but, nol The figures which could be distinctly seen through the mist were unlike the people of the present day. The militaiy man, standing with head erect and one hand exteuded as if issuing a command, looked wonderfully like the old portraits of General Wayne. Standing before him, with folded arms, was a young man in the dress of a lieutenant. His face expressed defiance and despair. Kneeling bufore the general was a slight girlish figure, with clasped hands raised in supplication to the stern man whose face looked hard and merciless in the blue ghastly light whioh made the soene so weird that the captain as well as his young friend began to have a weak feeling about the knees as they gazed spellbound through the mist at the uncanny pantomine. The woman, who seemingly had pleaded in vain, suddenly springing to her feet, threw her arms around the young lieutenant, and in that instant all three figures disappeared. No vestige of the scene enacted remained, although the yaohtsmen, straining their eyes to tr/ice a shadojv of what they had seen, could distinctly see the ground upon which the ghastly trio had stood.

A moment later the moon, bursting through a oloud, shone dear and cold, showing the bleak spot where Mad Anthony Wayne had once been buried. "Who on earth were they, oaptain?" again asked the younger man with a glance at the bluff they were fast leaving behind as thoir sail, answering to •tiff breeze, carried them toward the lower piers. "1 do not know, Bert," replied the captain with a-short laugh, trying to oonceal the nervous feeling he oould not shake off. "I doubt whether it was any one 'on earth.' If the old •tory told by some of the sailors be true about the bluff being haunted by the spirits of 'Mad Anthony Wayne' and the young lieutenant he had shot as a deserter, I imagine we have seen the spooks tonight I havo never believed in ghosts, but this beats me. It is a trifle too supernatural to suit my taste. "I will tell you the story of General Wayne and his favorite lieutenant as it was told to mo by an old resident of Erie, who moved there from Pittsburg at the time Anthony Wayne died and was personally acquainted with the facts.

history that

Gen­

eral Wayne was one of the bravest and most daring soldiers of the Revolution, and as an Indian fighter hud soarco his equal. Ho did not know the meaning of the word fear, and as a disciplinarian he was a terror to all who were under him. Among the young officers on his staff the one he liked best was a fair haired youth of 24 years, to whom he had given leave of absence to visit his bride, to whom be had been married but a few days when he received marching orders. "He was a great favorite with General Wayne, who sent him away buoyantly happy with the permission to reniniu 48 hours with the object of his affection. At the expiration of that time he was to report promptly for duty. He started on his short journey with hearty good wishes and congratulations of the other leas favored officers, who, although they might envy him, did not grudge him the 48 hours' freedom from duty, nor the happiness before him. It seemed a long time, but, alas, how short it was! 'The bride, a dainty little woman unused to discipline of any kind, with loving imperiousneas so bewitched the feeart and brain of the young husband that the hours flew on uncounted and the general's command to return in 48 hours was unheeded—was actually forgotten until four hours over the allotted time. They had passed before the lieutenant realised he had disobeyed orders, and he was about to return and sue for pardon, trusting to his good standing with •he general to influence his granting it was a hope thai showed bow little he Lnew Anthony Wayne. There was not upon record a time when merry was shown by him to one who set at naught one of his commands. Were his nearest, dearest friend to offend in that way, "While under military regulations, he 'would mete out the full measure of punishment without flinching. No matter how palliating the circumstanoea nor bow strongly his own heart plead far iflif agamta the offanae BMt to Ml

with the penalty laid down by the law.. Woefully ignorant of this, our young hero was hopefuL He sincerely regretted his thoughtless act of disobedience, bat his only fear of punishment was that he might be pat under arrest for a few days. "Ah he was bidding the little wife good by and trying to reassure her that all would be well with him, two stalwart soldiers entered the door unannounced and, without further warning, arrested^ him as a deserter. 'As a deserter! Merciful heavens!' exclaimed the lieutenant, realizing in an instant the horror of all that meant *1 am not a deserter! Who has dared to accuse me as such?' 'Our orders affe from headquarters, sir,' replied the sergeant, showing him a paper, the warrant signed by Anthony Wayne. The doomed man, crazed with the thought of what his fate would be, looked about wildly for some chance of escape, but the soldiers of General Wayne were too well trained to neglect their duty or to even show the pity they felt for the young man, whose offense, seemingly so slight must yet pay the penalty of a base deserter. 'The few brief hours of happiness had cost them dear. What a sad—aye, terrible—ending of that short honeymoon! The girlish bride, white with terror, yet not realizing the awful sorrow before her, was sure that she could save her husband from punishment were she to plead for him with the general, who. had been so gracious to her when they met that-she could not believe him crueL Hastily saddling her own horse, she had followed close behind the soldiers guarding her husband, determined that nothing should prevent her having an interview with General Wayne. "Arriving at the fort, she dismounted, and, slipping past the guard before they oould prevent her, had forced her way into the presence of the general. It was said of 'Mad Anthony' that, however stern and unbending he might be with his men, with woman he was tender, deferential and yielding. They could not believe the stories about his cruelty, and the little woman who stood before him was not prepared tor the stern order given to the sentinel to 'escort this lady to the outpost and then report for lack of duty at once' who has dared to let her through the guards. 'This is no place for you, madam,' he said more gently, but throwing herself on her knees before him she pleaded as only a loving woman can plead for the man whose life is dearer to her than her own. "She might as well have appealed to a rook as to Anthony Wayne, for, although every word she uttered stabbed him to the heart because he was fond of the young lieutenant vLose future had seemed so full oi well earned hope, yet no thought of granting the pardon in his power entered the stern oommander's mind. In his estimation there oould be no reprieve for a soldier who willfully or through careless disregard of orders had placed himself in the light of a 'deserter. "Lieutenant G. stood before the man whose power was unlimited with folded arms awaiting his sentence. Without a pica for his life and hQiior, without the usual oourt martial, or, in fact, any chance of escape, he was condemned to be shot at sunrise as a deserter. Not a sign of agony felt was shown by the doomed man, whose bright young life was to pay the penalty of a few hours of happy forgetfulness of time, but as his wife, springing to her feet, threw her arms around him as if to save him and with a shriek of terror fell at his feet unconscious tiie lieutenant turned and looked at Anthony Wayne. It is said that General Wayne never forgot that look while he lived, and that when the report of the muskets reached his ears at sunrise that fatal morning he dropped his head on his hands and groaned aloud, and it was not well for the hapless soldiers who had business with him that day. 'One word from him might hafe saved that life, which lay like a gift in the palm of his hand—not only one, but two lives, for the girl bride never reoovercd from the shock of that day. Dying, she cursed the hard hearted soldier who took from her all tlfat made life dear to her. For that reason, and because when the bones of General Wayne were taken from the grave on the bluff at Presque isle and carried to their present resting plaoe among his kin, the scalp and particles of flesh which had resisted decay being replaoed in the old coffin and grave by the blockhouse, the superstitious sailors Bay that 'Mad Anthony' cannot rest, but that at intervals he comes to the old headquarters where that terrible tragedy was enacted so long ago. It is believed that he regretted that act of cruelty which he at the time thought imperative duty demanded in order that military obedience be enforced upon the soldiers whose hearts were filled with horror at the punishment meted out to the young officer whom they all loved. "Regret comes too late when the ooffln lid is closed.

MI

don't know why we have been chosen as witnesses to the ghastly reappearance of the trio tonight, but I am glad to find myself once more among living creatures," added the captain as the boat touched the pier. "Whatever mistakes were made by 'Mad Anthony Wayne,' he at least was a brave, dauntless soldier, and I for one say. "Requiesoat in pace.' "—Philadelphia Times.

n, MOT 9MTOT* i&v

An old lady died not long ago who I during her lifetime had under all drcumstancea managed to maintain an appearance of composure ami placidity and who had been the admiration of all who knew her. When her life was almost over, her family physician stood at

bear

bedside one day and said: "Mrs. Brown, I wish you could tell me the secret of your happy disposition."

The old lady looked up at him with an attempt at a smile and murmured, •*I nlways had patience with fooll Boston Woman's Joornal.

VI

tH

One of the great ladies of Shiraz was requested by an aged and ill favored mollah to give him one of her waiting maids as a wife. The old man was already married to a termagant, who happened to be a friend of the great lady in question, who now saw the opportunity for a joke. "I will give you my maid as wife, O mollah," she said, "and, more than that, I will pay all the expenses of the wedding, and I will see that there is a suitable entertainment" A few days afterward tlje old priest was actually married to a veiled bride at the house of the great lady. All the elite of the women 5 Shiraz were invited to the wedding, but when after the banquet the priest attempted to unveil his inamorata the hideous face of a male professional buffoon or jester was disolosed to his astonished gaze, and the Lothario was chased out of the house, amid the laughter of the great lady's guests, (unong whom was the old man's wife*— Fortnightly Review.

1

Wbere Everybody BonfM.

In Japan it is quite a reoognized thing that a woman should make up her face with powder and paints, and without doing so she would no more think herself fit to appear in public than we should if we failed to perform our morning ablutions. The process of making up is somewhat complicated. To begin with, the fair lady smears a thick layer of white chalk with a soft brush on her faoe, neok and shoulders, arms and hands. Then, having dipped her forefinger into red paint, she carefully colors her cheeks, temples, and then over the eyes. Her middle finger is used for the black pigment with which she touohes up her eyebrows (unless she has bad them shaved off) and blackens under the eye* to improve the expression. With her .le finger she gives the finishing touches to her artistic efforts, adding to her lips some brilliant carmine and a little bit of gold to set off the charms of the lower lip. —Phil adel phia Times.

They Had No Diane*.

The absentmindedness of a oertain well known Scotch professor is notorious. Not long ago he invited a few seleot friends to dine with him, and upon their arrival, some short time before the hour set apart for dinner, the pre fessor suggested a walk through the conservatory and grounds until the gong should sound the dinner hour. After spending a short time inspecting flowers, plants, etc., host and guests came suddenly to a small gate at the end of the lawn. "Ah." said the professor to his astonished guests, "assuredly this will be a much nearer way home for you than going back to the front" And, all UDoonscioas of his invitation to dinner, he opened the gate and bowed his guests outi^-Landon Answers.

Bath, Xa Boss!a.

Filthy as Russia is, the filthiest houses in the oountry are those reserved for the public hatha. Gloomy buildings always, few are the Englishmen who oould submit to the atmosphere of them for a few minutes. Bat the Russian revels in them. Taking his ease upon a bench, be watches the whole room filled with a steamy vapor, and in this steam he slews until he feels he has had full value for his money. An attendant then throws a few bocketa of oold water over him. and he goes his way a happy, but, it must be admitted, still a dirty man.—St Potarsbcrg Correspondence.

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TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, AUGUST 29, 1896.

Social BIISMOM la Fsiral*. Persia 'being a Mohammedan country, polygamy is practiced, bat women have far more liberty than in Turkey. Usually among the lower and middle classes a man has but one wife save in the case of those with childless spouses monogamy is the rule. The mother of a family is treated with the utmost respect by her husband and. children and is invariably an autocrat in her own home, anri there are many strong minded and ambitious women who take an active part in politics. In no case is the Persian woman the mere toy of the voluptuary. She has her rights, her duties and her pleasures and at times indulges in amusing vagaries.

Th«y Got Separated. jgj

The following story is vouched far by a Tale professor: Several years ago a young colored student was admitted into the freshman class at Tale. He was assigned in the classrooms a seat next to the son of a prominent New York business man. whom we may call for convenience Smith. Now, young Smith did not relish the idea of sitting by a "nigger," as he put it, so he wrote to his father, complaining of the indignity. Mr. Smith, the elder, taking the same view, at onoe wrote an angry epistle to the faculty, demanding that his son be relieved immediately from such close association with one of an inferior race. The professors were puzzled, but one of them, with long experience in olasswork, undertook to answer the letter satisfactorily. He informed Mr. Smith most politely that no present Intel ferenoe was possible, but that in a few week®! v'hen the classes were rearranged and grnded, ho oould assure him that the desired change would oertainly bo made. Mr. Smith was satisfied with this assuronoe, young Smith was appeased, and the farseeing professor had no difficulty whatever in keeping his word, for, by the time the class was graded, the young negro had proved himself BO superior a student that he was among the leaders of the first section, while Smith was an insignificant unit in the third. The Joke was too good to keep, and the whole college laughed over it, except Smith, who naturally did not see much fun in the situation. But his father wrote no mare letters to the faculty at any rate.—New York Tribune.

axe used for soap in many

oountrfea where they grow When the men wfrmea of the West Indies want to w«afc bands, they squaw lbs jaioa of a kaaea over tlxtn briskly In water aatil tbey a»

Hto W1IL

There is an enormous number af apparently sensible people in the world who have a strong superstitious antipathy to mairing

a

will

They seem to imagine that to do so means an immediate visitation of death. 1 know a woman who ventured a hint on this subject to her husband the other day.

He flared up in an instant What d'you mean by that?" he asked in atone of nervous indignation. 'D'you see anything the matter with me "No, no, dear, but"— "That's what the doctor was talking to you about in the hall," he went on excitedly. "I heard you and him muttering together. Now what did he say? I can stand it So I'm going to die, am I?" "He didn't say a ward about you, dear, except"— "Yea Well, well—except what?*' "Except that you ate too much and didn't take exercise enough." "Stuff and nonsense! It's my heart— that's what it is, and I've known it all along. There'b always that pain there after eating." "That's indigestion, dear." "Indi-oat's-foot! But I'm not going to make any will, I can tell you. That would settle it And we'll have anew doctor. Yon won't get a chance to dance over my grave yet awhile, I can tell you." 1

And out of the house hebonnoed, leaving his really loving wife almost in tears.—Polly Pry in New York Recorder.

I

.., ..

A Scotch Pearl.

With much preparation an old man, half gypsy, half soldier, produced from his pocket a twist of very dirty newspaper. Unfolding this, appeared a seoond twiBt of grooer's "white brown," and when this was unrolled with due oeremony he displayed a pearL It was not a bad one and was about the size of a sweet pea seed, with fair gloss and radiancy. He prooeeded to enlarge on it "Now, sir, this is a very fine pearl whateffer. It is really worth 80 guineas. I have just sold the like of it to the Duchess of M. Ton admire it, sir? No wonder. Well, I happen to be out of gold today, and you shall have it for a trifle. I will take £3 far it Reckon it by the cost of seven weeks of work, far It took so long to find so good a pearL Put down my day's woik at so much," etc. I admired, but declined.

Not so long before I had bought a Tay pearl at a Perth jeweler's for exactly 6 shillings. It was quite as lustrous and nearly as large as the one offered by the old soldier. Indeed it was so fine that I had it set as a ring in a broad band of gold. After seeing the pearls offered at Perth, unfoitunately for the gypsy gatherer, was I enabled to criticise his prices. We parted good friends, however, and he went off to Loch Rannooh. As a goc 1 many brides and bridegrooms were staying in that district, the probability is that one of the former now wears the pearl whose fellow adorns the Duchess of M.—Gentleman's Magazine, f. Pope's tay For His Iliad.

Pope made £5,820 by his "Iliad," on which he worked alone. By his "Odyssey, after paying Broome and Fen ton, his assistants, he made about £8,500. To Broome and Fenton he paid £50 frr each book. Broome did eight books, Fenton did four. I would be pleased to translate th« "Odyssey" at the rate of £50 a book—that is, for £1,200 altogether. A better price is not likely to be got today, and I have known a much smaller price offered. Pope got far more —£8,500 for 12 books—but that was because of his name. Broome and Fenton were not likely to get more than they did in open market, and no publisher would offer FO much to ordinary men of letters today. If the poet laureate, even, produced a translation of Homer tomorrow, I doubt if he would be offered £8,500. Perhaps Lord Tennyson might have secured that sum, for his name and fame were justly great in the land.—Longman's Magazina

L,„1

The Persians have an era of their own, the "era of Yezdegird," which begins June 16, A. D. 682, and commemorates his accession to the throne of Persia

Women are naturally more prone to insanity than are men. The siiakers area Happy Community It is said, but the shaker who shakes because he can't help It is by no means a happy individual. So shakes the person troubled with chills ,and fever. The quivering and shuddering sensation is followed by no less a plague, namely, burning fever, which is followed by a perspiration oath that leaves the unhappy sufTerer "as weak as a cat." a most unfortunate simile, by the way. as the cat, for Its size, Is a peculiarly muscular animal. Under the above circumstances vital stamina Is soon used up. What will recuperate it? Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which eradicates malarial diseases in every form and repairs its terrible ravages upon the system. Derangement of the liver always accompanies malarial disorder. To the relief of this complaint, as well as constipation a«d dyspepsia, the Bitters is admirably adapted. No less efficacious and thorough is It for kidney trouble, nervousness, rheumatism and neuralgia. A wlnsglassful three times a day. Inflammatory Rheumatism Cored in 8 Days.

Morton L. Hill, of Lebanon, Ind., says »My wife had Inflammatory Rheumatism in every muscle and joint her suffering was terrible and her body and face were swollen beyond recognition nad been in bed for six weeks and bad eight phvslclans]but'received no benefit until she tried the MYSTIC CURE FOB RHEUMATISM. It gave immediate relief and she waa able to walk about In three days. I am sure it saved her life. Sold by Jacob Baur, Cook. Bell H. Black, and all druggists, Terre Haute.

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si* brt&L of Domini

A Bag SIX

The island

mica is the home af the hercules cules), the very of the coleoptera

and natural habitat beetle (Dynastee hj largest known specie

or beetle family. Full grown specimens af this gigantic representative of th" hard winged bug family average six inches in length from the tip of their pinchers to the termjnation of the wing covers. The specimen I have before me as I write is slightly smaller than the average Dynastes hereulca It has a long, black horn growing out of ahead which is even darke^ than the horn itself. On its lower surface tho horn is covered with a thick setting cf gold colored bristles, which the entomologists say are used by the inseot in capturing its prey. Another and shorter but more powerful horn grows out from beneath, the two forming a powerful pair of pinchers. The creature has six powerful legs, each armed with claws. The elytra or wing cavers are of a dapple gray color and the under parts of the body black. Taken all together, it is a formidable crcatuxe, with strength sufficient to catch and hold a bird of the size of the English sparrow.—St. Louis Republio.

Minagtena. A

M. de B., contemplating one day the two figures of Justioe and Peace kissing each other, which were sculptured above a fireplace, said to a friend: "Look, tbey aie kissing each other. They are saying adieu, never to meet again."

At the last sermon of a mission in a oountry parish everybody wept save one peasant Another asked him, "Why don't you weep?" "I do not," he replied, "belong to this parish."

Here is a story whioh is always cropping up and will probably long oontdnue to do so, fitted on to some well known personage of the time. It used to be told, 40 years ago, of Lady Jersey going to the chapel in Curzon street, and was told in London last oentury about some one else: "Mme. de B., arriving too late for mass one Sunday at 12:35 o'clock, said to her IfK&ey, 'Go and write my name.'

Lady Jersey was supposed to have put it somewhat differently, remarking to her daughter as she turned away, finding all the seats filled, "Well, my dear, at least we have done the oivil thing." —Oornhill Magazine. sr

OH Day aft a Time.

••Live one day at a time, my dear," •aid an elderly woman to a younger one recently. Don't wrinkle your forehead today over tomorrow's oares. Nothing is f*o bad, or so good either, as we anticipate, and tomorrow's burden may not be one when tomorrow is today. I lived aver two-thirds of my life before I discovered this secret, and I am growing younger every month in its use. There is always time and strength for today's duties and oares. It is the piling and borrowing, the crossing of bridges before they are reached that kill a New York Times.

________ S .. .•

SACKED CONFIDENCE.

No_ Woman's Latter Publishod Exoept by Request,

r"

Hrs. Plnkham's Tender Relations With the Suffering of Her Sex—Women Who Cannot Hide Their

Happiness.

There is a class of women who, from their own experience, sympathize with their suffering sisters, and in order that such suffering may be lessened, no bly put aside false modesty and in heartfelt gratitude publish to the world wH^t every woman should know.

Mrs. W.

•r

L. Elliott, Liscomb, Iowa, is one of those women, and has requested us to publish the facts in her ease, otherwise it would not be done, as all such evidence is treated in sacred confidence, unless publication is requested by the writer.

She says to Mrs. Pinkham"I wish you would publish the circumstances of my case, in order that other women may be benefited by my experience.

I doctored nearly all the time for two years. I spent several hundred dollars without receiving much benefit. Last June I wrote to you and described all my aches and pains. Such a long list aa there was: headache, backache, bearing-down pains, terrible soreness, constipation, dizziness, feeling of extreme lassitude, irregularity and nausea but you answered my letter and told me just what to do. I followed your advice.

After taking eight bottles of the Vegetable Compound and three bottles of Blood Purifier, I am glad to write you that I have not enjoyed such good health for years, and I am able to do all my own work. I can surely sound the praises of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and a number of my friends are taking it upon my recommendation. "—ILbs. W. L. Ezxzotx, Liscomb, Iowa.

N. HICKMAN, ..

U1SIJDJ3S,JR*TJLTZJER

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All calls will twelve the most careful attention. Open day and night.

i•

if* the Messengers of 5mss,—the Telegraph System of the human body. Nerves extend from the brain to every part of the body and reach every orgau. Nerves are like fire—good servants but hard masters.

TWICE DAILY STEAMERS TO

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Beginning May 26th and continuing until about Sept. 30th. the steamers of this line will make two trips each way dally-Onrludlng Sunday) between St. Joseph and Ohlcage, tho following schedule:

Leave St. Joseph.. .4:30 pm 10:30pm Leave Chicago... .9:30am 11:30pm

Extra trips on Saturday leave St. Joseph at 8 a. m. and Chicago at 2 p. m. Running time across the lake 4 hours. Trl-weekly steamers to Milwaukee leave St. Joseph Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings.

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,JS8

1

Nerves are fed by the blood and are therefore like it in character. Nerves

Will be weak and exhausted if the blood is thin, pale and Impure.

Nerves will surely be strong and steady if the blood is rich, red and vigorous. Nerves And a true friend In Hood's Sarsaparilla because it makes rich, red blood. Nerves do their work naturally and well,— the brain Is unclouded, there are no neuralgic pains, appetite and digestion are good, when you take

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3

EVERY EVENIMTT

Between Detroit and Cleveland

Connecting at Cleveland with Earliest Trains for all points Bast, South and Southwest and at Detroit for all points North and Northwest. Sunday Trips ions, Inly, August and* SeptsmNr My.

EVERY DAY BETWEEN

Cleveland, PuHn-Bay Toledo

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