Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 August 1880 — Page 7

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£8 Years before the Public, THE CENJUINE

DR. C. McLANES

LITER PILLS

are not recommended aa a remedy fox all the ills that flesh is heir to," but it affections of the Liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia, and Sick Head* onhe, or diseases of that character, they stand without a rival.

ACUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used pre* paratory to, or after taking quinine. As a simple purgative they are unequaled.

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar-coated. Each box has a red-wax seal on the lid, with the impression, MeLANE'8 LIVER PILL. Each wrapper bears the signatures of C. MCLAHB and FLEMING BBOS.

Insist upon having the genuine

DR. C. MCLANE'S LIVER PILLS, prepared by FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of the name McLane, spelled differentlv ^ut samo pronunciation.

INVALIDS

AHD 0THER8 REEKING

HEALTH,

STRENGTH AHD ENERGY,

WITHOUT THE USE OF DRUGS, ARE REQUESTED TO SEND FOR THE ELECTRIC REVIEW, AN ILLUSTRATED JOUR­

NAL, WHICH IS PUBLISHED FOR FREE DISTRIBUTION.

II-

TREATS npon flEALTH, HTGIENS, and Physl. CAI Clillurt*, and in a complate encyclopedia O( nformation for invalid! and those who suffer from Nervoua, Exhausting and Painful Diseases. Ever) 'Ubject that bean upon health and human happiness, -cceives attention in ita pages: and the many questono asked by suffering Invalids, who hava diifuiirod if a cure, are answered, and valuable information is volunteered to all who are in need of medieal advice.

vrrttu

The subject of Electric Belts

Medicine, and

be hundred and o*e questions of vital importance to suffering humanity, are duly conaldered and explained.

YOUNG MEN

Ana othe.'s who sfffer from Nervous and rhyslcal Debility. Loss of Manly Vigor, Premature Exhaustion and the many gloomy consequences of early indiscretion, eta., are especially benefited by consulting Its contents.

The ELECTRIC REVIEW exposes the unmitigated I'ruuda practiced by quacks and medical impostors who profess to "practice medicine," an(J points out tire )Dlv snfe, simple, and alSiv live road to Health. Vigor inaBedily Energy.

Send your address on postal card tor a oopy, and nformation worth thousanda will be sent you. Address, the publishers,

PUIVFRMACHER GALVANIC CO., ..OP, £10"IH SL VINE STREETS, CINCINNATI, a

§lis ^cckly isette.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 19.1880.

Democratic Ticket.

For President,

Winiield S. Hancock,

OF PENNSYLVANIA.

For Vice-President,

William H. English,

OF INDIANA.

STATET

Governor

FRANKLIN LANDERS.

Lieut.-Governor, ISAAC P. GRAY.

Attorney General,

TIIOS. N, WOOLEN.

Judgcs of the Sitpreme Court, ritird District-JOHN T. SCOTT. Fifth District-A. S. MITCHELL.

Secretary of State

JOHN G, SIKANKLIN,

Auditor of Staid,

flAHLON D. WANSON".

Treasurer of State WILLIAM FLEMING.

Reporter of the Svpreme Conrt. A. N. MARTIN.

$ erk of Supreme Court, GABRIEL SCIIMUCK.

Superintendent nstructicn, A. C. GOODWIN.

Congress,

BAYLESS W. HANNA

COUNTY TICKET.

Clexk.

THOMAS A. ANDERSON. Cm

Treasurer,

DAVID M. WALLACE.

STieri

LOUIS. HAY.

Coroner,

HEN YfcEHRENH ARDT.

Commissioner Third District, NEWTON BLEDSOE.!....

Senator,

I. N^KESTER.^'

Representatives,

DAVID N. TAYLOR. ?.-• JAMES WHITLOCK

ng Attorney for the 141A Jndicktf CircnU.

PERRY H. B&rb

it

1

ii «s

GENERAL AND PERSONAL.

The old masters abroad must be kept very busy supplying shoddy Americans with paintings.

Col. Robert G. Ingersoll is passing the summer at the Bass Rock House, Gloucester, Mass.

Mr. Ernst Gaujot, engineer of mines in Japan, has arrived in this country per French steamer Labrador.

What is called a cord of ice weighs a little over a ton but poor people are jnot now buying ice by the cord.

Miss Lennie Ashe, of San Francisco and the niecc of Mrs. Admiral Farragut, is soon to be married to Rogers Gait, of the navy. /.p

The young man who has proposed and been neither accepted nor rejected knows how exciting it is to live in a doubtful state.

Lavater would have called Bob Ingersoll an honest man. lie said: "The more honesty a man has the less he affects the air of a saint."

Job was averjr p&tient man, but it should be taken into consideration that he was never overtured for a $30 bounet on a $10 per week salary. "Retrospective Prophecy," whatever that is* is what Prof. Huxley is working up now. If it is about the weather, a forecast of the past is safest.

If Tanner's mother had tried tl^e. forty day food skip on him when he was an infant, there would have been ndne ofthis starvation nonsense going on now.

Parasols are generally made larger for summer use we don't Know exactly why, and we are hardly wicked enough to sug gest that it may be enable two to get under it.

A memorial window to Sir "Walter Raleigh is about to be erected in Canon Farrar's chtirch—-St. Margaret's, Westminster. Americans, the London Truth asserts, have contributed largely to the fund.

An Irishman sf a mechanical turn took ofF his gas-meter to repair it himself, and put it on again upside down. At the end of the quarter it was proved that the company owed liim $15.75. "When I speak this speech at night," says Bernhardt, at rehearsal, "I shall stand by the chair, left side of stage." It is well to be exact as to position, for the catling actor can not always see her. "Mark Twain" thinks that every steamboat should be compelled to carry in a conspicuous place the following notice "In case of disaster, do not waste precious lime in meddling with the life-boats they are out of order."

Sufferer wants to know what we should do if we had a boil. Can't tell but the chances are we should swear a good deal and commit assaults on whoever brushed against the sore spot. We're a good deal like other men.

There is great rivalry at different watering places this season over peculiar styles of walking, and much is heard of the Cape May wiggle, Saratoga trot, and the like, as if society might be "walking for dat cake."

Flotsam and Jetsam.

The astronomer of the Providence Journal says in reference to the heavens during August: "Jupiter will be a superb object to every beholder during the August evenings, as he comes beaming above the horizon like a brilliant young moon, lie rises now about 10, at the end of the month about 8. Saturn is morning star and follows closely in the wake of the more brilliant Jupiter. He is, however, no mean object for observation as he rises to the northwest of his rival and about a half-hour later. He is increasing in size and clearness of tint and is well worthy of attention in his present phase On the 20th there will be a close con junction between Uranus and Venus, those planets being then forty-five minutes of a degree apart. This phenomenon will afford a fine opportunity to the telescopic student for a study of the contrast in planetary colors, the delicate tint of Uranus and the inimitable soft golden hue of Venus being beautifully illustrated. Uranus sets now at about 8.30, at the end of the month about sunset. The August moon fulls on the 20th. The new moon of the 5th pays her respects in quick succession to four of thq planets, to Mercury on the 5th, the day of her birth, to Venus on the 6th, and to Uranus and Mars on the 8th. On the 23d the moon is near Jumter, and on the 24th she is near Sar turn.

A bonheur dejour table feet wide, 18 inches deep and two feet 9 inches high beautifully and elaborately decorated, one of the Wei beck "proprietors" inherited by the Duke of Portland, has been valued for probate at 10,000 guineas. There is nothing very astonisliinp in this for when there was a dispute as to the ownership of a cup during the bankruptcy of the late Duke of Newcastle (whether it belonged to the Dnke or Mrs. Hope), some one suggested that such a trine was not worth so much discussion, whereupon it came out that at the death of Mr. Henry Hope the said cup had been valued at £10,000.

One day our Towser was a lyin' in the sun trine to sleep, but the flies was that bad ho could't cos he had to catch 'em, and bimeby a bee lit on his head and was working about like the dog was his'n. Towser he held his head still, and when the bee was close to his nose, Towser winked at him like he Bed you see what this buffer is doin', he thinks I'm a lilly of the vally which isn't opened yet, but you just wait till I blossom and you will see some fun, and sure enuf Towser opened his mouth very slow so as not to friten the bee, and the bee went intoTowser's mouth. Then Towser shet his eyes and mouth, too, and had begun to make peaceful smile wen the bee stung him, and you never see a lilly of the vally act so your life.

As to laughing, says Mr. Labouchere, how seldom, except on the stage, do we hear a really musical laugh. Some girls make dreadful grimaces when they laugh. A little education in the art would not make their laughter artificial, and they would surely enjoy it all the more if they could realize that they might indulge in mirth without making themselves look so very ugly as is occasionally the case. It runs in families sometimes to distort the countenance in laughter. I know a family who laugh fi great deal. Their

THE TKKKE baufc WEEKLY

eyes always'shut up when they do so, and and it is the funniest thing when one dines with them and something amusing is said, to look round the table and see exactly the same distortion on every face. There is not an eye left in the family. Three sisters whom I know show quite half an inch of pale pink gum when they laugh' In their presence, like Wendell Holmes, one "never dares to be as fnnnv as one can," for fear of seeing this appalling triple vision of gums. A little training in childhood would make their laughter a pleasant thing to look at, for they have,all pretty little square teeth, very white and even. Ward Beecher says "A good laugh is worth a hundred groans in any market," and I am sure a pretty! one is worth a thousand.

RELIGIOUS.

Denominational Notes oflnterest.

UNIVERSALIS?.

The Rev. Edward Smiley has resigned his charge of the parish at'Claramont, N. H., where he had spent the last six years. No pastor before him had served the parish for so long a time.

The Christian Leader deeply regrets that Dr. Cbambre, a prominent and scholarly Universalist minister, should go to the Episcopal Church, where, it sa)rs it is impossible for his former brethren to hold any relations with him—"a church utterly without bowels and mercies, though endowed with a capacious and undiscriminating maw."

The Rev. James Freeman Clarke, of Boston, said in a recent sermon:—"I have noticed that men holding extreme opinions in what is now called free religion are often just as bigoted as the most orthodox." The facta are as unquestioned as the authority, for the assertion is indisputable. Aiid the Loader adds that liberalism is tolerant of itself, but seldom of anything different.

BAPTISTS.

The First Baptist church at Stillvvater, N. Y., is 100 years old, having been organized in June, 1780. Centennial services were held there recently. This church has had twenty-three pastors, and has licensed eight brethren to preach the GOSIMJI. Her children are known as the First. Saratoga, Greenfield, Schuylerville and Second Stillwater.

Previous to 1669 tlierew"was preaching in the city of Ni:w York by men professing the Baptist faith.

The largest Baptist church membership outside of Tinnevalley, in the Telugu country, India, which numbers about 12,000, is Spurgeon's Tabernacle, London, which contains 4,290 communicants, and which during the last ecclesiastical year iail a net increase of 123 members. In The Sunday school there are 1,200 scholars "and teachers 42 scholars have joined the church during the year. Besides which Mr. Spurgeon's people conduct in connectien with the Metropolitan Tabernacle 19 Sunday schools, in which are 500 teachers and 5,853 scholars.

The Free Will Baptists have in this country, according to their latest reports, I,449 churches, 1,434 pastors and 75,686 members. Their contributions for benevolence and education amounted to $80,711 29. Bates College, in Maine, has a debt of $56,000, which they propose to remove, and as this is their centennial year also they propose to raise an endowment fund of $25,000 for tliil college and $10,000 for Hillsdale College, Mich. They have 3 missionary societies and-17 educational institutions.

ROMAN CATHOLIC.

The wife of Don Piatt has joined the Catholic Church, and will build a new church at Mackinac, Ohio, where her husband owns a beautiful summer residence.

Four nuns of the Second Order of St. Dominick—two American 'and two French—have come to open a new convent in Newark, from Lyons France. They will build on a lot next to the House of the Good Shepherd.

The names of Bishop Lynch, of Charles, ton Bistap Loughlin, of Brooklyn, and Bishop Corrigan, of Newark, N. J., have been submitted to the Pope by the other Catholic bishops for the selection of a coajutor to Cardinal NcClosky, the preffer enee being in the order given above. The coadjutor will relieve the cardinal of many of his episcopal duties and will Have the right of succession to the archbishopric.

His Eminence Cardinal McClosky will spend a portion of his vacation at Newport, probably the month of August. He needs rest and recation for, notwithstanding his years, he has lalwrcd very dili gently in the performance of the duties of liia high calling recently.

The Pope has named the Very Rev. Patrick Manogue, V. G., late of Virginia City, Nev., to be coadjutor, with the right of succession, to the Right Rev. Eugene O'Connell,Bishop of Grass Valley, who has for years past asked the favor of the Holy See to lighten the burdens that this devoted and learned bishop has so long been enduring in his own person The Very Rev. Father Manogue sailed lately for a brief rest in his native Ireland.

Santley, the great singer, has joined the Roman Catholic Church. METHODI8T.

The Methodists now find the Western field far outgrowing their present means. Although the Board of Church Extension has aided in the erection of nearly 2,800 houses of worship since 1865, providing sittings for 840,000 people, they are far behind the demands of the West. There are elders' districts, several counties in extent, where no churches exist at all, and in districts as large as New England barely three or four nave yet been organized. An immediate increase of $100,000 for the Western and Southern States is asked bytliose on the ground, and Chaplain McCabfe is working hard and traveling much\o raise it. "Sham Episcopacy" is what the Churchman calls the third order of the Methodist ^Episcopal Church. But it's all sham, and the more there is of it the more sham there is. An exchange quotes the old adage about people living in glass houses throwing stones and says that when we investigate its genesis we find that the episcopacy of the Methodist Church has exactly the same warrant and entirely the same historical excuse as the episcopacy of the Episcopal Church. If it was necessary to authenticate the line neither could ao so without adopting the heroic policy of forgetting many things that did happen and remembering some that did not Tbe theory of

GAZETTE,

the episcopacy and the method of using it differs in the two sects but since there is no standard of the genuine thing assumption on the one side or the other is as absurd as it is in disputes between Englishmen and Americans relative to the orthodoxy of their respective forms of government

1

"ft.

EPISCOPALIAN.

The receipts on "Hospital Sunday" in, London this year were $152,500, which is an increase of $20,000 over 1879 and the largest amount ever received. All denominatfons contribute to this fund.

Resignations of the following named clergymen are reported in the latest church papers. Rev. Charles J. Curtis, of St. Matthew's

Church: Hillsboro, N. C.

Rev. E. H. Ingle, of Emanuel Church, Athens, Ga., to remove to Baltimore, Md., and Rev. F. W. Tompkins, Jr., of St. Matthew's Church, Letiosha, Wis., to go to St. Paul's Church, Minneapolis, Minn. September 1.

The Rev. J. Winslow has resigned the rectorship of St. gtephen's Church, New Hartford, N. Y., and removed to Watertown," N. Y. The Rev. William J. Alger has resigned his charge in Saco and Biddefora, Me., and removed to Auburndale, Mass. *fr

CONGREGATIONAL.

The Second Congregational Chufch of Watcrbury, Conn., Rev. Dr. Beckwith, pastor, received at their last communion 44 members, 39 of whom were on confession of faith. The church is entirely free of debt, and is prosperous in all its departments.

The First Congregational Church in Chicago, 111., was organized May 22,1851. Since that time 31 Congregational churches have been organized mat city and vicinity—14 within the city limits and 17 outside. These 31 churches report 166 original members. Aggregate additions during the quarter century, 9,560 total number, including original members, 9,726 persons.

PRESBYTERIAN.

The Rev. Henry McMeekin has re signed his charge of the church at Wenona, 111. The Rev. Wesley Hyde, of Glenfield, Pa., has resigned his pastorate at West Middleton, Pa. The Rev. Dr. William M. Blackburn, late theological professor at Chicago, has been elected Chancellor of the Western University at Pittsburg, Pa.

The Rev. J. H. Smith, after a pastorate of fourteen years at La Crosse, Wis., has resigned. The Rev. J. K. Gibson has accepted a call to the church at Troy, Ohio. The Rev. Dr. M. E. Dunham, having been elected principal of the Whitestown Seminary, has resigned his pastorate at Johnstown, N. Y., and next month will remove, with his family, to his former home.

The Presbyterians of Asbuiy Park .N. J., laid the corner of their new church on a beautiful site on Grand and oecond avenues a few days ago. The work will be pushed to completion in time for occupancy before the winter sets in.

MISCELLA25I0US.

The population of our whole country may now be set down as 45,000,00. The church edifices are estimated to be sufficient to seat 25,000,000 but on an average Sunday probably less then 15,000,000 are found in these places of worship. Allowing 12,000,000 to be detained at their homes, we yet have 18.000,000, or more than one-third of the nation, and these of sufficient age and ability, who do not habitually meet for worship, but devote themselves to something quite alien from wor-hip.

Piiiladeiphia has the largest number of churches of nny ofjjtbe large cities in the UniK-d Stales—434 New York comes next with 354, Brooklyn with 240, and all other cities have less than 200 each, Boston has one church to every 1,450, inhabitants,! New York one to 25,00, Buffalo one to 1,675, Cleveland one to 1,450, Cincinnati one to 1,600. Providence has one to 1,300.

The various Protestant denomination have in Japan 117 male and female missionaries, an increase of 13 since 1874 54 organized churches, an increase of 20 2,701 baptized adults converts, an incrense of 1,084 2,511 Sunday School scholars, an increase of355 16 ordained native pastors, an increase of 7 4 theological stu-dents,-and 94 unordained native preachers and catachists. In the hospitals under the charge of missionaries 13,286 patients have been treated.

E ronchitis, a Premonitor of consumption, is characterized by 4 catarrh or inflammation of the mucous membrane of the air passages with cough and expec-^-j' toration short breath, hoarseness, pams in the chest. For all bronchial affections, sore throat, aphonia or loss of voicc coughs, "DR. SWAYNE'S COMPOUND SYR\'L UP OF WILD CHERRY" is a well--known curative. Price 25c and ip$l a bottle, or six bottles $5. SfeThe large size is the most economical. Prepared only by Dr. ^Swayne & Son, Philadelphia. "'"Sold by all prominent druggists,

T: An occasional dose of "SWAYNE'S jr/^PiLUs" should be taken to keep vv the bowels free. They arc excel^:.w !lent for torpid liver and bilious complaints. Sold by Bun tin &

Armstrong, Terre Haute.

"Swayne's Ointment and nils THE GREATEST REMEDY THE WOULD HAS EVER KSFOWN.

Curing the most inveterate case of skin diseases, such as tetter, salt rheum, scald nead, barber's itch, sores, all crusty, scaly skin eruptions, and that distressing complaint, itching piles. As a blood purifier and liver regulator, Swayne's Tar and Sarsaparilla Pills are excellent. Cure sick and nervous headache, dyspepsia, in digestion ward off malarial fevers, cleansing the system and bowels of all impurities, restoring to healthy activity every organ of the body. Price, twentyfive cents a box five boxes, $1. Ointment, fifty cents three boxes, $1 25. Can be sent by mail to any address on receipt of price. Address letters, Dr. Swayne & Son, 330 North Sixth street, Philadelphia. Sold by all prominent druggists. Bun tin & Armstrong. Terre Haute

i. H. Chapman's

restaurant is rapidly filling up with regular boarders who have tried his meals before and know their excellence. CHAPMAN'S reputation is on a rock and is enduring. His charges are reasonable.. ...

STANDS TO-DAY WITHOUT A RIVAL IN THE WORLD. For the core4f all kinds of Ague and Chills it has

Boots

Mill

HP

*No.

FEVE*

wi hue uureva aii Aiuuo ui nywv nuu vnitii it uu no equal having stood the teat of universal use fof thirty yeart in the most malarial distric It never (alls to curs, not merely removing for a time the symptoms, bat eradicating the catue the disease, thereby making a permanent cure. PRICE ONLY 75 CENT

Hanaffcctare* by Tbe Dr. Hirter X«dletn« Co^ Mo. SIS N. Sfaln Street, St. Louis.

^"Dr. ifarter't

Cg^^ns^April 30th.' 187^, says:

has never failed with us."

Dr. YOUNQBLOOD of Little York, Ifo., says: "I have used

German Protestant Orphans' Home, St Charles Rock Road, 8t Lonls

rever and Ague Speci/lc

Mr. Jwo. C. WSLBORH of Keysport, Ill_ says: "I cured a little trtrl of Aime of thra* standing, with

Dr. HarUr'$ Fever and Ague Specific,

in my practice, and can heartily recommend it to the public." \Z

AND ATTEND THE

CLEARANCE- SALE:

AT LESS THAN To make room for Fall Stock.

Used and approved by the leading PHYSICIANS of EUROPE and AMERICA.

Tf rro8t Valuable Fa Remedy ov»/n.

E I "TOOL CLS

1ETR0LEUM JELLY s&Z-

Office of Dr. M. W, CASE, 933 Arch Street, Philad'ft, Rt,

CATARRH

It does not

inhaltti—takenright

MV"

PATENTED OCTOBER LO, 1876.

O N O

Xa a Terrible Disease. Ita fearful «ffocts~ 30miction running fawn tbe throat, weak eye*, deaf f* ne«, Ion ot voice, Ion of smell, disgusting odorg, nnaal i* deformities, and flrcJly consumption. From first

last it is ever aggrer J*. J. Ordinary treatments are worse than useless. If neglected*? while a care is por)£Do,it may rs{idly develop into quick consumption. Tbe moot thorough, auccoasfM ad pleasant treatment is

JI^E'S

re­IFOR

ten min•

quire

CAEBOLATE of TAB IMALAHT

CATARRH. ASTmKjC

uta to demonstrate the value of Csrbolste sf Tar, the mart htal- ^AUQIIUDTI AM nil remedial aaent known toteienee. Balsams and Cordials ofD VVllOUnir I IvHl the most healing and soothing properties are so combined with fine Tree Tar, that the mere breathing converts them into a dense smoke vapor. This is

to the diseased parts. No heat, 1

ao not water, simply inhaling or breathing it and you feel its healii is endorsed by physicians everywhere, and highly commended

.cat Satisfaction Always Guaranteed.' Address, OR. |||. W. CASE, 933 Areh St. Pblladelphis, AVOID WORTHLESS IMITATif""" AND BASE !M,T*T0RS.-«e 1 A'Ii i,

y\ POSITIVE CURE ^WITHOUT MEDICINES.

ALLAN'S SOLUBLE MEDICATED BOUGIES

No. will cure any case in four days, or I^ss.

2 Wxl1 cure the Most Obstinate Case, nc matter of now long standing. No nauseous doses of Cubebs, Cop-alba or of Sandalwood, that are certain to produce dyr, pepsia by destroying the coatings of the stoutsach. No Syringes or Astringent Injections tc\ produce other serious complications.

Price $1.50. S'OLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS oxmailed on receipt of Price. For further particulars send to druggist in your city for Circular. J. C. ALLAN CO., vP. O. Box 1,533. -No. 83 John St., New York: 4 We offer Rev/ard for any case they wiD, not cure.

Ouic fe, Sure Cure.

OH do TRIAliI

ML Dm CKLttBATKD KJKTKO-TOLTAIC BBUI8, lit, OrssaimuMH, to any panoa tjwmf or oU) wjflbrtngfrwn or TITAI.ITT.etc~ or to those afflicted: with BP

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For the

Treatment of

W0UHDS, BUBJTS,

SORES, CUTS, CHILBLAINS,

SKIN DISEASES, RHEUMATISM,

CATARRH, KrtfORRHOIDS, Etc. Also for Coughs, Colds, Sore Thioat, Croup and Diphtheria, etc, J^Try them. 25 and 55 cent sizes of all our goods,

6BAND MEDAL. AT THE PHILADELPHIA EXPOSITIOW. ULYEUISXDAL AT THE PARIS EXPOSITION. r. •.Vi' 'fr-if-'

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fj

it

is a positive cure Itor*

after the best physicians Sled to benfit her.* .,

Dr. HarUi't Fever and Aaue SoetUc

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3

'The TolJal|S

Article* from par**"

Vaseline—each ss Pomade Vaseline Vaseline Cold Cream,

Vaseline Camphor left Vaseline Toilet Soaps, am inperlor to nny i'mW an***

VASELINE CONFECTION!'

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SPPFORTSKS. aa* UDICITTIOM