Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / July 19, 1886, edition 1 / Page 7
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THEr GOLDSBORO MESSENGER.-MONDAY,-JULY 19-1886. ' .-til nil' 1 WHOLESALE 1! My Prices Guaranteed to meet Northern .- .;- : - . - ... .. Health r " i t - . s i y ;! : - . 1 Tin :'v ratlin Itey m "T:"' f&St&' :. ! " ( 33 MILES WEST OF CHARLOTTE ON THE ATLANTA & CHARLOTTE AIR LINE R. R. ThP above Kesort was newlv built open fife place in every room. Tow supplied at all times with the best the May 21, 1888-w3m 66 Hi, GENTS' DEPARTMENT. CLOTHING STRAIGHT-CUT. 3 and 4 BUTTON CUTAWAYS NORFOLK'S SEERSUCKERS IN COATS AND VESTS. LION BRAND COLLARS AND CUFFS. "FAVORITE SHIRTS." B JE31 O IN LOW OR HIGH QUARTERS. TIES AND SCARFS HANDSOME AND CHEAP HEMSTITCHED HANDKERCHIEFS. TRUNKS AND VALISES. HATS, HATS, IN STRAW, WOOL, FUR, CLOTH, DRAB-PEARL, BLUE, BLACK, & BROWN, ALPACA COATS, SUSPENDERS, HOSIERY , AND UMBRELLAS. ILdEdDBS: ATT TTIHinS All Havana Tobaccoi, akd only costs you Cents som thini-never done beJitMs cz We are selling this Cigar for less than it cost to manufacture them, . and ,will; seh j ., omy 0WV. vuiue iuiu u.j bxiciu. j "We also handle the following Celebrated 6c Cigars : "Navy Fives,)aOherita,'' ''Our JsJu laolesale, . .1 v. t ooifner VNUV Jan. 25, 188.-tfjQj HOTAIRid llllT I . A T r ...... ... ,.,.,.,..,,- .... ; V DEALERS IN AND nn: i P or Western Markets. Write or Call for i ; arid Pleasure Resort I last Season, is' beautifully located "Rafb TTonRP and Bath Kooms. JNew Uancinff ravuion. ne xaDie TT JL-MVMk V .rf-wr " " " market affords. B Y P R O M P T N E S S W P R O S P E R B Y P R O M P T N E S S W E P R O S P E SR; IR5 DRY GOODS Clothing,; Furnishing GOODS v o 1 1 i 'A Grafosoarsr HouseJi -y.' MnK 1 . I ': ; frAfSSOZDODOM C. Mill BU1IMIE. '3ES mrm ; 1 mill laiiui ivii . ivii , X tax III - - XI va im v - - w 1 SHIPPERS OF Postal Quotations, (if maj31--tf; a r i P1 , i j fit i j i .0. 3 3 and elegantly furnished Has an KJ - . -9 1 1 I nP If Slip I mm '' I '- I " I .1 1.1 I ' V Terms Reasonable. For further information address COZZEJTS & THOMAS, ' . .1 All-Heallnur P.' 0 Gaston County, N. C. jii LADIES' DEPARTMENT. DRESS GOODS, SEERSUCKERS, BOUCLE AND LAWNS, GINGHAMS AND CALICOES INDIAN LINEN, PERSIAN LAWNS, ALBATROS, SUMMER SILKS, PARASOLS (in all Colors.) X XAll Jj HAND SATCHELS. MULL, in Pink Cream and White, Blue, Black, Brown, Green and Garnet CASHMERES. SILK and LISLE GLOVES. All Colors in LADIES' and CHILDREN'S HOSE. LACES in all Widths, also in Colors. . WOOL LACE. Dress Fronts, LARGE AND SMALL - . ; i ;-'U i I ( : BUTTONS TO MATCH. .':rs K The undersigned having qnalffied as administrator of Thad. A. Granger, ' de ceased, hereby notifies all persons holding claims against the estate to present them for payment by the 14th day of Jane, 1887, or this notice will be pleaded in. bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will make immediate pay ment; t W. P. GRANGER, : June 14, 1886-6 w- Administrator : I'M liU'SPfilllliS HOTEL! The new Hotel at Warm Springs, N. C, ? will De open for the reception o. guests on June 30th. : t"For particulars as to terms, baths, &c.j address ( v v '1 , iV ; 2. CHATTIElDF;lV()prirfw. (Alao of Highland Park. Hotel, Aiken, 8. G.) jan21-lm :S f it: s Warm Springs, N. O. BARGAINS! ' ' : -iwiS p p . -j ff r, t f I have ireceired t& lot ot JxMx Papers, embracing about thirty, etylesi t unusu ally low ngures and will offer this week at about one-half the regular prices. Pos - 886 FANS FANS NOTICE itivetyr the Bame paper cannot be dupli- the playing with which impresses upon cated at these prices. 1 These are genuine the youthful mind the value of different bargains. 0 i " ' ' '- $ ' i; coins and the artof making change, there t Finest thotdgraph 'Albums ever shown by laying the foundation ior Elementary In t.h rftv. Hmtabla for .handsomd nrea- ArithmeUcU -Xtu.- -i- ' f- cnts.4 MX-l'Xt myl7- WjnTAKBBBDOKfirrORB. TSlIscellaneaus. UUUk -AND t Ono Car Load Oyster Slicll Line. 25,000, LBS. HEAT.' 500' BUSHELS CORN.' f; 3 00 BBLS FL0UB' Jy r ' MOLASSES. KEROSENE OIL. r.'h- I BREAD PREPARA-1 vac CASES 50 75 50 25 LYE AND POTASH. BOXES SOAP. , CASES OYSTERS. SACKS COFFEE. One Car Load Hayden Flour, cbeap. Tobacco cheaper than anybody else in town. At ILL. LEE & CO'S. Goldsboro.N. C, March 18.--tf i i Five Cold and Two Oliver Medals, awarded in 1885 at the Expositions of New Orleans and Louisville, and the In-' ventions Exposition of London. The superiority of Coraline over horn or whalebone has now been demonstrated by over five years' experience. r It is more durable, more pliable, more comfortable, and never breaks. Avoid cheap imitations made of various kinds of cord. None are genuine unless "Db. Waenee's Cobalinb" is printed on inside of steel cover. (OR SALE BT ALL LEADIXft MERCHANTS. - WARNER BROTHERS, 353 Rrrwriway. New York City, A. WILLIAMSON, . Manufacturer of Fine AND DEALER IK WHIPS, BLANKETS, ROBES, BRI DLES AND SADDLES, CART- BREECHINQ, HORSE BOOTS, DOUBLE AND SINGLE WAGON HARNESS, HALTERS, CUR RY COMBS AND BRUSHES. A So. I Bui;M9':fiir&6ss for 112,50, Machine Harness, 87.50 to 812 50. KORNEGAY BUILDING, GOLDSBORO, N.C. "Repairing of all kinds promptly at tended to. 0726-11 Exchange Hotel, -w xiisonr, rr. o. Under the management of MRS. F. I. FINCH, (The Original Proprietor.) i Special attention given to the care 1 SUMMER Up Among the Clouds 4,000 FEET ABOVE SEA LEVEL, 1,700 FEET ABOVE ASHEVILLE Magnificent Scenery. Temperature from 60 to 75 " rarest Air ana w ater. THE WATAUGA HOTEL, Blowing Rock, N. C. tton. ReasSnable Bates. Accessible Loca w i .... M 4. m A 1 . tlon. Excellent Table. Plenty of Ice. All the Delicaces of the Season. Mrs. and Miss Bbxidt, of Davison College, have charge of j more the Houseiceepmpr uepartmenx. guarantee 3 Reasonable (a ites than any house with equal attractionfl and aoconimoaaaons. -For .Circulars and. Tenna Address WATATJ3A HOTEL C01TPAN7, apSd-wtf. BLOWING BOCK, N. C. THE .:WA7ERLY; HOTEL, 'SARiTOGriVN. T. A .Select. Pamily ! Hotel, delightfolly located! "on. North Broadway. Terms: $12 to $15 per week. ; Pr?SenK kf trcalars.- Wu, TP, HXIRD, M , Proprietor. I fnn23-tf rr r?nn EDUCATIONAL 3TOr MONEY. 1 - A fad sirnde'.' on card-board, of coins in 1 common use, making an ;lnatructiTe jtoy; june28-tf f . Goldsboro.N. C. A DD r i Hand lade Harness Lamar as a Maaber. A correspdndent .of the Philadelrhia Press writes. I Secretarr, Lamar is - a larse. rather powerfully-builL.manB, with-trong I but coarse features,' a quick eye, .and a man ner at times cold andabstracted or ' ex ceedingly warm and genial, according to the mood he is in. He is a man who finds it extremely hard in his official position to'&ay rio, especial! v to ; a wo man, and more especially 4f that wo man be a pretty one. Apropos of this, he' made the remark the other day that before his appointment as secretary of the interior, he held.un common with most rxnrIi th Mpliitht Tnm fVli;iL tree was the ; biggest liar tfn rAmerica; -but," said Mr. Lamar, Wince I have been in office I have told more lies than the Texas colonel has in his illustrious career. I heard a lady remark the other dav that Lamar . looked like n a snub-nosed 0nt ertain1 heldoesji' good $iX bf OVA : vuiu rJo known as the male flirt of the present administration, it nas. Deen said of him that he only asks ten minutes to make a conquest of a weak, and twenty min utes of a strong minded woman. 'This seems all the more singular, as the sec retary 8 thirty years of married life has! been pronounced by his friends a poem, o .1: . t i ouuiBui ins uiauijti! iuairon irienaa say it is a pity that the great -Mississip- pian does not concentrate his affection and lay it at the feet of some charming southem woman who would make, him happy. They regret the frivolous turn he has taken of late, and - hiear 'with amazement the 101 stories which are floating around of the pretty sen ti men- tal speeches which the secretary of the interior makes alike to his lady callers I and the numerous pretty" clerks in his tment. v ' Madame," said the "poetical secre- tary to a lady applying for a position in the'interior department, "I have but! one thing to give." and bowing low he placed his right hand upon his heart The gentle applicant went away as nattered as it sne had if she had shaken hands with the president. When the cares of office and the pressure of oflice-seekers get unbearable Lamar escapes from the back door of the interior department, mounts a horse that is waiting for him, and is soon beyond the confines of the capital. Absorbed in thought he will often ride for miles. He is indeed a dreamer. Uncle Jones, as he is called here, known to the public as Greenback Jones, said a true thing the other day. though I don t think he had either La mar or the silver-tongued Gen. Nelson, of Indiana, in mind. "A man," said he, "who thinks he's a masher at 50 is a fool. Uncle Sam's Conscience Fund. In the vaults of the United States Treasury at Washington there is the sum of $220,746.26, which is entered upon the books of the Treasurer as "Miscellaneous receipts from persons unknown," and which sum constitutes what is known as the ,4Conscience Fund,'' as it is supposed to come from people who have at some time defraud ed the government and who wish to make restitution by refunding the amounts of their peculations. "Ihis conscience fund, said a lreas- ury official, 'has been steadily increas ing for sixty years, until now it reaches the enormous sum of nearly $250,000. The first money of the kind received by the Treasury was $380 received in 1827 from an unknown. person, -who explain ed m ihis letter that ? he was reiandinET for some customs he had once defrauded the government of. - Since that time re mittances of all amounts; 1 ranging from 8 cents to $2,500 have been coming in. They come from all over the country, ana even from foreiffn lands. A great deal of this money is reeeiT- ed from priests nd ministers. who write that some sinner in their parish request ed them to send it in. During the small pox epidemic in Canada a Catholic priest sent us a draft for $60 which a dying Canadian had given him, confes sing to have stolen that amount from the United States government, but not giving the details. Frequently nothing accompanies tne remittance uj muicace what it is for, but generally, a line or two of explanation is given. "Another time we received a letter containing four ? cent stamps, but not a line of explanation, xhis, I believe, is the smallest contribution ever sent in. Another letter, postmarked at Kansas Citv, was received, inclosing ten $5 bills, with a note saying, 'This money belongs to the government 'In January we received an official envelope Dostmarked at New York, and containing $2,500 in bills one of $1. 000, two of $500 and five of $100. They were all cut in two, with a small piece cut from the center, and the word "cancelled' written across the face. A note inclosed ran thus: 'Here are $2,500 in United States bills, mutilated so as to insure the gov ernment's getting the money. Whatso ever a man sows that shall he reap. I have sowed the wind, and am reaping the whirlwind. This is next to the final payment due. ' God grant me a speedy release.' "We had received $500 dollars from New York shortly before, and circum stances connected with the remittances indicated that they were both from the same party.' N. Y. Suri. A Wonderful Spring in Florida. The finest spring of water I ever saw,'' said a passenger from Florida, "is down in Hernando county, on the gulf side. The land is high and rolling and not flat and swampy.--as most , of Florida is, and as most folks think it all is. The Wekowechee River in that countv is twelve miles Ions:, and about the prettiest stream I ever saw. . It is made entirely by , one spring, and this spring is sixty feet in diameter. You can row a boat ngni ; into it, uul Jou can't made a boat stay in the center, as m ' . 1 Z A the force of the water rising throws it gently to one side A - small steamer can navigate the river.-whose banks are high and coverea, twitaj iouage-i ixuu spring has' the purest, water ;that .ever flowed out bf the' earth:. It is seventy feet to bottom, and you can see,, a dime down there just as plain as you can in a glasa of water.: : In the, .river ryou can Bee fish twenty rods away. Not . the slightest trace of organic matter can be found in the spring water.; This river and spring, bv the way, have been pur chased by two ' Chicago gentlemen. They got some 2,000 acres of land there for something like $8,Q00rand' they will make a fortune ont of it?. It is the most rwntiftii snnnor in America. ucayw . ' - . -i. 4 . -A J 'L I . 3L Jit il dram tan 9.000.000 soldiers could take arms in Europe. -r :,-fT v . - The beitrdressed professional woman in Nftnr Ynrt la KA1U.LU ,ue it. her and her calling. ? y(. r. , ' ay and ithoi statement is equally true of the other two.hvmg menibers of the old bonanza nnn - that.he is no longer an active par- i 4. i H. : : i.: i that he has' salted away "most of his money in Government bonds and Cali fornia real estate. , The editor of a New York mining journal ayg .that he does not believe that any . of ; the bonanza kins ever had as much money .as. the world generally has - thought,, even in their palmiest 'days, and that ,they had less now tthan . ever.- ."I, don't think either Fair. Mackay , , or Flooil - has j put any considerable money, in mines in. the last three A-ears," he continued: " Vand thW ?nV own-1 u?? ? ' f?w btVck in w hic,i seo a bl- future nd ?&cn ?nai U1.V cau"?1. 5t; oul ol w in.0Hl heavy loss. . All three have turned their attention to legitimate business. Fair is here' now looking into some railroad enterprise; Flood is the biggest holder of real estate in . San Francisco; while Mackay, as is well known, nas nearly all of his fortune in telegraph and cable schemes and the Uouman House here. Their connection with the Comstock lode is now a reminiscence.'! Ex-President.. Franklin Pierce once taught in Oxford County, Maine. , A lo- cal paper says that a problem in alge- 11 . tr. t: u . via aa , uiuuuk iir & iuru vj u scholar with a request that he , give aid in solving it. lie took , the problem, worked on it a long time and, being un- able to solve it. gave the scholar a lect- ure on perseverance and advised him to work it out himself. f That night the young schoolmaster worked at his room until a very late hour on the problem. but without success. Finally in a sort of mental . abstraction he got up and commenced pacing the room. While so doiug he noticed a small clos t near the side of a chimney; opening lhs and ex- ploring its interior, he found a torn and wrinkled piece of paper with licrures on it. lakmg it out he found that the figures on that piece of paper were the solution of the very problem which had perplexed him so greatly. Stanley, when he started across Africa, took with him sixty-nine books for en tertainment on the way, and the only one to survive the trip was the Bible. It is amazing how long the Bible will last some people. In some families the Good Book, bound in flimsy muslin, will out last a dozen novels substantially bound in leather. Norrist&icn Herald It is a familiar and yet it always strikes one as' a marvelous fact that world may have been for 'years in ex istence, the light of which has not vet had time to reach our earth, and that we may still continue to see the light of stars th at have been lor a long time ex tinct William Cullen Bryant was Town Clerk of Great Barrington, Mass., sixty- one vears airo. and one of his duties was to record the marriages solemnized there. Among the marriages so r corded was that of "William C. Bryant with Frances Fairchild. Jan. 11. 1812." The Churchman indignantly calls the prevailing, style .of ball-room dress "m aolent indecency." LEMON ELIXIR An Old Citizen of Atlanta. Ga. By the recommendation of Rev. C. C; Davis, I used Dr. Mozley's Lemon Elixir for a severe chronic case of indigestion, palpitation and ir regular action of the heart, with constipation and biliousness. I also suffered greatly with gravel and great pains tn the back and kid neys, much of the time unable to stand alone. I was treated by many physicians and used many remedies, but got no relief. Dr. Moz ley's Lemon Elixir alone has made a perfect cure of all these diseases. I am now - a well man. - My wife has for many years suffered greatly with constipation and sick headaches from which f he could get no relief. The Lem oa ""uit&ia, O.. Bold by d druggists. 50 cents and fl.00 per bottle. Pre pared by n. Moziey, M. u., At-1 lanta, Oa. ... julyl-lm DON'T FORGET ! Senator, Fair's i friends F. & S. F. & S. F. & S. F. & S. F. & S. F. & S. F. & S. 0' FOHYIELLE & SAULS .wnnsn. IIEV ADVERTISEMENT! AFPEAB IN THIS SPACE Zrz PARKCRV8.';V; k HAIR DAL8AM th popular farortt for Ormng 1 . I th blr, RMtorlnr color wben 1" if mrmj, acd prwrcnuna' VmaarvtX. lr& ti " eluiaM tb Mftlp. stop thm SiC Frv bairtmmng.tuxdUmirmtofimfm. CHESTNUT 8TBET,.u Qoldsboro, N. C, Keeps pare and Fresh Drugs and Brown Trnn Bitters. . , I will sell Patent Medicines ten per cent less than usual price. , . . , m-Call on me: 1 am always about my "place of business, and will take pleasure in waiting on any one In need or any n. ' t ' 'Toftac Flues ! Mc MIL L AN BROS.. ; FATETTEVILLE, N. C, J j prepared to furnish Flues, any size, 1 inii - at iowesi rnccs. -ia .'i iThe best preparation made for CLEAN; ING WALLS,' white, and different tints, iiui j , 4 iWQGnrS'&FEEEIIAir.' marStf l .ivrl v. ;,;!h Miscellaneous. Tickets only 5, .Snare a rportli Louisiana State Lottery Company. : ".;!: ; .' . , i . ; : nU for mil Uu MmUklm mmd UuarUrtw Drlmsi ft4 liimm StmU LctXm-f CZmmmnm. mtU i per in r faitomnt WNrtH. JimUJUrti U wmpomf m mm (Mi rtyumU, miiX fmm Wttk wuUrrinud Banii and Aamlsrt will pay all Pritet drawn on The Louiiin State Lotteries which may be yresenied mt our counters. J.H.OGLESBY, - Pres. LouiiiaDa national : ' .,; J W. KILBRETH, . Pres. State National Bank. A. BALDWIN, . Pres. New Orleans National Bank. lneorporaua In 1868 for ss Tears br th Lia latar for dncatlonal and UfcariUU parpocM with a capital of tl,000,ouO to which a ttftm rasa oi oTtr ssoooo ts sioc boon added. lij an OTerwbelmlne popular vot lit traachls waa mad a put of th present Bute Uonatlta tlon adopted Deoember Sd, A. D., 1STS. The only Lottery ever, voted on and en dorsed by the people of any State. It never scales or postpones. It Graad Mlacle N amber DrawfacN take lace monthly, and the Extraordinary Draw- firs reirularlr every three months Instead of semi-annually as heretofore. A 8PL.KMJID OPPORTUNITY" TO WIN A FORTUNE. EIGHTH GRAND DRAW ING, CLASS II, IN THE ACADEMY OF MUSIC. NEW ORLEANS. TUESDAY. A a. ui 10. 1886 loath Monthly Drawing; CAPITAL PRIZE S75.000 100,000 Mets at fitb Dollars Eacl. Fractions, in Fifths in proportion . list or PRIZES. 1 CAPITAL PRIZE S75.0 1 do do 2V, 000 1 do do 10.0U) t PRIZES OF SflOOO 12.OH0 5 10 20 100 300 600 1000 do 2000 10.000 do . 1000 10,000 do 600 10,000 do 200... 20,000 do 100 30.01)0 do 60 25,000 do . 25.. 25,000 APPROXXMATIOIf PRIZfeS. ' 9 Approximation Prlxes of $750. ..... 6,750 9 do do - 600 4,50 9 do do 200 2M 1987 Prizes, amounting to.... 1365,500 Application tu ru to clab boo id bv ntu. d1t to the otfiov ef the Oompaaj In New Or leans. For farther lulormaUon writ elearly, irUm. Till address. POSTAL MOTKM. Expresa Mon ey Orders, or New York Exchange in ordinary letter. Currency by xpreis (at onr expease eddreeeed .N. A.DAL'PI1I, Nw Orleans, I a. r M. A. DAUPMIM, Waabincton. D. V. Maie P. 0, Honey Criers Fay; He and. . address Registered Letters to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK. New Orlexne! La r CONDENSED TIME TABLE NO. 13. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1885. t ; ..!,.. . . MAIL AKD PASSKNGZB TRAINS NORTH BOUND. Leave Ilerinettsvllle, 8. C 8:30 A. M. Bhoelleel, a. 9:M 1 FayettevlUe, 12:25 P.M. k: Sanford, . M 2:25 . 44 4 Ore Hill, 44 " ' Liberty. : 44 1 Arrive at Greensboro, 6.00 ' 3T Dinner at FayettevlUe. MAIL AHDPAS8KNaZR TRAINS SOUTH BOUND. Leave Greensboro, N.C, , 0:60 A. M. liberty, " .....ii.tr - Ore Hill, . m . .....12:00 M. Banford, 44 1:45 P. M. 4 FayettevlUe, 44 .... iiOO " ShoeHeeL 8:15 M Arrive Bennettsville, 44 70 44 Fjp Dinner at Banford. FreUrht and Passerurer Train leaves Ben nettsville Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays at z:&) p. m., arnvingr at oboe neei at 4:) p. m- and FayettevlUe at 8 p. m. ' ' . Leaves Fajettevule on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays at 6:30 a. mn Bhoe Heel at 10 a. m and arrives at ucnnettsviiie at 12 m. Freight and Passenger Train North loaves FayettevlUe daily at 8 a. in (connecting at Sanford with Freight and Passenger Trains to Raleigh), leaves Sanford at 11:30 a. and ar rives at Greensboro at 5:4(1 p. m. Leaves Greensboro dally at 5 a.m., leaves Banford at 11:15 a. ixl, and arrives at Fayette vlUe at 2:40 p. m. JNO. M. ROSE, Oen'l 8up't. Gen'lPass.Ax't. -tr We would Call the Attention pf . HE'IT E.J2EE who wish Seed that we hare on hand wmcn we sell cneap xor uasn. We would also say to oar friends that we do not profess to keep a ! JUVdAJ mUmVUS: Store ! Bat those wishing to buy , PURE DRUGS At & Llriaj Profit, cm find Uien it our Place. ; f Parent Needing will do well to consult us before buying. ! - . also icAHirrxcTiraz&s or for disguising Quinine and other nauseous : .v.- a meoidnes. ; KIEBY & EOBINSON, ! Messenger Building. ; , , Qoldsboro, N. C, Jan.-14-tf - Pure Linseed Oilfv . . f 1 . . ....... 1 . . :., j White Lead, Colors ' Japan Varnish,' Qlue, &c.t Forsalelowiat' 1y . HUGGIN8 & FREEMAN'S. i; t O ilDtt AM Desires ' to 'lnforni' the public that he has aecureatbservloataf the effldent and ren tlemanlybarbar,. !. j i . !: A TTTV'Rft ROTT..WOOD.' . . Formerly with "joha Werner,? of wiimln- lton,N.C. gbrHJurorcQmforulebath ,Rtof , Jull-lm JL ;;rOBDUAMS. .CS want a clean, easy shavt; ' CatatlMUBr.' mmmumwmmmmmmm t J Gaps Fea Yadkin y alley Raima? mm Extra Ear ai Beans t S'l 1
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 19, 1886, edition 1
7
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