Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / Aug. 4, 1919, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE ROBESON IAN . 71 THE DATE ON THE LABEL IS THE DATE YOUR PAPER WILL BE STOPPED. WATCH LABEL ON YOUR PAPER AND DON'T LET SUB SCRIPTION EXPIRE iABUSHED 1870. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. COUNTRY. GOD AND TRUTH 12.00 A YEAR. DUE IN AUVAM. v3L LUMBERTON, NORTH CAROLINA, MONDAY, AUGUSTA 1919. NUMBER 51 GOUGH URGED TO ENTER ' dapp pn nriisirikf'.;s Former State Senator is Considering1 tillering uace Against Godwin. Former State Senator Frank Gough is being urged by men from every county in the Sixth district, .as well as many from ou'side the district, to enter the race for the beat held by Congressman Godwin. While .Mr. Gough is considering the matter of "coming out," he has not made the final decision. Mr. Gough is not a lawyer and that is given as reason why he .should make the race by many who iave urged hm to enter. He is a large farmer, successful lerchant and all 'round business man, and .should he decide to offer other can didates, o fwhich there are indica tions of many, will have plenty of .entertainment. OXENDINE BOUND OVER. Recorder E. M. Britt Sends Case to Higher Court for Disposal Exon- era ted by Coroner's Jury. J. V. Oxendine, Indian, who shot QnH lnlleH Hub Hammond, another Indian, three weeks ago, was bound over to Superior court inursaay Dy Recorder E. M. Britt when given a preliminary hearing on a warrant sworn out by Hammond's wife, charging Oxendine with murder. He was placed under a $1,000 bond, which he made. As has been stated in The Robe sonian, the coroner's jury exonerated Oxendine of the killing, rendering a verdict of "Justifiable homicide." HIGH PRICES FOR TOBACCO. Rowland Stephens Sold One Barn For $919.77. Mr Rowland Stephens of Orrum ; section sold one curing from six acres of tobacco at the Star warehouse here Thursday for 64 1-2 cents the pound. The load weighed 1,426 pounds and brought a total of $91i).77. Mr. Homer Barnes of K. l, urrum, nlrt k curing from one acre Thurs-jall day for $112.20, clear cnecK. sold laree piles , of tobacco for above 60 cents the nA lnsf week and all whj have good tobacco are highly pleased with the prices being for the "weed. KILLED BY TRAIN. i i - k:iii Woody Hester of Clarkton Killed Saturday Night Same Engineer On Duty When Hester's Brother ' W K.1W So-. Ten r-r. A," j dav night bv the passenger tran that nnsses Lumberton for Wilmington at, ?0?04 p J A brother of the de-' ceased was killed by a train ai o. Clarkton some ten years ago ana the eneineer that was running that train was running the train Saturday night. Ed Miller colored, was found guil-jup tv of carrying concealed weapons and ,, as iriven a three-months road sen- aa fe Geo. Lumdy was sivon a 2-months road sentence on the charge of lar ceny. Lumdy was found guilty of taking a ring from the office of rm.tr TnUnann Xr .TnlltlSOn. juessia ' " . V ...... ChaS Dillard, Colored, was iounu opinion apieau tiiot W"' " euiltv of being drunk and judgment; be concentrated toward rushing was suspended upon payment of cost, through important matters in the w 31 1 ! hope of a sine die adjournment eany Oieratinff Special Tobacco Trains' this fall of both houses to give mem Kr to move the tobacco being ber. a rest before the regular Decern ed on the Lumberton market the ber session. Virginia & Carolina J Washington. AuB. 3-Definite steps been "JPLm a i toward reducing the high cost of liv fr? SV tobacco in are expected this weak. While -sohu u' - - - T.tiv I all government departm3nts are work--was shipped at one time rcc itiv. , , . , , ol.;.,f ; . rm iTT at HOME iVBUm inr. , Mr Gilbert Taylor, son of Mr. and, t rri' R S- Lumber-t ton,' arrived home yesterday from! Crmanv havine bee'i a memoei ui, liermany, naving --. the U. S. army of occupation ioi sev eral months. Mr. M. G. McKenzie went Saturday to Jackson - Springs, where he will spend several days visiting friends. Miss Louise Townsend nas return ed home from Chapel Hill, where she attended a summer school for teach ers. , ... Mrs. K. M.' Biggs and daughter, lit tle Miss Margaret, went last week to Ridgecrest, where they will spend , some time. - Mr. J. T. Norsworthy, the, book man. Mrs. Norsworthy and their son, ; Mr. Paul K. Norsworthy, are spend ing some time here. Mrs. 'Stinson Powell and two chil dren. Jane Page and Majorie, went "Friday to Wrightsville Bsach to yisit Mrs. W. A. McPhaul. Misses Anna Thompson and Ruth Pope returned home Saturday eve ning from Wrightsville Beach, wnere they spent several days. , hUuiVLLi iSAliKtiii ELxiUi'i.D fVLiriiij! ix' tvuiVjd Salary reet foreman Uooeson lncre; rom 90 to $100 the Motfth Street Paving Notes Must Met Dr. W. A. McPhaul Elect- A T..M-n Ho.llk IHGror I l.ir Of. tffh B m o i7f,i ; of the country is probable, in the dteances Must Be Enforced. , of M Hawver prsdent of l the Chicago dstrict council of the Mr. D. Marvin Barker was elected Federated Railroal Shopmen'1 union, chief of police, succeeding Mr. E. L.:wnich called a strike of shop chafts Hanna, who resigned by the mayor frday. and board of town commissioners at He returned from Washington Sun a special meeting Friday afternoon. !,iay states a Chicago dispatch, and de Mr. Barker will receive the same sal ary paid Chief Hanha 100 thej month. Chief Hanna's resignation went into effect August 1. He came to Lumberton from Red Springs more than a year ago and returned today with his family to Red Springs to ac cept his old position as chief of po lice. Mr. Hanna made a good officer and has many friends here. Chief Barker is a Lumberton man, having recently returned from France, wbere he spent almost a year with the American array. He en tered upon his new duties Friday. The salary of H. B. Robeson, san itary officer and street foreman, was increased from $90 to $100 the month. ' Messrs. R. H. Crichton and E. M. Tnv,nonn momhors of the board, and Mr. Ira B. Townsend, town clerk and ...n.nr moro nnnnintprl a commit- tee to determine the advisability of j selling two horses and two mules: belonging to the town, with author-; itv to act. ! The board passed an order wnicn requires that where new building are wired meters shall be placed on the back porch of residences. This or der was passed in order that the me ters might be read without entering the ouse instructed to advise all who owe notes for street paving that if same are not paid in 15 days after notifica tion that the matter will be placed in the hands of the town attorney for legal action. The light and water committee was advised to investigate and determine the advisability of placing meters on street lights and in all school and municipal Duuuings m uiu ' the charges of the Yadkin River Pow- er Co. for-current used may be( checked. Dr. Y. A. McPhaul, county health i officer, was elected town health of- ficer at a salary of $200 Cie year. , If wa nvHprpH that the town's fire x.-- insurance De equany aismmuea among the several agencies operating jn tQwn jne poijce force was instruct! to see that the ordinance which says all JmS"? oglJ? BRIEF ITEMS OF NEWS General News Items of Interest in i R.i.r irArm riinnd Pr,n I This Morning's Papers. Washington, August aSpeeding-j of legislation with high cost of living and railroad employes wage demands, as new and pressing prob- Moms tnnitrht dnno'jrp.l to hp a nrOD- able result from abandonment, at President Wilson's request, of con gressional recess plans. Leaders be an revision of their programs, both personal and legislative, and the :.. J t,,x ,m,M ing toward tne era oi auev g u..- 'rest tm restoring a normal ivei ui rest bp restoring a normal . . c. 't. m the meet. confersnce called I Attnrrp. General Palmer to coi.mittee at a sPcial meeting. .y, r '.t.j , The President took a new step in w, Wlth respect to profiteer- lrip JAPS AND CHINESE CLASH. Washington Dispatch, July 31. Sixteen Japanese officers and men and three Japanese policemen were killed and 17 Japanese soldiers more or less seriously wounded in a clash with Chinese troops at Kuangchenku July 19, according to an official re port received by the Japanese Em bassy here. The losses of the Chin ese were not given. . The clash was said to have .follow ed an assault on an employe of the South Manchuria Railway Company. by about 20 Chinese soldiers. The report said the Chinese Government expressed regret over the incident and Hismissed from office the. com manders of the. Chinese division,- bri gade and battalion concerned, and reprimanded Gen. Meng Un Yuan, Governor-General of Kirin Province, in which Kuangcheneku is located, COMPLETE TIE-UP OF RAILROADS PROBABLE Union Official Declares Strike Es Spreading Rapidly and That Kail- road Schedules and Industry Willi Be Seriously Crippled in Few Days.) A complete tie-up of the railroads' elared the strike is spreading rapid ly and that the unrest among rail way workers is so general that the movement has overwhelmed the in ternational officers of the various unions involved. Advices yesterday from Cl?veland were that the executive board of the American Federation of Railway Workers with a membership of 26, 000, chiefly unskilled labor in Cleve land and the east, had decided to Btrike today, according to Mr. Haw ver. The Maintenance of Waymen's union alio is preparing to strike, it was said. With more than 250,000 shopmen on strike and the number increasing, both President Hawver and Secre tar., John D. Saunders dc'ared mil- way schedules and industry would be seriouslv criDDled within a few days. Already steel mills at Gary and otn-! er points in nortnern inaiana aim in Chicago have begun to feel the effects of the strike, according to union leaaers, aa wueu tc on.n. more complete factories and mills will virtually be forced to close down for lack of ore, coal and other essen tials. SEABOARD MECHANICS STRIKE Raleigh Dispatch, Aug. 1. Between 500 and 600 shop em ployes of the Seaboard Air Line and the Norfolk-Southern went on a strike for higher wages this after noon at 6 o'clock. The strike is in line with similar action at other points on the Sea board svstem. T iKnr lonHora snid here that allied craftsmen at other points in North Caroina would quit work as SOOn as! icated with. It! 1ftn . f -k hero j Th finisliPd the dav. .stop-! he ,af tJme At u mect. Y & , ....j t n ?o j al neld ,ale VOlCU I1Ut- jj back Saturday morning The loc union of railroad mechanics declare that they were not represented at the Atlanta meeting, which decided to call off the strike and therefore decided not to heed anl rescind the general strike order. The railroad officials have made no statement about the strike here. waiting until some general policy in Sr htS isSd! I ' HOUSE ABANDONS RECESS . nr.M.r.oT t oDi?cini7VTj Ai nr-vti v,r . Threatened Cns Caused By n,Rn I Prices Leads to yuiCK uomnmein A,f. a., i I WaSninglUIl Uisyaiii, nus, - . , . A new labor crisis, growing out ot the high cost of living, is facing the railroad administration. So pressing are the demands of the railroad employes for more pay maintain their standard of living that President Wilson, following ex- venaeu lumeiein." i.viiie Beacn, wnere mty wm arti:u ioniiav.c f 1 . General Hines, today asked the house , fftW dayg , Mr8- Cornelia C. Morris introduces of representatives to abandon a pro-J jiessrs p. E. Branch. Haynes' her new cook book which she has re posed recess of five weeks beginning) Brancn) eal and Ansj0 pjttman of j cently prepared for the Home Dem tomorrow and remain in Washington j Boar(jman were among the visitors onstration division of the Agricul nnnciHr thp rrpation of a commis-! . . r-;jo.. : tnr1 Extension service. Mrs. Mor- sion -which would determine all ques - vwiu'u- v.., - tsna xnncDrninc the waees of rail - WUUO v w 1 " " " .. -c - way workers. nc nouse conieni. on me e its planned recess, voted to comply r - President.s reuest, which . - , , . , v v,t previously naa oeen enuu.,i u. republican legislative steering com- railroad legation in cuugicsa ui i commission should "make the deci- M d Mr! j w. Gandv and tW sions of that body mandatory uponjda; Mif,, Beje and evaM the rate-making body and provide1, Jnd " Mr. Yates, of aFrmot t. R. when necessary increased rates to ' were Lumberton visitors Thiirs-j cover anv recommended increases in i' I wages and therefore in the cost of operating the railroads.' HE IS HUSBAND NO. SEVEN. Wellsburg, W. Va., Dispatch, July 31. Jesse Perry has sued Mrs. Delia May Holt Perry for divorce. He is her seventh husband. Mr3. Perry is being held" on a charge of bigamy Perry avers in his petition that he was married to her on May 16 of this year, and that ut thai time rne had another husband ' living- from whom she had not been divorced, hav ing married Charles Graham, of East Liverpool, Ohio, April 3 of this year. pAmr'.iiAM. tViDf nftAr livlnrr with1 Yiim on cAutrincr a lunre amount of clothing and money she1 SJI1 CT-S jw--, o r - -deserted him. NEGROES WOULD COME SOUTH AGAIN h initio Newspaper Ask Govrrmir ft i - a ma t' . . . I L ; ",rMf" ,,an van S(rij i.au-iKh Lispaun, Aug. i. ( tmcago would welcome the return, of many negroes to tne soutnern stales, according to the tone of a telegram received oy uovernor pick-i ett today from The Chicago Herald- Examiner. The telegram says: "Manv negroes who came here for war work are anxious to return. south if the south needs them. Their spokesman asks us to inquire how manv your state can absorb. They are of the most industrious class, dis tinct from the - bad element respon sible for difficulties here. Please rush answer." The governor is out of the city, so no answer to the telegram has yet been made. DETERMINATION SUCCEEDS. Plucky Farmer -Carried Wood to His Tobacco Barn at Night on His Shoulders. One of the plainest instances of thej truth 'oPIKIs assertion comns to The; Robesonian through information giv-i Son in connection with one of their! customers in handling his tobacco - .. . j u rZV PushedW trcoSeteC; gathering and placing in barn for, curing the cropping of tobacco ready j for runner The filling of the barn was not' completed until after nightfall and' when fires were to be started it was found that there was not a sufficient quantity of wood to fire the barn during the night. He could not haul the wood in darkness with wagon, so what did he do? He went into the woods nearby and brought the wood to the barn on his good strong shoulders. He sold that barn of to bacco in Lumberton Thursday, weighing over 800 pounds, at 54 cents per pound, or $419. PERSONALS Mr. L. R. Edens of Rowland, is a Lumberton visitor today. Mr. Wallace Norment spent yes terday at Wrightsville Beach. Mr. Dock Lewis of Bladjnboro vas a Lumberton visitor Saturday fu' Mr. Joe carringuon speui week-end at u WTightsviIle tseacn. i Miss Elizabeth Sheehan of Wilming; ton is the guest of Miss Carrie t-. mund. Mrs. R. T. Allen and two children, Amanda and Henry, are visiting at Forest City Mr. W. J. Wari of Tobermory,! B'aden county, was a l.umbo-ton vis-i itor this morning. ! Messrs. Foster Wplters and Joe Bas of-BarnesviHe were among the in, S: Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Hickman nd daughter. Miss Monie, of R. 1, Lum- berton. were in town Saturday. Miss Nina Bebber -eturned home (last night after spending some tmie at Taylorsville visiting relatives Aliases tiinei anu nu went Friday to Wrightsville Beach, where they will spend some time HT- T.kai4 riotris nf tll( R;imCS- 11 L . juiscv gection was among the callers t The Robesonian office Saturday. Mr. E. Odum and grand-daughter, little Miss Esther O'Nealy, of Buie, were Lumberton visitors rriday. Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Tyner went Fri- K morning to Wrights - in liiw 1 r iiuav i Mie.M HiHn Miriam and Mildred , ttt! J.; loff thia tviorninfr for; 11 I'll. ' ' ...v r- - JWrightsvllp Beach, where ihey will .nmH h-pps j Mjsses Henrietta Ammons and Sue M n returned Thursday r "... . . i afternoon from wrigntsvine ceacn, where they 8pent several days. Mr and Mrs. w. C. Epps of Far- r.nn Snriners arrived Saturday and will be ests for some time of Mr, --.jano Mrs. a. t,pu, '" j d Mrs Oliver Britt and three children and Miss Bettie Ar nett of East Lumberton, spent the week-end at Wrightsville Beach. Mrs. T. M. Bnrney and four chil dren left Friday for Rockingham and Jackson Springs, where thev will snend two or three wee ks visiting: relatives and friends Mrs. S. D. Townsend o? Charlotte visiting her uncle, Mr. W. C Town snd, of the Raft Swamp section. Mrs. Townsend will visit at Kea Springs and Wakulla before return- a properly arranged kitchen, and in home. ! stresses the necessity for sanitation Mr. and Mrs. Jno. S. McNeill andjand a convenient water supply in the two children,: John Jr., and Donald,! ro .npnHtncr anmp time at Laurin - Vinw unA T ourol Will viairfner rela- , - . - vft - 1 tires. They &re expected home Wednesday GENERAL PERSHING MAK- ING FAREWELL VISIT Paris, August Lf : .1. n 1 prior to fnr :i,.n, ; tonight where tomorrow he i to oe- rvin hia v.- n it l " t tV V ' i .T ff i'tfr- man territoryi firgt visiting; the American troops and then the french and British soldiers, Gen. jonn pershing this afternoon re- ceived tne American newspaper respondents in his Paris home. General Pershing talked with the correspondents on various subject tne American dead, buried in France, ajrajnst the removal of which he said he would advise; the preparations that are being made for the Ameri can troops to leave France and con crninr the release of the 4S.00O German prisoners held by the Amer- . .... . ican army. After his reception of the corre spondents, General Pershing review ed the famous American composite battalion which represented the' American expeditionary forces n Pa ris in the Bastile Day parade and in London at the victory day celebra tion. The review which probably will prove the last official American military ceremony in France took place on the famous parade ground in the Bois , de-icennea. Large crowds viewed the evolutions and ac corded the troops a hearty leception. hich will be made by automobile em battle front from Betfort, near will carrv him over the entire west- - e Swiss border, to Nieu?art on the Belgian coast. CONFERENCE WILL BE HELD IN OCTOBER , Senate Authorizes President to Call Meeting to Be Held in Washing ton. 2 Washington Dispatch, Aug. 1. So that the first meeting of the International Labor conference creat ed by the VersaillePireatv may be held in Washington next October, re gardless of whether the -treaty iis ratified, the senate unanimously nrfnnterf todav a ioint resolution au thorizing the President to call such a meetine but giving no authority for American representation "unless and until" the treaty's ratification has been accomplished. ThP action was taken after Secre - tary Wilson of the labor department; ' .,, . forpio,n relations com - mittee inai even n i"- ic. ... I tkn tpaotV UTPrP rejected here, its acceptance by other, d validate the request it hat the pT.sident call the ould that Ponference to meet here in Oc-, tober. . In committee the resolution, intro duced by Senator Kenyon, Republi- r...n ...os afrinnpH of all refer- . - the conference ag created under the treaty, the Ofwirtion ns finally framed . f international y - lltor consideration 0f tS, measure . . in the Senate was secured only aiier in tne nVLrT,H .Vur treaty ' nornn. The dog attacked the child Chairman Lodge Jd JjSi whil. playing near her home. The opponents that action in the r J could have no effect whatever treatment. The dog kept going af- "yresolSSr the!terbitng the child and it is not house is necessary before the pres.- dent's authority is' complete. FREE COOK BOOK NOW READY FOR DISTRIBUTION Raleigh, August. 2. When one's lsTnwof erf of ' foods and cookery passes the stage of drudgery and be- ; comes a science, immediately its per- ris' new bulletin, "A Study in r ood3 fnr Home Demonstration Club3, con , sisting of 35 pages of condensed w - . i. .v- i.;tu . .nntsri' formation aoou,t. e ;'7iM fwldays here visiting at the home of the uses of foods, and rec.pes lor A EJ. nreDarme different dishes itn an . - srr."; distribution I Mrs Jane S. McKimmon, Chief of u Tv:.,;D;n fopl that this bulletinl is one of the most important recently , i9SUed. For some time there has. been a need in the State for some ele- mentary text on the care and pre,.a-; ration of food so that the home dem- tup un utiii , onstration workers might use thi3 in carrying out their program of work with the girls and women of the State. j The ouroose of this new bulletin, therefore, is to set before the club members and such rural teachera as may oesire, iMoniiuuii methods of preparing and caring for food, a knowledge of its use in. the body, and to teach the . value of a balanced meal. - It also demonstrates the. value of home conveniences and house. ! Conies may be had by interested! housewives by dropping a card to. " . . . TPA I ; the -Agricultural Extension service Raleigh,' N. U WATCH THE LABEL. Watch the date opposite the naeie on tne label on your papr. When your subscription expires your paper will be stopped. This apolies to all sob- ,Pj(rg .-,-,,,, T rir,. T x.ii x.fo I. 0. O. F. meets Thusday eve- cor-lning. Work in seconl degree. Mrs. J. F. Meares left Friday foe Burgaw, where she will make her home. The U. D. C. will meet in the municipal building Thursday after noon at 5 o'clock. Mr. Joe Biggs of the Saddletree ection is undergoing treatment at i" empon noipiiw. ! m. i The Robesonian has received from Mr. C. H. Odom of Fairmont the first open cotton boil of the sea son. Mr. Harry Green went today to Raeford, where he will take charge of a Ford garage and agency for Mr. H. A. Page, Jr. Regular communication of SL I Alban's Lodge No. 114, A. F. & A. M., tomorrow evening at 8:30. Work in second degree. License has been issued for the marriage of Geddie Tateman and An nie 'Davis; Wm. B. Baxley and Emily Dean; Floyd Jackson and Ella Cain. Mr. Grover T. Page returned Friday night fro ma two weeks' visit to relatives at Elmira, N. Y. He aso visited Niagara Falls and sever al otner points of interest while away. Mr. R. M. Phillip, of the Globe from Charlotte, where he recently Swamp section returned home Friday underwent an operation at the Char lotte sanatorium. His condition is somewhat improved. Prof. R. E. Sentelle, former su perintendent of the Lumberton schools, spent Saturday here looking after business interests. Prof. Sen telle is conducting a summer school for teachers at Asheboro. Friends of Mr. Forrest McGill of Lumberton will be interested to know that he has recently been trans ferred from Camp Jackson, whero he i was in the postal service, to (-'imp Gordon, Atlanta, Ga., and is now Held clerk. , m, t McK. Parker, who recent- jy returne(j from France, where he ; ' nt otm. tua x w I i 1 , 1- r ( nas accepiea a position as ooon- ke'eper jn Mr. L. H. Caldwell's de- partment store Hc work Aa. ' j Dr. W. A. McPhaul, county health officer, returned Friday from Lincolnton, where he was a character witness in a case in which J. A. Raine, formerly of Lumberton, was charged with false pretense. Mr. Raine was found not guilty. A small daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. eGroge Collins, who live o East Second street was tten by a dog thnnorht tn havp hppn rnhhid Friday "-.- .. ' . n -Mr. J. A. Sharpe, editor of The Robesonian, Mrs. Sharpe and their two children, little Miss Anna Court ney and J. A. 2nd, returned last eve ning from Wrightsville Beach, where they went last Wednesday to attend the annual convention of the North Carolina Press association, which closed Friday night. Some report of the convention will be given in Thurs day's Robesonian. Miss Lillie G. Epps returned Thursday from Fort Mills, S. C where she spent some time visiting relatives a' friends. She was ac companied home by Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Mills, Misses Elizabeth Mills and Martha Dvches and Mr. Ladsons ' 1 j - : Willis vi run .mi is, wnu bwih o ic te ,;;p M,,,s rt- Mr- w- H- M- Brown ,f Bu,e was a caller at The Robesonian office Saturday. Mr. Brown returned from. banford yesterday was a eeA apo where he spend the week-end and heard Evangelist B r. McLendon preach three forceful sermons Mr. Brown says altthe churches of San- ford are supporting Mr. McLendon and a great meeting is in progress and much- interest being howi. The meeting is being bold in a large tent and capacity crowds are ttending all services, according to Mr. Brown. Mrs.' Robert Belch went Saturday to Wrightsville Beach, whore she will spendL several days. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Lawrence re turned Saturday from New York, where they spent several days. Mr. M. F. Cobb, cashier of the Na tional Bank of Lumberton, spent the week-end at Wrightsville Beach. i n mm- V V . v . m v. . T- til. uxs. wujUIA&l w. rAivixJuxw Kit bff.ciAL.lM Office: National Bank of Lumbertoa Building.
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
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Aug. 4, 1919, edition 1
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