Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / Sept. 14, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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T ft R CArOAHU 4 m itt. . . , n irrnii rmwrii i ri i - " - r &am&&ax&&aaatma. H iW'JMwaiWWMMi rrwamr ' w--fcfafc ,wia'c-a'i - f" ; . : t .. - a 5fae Netfs. tn a hadl deom&f4 itate tbe I body of young Braxton Barkley. wbo jwaa drowned is the YadUa River.! ten mile north of Spencer, lome day !nkf " " J - - , General Keifs. i:k;ht m:u o muiiiatv ciuttue. &mUU f Gary. Isdiama, for M!kltlft2 IlrlUr. County, at to fence or the entire county, went no a majority of 19. . r:r4 RDi4f. Mien.. SepleaWrl The stock-law election id -1 , .cr brivoTotsDcaeaiuh t toole were hurt and Gam lod.. Ssrt- -Mayor Tboa- , f,mi mUf '"-" - - ; . , ....... - ' - ' Rv ieoc iur . . . -r-v KAv4w K4 ! i t- ilnnJI In "a s.f4. . I.' r--. f itt ! tnt3- f rsr v.- or tne ceigDvurowu. wvs 1 fever - - ,. .. .-. - bn washed out oa the bank by WajOI collision between Intermrban car br of lb city coasetL City Kagl ' nA vii dlsrovered through a ; nrand Haten Junction In a fog. neer W. A. Willittoa and a a of " t m large number of bursard aerabledj one of lb aldermen, weft? arrte4 While working at a planing Tbe eih!bitlon of picture of the.to-day oa charge of having arreted at Clayton on September Stb, Marvin i IleatlJe murdr trial will not be pr- and solicited bribe la a beating fran- WUliarnion was struck by a plank f . t,rTt ftf rrmrt fQr icolr' ... t th ritr of New York, on cbla deal. Tbe arregt were made and killed lntantly. v,- hr noremor , thr were unfit to on tomnliin of T. H. Dean, of lite a :tuyui; . v . i u f ivuuus - - ' , . i Kitfhin. It U for tbe trial of the bown In place of public ataui- mon. Ky.. to whom tb franchlt waa Ken Jordan, of VUUon County, bat , rrim!nal docket, and ftT,r - granted, and bo aaid be ha4 gitea ntencea to wne one ; . , .t. rinninr .rtnr nf fh tfn&!cd bribery to Judge M. H. Justice, M tforrestler, an aviator, wnne attorneys In Chicago txrore tae mon- , m a makinr a nlRbl at iiueiTa. opsin, ey wu iransierrea We afw 4 . t ibfw a&d llNr?, tbirfty fans? - ben se ..it t imw tih a lma a n nra r court and declared they bad ed in enough of Jordan. t - Deputy Collector K. M. Merritt deaa at nm nome m mu - . Monday and roured 1.- DluEe, from a h,Ight tember y. he cause o o a ueatu f r and five gallons ' " there. Tbta money. Dean aaid. was a hemorrhage of the brain, ma wne? Th mllc- - v . r,r,t Arthur Jam- rirn hr him tn a. councilman, clawed i of Hutberfordton. la to preaSde. SeDtember 5tb. vat burned to oeatn At the fame time atepa were iaea In mld-alr br the explosion of the in Chicago to protect funds said to motor of bis aero jr. Iirowa 4nutf e4 bU cloter 4s?wa IUirS Thf. i T miih a bfty 4rag Ibea cul H Ibfw t v c.r four tiSi wbll yet ms Hb a ban twt&ty.fdtsr isrb wttgbte 41 barrow ei nralgbt, After barlag rut tbe cier ia;o Th 5 plwi It edr as deeply Jjry ay. W k- . teams coald pall it, lie tbea t bts t 4 v at a. allrbi s&xle and disk! tef..m. . a - . .ti j - a - land again, taut mmsff aaa riw, . tbe cut op cloter with tbe whole ata iin'.ua la a ery tborouga maaaer.j tefta r4, s,. He then UU oS bis corn rows actj. las deeply a he bad plowetfce Us4 ha)(k fcetrf fc j?i and planted hi corn la ice wu ',tot JMo ul , tbe furrows, eoirerlag it -allow. Some day ago wbea I saw tbe CU nkl th 0? f , ere was naraiy rry v ;arst1vM en while bis other cora oa imiar t land on the opposite side of the road "4 V 3 i t '51- a f. - IliS Wife' 41 IUUO Ul WT7 .v r. .! IIaiiap rn thn rmnnA The COlleC- T-. V. rA v rf Pant was away irotn ine noue ou "u":tor a!go made an arret, which party ; Mfttthewg. nior captain of the U. S. in an envelope, and signed by Deaa him dead on her return. j &i tfae nexl term of Fed. gtateg Marne Corp, who disappeared and each of the men invoked, each - ; . V.. .a . . mm. eral Court. ! so mysteriously from trie iiare lsiana Keeping a Key unui we aeaj a vuw- Navy Yard some time ago, Is believed pleted. Mr. Samuel A. Hubbard, of j to naTe been found at San Pablo, near Keidsvllle, most highly endorsed, has! Jacksonville, Florida, been elected by the North Carolina ; . Corporation Commission as Assistant j Tne h0dy of Frank White, a civil State Bank Examiner to fill the PO-Uneiner of Atlanta, Ga., was found Blton made vacant by therecent resig-J in an elevator shaft in an lncom- bribe charges and said he would be nation of Mr. J. Kemp Doaghton. The) Iete up.town building on September able to prove bis Innocence was burned to tbe ear. ity thus mix- car4ea Ti..t (Ki. nrrinie matter In this cud-u . . its. ,n- v . i.ir i h- ..m tn be " - ut oa n at-r. " w .1 condition Ma tne wnoie son ui f,f ,v . 1 . L . I ' - - . from tbe sunace 10 ae uwwn St i r 1 James Porter, colored shot andj killed James Jackson, also colored,! near Lumberton, September lltbj Tbey were said to have been drink ing. Porter made his escape. Six prisoners, five colored and one white, escaped jail at Troy on the morning of September 11. The white nrisnnpr waa fifteen years of age ld was charged with stealing $5. j A solid gold nugget, 99 per cent pure, weighing nine and three-quarter ounces, valued at $300, was found by Mr. George Troutman at his mine about five miles north of Albemarle on September 8th. Mr. Phllipp Prltchard, aged sixty six years, fell from a fodder stack near Elizabeth City, September 8th, and died before medical aid could reach him. His death was supposed ly due to heart trouble. The Statesfllle Lumber Company, whose plant was destroyed by fire some days ago, has purchased a new manufacturing site from Mr. Isador Wallace, at a cost $3,000, and now nas a new plant under course of con struction. Mr. Thomas Hughes, a blind man and substantial business man of Rocky Mount, who has been in Rich mond attending the Beattie trial, charges that he was held up in the streets of that city by two policemen and robbed of $21. Miss Jane Stewart, daughter of a prominent business man of New Bern, bad several friends out riding in her automobile a few nights ago when the machine collided with a locomotive. The automobile was wrecked and all its occupants injured. Two colored convictsscaped from the convict camp near Wilmington Monday morning While looking for the' escaped prisoners one of the ' guards mistook an Innocent negro for a convict and shot him, though the wround may not prove fatal. Mrs. Sarah A. Burris, aged seventy two, of Wilmington, was seriously in jured in an automobile accident near Wilmington a few days ago. The car in which she was riding turned turtle and Mrs. Burris was caught beneath the machine. Other occupants of the car were slightly injured. ' The Smithfield term of Superior Court was postponed until yesterday because Judges Peebles and Solicitor Norris were detained in the Marsh murder trial in Harnett County. There is a heavy criminal docket in Johnston, with three murder cases. Between Franklinton and Kittrell, on September 11th, Mr. J. E. Alford, wife and daughter, were met by a man in an automobile, when the horses became badly frightened, and threw the family from the carriage, seriously Injuring Mr. and Mrs. Al ford. . Cashier Roberts, of the office of Collector Brown, In the Western Dis trict, reports Revenue collections for last month as follows: Lists, $325- .44; cigars, $22.05; tobacco, $398, 703.13; special tax, $216.14 total, $399,267.06. There has been no col lectio on spirits for two months. Mr. S. E. Sullivan's lumber plant, located just across the Trent River from New Bern, together with all the machinery and several thousand feet of lumber, waa totally destroyed by fire Thursday afternoon. The fire was of unknown origin. No Insurance was carried on the building or its contents. Maynor Knott, who was arrested in his office by Sheriff Thomas Grant. gave cash bail of $10,000. The oth ers were taken to jail at Crown Point, Indiana. Maynor Knotta scouted tbe 3-, -- t position' pays $1,800 a year, and j 12tQ Dean charged Maynor Knotts with The body was ternoiy man- there were twenty-five applicants, gled police are advancing a suicide having received $5,000 as his share most of whom, it is said, were from; tneoU. 1ofhe deal. Eastern Carolina. an trr-r nf .:,, io rs iiuui wo v-e.. moay crop la c -fx.ee again without being obstructed ghJpH(4 t0 fart c. In its movement by tbe layer of non- ftCrtf pUated aa4 capillary vegetable matter at some malmam !oad . t. paco iuc v- cr0p per acre -wai Tbe formation of organic acids is tQCi a addIUoc l0 a necesaary accompaniment to decay of 00 cralM of Cuc , of any organic substance but in t b. r.m(,mh, drained soils and exceas of tbte acids toTmtT erop. had v ; is removed and passes off in the Ucd waft a0cj jB t.J drainage waters or eacaies by evapo-; what lhe!r for4p (rr).; ' J1 ration. The formation oi ammonia DQt j . Ho.., . is another necessary accompaniment producing country, it cl v nf th dfcav of any organic matter, .v, .v,.,. .t A '" The ammonia is an alCSli and tends able cfop from lhrJf w to counteract and neutralize any ex-; Wilmington Star, cess of acid formed along aide of U.: Mr. H. W. Conn, the leading author- Morris Katz, of BaltimoreMd., fell Former North Carolina 3Iirtiter In- At Wilmington, yesterday after-) dead a few day8 ago after drinking dictetl on Six Felony Charge. ... . 1 .n.mon: . t r . U ,1 noon'T"y lrr:::,r gla8SS OI. " "t": Danville, Va., Sept. 9.-Rev. D. P. j ity on soil bacteriology In the Unit uon, wiinam greatly oveMsuMwan,.uu, ... fQr many years a mlnister ln ed sutes makes thlg sIrniflcant byivesier tnueu, a.tuCt he had leanea up 10 iae tuuu. Wlt"!, xvarn v-h r-amiina r.nnfAr.Lt-man tn h! TCAllint work on . . ! f i ..vr..- OlOlsmvuv the avowea mienuou oi uy. u6 " ence. but who for the last several agricultural bacteriology. "Docom- one hundred glasses ot the nuia j Jq tbe real egtate hugl posiUon ln Uglf wU1 prouco an al- xi flVnw phinn ! neES nre was to-day indicted by the kaline condition since ammonia re- A dispatch from HanKOW, nina,: f0lnnv rhartrpi all tr-nrn ommnnial frmntatlon gays that 100,000 persons nave teea skiDDed the wni npntralize the acid. If. tbere- Norfolk Southern Rafrctj a the eye. Johnson surrendered nim self a few minutes later to the au thorities. Ennett-Js in a desperate condition, and it Is feared he is fa tally injured. Johnston will be held without bail until It is discovered whether or not Ennett will die. ARRESTED ON SERIOUS CHARGE. drowned by the floods caused Dy uie dty seyeral month8 ag0t about fore vigorous decompostUon of or ! water flowing over the Yangtze s Ktt-, QQ &hQn n Qis account4lf and lc maUer of acidlty. er. Tne nooas are uw wuw J' nothing was heard of him until he in poorly drained soils where n. M. Pace, a Machinist at New Bern, is Charged With Seduction. New Bern, N. C Sept. 11. At an early hour Sunday morning H. N. Pace, a machinist at the Norfolk Southern Railroad Company's shops in this city, was placed under arrest on a warrant charging him with ttte seduction, under promise oi mar riage, of Miss Henrietta Daugherty, a young woman who lives near Bel lair, but who during the past few months has been engaged as a wait ress at the Gaston Hotel. Miss Daughtery claims that Pace took her to Wilmington where they registered at one of the leading ho tels as man and wife. In the mean time he was supposed to have sent out for the marriage license; later onin the day, he told her that he could not secure a license at Wil mington. After this they returned to New Bern where he told her there were complications in securing their license and that it would have to be delayed for a few days. A few days ago Miss Daughtery al leges that she discovered Pace .was intending to leave the city. Upon the suggestion of her brother-in-law, L .K. Tindle, a warrant was sworn out for the young man and he was arrested and in jail. and it is estimated that 99 per oent of the crops have been destroyed v Another Traitor. Representative James B. Latta, of Tekamah, Neb., who served In the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congress, and for many years president of the, kpe Journal (Dem.) First National BanK oi lesamau, died at St. Mary's Hospital, Roches ter, Minn., on the "night of September 11th. de- v a a m a a a a was arrested in ivnoxviue, iean.,i composition or tne organic maner about six week3 afterwards andl goes on slowly only small amounts of brought back to this city. I ammonia are formed and these escape readily into the air while the organic acids tend to accumulate and remain in the soil moisture and render the land acid. Here is where your strip It's time to brand Congressman! of litmus paper would be turned red ROUTE OF THE X1GHT F-XPREKS.- Travel via Raleigh (Tnloo and Norfolk Southern Ratit to and From All Pott Eastern North Ckn Una, Webb as a traitor to the platform." John Jacob Astor, millionaire, and! Miss Madalfne Force, whose proposed j marriage has been much discussed,; were married at Newport, R. I., Sat- yecessitj 0f Organic Matter in the Farm Topics urday last. The ceremony was per formed by Rev. Joseph Lambert, a minister v of the Congregational Church. Soil. V. by the wet soil. Such land la found in some of the mountain valleys and some of the low-lying lands of the eastern part of the State and occa sionally small areas In the Piedmont section, but soils in North Carolina are well drained and if the green ma nure is handled as Mr. Brown of Rowan handled it no fear need be Suppose your wheat had been sow-J entertained from excessive acids ac ed on the surface of this soil with this! cumulating in the soiL In Augusta, Ark.,. September 9th, after he had slashed tha throat of Mrs. Albert Vaughan, daughter of a whUe farmer, shot and killed one of his own race, and assaulted an aged J. L. BURGESS, N. C. Department of Agriculture mass of vegetation underneath, or suppose your corn crop had been planted in the first three Inches of this soil, what would have happened? In neither case would thep lant roots have gone down below this mass of nrOCO Arthur Ttean was taken in vegewuuu iu uvuv" luo un" ,icl"Vj,c a"W " hand b'y a posse of white 'men and; and in neither case could capillary ed on the floor of the Houston Cot- negroes and lynched. Second-Crop Cotton. The other day a gentleman from BOLL WEEVIL IN EDGECOMRE The Cokeville National Bank, at Cokeville, Wyoming, was entered by two masked men on the afternoon of September 11th and robbed of $1,500 in money. They locked the oflicers of the bank in the vault and escaped. The robbery is attributed to Hugh Whitney, the Idaho bandit, and his brother. attraction have raised the moisture! ton Exchange and exhibited a novelty from the subsoil through this mass of I in the way of a cotton stalk that at- SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JTXt ,L N. B. The following ul'4 urea published as lnforaxtios 14, and are not guaranteed. Trains Leave Raleigh 9:15 p. ra. Daily "Niit I press." Pullman Sleepinc Cr tst Norfolk. 6:15 a, m. Dally for Washington and Norfolk. Brttr Parlor Car service betweea Eiri and Norfolk. 6:16 a. m. Dally, except Sadif, for New Bern via ChocoTis!t. ru lor Car service. 3:00 p. m. Dally, except Satiiy, for Washington. Trains Arrive Poleich 7:20. a. m. Dally 11:19 a a. daily except Sunday and 1:15 p. a. daily. Trains Leave Go!Ubor 10:15 p. m. Dally "Nlftt Ex press" Pullman Sleeping Cir isr Norfolk via New Bern. 7:15 a. m. Daily for Bniiaet Is Playing Havoc WithjOne Farmer's j Crop Near Rocky Mount. Rocky Mount, N. C, Sept. 12. The boll weevil has appeared here on the farm of Mr. Sidney Balcombe, and is playing havoic with his crop, destroying at least three-fourths where they are at work. Rains have been injurious to opening cotton; too wet to "pick out. The berry situation has improved. The situation of corn, sweet potatoes, peanuts, bid fair to be very good. The National Board of Censorship vegetation to the famishing plant tracted universal interest. It was a; and Norfolk. Parlor Car bets roots above it. But one result would! thrifty-looking stalk, four and one-j Washington and Norfolk. be inevitable. Your crop would die half feet high, and contained onej 3:20 p. m. Daily for N'e B, hundred and fifty bolls and squares, j Oriental and Beaufort, Parlor Cif It was represented as a fair sample i Service. ' of the twelvelacre field from which ; it was cut. The peculiarity which For further information xcd made it of interest consisted in the vation of Pullman SleepStf 0? fact that it was a second-growth space, apply to stalk. After picking nine, bales, the' D.' v. CONN. General Afest, planter irrigated the patch and new s Raiotrh v C for lack of moisture, notwithstand ing, you may have a normal amount of rain fall during the season. You have not set up a chemical but a mechanical condition in your soil that allows the rain water to pass down into the sub-soil, but will not allow caDillarv to refurn into the of moving pictures have notified the surface soil to supply the needs of shoots sprang up from the roots and j w R HUDSON. W. W. CR0XTCX police of all the large cities of the the growing crop and it is only the will have plenty of time ttfnature; Q , p Car Inspector Meets Sad Death at Spencer. Spencer, N. C, Sept. 10. Edwin Winn, aged twenty-three years, a car inspector on the Southern Railway yards in Spencer, met Instant death under a train here to-night In a most tragic manner. While walking in front of southbound train No. 43 run ning at a rapid rate he "was struck by the locomotive and knocked off the track. He fell on the main line northbound track and No. 38, the fast mail train, then approaching at full speed, ran over his body, severing one hand and one foot. It is believed, however, that he received the death blow by the southbound train, his skull being crusher by the impact. The engineer of this, train saw him and gave the signal, but too late to save his life. ' country that they had condemned the films posed for by Beulah Bin ford, one of the figures in the Beattie trial at Chesterfield, Va., and re quested the authorities to forbid thei exhibiton. After reading a story in a news- . . .a m 1 a a paper tnat tne mniora gin wouiu probably be prosecuted in connection with the Beattie murder, Mrs. Laura Sullivan, of Pensacola, Florida, be came despondent and swallowed lau danum, with suicidal intent, Septem ber 8th. The poison fa'iling to take effect, she tried both a pistol and knife, but both failed. canillary water, or the wrater on Its I at least a bale to the acre. This was return movement to the surface, that off of the land which this year pro feeds the plant. Not only so but all duced the earliest bale of cotton ever of the soluble nitrates in the surface marketed. Neighboring farmers are eight or ten inches are leached out treating their lands in a similar man and carried down into the sub-soil ner, some cutting down tfie old stalks A GRANDMOTHER AT 29. Atlanta Claims to Have the Youngest Grandmother on Record. and forced to remain there until this bed of vines, weeds, etc., has been removed by a subsequent plowing or the natural processes of decay. The surface soil is thus made poorer and dryer by the localization of this mass of green manure just below the sur face. How shall we avoid this con dition? Mr. T. D. Brown, of Salisbury, I solved the problem this season on his ! own land. . He had crimson clover on a piece of land that yielded about six tons of green manure to the acre .which he wanted to plow down for corn. This is a very large amount I of green manure to be turned in at The notorious blockader, Henry M. Hancock, was captured near Siler City, September 9th, by United States Marshall Sloam and Sheriff Lane with a . posse of soldiers. He was given a hearing before Commissioner H. C Resse, found guilty, and being un able to give bond, was brought to prison at Raleigh. While hunting on, the farm of J. L? Bernigan, near Greensboro, on September 7th, Lacey Hackett, a 19-year-old boy, was shot and instantly killed by his comparion, Gaff Smith The shooting was accidental, and the gun was discharged, not more than five feet away from the- face of young Hackett and the entire load struck B. B. Massenburg, of Louisburg, Dies After Drinking Deadly Poison. Louisburg, N. C, Sept 7. A very sad death occurred here this morning about 11 o'clock in the drug-store of the Aycock Drug Company. Mr. B. B. Massenburg came in the drug store and went behind the prescrip tion counter, while all the clerks were in the front part of the store. Upon hearing his outcries they rush ed to his assistance, and it seems that he had taken some formaldehyde through mistake. He was given prompt medical attetnion, but of no avail, his death following in ; about five minutes. He was sixty-one years of age, and leaves a wife and large family. while others planted new seed In be tween the old rows, and all have a fine prospect of profitable results. This incident is surprising in that it makes possible a double crop of cotton ln one year from a single planting, but that is only an extreme ly limited area, for the season else where is too brief to permit of growth and fruitage fox mor than one crop, and that -not always entirely satisfac tory. The early frosts often do their deadly work before the crop is fully ripe and ready for the pickers. The Texans will have to discover a good deal more such land before a second crop of cotton has any appreciable Norfolk. Virginia- one time, especially during this sea- effect on the market. Charlotte Ob- WEE TO Y01H.1Y SISTER Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 10. A grand mother of two children at the age of 29 and of three at 30 years, is the record of Mrs. E. W. Bender of this city. - It is claimed that Mrs. Bender is the youngest grandmother on rec ord, and her case one of the most re markable outside of tropical coun tries. . . t 1 Mrs. Bender, who is 31 years old, was born in 1880 in South Carolina. She was married to E. W. Moore at Columbia, S. C, in 1892. She was only 13 years and 3 months old when her first child was born. This child, a daughter, was married in 1909 to Edward Sinclair and in January, 1910, gave birth to twins, the moth er being barely 16 and the grand mother not yea 30. In January of this year Mrs-Ben der's daughter gave birth to another, TSfSXll child, the third of Mrs. Bender's maSmr it m wish. grandchildren. JJZJT ! . 1 -a .V : . - aiuw U m noma ittxj wwhm uwu wn , ana warn to Mat fat aarait. taemselTaa with my home remedy. Ik carta & tM Free to You and Every Sitter Cut erlng from Woman's Aliments. I am a woman. 1 kaoir wconia'i nflitlan. I bar f ooad toe cur. dmnzhUr. yourxnotber.orTOur&L.. 1 JjJtX Tu apw to cure youraelTea at homa with- wom-. Buffering wbat we wWTkowS fmrimn. w& know better thaa azrr doctor know that myhome treatment ia aafeaadnir f:Krtat, kMut. UacitrbiakvLra iLl t wmwat aarat lif to our aex. tats frta to tnora to -rem ts.t -r " ATTENTION BoysGirb Tou can get a rOvJ TAIN PEN. Fun for one year, abiolsaiy free by sendb ti tf new yearly fatter3 to The CaucaiUa. Oe. you may aend cj t3 new subicriben to & months each, or tH new subscribers fr three montbi etc Caucasian bai beeaf Urged to eigiit pt and Is the best paper publiibed 61 SUte Capital TU la only 11.00 a J your father or subscribe, as Mr. Moore died when Mrs. Sinclair was an infant. Later his widow mar ried E. W. Bender and their union has been blessed by several children. Physicians claim it Is rare in this part of the world that a woman be comes a grandmother even in the early thirties. m a . . Z?LI'Lca Hy cure thamaelyea Tou must hare aa operattoa, you can decide for ranlf JtT31 dotor diamselrea with my home remedr. ItcnraaiaiS iJSSr. 255?rf.women have cured simple borne treatment which apeedlly and efiecrei TA'Jlf L1.exPlaLQ t ntnru or irrecruar Aensaruanoa in younz X-adiea. Plnmrm -TvTrST? oicxneBB ana Ususe. j. - -rwueaMwayansuitsirom latthla trong-,plnmp and. robust, tetnai -Wbererer youtirofl can refer you to ladlaa nfrm. 1 ... : . tea any sufferer thatthls Etaa Trwtawi really miti wom.nf atrona", pinmp ana. roous. atag aa yaw taimt. and th a trcSL XTT' T " 1 women wen. thebook? Write kvday, aa you may not m3hUlZ? daytreatmenti.your.aaiS a. a. atia more 3 gMl - add the fooittla f ' Jr for . t .nn caa f TT7& rlaucasian Sed the him in the face. ........ . -. v I i
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 14, 1911, edition 1
2
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