Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / Sept. 17, 1885, edition 1 / Page 1
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OYER Office KinrKETT, WALL A COMPANY'S. jBSCRIPTION 3UTES- 0n) year, - v SlXDioBths, Three months,... wr5ntion accounts 11 Suov' ra 1.50 .75 .40 must be paid H. C. WALL, Editor and Proprietor. es furbished on Advertisinj application. DBOWNlKO CREEK AfD LUMBER RIV EB. FBOM TOUT HOLE TO RUS- SELL'S BRIDGE. j ,A Summer layi. BT IRCTLDOCX. ' :J irl scotch lassies fail! as the light, " i And two Scotch laddie brave and bright, jCm to a Poet's caveone day , ; r To spend some time in song and playj ..for " said they, isso hot at home, ; e thougnt " r. , See you. ana .uom jy-.-.. - , Thfl wonders which, around us dwell, And share your rooms and herbs as well.'.' ,Well knew they how he children lov'd j And often with them panjj and ror'd. ., j A lad and lassie on each knee, j rFor Poets are long shank'd and free,) j- Then girding cioso nisj naxen ruoe ; He speaks while they its pockets probe i 'Shall 't be of horrible and awfu' ? ghall i,tVe fairy tele of true ? Hhaii it be of fair Loch Lomond, Ben Nevis or Roderick Dhu?" JOHNSTON'S AND SHERMAN'S ARMIES. Their Passage Through Fayettevllle, N. in March, 1865. "Not these, not these5 Things nearer, please." I Here the Poet, leaving fiction, j .Rose a syllable in diction ,"Shail we sing of man or creation ?' j " ' "Oh1, no) Oh, nol'.' ; - . :. 'Qf the oixe and might of, our nation?' 'Wait for the snow J" "Shall we tell of soience or no-fence?": 'Mot .now, notjnowl" "Of the poor Mistress Surratt's offence 7 "None, none, we trow." j ','OfSeo'y Stanton's night thoughts T" j Too hot I too hot" Of her murder byJum to please sots ?'' cr- 'Nor what he got I- V -j i.' Tell as of streams bright and flashing, I Smooth rolling streams, or fierce dash' - ' -j Of glaciers, snow-slides or oceans, I f roien halt down. , 1 Suif, our notions, j 'Or we shall sleep !" "We will tell of the Lumber iiirer to keep you from slumber, Drowning Creek nour o'r and round '.. . . '"'I Let it cool, but not astound you ; , j 'Tis Lumber's: head i Look not with dread I .u.J;.L ! up huui iihkcu vroeK juncuon, ; lligli up, where dasl with an unction,! The waters which rush in 'their glee. ! There a restful grotto we see The "Tory Uole.", Slain was each soul Jiyjhe brave Whigs who had trac'd them And then in their stronghold faced them; l old them of their Rapine and theft Slew all, and then quietly left, . To light till free as ireek could' be 1" j "Yes; tiis," aid they, "away, away 1' f'Now hup and sleep thee fill mcrn, ' Awake at the sound of tLB.horn." J f; -Well knew the fair lassies their jnpokj" Kock cartain'dj'and to it they took, j Fern leaves their hfd and Airfftr dnmn Their room hewn-stone of richest brown, j fwoir wyenew oi piK ana lace .- j xii, any queen:s iugn eoueh to grace. ?n a cool roek, on a straw bed, u j r. ti v tuu hm iiou. ' At sound of horn, ill bright and gay,! Prepared to be upon the wayj ! Mail Iftftrn'rt in hnmti lha vnnnit fnlk-a , -TV '" Were ' .j" ):.:: ') ".:'; As well, rich, dahities to prepare. I -The meal enjoy'd. The dog had led Sheep and cows out ; now boat ancj sled The Poet then calling his deer . j Vhich always wer feeding quite near, Hitched then to his boat and slod I And away for the Uole" they fled, 1 lis Shepherd dog taking the lead, j Swept away o'er the hills with speed ! ArriT'd: The boat from sled they took xnen the Bard gave the dog a look : lhi eve," said he, "at Mont Pelier Meet me ere the night shades appear." The dog took reinis, bowing his head, ; t-uter'd and bark'd, and back they fled I uere then let us enter the boat I . And adown with the swift stream float, With a maple for mast and sail j -And shade, as we Meek the gale. j Montgomery and Moore are seen, ! ghadowed in pinery green ; Fwms 'round an4 the tinkle of bells , Of pastoral husbandry tells ; . Turkey we see and fish bite free; nre Riehmond and Cumberland, too, " Are opening out to our view. : Ihe raUroad's Mgh trestles are past, ' On, on to Blue's pridgft like the -bhwt We sweep, and by ravine and ridge Till we reaeh our aoon-stay, Pike Bridge,. 1 he Pattorcnnii'lRAnvA. T T Specif Correspondence of the Rocket. On the 8th of March, 1865, the vanguard of Johnston's army, con sisting of part pi Hardee's corps, en tered Fayetteville. I was then a school girl of sixteen, with - ardent ove for the South and unbounded "aith in the final successful termina- ion of her cause, which even the sight of .her armies in full retreat rom Sherman could not shake. Only a few detachments and some officers with their staffs came in the first day, but all the next day, and the greater , pjart of the night the ar- illery and the infantry of the arriiy of the Tennessee and the defenders of Charleston poured through the place, making an incessant moving panorama of men, horses, cannon and wagons. First of all came the "galvanized" Yankees, armed with axes, picks TERMS: $1.50 a, Year, in Advance. Vol. III. Rockingham, Richmond County, N.. C, September 17, 1885;N No. 38. at some Yankee cavalrymen that ap peared above the brow of the hill. I shall never forget my feelings at the sight of the latter as my aunt said solemnly, "Children, they are Yankees.'" It was like a knell of doom. Hampton's cavalry were camped ed West of the town and had not yet passed through, so close s were the contending armies together. After this, for an hour o"r more we saw no more Yankees and the Confederate cavalry passed by, the horses in ranks and every man with his sabre held . up - over his shoulder, thie noise of their harness and accoutre ments making a sort of rushing sound almost as soon as they came in sight. - After these well-ordered ranks came a more disorderly body of cavalry Wheeler's I presume many of them ragged, some of them hatless, and mosfof them with two or more horses. One of them stop ped at our gate and asked for a hat, nnrl nhnnt. tiftv mnr nr Ipss Rtnru anoV spades to repair and make roads ped tQ gee wmt kind of m hQ were northern prisoners on parole, , , ,an wna n the good luck to meet Lieut. Mc Veagh, of Illin ois, wh om I .Verily be lieve was walking ahead of. his regi ment in. order to afford protection to some poor woman who 'might stand in need of tit. . He drove' the bummers out of the houserand they ran into the kitchen where they be gan ransacking the servants things, mistress's clothes. -1 saw a negro man with a ladies' hat on trimmed with blue ribbon, another walked off with a" velvet cloak on belonging to one of my . acquaintances. Each night the sky was lurid with the ffaihes 1 from some burning home- hstead, but it has passed into a prov erb; that Sherman's route could be who preferred serving as sappers and miners for the Confederates to con finement in prison. After these cam6the artiller', then the infantry. wheat-straw hat, whole- but rather the' worse for the wettings it had re ceived; I ran and got that; it was received with shouts of "New spring " c V "W hat from Nnssnn 'f "Ain't, it. nrfittv. spread Cor the soldiei-s, and ajl day - . Q.. - u , me . Ag ong the house was full of them. A snlfl. rpp . , u.a good many of them came to get lit- v -I, tTir ,fira K MH lejobsof sewing pr mendipg done. I., . nll th Ttis needle A party of cavalrymen, I remember, t0 say that I retired in confusion. brought their blankets to be fixed after the manner of a Mexican sefape a hole was to be cut in J,he centre just large enough for the head to slip through and the edges bound with braid. " - It was on this day that a skirmish was iougnt at Jjongstreet, twelve miles from Fayetteville, Kilpat- rick's surprise and defeat on this oc- casion are matters 01 history ana need not be narrated here. Toward the close of the day the melancholy line of ambulances canip in bearing the wounded, and, to me, the still more melancholy file of prisoners. I would have liberated them all if I could. I had not made the acquaint ance of Mr. Sherman's bummers then. . ; The night of the 10th was clear, with the moon shining brightly.- A blue line now appeared behind the . breast-works which formed , the outer defences of the Arsenal, which lay to the south of he main street and only -'150 yards away. It was undoubtedly the Yankees, for they fired a few shots at the now scatter ing columns of Confederates, which were returned. . One had the temer- ity to venture out from behind the breast-works and a Confederate gal loped up and took him prisoner in the face of his comrades, who were afraid to fire for fear of" hitting him. A demoralized Confederate who had stayed behipd . to sec what he could pick up at the Arsenal rushed fran tically through our yard. Ho wa"s bare-headed and was rapidly divest ing himself . of everything that could impede his flight; gun, knap-sack and canteen lav strewed on the The columns of infantry continued ground behin.1 him. Our old cook to march by, looking so worn and ragged, poor fellows, as from time to time a fe4r of thpm would come in for rest and refreshment. A party of general officers came in and ex- stood in the kitchen door and watch ed him in his mad career. As he dis appeared over the fence she remark ed sententiously, "I didn't know that was the wav they fit." I hope I and jrig':trlt;thet:Bm'; Ltrapedlby solitary chimneys where" happy homes once stood. - In town there were several buildings burned besides the factories, namely the State bank, several large warehouses belonging to a factory company, two dwellings and the office of the Fay ettevilleObserver. Outside the town, where no guards were placed, the soldiers "ran a muck" through ev erything. At my uncle's place, four miles 'from here, they tore up smashed and stole everything they could lay their hands on ; they cut up the parlor carpet into saddle cloths, broke the mirror over the mantel, broke up the clock and the sewing-machine, carried off the books from the library, even the family Bible was not sacred ; one of them opened it and spread it over a mule's back and rode off on it for a saddle. Finally they finished by tearing up clothing, pamphlets, feather-beds, &c, and pouring pea nut oil over the debris. All the bed clothes were carried off except one quilt on which the" baby was lying. One miscreant worse than the rest seized that ; ray uncle's wife held on to it." but. lie being the stronger of the two, jerked it away from her arid ran away with it. Of course every thing eatable was laid hands on the first thing. A faithful servant was dis patched to town to the house of a friend for something to eat; he brought some meal and a bottle of molasses. The bummers took the molasses from him as soon as he ar rived ; my aunt made some brj?ad from the meal, and as she was cook ing it before the fire a scamp sitting by kept spitting over and around it, "Please don't spit jnto my bread," said my aunt.' "With that he spat directly into it the bread intended to feed our hungry little chrildren. The evening ;they left this place a field 4 officer rode by BurgOss I think followed by some men with horses loaded with bacon. My uncle approached him, saying, "Sir, you have taken all mv provisions and my family must suffer without any thing ; will you not leave me ome of that meat?" Without deigning to. reply he turned to one of the men amined a map, looking anxjous and may be pardoned that the ludicrous low spirited, a party oi young men from the Stono Guards, I think, had been with us all day, some of their number being sick. After all was quiet they tied their horses un der our windows and we kept guard over them while their masters slept on pallets made on the floor. How incidents of that sorrowful time seem to stand out at this late day with more distinctness than any other. Another company of cavalry now approached and my aunt and I ran out to warn them that the Yankees were behind the breast-works to the south of them. Quick as thought eat. A negro rushed in, exclaim mg, "Oh, Miss Susan, they've took the dinner mammy's cooking, and dad dy's Sunday breeches" and seeing the vYankee officer, he interrupted himself with "but daddy don't care." The main body of Sherman's army now began to pas by in martial ar ray, with flags flying, the field offi cers on horseback prancing at the head of the column, the soldiers proudly keeping step to the music of the band ; and the very first band that went by played "Dixie." ' This was too! much the drop that over ran our already brimming cup; one and all j we burst out crying, and sat around! pouring out floods of tears as if our hearts would break. Lieut. McVeagh must have been one of the men who cannot stand the sight oi woman's tears. He did all he could to comfort us, even averring that which he did not believe that the Southern cause was not lost yet. Finally he desisted in his efforts at consolation and strode up and down the room in despair (jmtil his regi ment came along, when he Jeft us regretting that he could not stay un til a guard was placed. , We at last were able to dry our eyes and look out at the grand military show, the like of which we should probably nevef see again. A man in a linen duster riding at the head of a troop called out to is, "Gone up the spouk'No, we are not," said my aunt, "hurrah for Sou thern rights." n about half an hour an' officer came iwith a guard. My aunt began risking if that was the way civilized warfare was conducted alluding to he bummers but he interrupted her, saying,' it that s the way you alk, madam, I'll place no guard at this house." The guards did their duty; well enough, keeping intruders rom the houseand never failing to call us when any celebrity passed by, thus : "Here, you people, don't you want to see Gen, Sherman ? or I say, here's Kilpatrick going along." We had no trouble after this except hat a horrid looking man in a red shirt, who had some writing to do, brought his- papers and ' wrote at a ablfc in the house. We did not tnoiv he was spying on us until one day he called out, "Look ahere, if Phe Pattersons.' Bennetts McDonalri'a ' 'OoL-ll im i... ' Hughes, Alcltenzies. Ourrift McLeans, Grahams, Wilkes, St. filairs "h to ine i pike are names we strike. , Ure let us moor our bark and dine 1 And drink McLean's spring waters fine; Fresh fih r.'Vi: ? ' - I- r vw give, I'or here the hardy hunters live. I To he continued. "I take the pledge and keep it,'' vsine pawnbroker. sorry we all felt for the poor boys, Uhey formed in single file and gal and have otten wondered u they au loped down a street towards the lived to get home or perished in the north, every map discharging his single battle that was fought before pistol as he turned the corner. These tne surrender, i nave tnem Deiore i mora ut nf t.hp. r.nnfprlm-ntps. my mind's eye now as they mount- and I have heard that thev crossed -I ? 1 111 ed tneir norses at our aoor one snoni tne Cape Fear river on Sherman's half hour before the first Yankee ap- pontoons. peared over the brow of Haymount. For the space of perhaps a quarter Pnngle, the Grahams, Kavenel and of an hour there was silence, during which we waited. There are few such periods in a lifetime, and fortunate ly ours was cut short by the sound of hurrying feet and shouts and im precations, and a party of miscreants burb of Fayetteville, situated in full scampered up the walk, ran up the some others whose names we never learned.. The house where I was staying with ray aunt and her family was on Haymount hill, the western su- view of the C. S. Arsenal, from which it was separated by a grove of oaks. This j Arsenal,- Sherman's objective point in visiting Fayetteville, was evacuated on the night of the 10th. On the morning of the- 11th Sher man's army entered. The first inti mation that we had that the Feder als were really in town was by a jet black negro mounted on a clay-bank horse- He had .lost his hat and his blanket was streaming behind him ; he was urging his horse to its utittost speed ; his 'eyes looked as if they would pop ' out of his head with fright, anclat every bound he ejacu xaicu . . - , . - "YANKEES ! YANKEES I" A few horsemen followed him, fir- steps and pounded on the door with the stocks of their guns, crying, "Le us in," "Open this door or we'l break it down." My aunt let then them in and they pushed roughly by her, and in an instant spread themselves over the house, rummag ing and ransacking everything. Shall we' ever, forget them, th "boys in blue," with their loose jack ets, sloMch hats, arid fdcesbegrimed with the smoke of . camp fires ? seemed as if the lower regions were opened and the fiends turned loose upon us.. My aunt said, "Where is your commanding officer? I want protection." "You'll git noprotec tion," said one. "That's played out long ago, grinned another. She ural like places seen in dreams, v The town seemed literally boiling over with blue-coats. In . every va cant lot they had pitched their tents and were luxuriating in rock ing chairs or stretched on cai-pets in front of them ; some were " lying at full length on the side-walk and would; not; even draw in their feet for us to pass, but lay staring impu dently at us as we walked around them into the street. ' ; ; " ' ' We got our peck of meal, and as we turned homeward we perceived that the Arsenal was in flames.- It had all been fired at once and pre sented a fearful., appearance, espec ially to one whose home lay in its immediate vicinity. Frightened out of bur wits we hastened home and. began moving out but some officers from Col. Estes' regiment, seeing us from their camp, came and persuad ed us it was no use, as they would place a guard in the yard to watch the park which were showering in every direction. Gratitude is never out of place, so I take pleasure in mentioning the names of two who were so kind to us on this and oth-! er occasions, . Capt. J. B. Newton, of Ohio, and W. B. Jacobs, of Indiana, although we never made any secret of our opinions. The thanks of the ladies in our neighborhood are especially due to the former, as he spent all the time he could spare from his duties in going around among them, quieting their fears and seeing if they needed any thing. After all danger of the fire was over and things had quieted down to their normal state, a boy came running to tell us that he saw two men setting our stable on fire,. Capt. Carter, from Ohio, had juat come in and asked for water to-wash. . He had been on the roof of a neighbor's house that had caught fire and was so bliick he" could scarcely be told from a "man and brother." He seized the bucket of water that was brought to hint and ran to the sta ble. Sure enough & blue column of smoke was circling up from it. For- tunately he arrived in i Job l.Printing.;.;-. : ; Having recently purchased a first '' class outfit, wcvare preparod to "do all kinds of - PLAIN AND PAKCY JOB rPRINTIWC ,IN. THE ',..-' i". BEST 0P ST7LE And at LhdngiPriceg. other books, a half bushel of ground peas, a, 'inger-bowl and a large looking-glass. Por the last we were for tunate enough to find the owner. ' I knew of their presenting one young lady with a piano. Fayetteville, N. C. Secorod Ms Rights. time to ex tinguish it or it might have spread ing their pistols, as they retreated, then ran out in the street and had following, "Throw him down a piece." The soldier obeyed with the air of throwing a bone to a dog and they rode off. ' I wish to confine myself to my own experiences and that of my fam ily, or I might multiply instances like these of the conduct of Sher man's men near Fayetteville, such as hanging men to make them produce their valuables, pouring molasses in pianos, converting bureau-drawers into feed boxes, tying up silk dress es" for flour bags, and so on; yerily the Yankees are an inventive na tion. j One evening we were surprised by a visit from two Confederate officers. How refreshing to our eyes the sight of the gray, uniform 1 I hey, were officers On parole who were permit ted to go round among the people to obtain food and other things for their men who were prisoners. With all the provisions Sherman had ap propriated in and around Fayette ville it did look as if he might have mnnarrpd to feed his prisoners. Dur ing the stay of the army my aunt found it necessarv to apply to the commissary for meal. She Was told to go to a mill about a mile away down town. Taking one of her daughters and a negro boy to bring the' meal she set out. In about an hour the boy returned saying - we miist iret some corn and an order from an officer who was stationed Having pro- a' scene so seldom witnessed. Car- cured the corn and order, one or my riages containing negroes and their Geri. Sherman knew how you peo ple talked he'd burn this house down." At night we would sometimes hear them bumping about search ing for "hidden treasure," I suppose Sherman, as is well known, stop ped five days in Fayetteville for the purpose of destroying the ArsenaL Early Monday morning the third day after he entered the place we saw a large body of men, seemingly armed with a new 5 kind of weapon, coming from the Arsenal On closer inspection we saw they each had a fragment of the ornamental wood work that surrounded the buildings to make their fires with;" Soon the work of breaking down the walls be gan. Bars of railroad iron were sus pended by chains from timbers set up in the shape of an X; with these they battered down the walls, peck ing first a small hole which grew larger as they swung the iron against them. There were several such rams at work simultaneously around the same building. i Whenthe walls were sufficiently weakened the roof wouldfall in with a loud crash, the bands vould strike up and the men would cheer as if they really enjoyed the work of de struction. -While this was going on It I the wagons, cattle, sheep, negroes and camp-followers were passing through, almost in an unbroken stream, such in sight of our house. "things," piano covers and curtains thrown over horses, bed-quilts, look ing-glasses, even chairs, on the wag cousiris'and I returned with the boy to" the mill. We had to pass down the principal street,of the town, and the' familiar scene seemed somehow 'An negro "called on the president of a railroad company.' " Hobbling" into the room he said i MLook at mef Bah." .' . MWell, what do you want?" . "Money." . ' "What for ?" "Dis heah," holding out a foot from which three toes had been cut. "I've got nothing to' do with that." "Well, er mighty fine lawer tells me dat yer has. Wuz on one o' yer trains tuther week. I ken rekiver er thousan' dollars." -.J -' ' 1 f "Didn't you work for the road?" ; "Yas, sah I worked for it twict." "Were you not riding on a free" . pass?"- . ;'; "No, sah; wuz ridin'.on de train." , "You know what I mean. Didn't you have a free pass ?" , 1 "No, sah, I'll sw'ar to de Lawd I didn't, an' - more den dat, I ken prubeit." ' What do you propose to do about it?" V "Perpose ter Lab my rights. Gin me ten dollars an' a pass fur a year, an' I'll let de thing drap." , . ; The money and the pass were giv en him. : :-; f " "Thankee, sah.'r As he hobbled down- the stairs, he muttered : KWan't rdin, on er free pass. ; Wuz er stealin dat ride. Dis pass is jes' inter . my han.V Gwine to fetch up fish from de bayou. ' Huh, dis ten dollar bill is . ez putty e a new shirt." Arkansaw , Traveler. ' , ons : negro women dressed in their ' to have changed and looked unnat- to several dwellings. The next day they broke up their camps and crossed the Cape Fear River. There was a regiment camp ed in the grove back of our house -Sherman's body guard, they said The night they left they burned a quantity, of corn. They built a large fire in the street I could point out the spot now and poured, on bag' after bag of corn, looking in, the fire light like a company of fiends. How glorious the boys in blue appeared, burning up the bread from destitute women and children. f On the night qf the 5th they left, and seemed to leave behind them the barrenness of desolation. Some few people had saved their provisions by hiding them or by ac cident, but the bulk of the popula tion . must have suffered if some-of the citizens who had managed to save some cotton had not sent a boat to Wilmington and bought provisions hard-tack and mess, beef from the Yankees who occupied that city.. The officers of a regiment near us, wishing to have a dinner party, bor rowed the dining-room of an old la dy who lived near us; They polite ly invited her to sit down with them To give an account of it m her own words : "General,"said I, "ain't you going to ask a blessing ?" " Well, grandma," said he, "I don't know how ; won't you do it for me ?" "So I asked a blessing and prayed a short prayer. I asked the Lord, to turn their hearts away from their wickedness and make them go back to their homes and stop , fighting us, and everything I was afraid to tell them I told the Lord and they couldn't say a wprd." One officer offered my aunt $15.00 Confederate of course for a home spun dress. He wanted it to carry to his wife to show her what South cfn ladies wore. . 1 ' The soldiers seemed very fond o making presents ; "easy come, easy go." Among the things they brought iriy aunt's little girl were agilt:edged Bible, a copy of Hiawatha, several Stopped his Paper, """ Once upon a time a certain man got mad with the editor and stopped his paper. The next week ho sold his corn at four cents below, the market price, V Then his property was sold for taxes, because he didn't read the Sheriffs sale. He was ar rested, fined eight dollars for goingr hunting on Sunday, and he paid $3ffor a lot of forged notes that had been advertised two weeks and the public had been cautioned not to ne gotiate for them. He then paid a big Irishman) with a foot like a forge , hammer, to kick him all the way to the newspaper office, where he paid bur years' subscription in advance und had the .editor sign an. agree- ment to knock him. down and rob him if he ever ordered, his paper stopped again. Such is life without newspaper. New York News dealer.," .."-". ;..,!"';;.,.-; Who's the new boarder over the way ?" asked Mrs. Bluff of her hus band. ; r "'" ? ' "I don't Know," he replied, i "He's a nice looking man," she continued. ::' ' ' 1 '"Yes, very nice looking" "Is he married ? . i r "How 36 you know ?" "-V r "Oh, I know." if "I thought you said' yon ' didn't' knowhim." ' "I don't." . - ' "Then How do you know he isn't married?" . "I heard him singing "Heaven is my home" as I came by last night. Merchant Traveler. ... : A Ruinous System. We heartily commend the following from the Wilmington -"Star."' The "Gold Leaf has been preaching this sort of doctrine all the time. -The f 'Star" says: ' I . ' ' The mortgage business is simply ruinous. People Who use mortgages, as . aCplaster will grow weeds and poverty. North Carolina has been very much injured by the lien sys tem.. Farmers pay'a ruinous inter. It. ought to ' stop-and until it does, there will be no positive recuperation and improvement.- Gold Leaf,-- Hs,i ;l4-:''-'?-."' : :: T''- Nevcr judge a: policeman by "hia hpimpt. t . - i. - c
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 17, 1885, edition 1
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