Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / March 4, 1886, edition 1 / Page 3
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nfikinghami feocket, wimX C, Tlinrsday, Hartli 4; 1 8 S 6. tocAL DEPARTMENT j W. KNIGHT, LocAti Editob. New Advertisements. . KTrnoLS Furniture. rrvr r vRRE-Strave-dorSto en. H C. WALirAdmin wtratort No - J.' B IlARRiNGTON--The Virginia Bekbyhill & JoHNSTOCharlotte Marble Works. ; rru mnn'th of hish! winds is here, xuv ! . i . . J C nnnti'nn in TOfTfirri fr and wo U1 """t "o1"1 fires is not amiss. There was a heavy fall of snow here last Sunday, but it melted al most as fast as it fell. f; - s -t. ' pf' ' ' 'We could not get the proceedings of the county .juomroissioners v lis week. Vill publish next issue. ' them in our The lot on which the residence! of the late W. J. Mcliae, Esq., stands, 120x460 feet, sold herjjat public sile on Monday .last for $2,106. Mr. C. M. Covington purchaser. Mr. Thorrias Fingey was recently married to Miss Florence Lemmondi - -. Lincolnton Press. With another Finger on his hands ; jlTiorrji as needs no machine to squeezehis Lemmoud. The great pressure on our advi ;r- tising columns, which, as every sen sible man knows, is the very life of a newspaper, curtails our usual ya riety of reading matter. .We must, therefore, ask our readers to bear with us in patience. We are requested iby Mr. N.A McNair, Chairman, to state, that t Board of Supervisors for Laurel Hill townshm ' continued itheir meeting from February to the 3rd day Anril. at 10 o'clock, a m. The rokd i ' . .-. '-. . i,. . .overseers in the township are 'e- quired to be prcsenlj and make a sworn statement of the condition of their respective rOad Lasr Saaday s - (Jbserver con iainsfan. account of a horrible sui cide, committed on the day before in that city." The victlim's name Was Willie Gilford-agcd 26. He was employed as a cl&rk in the store pf , the Messrs. , Nesbitt on. ,Trade street . He was observed by liis employer to be very cheerful, and active in h is attention to customers, when su 1 denly he was missing from the store. Nothing was thought of this until his continued.abseucc) , suggested in-, quiry and directly the report ofja pistol was heard in jibe rear of the store building and soon thereafter the odor of burnt -powder was de tected. i Examination resulted m finding the unfortunate young man lying in a pool of blood on the floor of an out house dead, the faUtl weapon which was a, 44 calibre pistol still clutched by the fingers of the left han.fl. The great mystery about it is the apparent absence of any cause for the rash act. TlJe opinion commonly accepted is, that deceased was insane, Ibis brain hay ing been disordered from a skull frac ture sustained by a fall some months . An Elopement. ...'. The neighborhood three miles north of Rockingham has - been somewhat astir lately (over the disap pearance of Nathaniel Thomas Cov- inston'Fsn.. rvnfi of its tor11 Irnnwn citizens and proprietor of a "fami ly of a wife and seven children Nat, as his neighbors call h imt left home some two weeks ago. with tne ostensible purpose of going to Moore .county, where he was to engage .temporarily in business with a Mr. McNair. His family "not ' heari ig from him, a messenger went hist ' Friday to Moore county to ascertain his whereabouts and welfare ; but found he was not, and had not been, in that section. Meantime rumor was afloat that Nat had been known for some time past to! be a constant visitor at the house of widow Sallie Bristow who was living near ? the Pee Dee Mill. The widow. acCom- panied Iby . her four-year-old toy, boarded the Charlotte bound train at 3 o'clock on Tuesday morning of ti wee k with the purpose of going nobody knew .where.- It has d veloped since' that, nreliminarv i her departure, she "was the reci pient oi a letter, postmarked Charlotte, - and signed Thomas Covington, b- gmning . with the very sweet arid wiaeanng words, "My Dear Wif appointing to meet her at Monroe on the C. C. R.R. Whether the devp ted twain have located at, or in proi: uniy to, Monroe as one report hif. it, pr about. Charlotteanother veiv sion of the story our Reporter can't testify. But that Nat has. deserted hi .wife and ;. seven children and eloped with the woman in question, is the settled - opinion among his neighbors. i A Correction. .. r At a .venture we stated last week that the famous quotation charac terizing George Washington as "first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen, was the prod action of ; Richard . Henry Lee, and that this Lee was the father of Uncle" Bob. At the.time of 'making the statement we confess, to having felt some degree of apprehensiveness lest we might be; inaccurate, and, strange to say, the eagle-eyed Star failed to observe the mistake. - We have looked into history since and find the following facts : George Washington died on December 14th, 1799. Congress . was officially noti fied of the sad event on Dec. 19th, on. which day resolutions of sorrow framed by Maj. Gen. Henry Lee and read by John Marshall, were adopt ed. The expression first occurred in these resolutions. Five days after wards, on the 24th, the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House, being directed by resolution to name the funeral orator, indicated Geh. Henry Lee as the person chosen for that interesting and solemn duty ; and on the day after Christmas the' oration was pronounced in which he gracefully incorporated the same elo quent phraser And this Lee -known in the war , as Light-Horse v Harry, afterwards a representative in Con gress was the father ' of Uncle Bob, our own great Lee. So much for the vindication of the truth ofjhistory. Too Good a Thing to Be pLo3t. ..." -y ? ( - 1 Among other institutions we have lawyers in our town, in 'act more lawyers than litigants ; and owing to hard times and the consequent dis parity between the two classes, our lawyers are obliged to be "briefless" and practically withou ; clients, sometimes for an indefinite period. In such a crisis it is no disparage ment of the dignity of their profess ion that they should occasionally turn their attention to ot ier chan nels of business whether for live lihood or recreation itl matters not." 4 A member of our bar some- tune ago conceived . a fancy for cultivating cattle arid soon it grew into" appassionato fondness, so much so that he is known to have led a choice Jersey heifer one day into his parlor for his wife to look at and admire. Aain and his is the "too good a thing to be ost" he sought to currij favor with - an old pet cow, of a different breed, by put ting a bridle and saddle on her and, to: amuse the children also, riding her around the lot. The iuniors whose Pa had been iri ; the cavalry and to whose exploits in rising they had often listened, looked on with nnbridle'd-mirth while ; the Senior bridled the apparently docile "crce tur." "Prepare to mount mount !" and, at a bound, the quondam bold cavalryman was jn-; position- not sooner however, than the dear old petTs animal intuition had suggest ed the command next in order and she "charged." Around that lot, afad about that lot and . through that lot, you - bet, - did old Pet charge aird never did instinct of "retreat or "halt" suggest itself un til the "burden of proof ' was lifted. The equestrian feats of our legal friend, when related to the children, always , since have liad reference to scenes and circumstances that ante date this particular event. - ? Death of a Venerable.Woman. y'.. The Wilmington Review of the. 27th, says:; - r Miss Maggie McLeod died at the "Old Ladietf Rest," on Seventh street, between -Chestnut and Mulberrv, at about 11 o'clock yesterday forenoon at the great age of about 90 years. Miss McLeod was a native of Rich mond county, but early in life came to Wilmington where she engaged in teaching, a vocation she pursued until the beginning of; the war. She was devoted to her profession and was , successful as a teacher, a fac sus,tained by the great number b years she was' engaged in .its many onerous ana responsioie auues. one had been for. many, years, a devoted consistent and conscientious mem ber of Front Street M. E. Church and was at the'time of her death the old est in membership of that body. She was an aunt of Senator Hawley o Connecticut, and when he as a Gen eral in the Federal army entered Wilmington in I8G5,", she, with the instincts of a true Southern woman gave her Brigadier nephew fsevere scolding for what she thought was his apostasy.,- .When .the Federal forces entered the J city 'she took a room in the residence of Hon Geo. Davis, while the. rest of the house was occupied by : Federal ? officers. Mr. Davis had some very rare and valuable books which she: iearing that they, might .be appropriated by -the unwelcome intruders, con veyed, to her room and:' hid in her bedding, by which means they were preserved. ; She has finished her work and is now at rest among the sanctified of God. - Charlotte. - - Amidst the blow and -bluster of ast Thursday night, this scribe left a comfortable bed and boarded the rain . for Charlotte! With three or bur drowjsy drummers as traveling companions, the trip was without an incident of interest, if we except a soul-harrowing' variety of snoring, with an occasional prolonged snort,' which emanated from the aforesaid drowsy drummers, while we wooed he sleepy god in vain. i Arriving at Charlotte we found it astir with; its characteristic bustle and enterprise. After eating a good breakfast Avesallied forth to "see what we should see." Almost the first acquaintance whom we met was our old friend Jas. A. Johnston, Esq., of the Charlotte Marble Works. A vsitto his marble yards, and an in spection of some of his work, qoii- vmced us that to send further than Charlotte for any kind of gravestone or monument is perfect folly. We saw, in the yard of Berryhill & John ston, some monuments which, for beauty of design and excellence of finish, cannot be excelled North or South. They ship work all over North Carolina, with a pretty fair trade in adjoining States. . 1. In the establishment of Mr; T. L. Seigle we found Mr. Martin McRae, well and favorably known in this section, who has now been with Mr. Seigle some five or six years. There, as here, Martin is popular because of his uniform courtesy, his strict attention to business, and hi3 un doubted integrity. To serve' his friends is a pleasure, and he gives prompt personalattention to all or ders received from them. Mr. Joseph Bar uch, with whom we had a pleasant acquaintance, is the manager of the immense retail and mail order department of Messrs. Wittkowsky & Baruch's establish ment, the largest dry goods house in the South. The small army of ex pert clerks are kept busy waiting on the scores of customers who throng the house from morning till night. Their Spring goods, are now arriving and they will soon be ready for their grand Spring opening. , If we may judge by the immense stock of furniture, he has on hand, Mr. Burgess Nichols is undismayed by the cry of "hard times.,'' which we hear on every hand. He has a stock of furniture from which any one may be suited, however small or great their means cheap chairs, bureaus, washstands, bedding, &c; fine dress ing cases, ' wardrobes - parlor and chamber; suits, carpeting, window sjhades -everything in the furniture line, as cheap as it can be bought anywhere.' '- ; ""' ? - " ' We had a very pleasant conversa tion w Capt. James ;F. Johnston, the energetic and clever machinery dealer on College street. In speak ing of the stringency of the times, he said that the greatest cause of hard times was the use of commercial ferti lizers ; that he had clearly proven it to his own satisfaction by practical tests, and that times would, never improve much until : the farmers learned to compost their Own ma nures, supplying ; vegetable matter to the land,' which enriches it" from year to year, instead of acid fertili zers which eat up the soil and ex haust the land in a few years. On this subject we, think, his head is level, and ; we believe, our farmers would profit by an experiment of the same' sort Capt. Johnston also showed us a diagram of a cotton cul tivator, the invention of a Mecklen burg man, which, to our mind, will create a revolution in cotton culture by greatly reducing the. cost of, pro duction. He has applied for a patent on the invention, and will at once proceed with the manufacture and sale of the cultivators. We have not space for a description of the inven tion, but would advise some of our large farmers to write to Capt. John ston tor lurther information i Business in Charlotte seemed to be brisk, but the complaint among the merchants was that there was no mone3'. Even the wholesale men. complained that their customers were failing to meet their bills, and that the outlook, at "best, . was not very bright. . J; -. . ' . , Altogether, we had "a pleasant day in. Charlotte, and on the return" trip met congenial company in the per sons of Mr. R. K: Bryan, editor of the Hickory Press, and Mr." M. A. Underwoodj of the Lincoln Press. - Another Batch of "Locals. i .Last week we ; gave a few items taken from the local columns of one of our State papers, and we feel sure that a few more this week will not fail to interest some of our readers. The following are taken literally, as they appear in the aforesaid pa per, and are a fair sample of the lo cal column : ' 5 Compest your land and buy less guano. Yes, by allmeans ; we think if our farmers would make a compost heap, of a few acres of land they would get alongmuch better. Nothing easier. Build a good strong pen and haul in leaves and pine straw, adding a lay er of one acre of land occasionally, until your land is all "composted,1' then you won't need the guano. "Fried chickens" are dear ; and the pros pects are, will .be dearer. , We, too, always had a weakness for fried chicken, and even now we love to fondle and caress the dear creatures, which, to us, grow dearer and dearer as we not the chicken grow older. Love is a great thing it caused a fish to be caught Saturday. Just how love could cause a fish to be caught is too much for us to "catch on" to, unless some fellow "hooked" a cod fish for his hungry "ducky dear." ; 1 : Which has the more influence over man woman or monev" is very debatable aues tion. There is certainly two Bides to it. . The question is easily settled. One red-headed woman, with a stout rolling-pin , can exert m ore in fl uencc and strong language over a man in ten minutes than all the wealth of the Vanderbilts can in ten years. It is a hard matter to break an old shoe it takes good "reasoning" powers but after broken once cannot be broken again. Tiie point i3 well taken and ad mirably sustained. After, "reason ing" the matter over with the old shoe in a calm and dispassionate manner, the breaking process must be pur sued with patience and fortitude. Once broken, it is generally docile and easily managed. " ? We would like to know how Mr. John Lawrence Whitehead's "democratic horse" is getting on., havn't heard from him in a longtime. r:" . ;; t?,-. 'h. How inconsiderate of. the 'demo cratic horse"not to write to his friend and let him know how he is "getting on" whether or not he has taken to crutches in his old age. Or possi bly, under promise of office, the horse has changed his politics and is ashamed to face his old friends. The girl with "pretty bangs and cye3 to correspond is said to have made a mash- sad.. (. "y We are of the opinion that the girl has made a mash, and that our esteemed contemporary is the sub ject mashed mashed flatter than a Chinese kite. Sad, indeed, 1 is his lot. We would advise him to retire from the editorial chair and go and soak his head in cold water and live oh' a diet of cod fish and garlic until his brain is restored to its normal condition. SPRING OPENING ; ; at WITTKOWSKY & BARUCH'S, v 1 : Charlotte, N. C, Is marked by unequalled Bargains in Embroideries, ' India Linens and Balbriggan Hose and Lace Scrim. We are selling these advertised Embroideries in strips of 4 yards only. '..! " LOT I, 4 1 yard strip for 20c. LOT II, 4 yard strip for 30c. , r ' LOT III, 4i yard strip for 35c. LOT IV, A yard strip for 40c. ; LOT V, 41 yard strip for 55c. LOT VI, yard strip for 65c. 7 LOT VII, 4 J yard strip for 85c. Send for one or more strips. : If you are not .entirely satisfied we will return your money ; we must please vou to gain your patronage. . ) India Linen, 40 inches wide, 10c. per yard, only. - Ladies regular made Balb. Hose, 25c. per pair, only. - Genuine Lace Scrim, 40 inches wide, 122 c. per yard, only. Mail orders promptly attended to ; WITTKOWSKY & BARUCH, ,. J ' , Charlotte, N. C : - - It is said ; that A. P. Southwick has attempted to have published a letter written by himself in which he openly ridicules some of our peo- nle here and also this paper. We . . - - i received a letter from this individu il several days ago which warrants the conclusion that he is a- thorough rascal.- We have been advised to publish the letter," but have hot yet concluded to do so. Rocky Mount Talker. Q T?AT"F. TO T. j COVINGTON, ! kjJJiX XJ AVadesboro, N. C, - for Wood or Metallic COFFINS. 5-6m. - Editor Rocket : Please allow me in your columns to express my gcit-" itiide to the people of, Rockingham 1 for tneir kindness to me and tamuy, expressed in what is Usually termecl a "pounding.iy On Saturday even ing our;hiearts. were made glad by the reception of t sugar, coffee, flour, bacon,' butter &c, &cv : This, was a very substantial expression of the people's good' feelings toward" usf as it filled up an empty larder':But we appreciate it more for thYspirit' tha prompted it. : It shall be pur pleas ure to labor, with God's ! helper to make ourselves and work worthy of these kindly feelings. ; i ' Respectfully &C.,".'; B. H. Philips. Pure Cream Cheese, Irish Pota toes, nice sound Onions and Cab bages at W. A.-Robbins & Co.'s, i I 'out of sorts' with headache, stomach, aisoraer, lorpia liTer, pamin Dactor siae, con stipation, etc .neglect may be fatal. One dose of BtroxLff'a Sanative Pills will give reliet few dosea restore to new health and rigor. Rockingham Market. CORRECTED WEEKLY BT EVERETT, WALL i CO., General KercWse. 1 . - . , , -n r Country Produce U Quoted at buying-prirc , Cotton i . - Good Middling, per lb..... : 80a Middling, ....... 8ia0 Bacon - ...... ..r Slides, per lb 93dl6 shoulders. " ' :.....::."..'....f OOa.OO ilams, I " .....'.....v.',.. . ' 00al5" B-ef,..........i : 5a3 Boeswax, ....:..........,............... 2t)a22' Butter. t: 20425 Cotton Yarns,.;. ...i.... ........ . 90tl:00 Chickens,. I21a20 Eggs, per dozen...................... ' 00al7 Flour- - , ,' '' Country, per 8ack,...........200a3.00 Northern . " 2.50a3.00 Patent, ...... 3.2ok25 Grain . M, (Join, per bushel, . 50a ,15 Wheat, " , " 75aSO . Oats, " i....;.,60a75 Peas, 1.00 Hides ' :- '' ' - Dry. per lb.....4... lOoOO Green, per lb 5a Lard,...: I0al2i Leather Upper, I ' 45a SOIe, 25a3U , Potatoes Sweet, per bu. ........ :50a75 Meal, per bushel, ....... .:...:;.....'-75aI00 lallow, per lb. 8al0 New Advertisements. STRAYED OR STOLEN. A FEW DAYS before Christmas, 1885; a large Berkshire male HOG disap peared from my premises. Color, black ; mark, a swallow -fork m tho left ear..; F6r any information leading to his recovery"! win pay UDeraiiy. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Having been this day dulv appointed Administrator of the estate of the late Oc- tavius D. McRae, notice is hereby civea- to ail persons naving claims against xue es i 11 ll 1 tate of my intestate to present the'same to me for pavmeut on or by the. th day .61 March, 187-1 Those indebted to the estate are required to make immediate payment. i " H. V. WALL; 'H5 : Adm'rofO. D. McRae, dee'd. w " Feb. 27, 1885. - T7"IRGINIA HOUSE, ' -Vt httlOTTE, N. C. J. R. HARRINGTON. Proprietor, i Terms, $1.00 to $1.50 a day . Restau rant attached! Meals at all hours, v Irade street; two doors east of court house. pH Uaed to-day regularly by. 10,000 American Are uerfectly Safe and always JBilfectnaJ 3 others, er Cah refanded. Don't waste lil KrmMr first. Sold by alt Druaaiats. cr mm money on vronni r Try L jaUed to any address. Bend 4 cents for p&rUcul&io. TTSSiCOX. SPECCIC CO Pbllwls.. Psw We Are Offering. -0UR Entire Stock of - - ,, .. . -; .... ,'L;" j . , . -! ..-. v I ' Fall and UJinter GOODS FOR THE sxxt 30 days. ; A To make room for Spring stock; - W." D. MCRAE &-C0. Y BAKERY Is again in full blast, presided over by first class Bakei and I can now fill orders for nice fresh BREAD, CAKES, PIES, (tc. at lowest prices for cash Also have a full stock of "r - ' Groceries,' Confectioneries, &c., which will be sold cheap for cash only, Give me a caU. .... . i , , J. W. HOLT. 1r , ' " Fresli Garden Seeds, L - Fine assortments of Fresh Garden Seeds just received by . I W. "A; '.Bobbins & Co. , ?M;Big: Ten Psaces off Best Tsntvsar for $1.00. Freslijlot.pf Garden-Seeds,' Onidn Sets Dried Fmitftc;. 1 Finest lot of Soda and Sweet Crackers In Town.1 I - - r ' A - V ' - " . 1 '? t- ' . - - ., t .... DEPARTMENT is "ehoek full" of Bacon, Lard, Shoulder Jamn, Breakfast Strips, F6rtt Meal,:Milapscs, Sugar, Green vnd Uoaeted Coffee, Teas, Pickled iPig-Feet, Strained Ilonej- at 12(pcr pound, Oheeso atloe. pec;pond,;etcj etc. ; 1j i v T?TTT) ''XXf A t1VrrFTTS '" 1 viU the hShest markerprices tor Fox JL ,AJ JLV T T -CL-Ll X JLJJL. i I -L. :Div WJM. -B!6wlkes"& Ca, ROCKINaHAM, 3ST Pure t-iii MEDICINES, CHEMI-, CALS, PATENT MEDI CINES, TRUSSES SHOUL 1 ; ''DER BRACESJ ' ' CANDIES," STATIONERY, PIPER- PENSvINK, fec: BUIST'S' FBESH JRum Wines sand ' tLiqiwrs i for Medicinal Purposes Alwry$,on JJand. Tl Physicians1 Prescriptfons carefully compounded-ai all hours) day .cr niht.O J ri- 5 s3V ...lit mf 1 lip- - r u v u. f i ti r r iiBMimi 1 1 w 1 r. it pwi' ".'uw. .i t,,-: a mi nt.oi.' !t"7. - "FOE SALE BX: Jir to o;iw DEALER :, -.il' :" I 1 I B jLS m l ' 'il , fr-iT STAPLE: AND FANCY ; I fanrf ..... . i. t l "r-iYl i i w mi im . .. "... " ' 4'v'Oents3,jIshinff'G66ds, : ' : I EOKIiEN3URG jGHARLOTTE, Nk. Gv... Manufactures anrj i Steam Ensrines' and Boilers. . " ! :f 'u uoaVM a i v hiiii v r . ,w . Saw- Mills and Variable 1 notion weddr-? Wheat mill Outfits. ' .,1 Corn.Mills -Portable. .:v ; .,wa Separators: Threshers and Horse. Pbwerg.q : Reapers, Mowers and Rakes. o.jm", ui Steam1 and 'water Pipes Brass Firtings.rf;n,! ilepairW ' Promptly ' ;AfendedtXfl S u ' " lAIddress"1 ! - i JOHN WILKES, Manaoerv 85! 1 GRAND irVliMSiTIil.'W.I : FRAXKLW Ult, i THE: ROCKET . wt5il c toibri Jotinial i One year for ori'ly Two, 'papers ; for.Uitle injora ttou thaprice pi one, i-r By paying us $2.25 yoa will receive for one year your homtpaper yntbi the Conricr Jonrnal, the RcpresentattYe Newspaper of the Bouth, .Democratic -and for a Tariff for Revenue only, and the best, brightest and abjest family weekly in the United States. The Weekly Courier-Journai has the largest Democratic circulation of any Newspaper in America.' " Tho$e 'who desire Ho examine a sample Copy of the Pourier-Journai can do so at this '.office. ' tL Life Experience, Remarkable and julclc cures, i Trial Packages. Send stamp for sealed particulars. .Address Dr. WARD & CO. Louisiana, Mo. .Leader y v r , r . , ana Uoon Kkms, .Dry Hides, dtcj- i,rGILES!E. WISHA-JEIT. "HTV ' ' ' :.it ) PAINTS OILS.M'A'fcV WISHES 4 J)T&STrjFFft4(u7 ' TOILET AND ' ri J aH i m FANCY ARTICLES, rS'fcnmATjrf tor Arm i'a'tttjjw if WiX "ClGARETyp-'1 GASlOEfl1, SEEDS; if , i ... ! i. - i(r:uii hod ah odi vit cm O'spp . . i '.r. ': a U a 'J p ton tt ..... i . . ' - .; 'iii1' !) y t di bd ic du t fkbat& . , .n hop. io y Lfiia ) - ixif-: : Vii has i I'iii tixr pit - I)' ECeops In Stock . . .... t t Tit fif.i r JjlJ:H rr Will practice in incbraond Robesori14''' Aason and Moore counti&sJ Groceries Wi Lit Wo ? kep. a' full of. Groceries ofalt." kinds, which we" sell at -' 'V ' !u . LOtVKSsT PRi:s F0H CASH.',." 03 f Call and see us before buying. .Ji.;; hsj w. d: McEAE &comffv T. W:-GUTHRIE 'M District Agent ' " Liverpool & London . & GIoTd- ' icwm nvpp Aflk aaa - Jil'" v. tn)Xy Losses' paid" icilhovl Ih muol di&viijitJi Co to Watson's for Chromes. J 'jut t 5 t Hi tr . J r.t- it r 'FvS
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
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March 4, 1886, edition 1
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