Newspapers / The Progressive Farmer (Raleigh, … / Feb. 23, 1892, edition 1 / Page 5
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THE PROGRESSrVB FAMSR:- FEBRUARY 23. 1892 IoatxT'. A SOLLUM FAC a werry feoaf Mlsw is de ole plantatloa male : u' nelwMlT'll piny wid hiui nnh-ss he is a fool, fie Wtt tia tode w'eu ou me itate about t ubkiBaMr sorter kalkerlate yom'll ft aloa widest hiarv. Tf a yi trv tB 'P1"011 d4t wnl from d fr0mt Me lctkMiaKk as Moses, but his leoks it full Ed dou muscle, ha doesn't eren Aa' ylmiar his dtspersition's better' peeple Ke itan' till yom s'pose he is a monument of Aji jounlrae' we a 'nerolent expres-i n en his fo: , ., i, Bat dat Barelent exprefa i de mask dat s ailers Tar ale butat. U brhiu' it sure aa you is born. lea you s?t aha a little, an yon pat hi ether end. An' you kvt a reverlatiou dak ha aint M ssueh our ft iend : Tou Ln untitle a bis: rnhtt&ke; but before da het reffiit-. Tea i iiitcd werry sudden to de odder side de fence. Weil, yn feel like you'd been itandiu' ea de Aa' de eiissnti some u' hit you in de middle ob de back; Yea dwu't know wat has happened, you caa soaiit-ly i-eich yur brrff; fat J on t.i.k yuii'vtj made de 'quaintance ob a wt-ri y Ti'ieut iWju. Sovr a mb ia de wul is precisely likede mule; A a' rioUniy 11 play wit it, unlets Le i-. a lool. It look M3 mitey Lunerien ; but honey, t ear, bc-WMi e 1 Tar all lioua de I iek is hidden, de kiek is ailers there. HOUSEHOLD. rFFFBTS FOR TZJL. Threo eggs, one cup of t-ugar, two thirds of a cup of butter, one pint of weet mil lr, three pints of flour, three leaspoonfuls of baking powder. Bake in muffii rings anr serve warm. CRUST FOR TAKTS. Rub on teacupful of lard into three teaeupfuls of flour and a pinch of salt. Beat the white of one egg slightly, add-' iva tahlespoonfuls of water to it, and . nix it into the flour. Do not mil nore than necessary, and it will bo a flaky erust. PLAIN OUIL1TT1. ,' Beat four eggs Try light 11$ ve reay a pan of hot butter, pour -he eaten ergs into it, and fry it till i'j is f a tine brown on the under side, then lap oce half over tha other, and ?rve it hot. Just before you lap it, sprinkle a little salt and pepper over thi' top. Chopped parsley or onion m.iy be aix d with the eg before it i f lied. ENGLISH PUDDING (HOUfJi Oee pound each of currant' raisins (stonfd) and suet, one-half ound of eitroa, one cupful of molaajer one pint f boiling milk, ie scant t'fvpoonful tah of cinnamon, allspice and salt, ne-fcalf teaspoon fill of clov;, the wmo reservirjone white for fi ttuie. Boil six I kour. Add flour to eyifWn, so that a fork will stand uprigV.tin tho mixture. oiRKOT nob p. 0n quirt rich, brwu etock, one pint, carrot, one teanrpoon sugar, one teaejooii salt, one hlf taltspoon pep per, one small onioli, sliced. Wash and scapo the carrot thave off in thin slices a pint of the outer part. Do not vise the hollow centr3. Cook the carrot with the onion in lioiling 6alted water ko cover, till very- tender. Rub the carrot through a sju ish strainer. Add the stock and hat again. Add the tugar, fcalt and ryppper, and when hot terve immediately with croutons. E0iI2 M ADS JHARLOTTK EUSS2. Ilome made charlotte ru is much ! icer tiiin that lKnight at he baker's, and is easy ancj simple to make. The following receipt will mak desert anouirh for a familv or nv. llalt a CJ " - ,mf pint of doubi3r cream, a teaspoonful t r,nilla and a third, of a cupful of rranuUtedaugar. hip these together, .nd yrh&i ntiff add the beaten whites of two an( mii thoroughly. Line hho jttom"and sid of a fancy pud iiug Cuh. with gingle lady fingers Mcrip ones.- It will take about I $fk'dv- oner, giving you SS single t.-ips. 'V is t,2tter to buy tliese a fiod corfttioner's than to make them. ?our ia taa whipped cream and eet siside ia a cool place. There are way ILOre involved for making charlotte Jve, but the above ia entirely satis- ro:y. 'PLENISHING THE SVEET- P4EAT JARS. 'reward the beginning of spring the ugal housewife often finds her supply fi jams and mirmalade running low. a J- jL ropier flexible a replenishing of both ia much lees and expense now than during ;:er rr&nth. when the intense paV arr- colfc-danfe supply of flies take life almost a burden. 1 Any unsweetened or sweetened ant''ii f:nit mnr hm converted into . jfrro c-s easily as though the fruit wore hiv f-athered. Lesa sugar, of courfj, rtill be Beoewsary for sweetened f'uit wlvu making it into marmalade r j'ip.t. , And the stirring need not be sirkGjjr.e tak it mutt of necessity be iurir,? i Ip ht wither when one must 'rrv to iinit-h the work Jam a-hd bu'er will cook nicely in a pan placed over a kettle of v&ter. Tch marmalade, the fruit is firet through a tin fruit strainer, would have beta had it bean iow tin Vrpe a i used in ita fresh sta,, the remainder of the procoea bein the same at for fresh fruit. Apple marmalari may b mad at this season of tjjT'yMr from apples nhat show signs c,;ecay Indeed, any time from fall tcf rpring the supply of apple butter ma be replenished. Ap pie preserves. fli0 sweet apple pickles, may be made I ny time before the ap pies are decajd or used up. It is not necessary ma0 these sweetmeats until cold weather,:f one is very busy. Plum butte'i may be made of canned plums mixed (vith cooked apples; half plum pulp arl half stewed applee, if it is not desinjble to have a very tart butter. f Many a bvy housekeeper has adopted the plan of deferring her j n and but ter makinf until winter, and in so do ing she iy's found it a very profitable plan, as At saves worry, sugar, and, most imy irtant of all, it save self. Elza Renaj. SCARCITY OF THEM. "Ycir idea of testing the compara tive fc ce of electric currents by hyp notizing a boy and subjecting him t) KiceUive shocks is a bold and original one, ''professor," said the capitalist to whon the eloquent visionary wa un foldng his new and startling scheme foi the storage of psychic forces, "but sui-po8e the experment kills the boy?" '"In that case," replied the schotarly iiventor, a glow of enthusiasm light tog up hispalt dreamy face, "I should take measures at once to secure another boy and continue the experiment." lineage Tribune. ABOUT DECIDED. A certain clergyman gave it out from the pulpit one niht that he had received a call to a wider tphere of usefulness in a larger town (and pre sumahly a larger stipend). He could not, he said, make up hi-mind, but was going to take some time to think of it. and pray for guidance. A fort night later one of the congregation met the pastor's eldest son, and asked if hi father was going to B ".Well," aid Johny (aged thirteen, " p is still praying for guidance, but most of the things it packed. "Tid Bits. WHY THE DANCE INTERESTED HIM. It was at an Old Orchard hotel last summer. A friend of mine whom I shall call Smith had enjoyed himself iramenm-ly and was just starting for the clerk's desk to get a fresh toothpick when he was accosted by a man of modest bearing who inquired: "Excuse me, sir, but what wat the name of that last dance you went through that shottish, I mean?'' "Oh," replied Smith, "that? That was a gavot. " "A gavott Something new!" " Oh, not very new " "Would you just as lief step into the waiting room and show me how you do it!" Smith, who is a good nature i m&i, cam plied, and quickly unraveled the snarles of the gavot, while the other "caught on" as rapidly as possible. When the lesson was finished tha stranger thanked Smith, saying: "I am very much obliged to you, sir I'm a teacher of dancing in Portland, and I want to keep up with the time." Boston Globe. SEWING ACHES. Jessie sat down by her mother to sew. She was making a pillow case for her o vn little pillow. "All this?" she asked in a discon tented tone, holding the seam out. "That ia not too much for a little girl who has a work-basket of her own," said her mother. "Yes," thought Jes-iie, "mother has given me work-basket, and I ought to ba willing to sew," and with that she took a few stitches quite diligently. "I have a dreadful pain at my side," said Jessie, in a few minutes. "My thun.b is very sore," she said in a few minutes more. "Oh, my hand is so tiri!" was the next. Next there was something the matter with her foot and then with her eyes, and so she was full of trouble. At length the sewing ws done. Jessie brought it to her mother. "Should I no firut nd for a doo tor?" said her mother. "The doctor forme, mother?" eried the little girl, at surprised as she could be "Certainly. A little girl so full of pains and aches must be ill, and the sooner we have a doctor the better." "Oh, mother," said Jessie, laughing, "they were sewing aches. Iam well now." I have heard of other little girls besides who had sewing ache and pains whenever their parents had any work for them to do. Thie is a dis ease called "selfishneif," and I hope none of my little girls are afflicted with it. Christian Inquirer. ASHIVILLB ECHOES. . Bill Nye Keeat Us Iafermee As Te Haw T hinge Are 11 evisg. Senator Vance Back from the Holy Land A Few Society Item The Great and Only Eber and Othe Great Men Nye Hat Met. LCopyright, 13, by Edgar W. Nye. Ashkvillic, N. C, January. This has been a very gentle and balmy winter for the native tar heeler, also the Cape Cod asthmatic aid bronchial whoezer from the frozen home of the abolitionist who may have been spend ing the season here. Tropical growths are getting along first rate here if kept indoors, and s-uch subtropical vegetation ai the John pine, the jonquil and the horseradish are growing in the open air. Senator Zebulon B. Vance has re turned from the Holy Land with a new story picked up on the Sea of Galilee. It is a corker. Senator Vrince is looking well and returns to hie senatorial labors wth renewed vigor and a traveled air which we North Carolina people alone lack to make us shine. . He says that Baireuth i pronounced Byroit. Senator Vance was there during the Wagner imbroglio. I do not know vhat an imbrog.io is, but I think it was that. He told several stories illue travive of American humor whde at Byroit, and, as I understood it, inter spersed between the Wagner selections. They were not well received. He told an anecdote of ex Governor Hoard's, of Wisconsin, regarding an experience he had while in the army. After a forced march of eight weeks during whk'h the brigaae did not touch food, being anxious to close the war, they camped one night at a cross roads .where it was found that in an old deserted tobacco warehouse there were secreted three barrels of spark ling, home made, Dent com Heidsick, grown on the place. The boys tried to get at it, but the officers eaw at once that there would not be more than enough for them selves, and so pla ed a guard over the liquor. In the night the boys g-jt into the basement of the warehouse with eight clean washtubi and an auger, and in the morning it was found that two of the barrels were empty aj:d most of the brigade full. The following night, after apollinarie and family prayers, it was resolved to try an i get the other barrel in order to uoolhe thai YiiKiie uiiiet ctul our ilnfr and another which one feels after an undue indulg nee in spirituou?, vinoua, malt or fermented liquors. They did not know that the guard had put the third barrel on two sawh jses a foot above their auger's utmost scope. All night they bored holes into the noc turnal bosom of the scooting hour, all unmindful that the guard slept by the barrel in a new place on the floor. Toward morning Governor Hoard took the auger with a heavy bea t and bored a new hole in the bosom of the night. He did not strike what he sought, but there was a wild ehriek from above, and when the governor pulled the auger out he found on it the fragment of a gray army shirt and a birthmark. Leaving the eight new tubs where they were, also over 400, 00 new auger holes that had never been ustd; they all went away. Senator Vance told it better than I have, but when he got through the German friend of Voguer said : "Um yahl Votkainof a story vas dat?" "That is a humoroui story. That is American humor." 4 No, my f rain ; oxcoose me. Dot vas not yoomar; dot vas a tarn lie." Senator Vance will, during this -eion, move the passage of an act authorizing the city of New York to buy the street bonds of the city of Asheville. The city ha been author ized of courbe some time ago to sell, but New York has not bought the bonds, no doubt feeling wme heeita tion without congressional authority, but this will be soon remedied by act of the National Legislature and all will be well. The colored people of Asheville each year celo orate on the 1st of January thfir emancipat ion from slavery. They parade on the street in strange cos tumes, and many of them improve their appearance by wearing false f aoes of a repulsive character. This year the procjewsion was quite large and embraced many of our haut tonnet colored people. Mr. Pluni Levi, the barber of the old school who shaved me five years ago and still points with pride to the gory towel which he used on me, was in the procession. He wore a pink mask and a mantle made of two large perforated rubber doormats. His feet were in cased in easy and commodious slip pers, each made from the pel 6 of a dead colt. Fivsam Garside wore a navy blue domino with knitted hood and blue oUier pants. He was the life of the procession, and almost everything he did war mirthful. He is a great reader, always abreast of the times, and may be often sound reading the Asheville Citizen till after 10 o'clock at night. Miss Pearl Backus, of Coxsackie, N. Y , is paj ing a visit to former Blue Rum friends and took part in the parade. She is yet in her teens, but ha the wonderful gift of being able to cook for her employer's family and have enough left over each meal for an aged mther who has been again recently blessed with twins. It is a j y indeed to the kind old heart of Pearl's widowed mother to know in her declining years that her daughter will look out for her. Filial love among people of moderate means is always a grateful sight. Ske wore a fur trimmed street dress like one her mistress at Coxsackie wore just before Pearl left there. I had occanion t meet my friend Mr. Franz Eber, of the Lilliputian com pany, a short time ago. He is about the size of the dividend hung on tae Christmas treo for me this year by Russell Sage, and yet is twenty-three years of age, a good comedian and pleading after dinner speaker He has the air, though, of a success ful actor, and the amount of dignity he has considering the small place he has to drape it over makes me 1 ugh, for I am a great hand to notice things that make a deep imp -ession on me. He did not seem to unbend, I thought, so much a he ought, considering that crowned heads have rested on this bosom, such as it is, and that dynasties have staid all night at our house. After I had gone the owner of the theater said to him reproachfully : "That was Mr. Nye, the great Ameri can humorous writer, Mr. Eber. Did you understand the name fully when I intr idueed you?" "Yes," said Mr. Eber, with arising inflection, as he sat down on the chim ney of a footlight. "I ting I haff heered off him." I do not say this to hurt Eber, for he is too great a man t be hurt by news paper criticism, but wh in Heaven's name cannot people of prominence get along smoothly together? I think we should stand by each other. Ten years ago I met the two headed girl for the first time, and while the meeting was not effusive, it was cordial. I have also met the Prince of Wales and Sitting Bull, and there was no cold iies, no professional jealousy h- twoen us. I also once met Joeph Cook, who was on his way to his regular work repairing and editing some of the works of God. and even he ras kindly and almost sweet to me. So I say that people of prominence should play in one another's bancs. Reminiscences of Senator Plumb are so plenty since his death that I venture to call up one of the incidents of his early experience. We had been run ning around over the Capitol, looking at whatever was curious in tho way of memoranda sent into congress by the presidents, like appointments, etc. some in pencil on manilla paper con taining a whole cabinet perhaps, but as inf jrmal as a list of vegetables for your cook to order for over Sunday; then others would be stiff and formal, like George Washington encaged in taking the thirty-third degree in Ma sonry. We had looked over and com mented on ail these things, swapped bon mots with Senator Iugalla, greatly to our orn advantage, for Sentator Plumb was never remarkable for his repartee, an 1 as a bright and ready b m motter I could never make wags, being slow of though and possessing rather a profound mind not of course the profundity noticed in fresh, young, newly matriculated asshood, but a depth which is slowly atirred, shadowed over with an earnest gloom. We then went up iuto the gallery and for an hour or two forgot our own greatness; the senate chamber faded away on the drowsy, buzzing wing of he motion to refer to the commit tee on rules; the hot Turkish bath air which is used to sprout the senatorial thought lulled us to half forgetfulness and hushed the pop of the committee's report. For the time wa were back again in the far wet, with widening miles between us and the chaste refine ment of Senator Hoar; with billowing, breezy States between us and the classic Hiscock, the deep, appealing ayes of Cameron and the Roman noes of Ed munds; we were again sitting astride the waspy cayuse or returning hur riedly to camp, where kind hands again pulled out the arrow of the savage and told us how the place looked to one who could get around there and see for himself. How kind hands could tell this to one I leave the ready and versatile reader to figure out. "We used to make our writing ink in the early days where I lived," said Mr. Piumb, "of maple bark, which was boiled down till it was a little redder than umbrella juice and a little thicker than stump water. "It looked badly, but it was a pearl compared to the way it smelled. It smelled like the deluge at low tide. New York when it is opening up a sub way on a hot day shows great possi bilities, but it cannot get in the little t arills and throbs of measly and antique stench that this homemade and fer mented ink did. "Once I went over to try a case before a poor white justice of the peace over thirty miles away. He was a pi tin, uneducated man, who used his tongue in writing and breathed heavily, like a mush kettle, while thinking. "Opposed to me as counsel was a man who had been admitted to the bat. I had not. He was rather pompous and hated to try a caeo before a coun try justice, but he had to do it. He was .hot and crobs, and while he was making his argument one of the chil dren got an acorn up its nose and we had to etop and bore it out with the iron worm on an old ramrod. That made counsel mad, and while he was making a dilatory motion the Square picked a brier out of the palm of his hand with a Barlow knife and over ruled it. "Then counsel got so hot that he forgot himself and said things to the court which ought to have remained forever unsaid. After that the court got angry and threatened to commit counse I for contem pt. Counsel alio wed that the court did not know enough to draw the mittimus. '"All right, I will show you.' says the court, and thereupon he bit off a piece of tobacco about the size of a prayer book and took down a large, fat volume of lorms for justices of th i peace weigh ing about nine pounds and smelling of pork gravy and childhood. "He wrote on and on till dinner time. Then he glared at the man he was engaged in committing and ate the undemonstrative corn dodger with him meantime. "I didn't mind the bitterness between the court and counsel, for it was all good for my side. After dinner the Square rolled up one corner of the oil cloth tablecloth and went on with the mittimu. All that afternoon, with bulging eye and wet brow, while op posiug counsel sat and smoked under the cool shadow of the cotton wood, the brodmg gentleman on the superheated woolsack painfully wrote on. "Toward twilight, as the frogs in the hollow smote the soft and echoless gloaming with their metallic rjoug, the court cloeed with the final 'whereof fail aot at your peril,' and the commit ment was duly drawn. "Looking over earnestly at it and leaning on the shoulder of the court, I can still see the calm, pale face of counsel as he looked searchingly over the still wet and fragrant document. "Then firmly and dsftly upsetting the bi, quart ink bottle over the mighty legal masterpiece, and thereby turning loose upon the horrified night a fragrance so able, so durable and so pronounced that you could tie horses to it, he said : "'There, you overgrown mushratl You shapeless paunch of justice with out its brains; you overgrown and fungus error on the face of nature; you old he mud hen of the swamps ; you malarial old intellectual wart on the brow of creation, by the time you can go down on the bottoms and gather your maple bark and bring it home and boil it, and put the caustic frag ranee into it for another quart of ink, will be in another county ; and by the time you can draw another mittimus I will be in most any other State which I mav select. " ' I now bid you adieu, Cauliflower. Au revoir, old Polypus en the mem brane of nature, blight upon the great job of creation, farewell.'" He then kicked the old mother dog across the kitchen and strode fiercely down the child bordered pathway. Bill Ntk. SWIPT JUSTICE IN MEXICO. Justice is occasionally swift in Mexi co. An American while seated in the Plaza de Amies, in the City of Mexico, missed a field glass. It had been taken from his pocket by a nimble-fingered rogue. He had not recovered from his amazement when three policemen ap proached, having in custody the thief, the glass still in his possession. The American was required to go at once with the officers to the court. Here the prisoner was promptly tried, and in fifteen minutes from the time of entering the court house, he had been sentenced to serve a term of five yeirs in the Mexican army. NOTICE. The next meeting of the Alliance Peanut Union of Virginia and North Carolina will be held in Tarboro, N. C. March 9th, 1892. We hope that every Alliance, interested in the production of peanuts, will be represented. Fraternally, R. S. Boyxin, (715) Sec'y A. P. Union. SHALL COURTESIES. Petcnt Factors in the Happlaess of our Daily Lives. Life is so complex, its machinery t intricate, that it is impossible that tin wheels should always move smoothly and without friction. There is a cca- tinued straining of every nerve to gain and keep a place in this over crowds J busy world. What wonder if in th- hurry and pushing the rights of others are trampled or completely ignored, when every individual is in such hast $ that time- fails for the "small sweet courtesies of life!" But it is the little offices of friend shipthe encouraging smile, tho ap preciative word, the thought of our preferences, the avoidance of our preju dices which make life easier, and' which lessen in a marvelous degree, all its worries and perplexities. For nothing prevents friction so perfectly as the exercise of what we sometimes disdainfully call the. minor virtues. As though one should be endowed with truth, and yet, lacking prudence and delicate insight and cir mmspee tion, wound with sharp needle pricks the sensitive hearer. We do not cars ings. "Faithful are the wounds of a friend," but friends too often show a fondness for the scalpel, and lay bara our pet weaknesses in a truthful but exceedingly uncomfortable fashion. . A gentlewoman never fails in tht small sweet courtesies. Instinctively she respects the feeling of others,: ,tnl having the golden rule by heart, it iz from her heart that all lovely, lovs compelling graces flow. "In her tongr.5 is the law of kindness," and she has tha ready tact which takes advantage cf every opportunity to render the lives of others happier. And erery morning:, witk "Good-day," Makes each day g- od. Her winning smile and gen le minis tration, her soft voice and unfailing sympathy, insure her always a ready welcome, and, like the sun,, she "flndi the world bright, because she" rct makes it so." v The fairy tale of our young days Lr : a peculiar charm and attraction. TL ; courteous, cheerful maiden who drair water for the withered old crone, fir.1 who .listens to her, and replies wils amiability, is rewarded with the gift cf uttering pearls and diamonds; and, ij the lees romantic German version, Frau Holie bestows gold pieces as th-3 reward of civilty and dihigence with that delightful prodigality so chare a teristic ot fairy land. The email sweet courtesies are to potent in their influence upon our daily a o o, uuj a uo bvmw-'v a icoj a iuuu a... ( it- angles, and insensibly compellir.j imitation. For who could be churlish, or even cold and indifferent, when cur rounded by an atmosphere of geni .1 warmth? The little every day and all day thought lor others is not hard t3 some gracious natures imbued with thi rare virtue of forgetfulness; but t those who long for the admiration cf their feltor creatures, the practice cf the small sweet courtesies can berecorv mended as an unfailing means of gain ing that approbation. Mr. Brownie j expresses it thus: Tw&4 her thinking- ef etkers made you tklak ef her. In his exquisite portrait poem, xly Love," Lowell has translate i .in V. 3 diviner language of poetry the worlj She doeth little klndaegses Which most It-ava uurfone of denpise : For naught that st ts an heart at ease, , , And giveth happineb or peace, t Im low ekteeuid in her ayes. Harper"1 Weekly., NOTHING HAPPENS ON A STREET CAR. "You must see a great deal of huibr 1 nature in your position," said 1I.3 joung man with the notebook as hs boarded a Broadway car. " Wtjll, I dunno," doubtfully repli: ? the conductor. . , All sorts of people ride with you, cf course" t: Prhans thev do." - "Mcii and women of almost every nationality ride up and down here," conductor as ho put his head into Vu door. v " I suppose even rich men often try to beat you out of the fare?" continu: J the young man. "Alebue ro, but I never knew cf "Don't you observe a very eel!! '1 disposition on the part cf a largo j r cent?" - v " .LNO ' "Doesn't a mean man act meaner c : a car than anywhere else?", - "Haven't you noticed that wo:n:v have no regard for each other I" 4 "No, dr." ; "I presume you get a faking ever now and then because you don't f top quick enough or becauso you cai ry some one past his street!" ' " No, sir; I never dc." "Aren't there any peculiar people who ride on your car V "Never eaw any sir." Well, I am surprised 1" Eaid the yours - man Avith the notebook. "Where l) the reporter get all these" odd r 1 funny little incidents which ar- op posed to happen on the street caist" " Out of their heads, sir," replied L:a conductor, as. fie helped a fat wemaa up the steps. ' " And nothing ever happens on a street car?" . "Nothing, sir not on . my car. 1 runs from the Battery to Fifty-nin 1 street and back, and I collects far ; and looks aftr the passengers. , Tha y all, sir. Fare, please." Aett vl or Evening World. y.-
The Progressive Farmer (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Feb. 23, 1892, edition 1
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