Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / Aug. 26, 1927, edition 1 / Page 1
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11 I t ' hk-4iV-'",' a. i fc f rn ) "iMfcWiiv zKMrmtwrk, k pwcEA YEAR iipi h" iVra" v ? m fFS : 4- ' : : ' IUV I JXVv-.J-. --- ; ;''''"l 1 I " I i inunnyfl-RW'M'M' t ') 'i i II ill 1 . - ', w i i a 1 1 y I BOTH 5 A' YEAR FOR VOL. XXI SUPERIOR COURT IN MARSHALL MANY CRIMINAL CASfiS ON DOCKET Superior Court convened in Mar shall Monday, Judge R. A. Nunn pre siding. Solicitor Robert M. Wells called over the docket as rapidly as possible. Quite a number of cases iri until the next term i were cuuwuuu --" i i of court Quite a number of cases were submitted and aisposea ox. One of the most interesting cases this term was that of the State vs hi ra Payne, in which the defendant was charged with abandoning his wife and later the child born to them. Ezra Payne is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Payne of Little Pine in Madison Co. and his wife was Miss Leigh Boyd, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Boyd of Sandy Mush. After Ezra had been working at Detroit for a few years, he came back and married Miss Boyd, he being 24 years old and she 18. Both families are well known in their communities and it had the appearance of a suitable and happy couple, Miss Boyd being quite an attractive young lady and Mr. Payne being a clean looking rather good looking young man. They were married in 1924 and left immediate ly for Detroit, where an apartment hH hnon rented from Mr. and Mrs. Hal Wild. They lived in their nicely , furnished two rooms and a nail quite happily for the first two or three weeks. Meanwhile he brought in and introduced his friends. According to her side of the story he soon became jealous of these friends and began nagging her and soon her life became . miserable and she desired to return 1 to her people in Madison County. For quite a while he refused to let her come and she threatened time and again to commit suicide if he did not of 1925, when she was desperately ill let her come. Finally, in the spring and in a critical condition he put her on the train and sent her home. Some of his people and some of fiers met her and for a time, they got on all right After a few months a daughter was born. According to her side of the story, from the day ahe left Detroit until the ppresent time he has never sent her one cent for sup port either for herself or baby and that for the naat several, months she i 1tas been working m WMiston-saiem to help support hresell and child, the latter being left with her mother and father. On the other hand . Ezra Payne contended that he did all he could in Detroit for the comfort and happiness of his wfie, that she became dissatis fied and refused to prepare his meals and was anything but a dutiful wife, that he finally gave her a ticket to come home to prevent her from com mitting suicide, that he visited her at the home of his parents and' did all he could to get hre to return with him to Detroit that he even sent mon ey for her return after he went back and she repeatedly cursed him and refused to live with him. The court house was crowded- to hear the evi dence in this case and it required all Monday afternoon and until noon Tuesday to examine witnesses. The defendant was represented by attorn eys Guy V. Roberts and John McEl roy, while the prosecuting attorneys were Messrs. C. B. Mashburn and George Pritchard. The specehes to the jury lasted about two hours and following a very able charge to the jury by Judge Nunn, the jury took the case at 4:15 Tuesday. The case had been so ably fought on either side and so-well argued it was hard to predict what the verdict would be. A hung jury or mistrial would not have been a surprise, but to our sur prise the "jury returned in about an what value is immortality to us if it hour, with a verdict of "Not guilty," is not ourselves, but some other self Mr. Ezra Payne had declared on in our place, who shall "rise again." the stand that he loved the child. He Yes, we shall retain our personal had taken out habeas corpus pro- self; in other words we shall recog ceedings to get the child in his posses-. nize ourselves when we reach heaven, siom It seemed Thursday morning And in recognizing self we shall re that this would hardly get Rearing cognize others. We,' Shall retain cur, this court ' , -' full personality: - Other important cases were the fol. ' Now, if we do not recognize our lowing: Bernard Eevis, of Marshall, dear ones in heaven, it simply means who abandoned his wife and children that all our closest friendships and all and left them to do the best they our dearest ones and most beautiful could or starve, was given two years relationships, will bo stripped from in the State penitentiary at hard la- us. It means that the profoundest. bor. . , v elements of our personal life which John Perkins ' was ! convicted of intertwine themselves Vith' the .very breaking into the store of Mr. J. S. roots of our being, will be torn from Brown at Waverly and the larceny ua- What maimed and meagre per of goods rand was given 18, to 38 sonalities, what thin and ghastly months in the State Prison, v ; ' , souls, we ' would ' be I No, here as Porter Taylor, charged with help- everywhere Christ "did not come to ing to steal an automobile,: belonging ' destroy but to fulfill,". All that is "of to Oliver Ferguson, did not prove a . he earth earthly,", all that , is evil, good character, this .being the fourth : that coarse, that is lustful, that time ne had been In court for various .V- -nru.-i- u j:j . . . offenses. While he did not flppm a be the Instigator of the crime, he was " associated, consented, aided and abet: . ted in the crime and was given 18 to 86 months in the State penitentiary. ;, .Hubert Gosnell was given six - months on the roads' of , Henderson - Com ij. to? assault with a deadly wit POn. -V i- ; ': .;, ; .v. . " v.;. The ease of J. R. Gentry of Spring Creek, charged with embezzlement, , was continued. T t' ? rf , : Eli&ha Rice, middle-aged farmer of ; we wainut creek section, will go on trial in flv ha' in tkie aa. ' olati-jn of the DraLlbition Uw: nd ' ihrm rliarMi f ;fk . j a ly weapon. The most serious charges are those of assault on his wife, which is alleg ed to have occurred at their home last June, and of assault with a knifo on his son, Walter Rice, which occurred the latter part of July. At the time the second assault was committed Rice was at liberty on Pc bnJ which was automatically forfeited when he assaulted his eon The youth who was painfully cut, .ha ' now re covered. , , - . , . The assault on his wife is said to have occurred while Rice was in a drunken condition, he having beaten her with a revolver, it is alleged, and inflicting painful flesh wounds aDout - . j her face and head ROY AIKEN'S WIDOW (SETS $4500 The widow of the late Roy Aiken of Laurel whose husband was killed by an Ashevlile-Johnson City bus was given $4500 in compromise. Holt Hensley, driver of the bus, son of Dr. and Mrs. T. C. Hensley of Erwin, Tenn., submitted and paid the cost by agreement. Judge Nunn complimented the grand jury for the rapidity and business-like manner in which cases were disposed of that came before it. Mr. Shuford R. Coward of Spring Creek was the foreman of the rrand iury, S the ,. .. tttii tv...l,. 1.1.- Solicitor Wells thought the tost of e week that a special term of court bteween this and the November term would be necssary, but so many sub mittd that it may not be necessary. However, this had not finally been decided when we went to press. They were hoping to get through and ad journ Thursday evening. SHALL WE KNOW OUR FRIENDS IN HEAVEN A friend recently asked us an old question, and asked it with the in sistence born of a new and heart- benumbing experience. A sudden and haunting question: "Shall I know my beloved one again when I reach heaven?" We answered as best we could, expresing our own conviction that recognition would be instant and complete and speaking in somewhat the following terms, though our lang uage hers 3s more formal than we used in .talking with our friend. We may answer this vital question by bringing it to the test of three principles, that of personality,, that of character, and that :nf Jove. , These concern themBelves.'reSiiactivelv With thfr ; philosophical, .tWpraCtisal .and the spiritual attitudes of Christianity. The highest existence in the. uni verse is nersonalityy. Some one has j said that the only two enduring facts are the personality of God and hu man personality. As persons we tower above the material creation and all lower forms of life. As per sons we are conscious of ourselves as independent, thinking souls. As persons we have power of controlling our own lives, directing our own thoughts, and shaping our destinies. Even God cannot break ' down the human will, which is the motive force of personality. Now personality grows through personal relations, through fellowship with other persons. It is strictly true that what a man really is- in present personal life, his wife has made him, and his children, and in earlier life his father and mother, and always his friends and associates. Babe and mother; by such fellowship we grow. In the Christian life personality with the living Christ than in any other way. As .we pass within the veil person ality persists. There is no loss of per sonality. If there were we would not be ourselves. To predicate such changes may be excellent to Budd hism, with its doctrine of transmi gration of souls; but it is not Christ ianity. It is a gloomy doctrine. Of hampered the grovth oi a .vigorous r :i v...- ."l . personality here, will be taken away, bnt the pure love, the inspiring fellowship with kindred souls, , will be renewed and strengthened and glor ified. "We shall know, each . other better when the mists , have cleared away.". ' -.v- a- '-.W-C-'-.i-u-' . - Similar truth emerges whten we consider the matter of character. Who are the inheritors of the ."many mansions?" Who go theavenT Un selfish people, oi course.. The i'.' egot istical, the servants of self, htose who who pander, to, their' own 'passions have no change. urles.T their lives are' thanked thraue-h faith iin Jesua i Chrtet. Those who love God,1, are the t ones who ara "called accordinar to I i.uipojo." Those who love God, ; who have seen him in .the revelation THE ONLY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN MADISON MARSHALL; N. C.t FRIDAY; AUGUST 26, 927 of Christ, are those who love, serve men. "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto me the least of these my brethren ye have done it unto me." Now the unselfish and Christlike peopple are those who live in the lives of others. By the grace of sympathy we enter into their lives. Therfore we love those others and are loved by them. Our ministry to others nnntitutes the highest and holiest ex perience that life can afford. It is the bedroek element m true cnaracier. Not to know any of these whom we have helped, not to know any of those who have helped us would be a cruel and heartless elimination of all that has been purest and best in our building in Christian character. We knew a woman of eighty who had spent her life in an unselfish ser vice of friends and relatives, of tht. poor and the distressed. We never knew her to be guilty of a single sel fish act Her one great and sustaining joy was the thought of meeting those whom she had loved so tenderly and watched over with .such gentle min istrations. Would a loving Father in. heaven deny her the privilege of meet ing and mingling with those loved ones? It would not only be un-God-Hke; it would be inhuman so to deny. She has already met them and walked with them and talked with them and i i i a 1 j:j u lovea uiem, just aa outs uiu iicre, th h t'tt of earthly biemish, . . aonarBJnn ha2 now been taken away. This question of character thus intimately involves the principle of love. "Life isever lord of death, and love can never lose its own. Love demands immortality. Love insists on immortality. Love discovers immor ta!ity. Christ founded Christianity on the principle of love. The gospel affords comfort and joy. Its chief comfort and joy lie in I the assurance that when this brief life is done we shall see him, our Saviour, as he is, and worship and have fellowship with him in heaven. "I go to prepare a place for you I will receive you unto myself where I am there ye shall be also." No Christian doubts the fact of this close association with Jesus in the life to come; it is a foundation prin ciple of our faith. Wei, if we shall know him, "whom having not sen we love," we shall certainly know those whom having seen we have loved. Fancy knowing Christ and not longer knowing the beloved mother who, brought us to r.hrit! The notion is unthinkable, nrannntermiR. ahmird. The child Will know his mother. ,-Sha wffl greet iita as ner son; ne win emuraw u mother. FORTY-HOUR RUN FROM ASHE- VELE-QUEBEC ATTEMPTED MR. R. P. (DICK) HARRIS TO DRIVE CHRYSLER FOR RECORD RUN Carrying letters of greeting from highway officials of North Carolina and eight southern states to the Min ister of Roads and other prominent Canadians, R. P. (Dick) Harris, state automobile inspector wdl next Mon- day, August 22nd, attempt to make the fifteen hundred mile . trip from Asnevme io vjubucj. . eight hours the fastest railway time. The trip will be made to emphasize the completion of the new interhation al motor route known as the Appala n I ieHti.lIllB chian Scenic Highway, from tne uuii of Mexico to Montreal and .Quebec. Minotw ner rent of the entire route e- lected is said to be hard-surfaced and suitable for use by motorists every day in the year. The start wiU De maae aw.ui - M., Monday from the executive offices j . , . A of the Asn route i w . .roadster, an,! the only extra equ:p Inn, Asheville, and officially end . j t h1s and with arr valat ; the Chateau . Fontenac Quebec, at is v m. '.-f"f " uwwwj 7 - , . i. ing to .schedule The Carohna ? Motor nh. A A.. A., will check the time oi Club, -A j" i pirn enph pitv ' Carolina, to the head of the govern departure and arrival From each city in' Quebec. From each check- olotio- the route telegrams will be sent . i f iw, w,.ri departure and arrival, r re along the route telegrams to mark the progress of the official scout car. Hon. J. 1. Bouianger, ui uty minister of roads, Province of Quebec, and Canadian vice-president of he ASH, win omciauy - ris upon his arrival. R. r. (UicKji naxria, io , follow8. 0fficiai Car Appalachian paper man, wen tet Highway, Asheville, North SHe4H? Dick is the son f. f orde Line.'2:30 A. M.; Johngon Ci He & wiS . KeS th'ty.TeiineeaO A. M.; Bristol T Sew iTlrirt1oral Tout and act! 400 A. M.; Roanoke, V a.-8:15 A. M. "nnScJaaffffiSi south U45 A. M ;Elizabthton-6:30 A M ; In thiT motorcade will be represen- AM : Rive' tatives from, civic bodies and other Canada-gS . V Rivers organizations in the southern states, :30 A . M.; arriving at Quebec-2 .00 including senators, congressmen, Ifo j U fL.. ' ?. " i ' ranP. mnn. and chambtT of com-1 After completing the drive. Mr. merce officials, who are going to tour .tm ranada on a mission of rood - 'will, to foster cordial relations be- Itwoon the Dominion and the United 'states, and extend to citizens of the north an inviution to. return the visit Takdf the case of those who knew mount of the transfiguration and looked 'upon Moses and Elijah who appeared with Christ upon the mount. Thos three men were in sweet, 3pe- jcial fellowship with Christ no other peinv present, un voiiuus m;uwiuo. Now-, In heaven, can you imagine Petef knowing Christ and talking withlljim, and John knowing Christ and talking with Him;and at the same time Peter and James and John being strangers to each other, and having to ba. introduced? Or can you con ceive? .their knowing each other by nam as individuals, without any memory of the wonderous person alities of comradeship which bound theiji together in this life? To argue otherwise is a fantastic travesty of truth. , Aeain. according to Christ's re peated statements, the heavenly life is an expansion, not a contraction, oi the present life. But to know our dear'' ones as dear ones and our friends as friends would be an amaz ing '.contraction fcind narrowing of life ; Merely physical relationships will end. There will be no marrying and giving in marriage. But these physical relationships are incidental; the spir itual relationships will endure. The Iwarmf r(endships rememberedshrdl warm friendships, the enobling affec tions, the thrilling personal fellow ship, the levely relations of admira tion and sympathy: the communion of ;SOul with soul, are experiences which the conquest of death; and the entrance into life eternal, will per petuate, and change only to deepen and to glorify. We shall know our friends again. We shail know them far more inti mately than we have known them here, when we meet them over there. Watchman Examiner. OEBRUHL FAMILY REUNION Last Sunday, near Alexander at the home of Zebulon Vance DeBruhl, a great DeBruhl family reunion was held..- There are five generations of the DeBruhl family, but the fifth rep resentative was unable to attend. The mother of the family, Mrs. Rebecca DeBruhl, is 84 years of age, and the youngest member of the fourth gen eration is two months old. f More than 250 people attended thi3 reunion. ' 1 ; Chuck I -thought you promised me some of that liquor you had.t iiajOyfc'toied to, bt it ate boles threughtevejTrthins I pfut it itr and 1 Anally had to drink it. ' next fall over this newly established route along the cre3t ot tne Appala chian mountain range. It is also de signed to emphasize the many mi-cs of new concrete roadway built be tween several cities to form a direct .ino route which can be used with safety and pleasure every day in the year. Mr. Harris will leave asiicv:hc , t to teke lunch in Mono y Afternoon, and those b0 Dickybest are bettinf that outdistance the railroads and , & of international m0. or sDeed This trip is being made Iwo weeks in advance of the motorcade, ana each of the cities along the route will have an onoortunity to see the ofhc ial car which is painted in blue and white, the colors of the ASH, as it pusses through on what is expected to be an epoch-making run. The High way Association has selected a Chrys ler "70" roadster, that has aireauy been run four thousand miles by the c b Motor Company. It is a Mr.' Harris will carry a letter from ivira r xi arris win ci i y a icmw uwm McLean, of North x tv. v,j t ft,- nn. will send telegrams to Roscoe A. Mar- vel. President of the Highway Asso ciation here, so that a record may be kept Of the tine r u ling through each Dlace. The car. ii. addition to carrv- ling the "AAA" insignia, is lettered as 'and Mrs. Harris expect to celebrate 1 their sixth wedding anniversary, All- gust 23rd, at the heme of Mrs. Har s parents m Danville, Quebec, prae- tically half-way between Montreal aa (C'lebec , r r-s COUNTY- LITTLE CHILD IS KILLED The hearts of Mr. and Mrs. C. L Stamey of Hot Springs were much saddened by a message from their niece Mrs. Kingsley. who lives in Iowa, telling of the death of Mrs. Kingsley's little daughter Ruth Eliza beth in an automobile accident The mother and aunt who were in the car with the child were quite seriously injured, but are reported as improv ing. The friends of Mr. and Mrs. Stamey join them in extending to the bereaved ones their deepest sympa thy and would suggest for their con solation, the words of the patriarch David who had lost a son and who said, "J cannot bring him back, but I can go to him. ' ERRO R IN T AX ARTICLE .Following is a letter from Mr. Ira Plemmons which explains itself: Editor News-Record. In my letter appearing in your pa per of Aug. 19 I made error in the a mount as stated from Mr. Spainhour's open letter. JWr. Spainhour says that the expenses of Allen's office is more than $1400.00 per day. In my copy I made the error and quoted it at $14,000.00. 1 hope you will give the same place in your paper that you did that of my letter. . I do not have any desire to misquote anyone, and am sorry of the mistake. IRA PLEMMONS. THE GRAND JURY'S REPORT NORTH CAROLINA, MADISON COUNTY. To Hon. Judge Nunn, now Presiding: We. the Grand Jurors of tne Aug ust Term of Superior Court, subm't the following' report: We have carefully examined and passed on bills that came before us where witnesses could be found. We have visited hte Countv Home and examined same thoroughly. Find evervthinir in verv srood condition. We recommend some repairs be made on the buikting. New gutters need to be nut on the entire building, also the building to be painted at once. r i s We ?fid Seventeen fAmates Of the home who say they have been well treated and cared for. f lve small Chil dren whom we recommend to be re moved to some public or private or phanage as soon as possible. We have carefully examined the jail and find.it in good condition ex cept some -repairs need to be dona on the inside Of the jail, by repairing the plastering and kalsomining. The prisoners claim they have been well cared for. We have also examined the Court House and find all the offices in good condition, except the Grand Jury room which needs some repairs in the plastering. We also find the approach lead ing from the bridge across the river leading to island now being repaired. We find the bridge leading to cot ton mill in good condition. We recommend that the Deputy Clerk for Clerk of Superior Court be paid by the ' County for this court week at the rate of Two Dollars per day. Respectfully submitted, SHUFORD R. COWARD, r Foreman. 17-POUND CATFISH CAUGHT At least one fish story has been definitely proved, and the fish wasn't weighed by the scales on his back either. Somebody called The Times Thursday to announce that a cat fish weighing 17 pounds had been pulled out of the French' ..Broad river, and when a shade Of doubt crept into the voice answering thecall, the fisher man decided fp bring his catch to the office to prove his story. T. L. Shepprd, of Bumsville Hill, caupht the fis about two miles be low Alexander -near the Deep Waters section in' the .'French Broad. He was fishing with a lantern about 9 o'clock at night when he landed the catch, li-.e 17-pound cat fish U one of the largest that has ever been caught a round here, according to experienced fishermen in. ljhis( section. Sheppard declares that he is'not an old hand at all, and that the catch was most sur prising to hint. ' ; The Ashtville Times. MRS. SMITH REPORTED BETTER Mrs. E. E. Smith, wife of E. E. Smith, merchant of, Hot Springs, who h;.s been in ,a hospital in Newport, Tenn, in a serious condition since lat S'.-tsJay, has improved to the extent that she was" ienioved to her h?me, tv ;-ere her condition is reported to be favorable, and .unless complications r-1 ;n, it is htlijeved that she has an r 4-illen'. chance", to recoverl Mrr; S - th was .:, rendered nnconscioas v.'or. she- is aij ta.have fallen from fhr husband's car on the Hot Spring. Feiat Rock highway, recently. ' Samt walk five' miles every day. Dan--Why:-ft's only- a mile to yoor office and back. . "'; 1 "i.'.r " V T,,2r Q0" B V" Sam I kno. I walk a Biihi and other four. CIRCULATION-1975 SUGGESTIONS WANTED HOT SPRINGS CHAPTER IZAAC WALTON LEAGUE INTERESTED Mr. L. Jared of Hot Springs last week called our attention to a matter that is now claiming the attention oi members of the Izaak Walton League of America. The officers of the Hot Springs chapter are as follows: 1. D. Hensley, president, w. . Lewis, vice-president, W. T. Davw treasurer and Lorenzo Jared, secre tary. This chapter, as well as otner chapters throughout the country, i appealing to its members and other lovers of outdoor nie to suggest, a suitable national memorial to Will H. Dilflr. founder of the organization. who died in Washington, D. C., ast March. The literature says: "Will H. Due has won a permanent place in the hearts of all who love the outdoors. This regard must have expression, must be carried on in tangible form to future generations who will use the outdoor playground he has done so much to keep inviolat through organization of the Walton League and who will De Denentea Dy the new spirit of conservation he haa injected into American life. "It is a simple matter to think of a statue or monument of some sort, but the problem facing the committea is that of pprovidmg sometning wnicn while tangible, will not be entirely confined to any one locality. The committee admits a feeling of incom petency to decide such a matter un aided by the Waltonians of America as a whole." The local chanter, according to its officers, will take measures to obtaitt suggestions from its members or from any sportsman interested. Madison County To Discuss Chain Gang Topic Will Be Brought Up Be fore August Court. The question of deciding as to whe ther or not Madison county will have a chain gang, will come before the August, term of Criminal . Court, convenes here Monday August 22, J- ' Hubert .Dayis.. clerk of. the, courtjrf J: . thia cbunty stated eeraayll. Davis said that it was his opinion that . the proposition would pay, but that -he could make no statement either pro or con in regard to the matter, but was planning to take the question up with the Board of County Com missioners within a few days, at which time it is very probable that some definite action will be taken. It was thought by many of the citizen of the county that the matter would receive the attention of the court at the May term, but Judge Thomas 3. Shaw, the presiding judge, did not consider it at that time. The docket for the August criminal term is a very long one, and it is be lieved that sufficient material could be obtained for the maintenance of a prison force, provided it could be profitably employed in the county. The Madison county chain gang was broken up in the summer of 1925 while the men were engaged in the construction of a road leading from the French Broad river, near Redmon : about two miles west of here, up Lit tle Pine Creek and across the moun tains to the Spring Creek highway, the Beard of County Commissioners at thai, time having taken into con sideration the expenses of operating the chain gang, and abolished he ' same, and all the members cf the force at that time, and prisoner:! sen tenced since that time in the Madison county courts have been hired out to the Henderson county authorities for the length of their terms. Ashe ville Citizen. DR. GEORGE W. M'DANIEL Baptists throughout Virginia will learn with sorrow of the death of Dr. . George W. McDaniel. His passing takes from the Southern Baptist,., Church a leader whose high ideals, sage counsel and sound scholarship were assets upon which the whole church leaned. In Virginia he had long been an outstanding figure not only in Baptist circles but among th v forces of militant Christianity. At. , though educated in Texas, his native State, Dr. McDankl. came to Vir-1 ginia before he was thirty years old v and served the First Baptist Church . of Richmond for neariy a quarter of -. ' a century. He enjoyed the implicit, y confidence, love and respect . of his .i fe.low Baptists, as was shown ) the , fact that he was president of tie , Baptist General Association of Vir- ' gpnia, president of the board of 'K rectors of the Virginia Baptist Or phanage and a ireb.ber'o')' the Baptftf -.t Educational Board of - Virginia., H was likewise a trustee of the prr.ta em Baptist Seminary. For thrc " ars he was president of ' the ; So Baptist ' Convention, His dea" prives - a great denomination great leader. Eoanoke Time. h de- :o a. County and roummnity fa!rs ire being "planned for -practically e very county having a faiin. and home a gent according to reports from theM agents. v1-
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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Aug. 26, 1927, edition 1
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