Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / July 11, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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- p-4- . fTTFnr'HYj A r iinL nthS rmrr 6kf la thm 74 ". ka. JtVHl katMlBfl. bMM HIMt .- , - ' fBONI Ka S. v . V ' CfcAALU I W1T1M( J V.-: ' MOTOR AND PROPRIETOR :j ' JJr&L jIIIS JOSEPH VAKZD ; ' '"4 "' - " m Tear hi e4raee . ' f- Mm mi, Ml to HnM. ! .MI BUatfctr ar arir to t ity." ; " Ararttotog ItM' lultM W se at pMtefflov New Bern .Cm seoooa-elaae matte. ' rrrsA& apk or raw " j" CBAVBtC OOONTT. BURN New Bern, IT 0. July 11, 1012 BETTBB TIMES AHEAD. The high cost of li viog con ti noes to be a live subject with a large number of the people for the rea son that when the average man finds tt bard to make buckle and tongue meet he is apt to try to fix the blame and to have a good deal to say io bo doing. There are those who predict that the right sort of adjustment of the tariff will solve the problem. Oth ers say that the prime reason liv ing is high is that folks are extrav agaat and self-indulgent, or in oth er words that it isn't a question of the high cost of living but of the ' cost of high living and that if folks didn't live so high their purses would bulge instead of wearing the present attenuated look. And we have just read an inter view with a traveling man who says that there is much to consid er, besides the tariff and the ex travagance of the people, in try ing to find a remedy for the hard run condition in which so many persons find themselves. lie has been traveling around considerably and he aays he has been keeping his eyes open with the result, he States, that he has found that the farmer has become something of a financier and in so many instan ces is prepared to hold his produce for high prices that he exercises an influence on the whole price situa tion. For instance he tells of New Jer sey farmers who buy large quanti ties of sweet potatoes when the prices are low, keep them in cel lars until they get scarce aud then "Bell them at a large advance over what they paid for them. This is paying attention to what the far mers call " distribution " and it is a good thing for the farmer but bard on the salaried men aud wage earners generally. There is something in all three of the reasons asigned for the av erage man finding that there is very little or no difference bet ween his income and his expenses. The tendency to extravagant tastes is oertainly a factor. The tariff on articles of food is obliged, it seems to as, to make those articles high er Juhari they would be if they were admitted free. And the shrewd farmers wtio are learning to hold their produce until it is scarce and high must also bear their share of the responsibility for the fact that )iring with all reasonable discount -for . the increasingly expensive : tastes of the people is high. , There is little doubt that the tariff will be revised in such a way as to remove or substantially re duoe the duties on foods. The country seems to be getting over the craze for riches which was once mo wuuuiiiug oeuwmeus witu v ' .many, men who corner the market a. .a.ii; - ; . i . .. " . . : tber than praised as wad the case ' formerly. Alon? with this change ..- -: ar -(,'-t---. - - - - O for the better in the ideals of the people with reference to .the. sort ' tt tfhiuMmmit th&f. in roalltr wnt-t.h while is, we believe, a realization i that the lack of thrift is one of the .- main troubles with . the ,- American people and a corresponding deter- mination to Overcome'' this i fault. ' So on -, the whole, the prospect seems wi ifo -goou. lor uctier unu easier times for the '? ultimate con- . . ....... , J. . ,Jf . .v , .. aumerv being found just nronnd the corner. IF BO At) SENTENCES - FOR SELL. i ' i. ---,,- Vbv' . Liquor retailing is going to get ut of fashion in Charlotte. .Becor ' der Smith says thatv hereafter all ; : persons cohvictsd of the offence will receive road sentences."'"-It is ul iirtuEi of his ' that makes ri t" h;'i t'.rt there is going to be Jy i'ss retailing in Char i , ' " a future than there has ''' r SSt. V-':-S t ' .' 3 " rast few months ' :'.3 mm have born ; !-tt? cf retatlip.'r t ,3; TfV has great corrraueoca to all '..- were ot tho . ThayewwauaaeSnf 'T The New Perfection Broiler . The New Perfection Toaster The New Perfection Griddle each deagned apeclalr for um an ma Nw Perfection Stove. - v ' J - ' Mur STANDARD (Incorporated NEWARK. Ki road have beeu let off with the payment of fines, large fines it is true, but probably iu most cases paid with ease. There has been a result of this method of handling the matter no perceptible diminu tion of retailing. So the recorder has made up his mind to see what virtue there is in road sentences. He will find, as we have already said, that he has struck the right solution of the problem. One of the principal reasons why the prohibitory law has not pro hibited as thoroughly as some of its advocates predicted it would is that the Superior Court judges have been so lenient in the penal ties imposed for this variety of law-breaking. Offenders have in numberless cases been let off with fines when a road sentence of liber al proportions was the thing need ed if the penalty was intended to have a really deterrent effect. When the people find out that it is a serious thing, a thing fraught with serious consequences to violate the law forbidding the 'sale of intoxicating drinks they will stop doing it. And it is agreeable to find an of ficial like the Charlotte recorder who is convinced himself that it is not a light matter for the law against? liquor selling to be broken. For of course the law will never be observed so long as the courts wink at its violation. Norman EL Mack says that Boos evelt will hurt the Republican par ty 90 per cent and help the Demo cratic party 10 per cent . That sounds like there won't be even a greasy spot left. $100 REWARD 100 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn 'hat there is at least, one dreaded disease that science, has been abty to cure in all ita stages, and that is Catarrh, Hall's Catarrh Core i the only positive core now known to the me dial fraternity.:- Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a con stitutional treatment; Hall's Catarrh Care is taken internally, acting direct ly upon the blood and mucous sucf aeea of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting natare in do ing; its work.: The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers , that (hey offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials, . -. . " 'j ,-';'. Jtit. CHENEY ft Cafloledo, a. Sold by all Druggists, 75o.7.- V- ' Take Ball's Family Pills f or eea- Upatio.x. fZJTg- , "l" & C- -. irJ. ' ' ' ' ; '5r-" r ' Many a girl strives to make av name for herself .'rather thaa 'attempt- to make a loaf of bread. ;'"- :f WOMEN ; Women cf lie lijled type, women of inferior eJcallaa tzl refinement,' whose dlaccrr t and judniect pve wcVt "1 force to tieir praise tLs wc and corative rr: tciLb's IcU. TLr; ' cf womra's llrc -Jx l" ? c:. l- lfjl" U i ) f i : : t . .! c : r p" Sts - ' 1 Hev Perfection : OIL COMPANT In NnJmr) SALTIMOaX-MD. MOTIC& On account of change of tebrdalm bj Railroad Company thara haa. been Change In tb time of eloaing- soma of the maila at thia offlea. i Biow . la complete Uat of all maila Waving tfeia office and the laat minute at which mall may be deposited In the poatoffice for dispatch via, same. . -Beaufort Cloaea 8;6a. m. flfos pv m Bridgeton. Closes 10:80 a m. ttalhaven. Washington and Raleigh, Cloaea 1:16 p. m.- Goldaboro, 8.40 a. m.- 6;0 p. m Morrow, s:u a. m. Migbt epreas train 9:00 p. m. Oriental a. . m. B;15p. . (Sunday 6:26 p. m.) Wilming ton, ub a. m. wiatroro, l.-w p. m. (Toes, acd Sat. only) i. S. BASNKSHT. . rS9alA8TER. We will win with Woodrow Wilson. Children dry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOR A Anyway, the pinnacle of fame must be an uncomfortable perch to roost on. A HERO IN A LIGHTHOUSE. For year J. S. Donahue, So. Haven, Mich.', a civil-war eaptaio. as a Ibrht- bouse keeper, averted awful wreck,but a queer I act is, ne nugnt nave neea a wreck, himslf, if Electrie Bitten had not prevented "They cured me of kidney trouble and chills." ba writes "after I had taken other so sailed cures for years without benefit and they alee unproved my eight Mow at seventy, I am feeling fine." For dyspepsia, indigestion, all stomach, liver and kidney troubles, they are without equal. Try them. Only au cents at au arnggisu. Job was a patieot maorbut helhsver found the cat aeteep on the , piano just after he had vainiahed.- Doring the summer months mothers ot young children should watch for any unnatural Jooaeoees of Abe bowele. When given psompt attention' at' this time serious trouble may be avoided. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Bemedy can always be depended upon.' j Far saje byM;uaalers.tr; There's DotbiDgy green : about the; grass widow" who goes ; after the rich bachelor. - ? ' -'.J- . - OaaMBuaMntsM Kieaiava amo atMteu1 Trying to be 't 'Christian on the In stallment plan is a. waste of time. - A GIRIS WILD,. MIDNIGHT RIDE To warn oeotila of . a fearful foreat fire in the CatBkills a yoong girl rode horseback at midnight and saved many lives, ' Her deed was glorious but lives are often saved by : Dr. King's 'Jieyf Discovery in coring lung trouble, 'colds and eougba, which might have ended io consumption or pneumonia. ' ."It cored me of a dreadful cough and lung dis ease," wri tea W. R. Pat'erson, Well iogton, Tex., "after four in our family had died with rorsumption, and I gained 87 pounds' Nothing so sure and safe for all throad and lung troubles, trice 50c and $1.00. , Tiial bottle free. Guar anteed by all Druggists. - - t r: Teachers Examination. ' Public J Examination for teacher certificate will be held at : the Court Bouse in New Cern Thursday and Fri day, July 11 ' and 12, t im,;, each day at 10 a. n, - The exaiu'iiatiott Tht!- '.. 3 v. .11 be for white teac'.era and Vtl '.. y f r colored teachers. . - " ' S U. Tn n, ' Supt Public I fi u tion, " Crnvf i Cmnty.- - .1100 n . ri a&ttS tr:v CHAPTER Vll. Some momenta j elapsed, - Coast's very aerve-and sense jipon the jack, Taonab b heard tt no more': stili that cry rang la hie bead, and he could bdr wait, smitten dumb and motionless, feenng hla chilled flesh crawl, en thralled by fearsome - shapes con jured up br aq Imagination striving I vainly acoount for- what bad hap pened rwalti (It seemed) Intermin ably f tor s what be hardly knew or cneaaed, unless it were for a repeti tion or some explanation of that In- explicable cryv - He received neither. Hla straining faculties detected none but familiar inotsea.': vf v : Insensibly be grew more calm. 80 Silent- waa the world, eeemlngly so saturated with the spirit ot brooding peaeev that he was tempted to be lieve ha had dreamed that first, shriek, to which he bad wakened, and that the second was but an echo of it In hla brain: ' some hideous trick of nerves, a sort of waking hallucination, to be explained only on psychological grounds. '. And yet ... AppleyardT What of him? Was there an? connection to be traced be tween hla mysterious disappearance from the Echo and that weird, un earthly scream T Was there really land near, and had the little' man found It only to become the victim of some frightful, nameless peril T Could that have been hla voice, calling for help . . .T And In what dread ex tremity . . .T There waa nothing he could do, no way to reach the man. The tender was gone, ' the shore Invisible and who should any how far distant? Oth erwise he would not have hesitated. to swim tor It. Presently It occurred to him to won der where the Echo lay off what land. Appleyard'a responses to his In quiries, several hours back, returned to memory. . The name, No Man's Land, Intrigued. He interrupted his vigil to Investigate such sources of In formation aa he had at hand. In the cabin again, with the lamp turned high, he' dragged out a chart number 111 of the admirable erts published by the Coast and Geodetic Survey, delineating with wonderful acouraoy the hydrography of Bui sard'a Bay and Vineyard and Nan tucket Bounds, -together with the topo graphy of the littoral and islands. With pendl It was easy to trace the Boko's course from New Bedford har bor through Quick' Hole; a little to the east of which, say of Robinson's Hole, the fog had overtaken them. To the south and east of that point lay j Martha's .Vineyard, for all the world like a trussed fowl In profile. And there yes, due south of Oay Head- was No MaA's Land, its contour rnucn that of an Infant's-shoe, the heel dig glng Into the Atlantic. Comparison with the scale demonstrated it to be roughly a mile and five-eighths long by a mile, wide extreme measurements. Coast stared at it with renewed In terest, for, the first time convinced of the existence pf a . Bpot so -oddly darned. '- A number of black dots along its northern shore seemed to Indicate buUdlhge-r-but Appleyard had distinct ly said "unfnhablted.'r "". Coast turned Out the lamp and went back to the deck. . , There was nothing to be seen, noth ing to do.-. . . He fidgeted. Then -out of the confusion of his temper, to which ennui etalked in. sin gular i companionship with perturba- tlon, be chances irae an odd end of thought, one of those stray bits of in formation,' mostly, culled "from desul tory reading, that clutter., the back of every man's bralnv - .f1.' - He happened to remember hearing, some time, some where, that fog rare ly clings to tne aurrace or moving, wa ter; that, by putting one's vision upon a plane almost borUontal with the water. It Is ordinarily possible to see for some distance roundabout ' "There may be something In It No harm to try,"; , ' - .j. Forthwith he scrambled out 'upon the stern, from which, after some in tricate ' maneuvering and - by dint of considerable v physical Ingenuity, he managed to suspend himself -at peril of a .ducking, with his head near the He 3raa romptly,s Justified vtotbls pains; 4 the ' theoryl proved ; itself 4n that oner instance at least; .between the slowly- nndulant floor, glassy and colorless, and the ragged fringe of the mist ; enrtaln, he 4 discovered a definite space.-. tV'iviftiSi Directly astern and," roughly,-some forty feet sway, a shelving stretch of pebbly beach, softly.. lapped .by- low- voiced ripples, abut In the view. The Echo'a tender, drawn up beyond the water's edge, bisected. lt"HM.??!i:: ."Good said Coast, abstracted, re covering from' his' constrained posi tion...: ' .'ri-s f?' --:;'v-rr-i-V Curiosity gripped him Btrongly; cau tion contending vainly; be knew quite well that be would never bide content unt'l bo bad probed for the cause and source and solved the mystery of that ".'! cry In the nteht Just gone. X" be felt In a measure re r rrVyard. Surely there e Grange reason for his "('PI. . . - 1 ' f, 'deaf to the ; i . -nro, Const rose and i i c ' ; V" -,. - ! ' v Info tlie 'wafer I 1 o ' 1 not 1 If ! It v. nrm out w ui wvam ram um, ie iosumi no slgnv of the- missing maa. The peb ble scratched and bruised hi - un protected feet, and he hegaa to shiver i with eold. He gave tt up, presently. returned to the, tender, pushed o,ff ana scuuea out to tne jscna. a Then.' having rubbed hi Seen to a hluahwith a coarse towel, he dressed, took the small boat back to the beach. drew it bp anOv now fully committed to an enterprise the folly of which he stubbornly refused to debate, feet eft; to reconnolter along the water's edge, feeling his way. p ' After a time the beach grew more sandy, and emboldened by the knowl edge that he would have hla foot prints to guide him back, he left the water and struck Inland but only to find his progress la that direerJoa checked by a steep wall pf earth, a clilMlke bluff Of height Indetermin able, Its flanks wave-eaten and deeply seamed by ratn. At random, with no design, he turned again to his left and proceeded as before, but now along the foot of the bluff, trudging heavily through damp, yielding sand. Still no sign of Appleyard. He must have tramped, at a rude guesa, several hundred -yards before he discovered either a break in the bluff or any change in the general configuration of the shore. Ultimate ly, however, the one fell away in land and the other widened. A moment later be came upon a email catboat careened above high tide mark, with a gaping wound in Its starboard side, forward and below the water-line. . She lay stern to the water. Taking the point of her stem a his guide, Coast turned Inland again, on a line aa straight aa possible considering the alantlng lay of the land and tb Impossibility of seeing anything be yond a radius of a few feet He had not gone far upon this tack before he stumbled upon a path of hardpacked earth, obviously made by human feet Then he found him self mounting a rather steep grade, and in another moment was faoe to face with a plain weather-boarded wall j of a wooden building. There were no windows that he could discover on this aide, and though he listened keenly be heard no sounds from within. Other buildings presented them selves successively, aa Ilk aa pea to one another and to the first he had encountered: all peopled exclusively by the seven howHng divtls of deso lation and their attendant court of rata or so he surmised from sundry sound of scurrying and squeaks. He gathered that be was threading 'a rude sort of street, fringed on one side to seaward with the abandoned dwellings of what had apparently been a small fishing community. "No Man'a Land lndeedl" he com mented. "Certainly Uvea np to the name, even if it'a some place else. It begins to look aa if I'd drawn a blank. . . . But Appleyard . . .f" He waa moved vaguely to liken the place to the Cold Liars of the Jungle Book. "Only infinitely sordid," he mused, at pause: "lacking the maj eatr and the horror . . . Wonder had I better go backf? As he hung in the wtmV debating what to do. whether to press on or to be sensible, swayed this way and that by doubt and half-formed im pulses, somewhere near, seemingly at his very elbow, oertainly Tot twenty feet away, uddenry a dog bowled. Long drawn, lugubrious with a note ot lamentation, the sound Struck OMoor dant upon his overtaut senses, shock ing him (before he knew it) to out spoken protest ' ' '' ""' "Good God!" be eried aloud. what r ft . - His voice mast, have carried to the animal; he heard a whine, the quick padding of: pawa,land a huge Scotch collie bounded . lumslly out of the ralats, passed him within an arm's length, vanished ana. returned, "whin ing and circling. c to grouad. as li confused and unable to looata him, He watched .the ? animal, v half -stupefied with wonder'" at its emtio- actions; then unconsciously moved slightly . A pebble grated beneath' his foot The dog .wheeled toward him Instantly and paused at attention, forepaw lifted; ar pricked forward, delicate nostrils -' expanding and ' contracting as he sniffed tor the scent of man.. 5tHer boy, beret" Coast called Soft ly; and the next moment had the ani mal. 'fawning upon j film, alternately cringing at his feet- and jumping up to. muxile his legs and hands, as tt "they were his .own master, jif :.-' r-"3oo4" boyt" fifeady 5 aowf J Soi, sol", puxxtad by this- demonstrative reception. Coast bent over the animal, trying; to soothe :tt with- voice and hand. . ft was plainly in a tat of high excitement and evidently deep ly ; grateful fori, his - sympathetic toleration. He caught the finely mod eled head between hi palm, lifting up the munte. '-"Come, now," fee said in a soothing to fro, "let's have a look at you, old fellow. Good old boy it'a ell right now-reteady ' i Why, the poor brute's blind! ''sC;'- K;v. For as Us eyes rolled up he saw that they: wore blank and If-htlesa, the Iride masked wUa a tim . of white.- . .. ' - ,-:--- " - , "Cataract," be raid, re'.v...:3g the dog. . ."That's vty be couldn't see me. . I w. ' "Pi . ",' Hol lo, 1st EOT?" -' Ci.ii.r,-". 1 r r - -.reJ,' t d. j 1 nd !-.-ao 1 ! r"- Has since 18M given "Thorough Inatroctloa Boder positively Christlaa tnfloence at the lowest possible eost," -. , AVtSOVtt B Is toay srltfc Its faculty of tsboardbg patron Ha studen body of 412, and its plan worth 1140,000 LBADINO TRAININO SCHOOL FOK GOtLS IN VIRGINIA Pay al charge for the year, tnetoolng tabfe toaid, non aeaa, kuindry medical ittentfon. pbyaleal.eulture, and tuition In al eubjecU eseepS muaw and eloeotton. For eatalogns and apphoatlon blank address, ' REV. THOMAS ROSSER REEVES, B. A., Principal . .' BIlCXSTONVA. IRINfiHAM AsmynxE. . e.i nni tui u. swemui hiaBthaCeMa etfairtad.lTtigmh. VlSMia.S ktt nd Satote p 0) we i rn pmoneH om mi or sew anaum ana bj mr nutins mwt rtMl Amn Sale of IS pound Um cf Wmn njral pgr CM 4. Pie sad SWrS I esTiNjBe, aauttary. to hris te aHridae Men U keva. but a I ' I I Founded 1838 Chartered 1859 TRINITY COLLEGE ITS STRENGTH LIES IN A Large, Well-Trained Faculty; Excellent Buildings and Equipment; Full, Well-Arranged Courses; Earnest, High-Minded Students; A Large and Loyal Body of Alumni and Friends; Noble Ideals ai.d Tra dition ; n Inspiring History of Achievement and Service. Next 3e-sion begins September 11, 1912. For Catalogue and Illua rated Book let, Address R. L. FLOWERS, Secretary, Durham, N. C. TRINITY PARK SCHOOL ESTABLISHED 1 8HS I,oati wi excellent. Equipment first-class. Well-trained Faculty of successful experience. Special care of the health of students. An in tract r i i each domitory to supervise living conditions of boys un der his c re. Excell nt library and gymnasium facilities. Large athletic field Fall Term opens September 11. FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE, ADDRESS W. W. PEELE, Headmaster, Durham, N. C. EAST GABOLIHA TEACHERS TBAIH1HB SCHOOL A State school to train Uachers for the public schools of North C arolina. Every energy is directed to this one purpose. Tuition free to all who agree to teach. Fall Term begins Sep tember 24 1912. For catalogu" and othr information address. ROBT. H. V RIGHf, President, Greenville, II. C. OLD DOIIION NEW YORK AND ALL POINTS NORTH AND EAST Affording Pleasure and Best. Korfolk to Hew foik and Return (30 Days) $14.00 First class tickets include Meals and Berth on elegantly appoint d ex oreea st amera. Hot or Cold Sea Water Baths can be procured on Steamer without charge. ' . Steamers are all equipped with the United Wireless Telegraph System. 8TKAMKBS SAIL FROM NORFOLK EVERY WEEK DAT AT 7 P. M. Tickets and Stateroom Reservations, Company's Wharf, Foot of Church St, Noifolk, Va. Ask your localjticket.agent regarding. through tickets. Send for Illustra ed Pamphlet Dealt J. W. H. LA NOON, J t BROWN, General Agant r Norfolk, Va. s Gen. Pass. Agent New York. .MMJflH! IEi MOREHEAD CITY, NORTH CAROLINA : NOW OPEN EXTENSIVE IMPROVEMENTS. NEW MANAGEMENT FINEST FISHING IN AMERICA The Greatest Seashore Hotel la the South. Accommodations for 1.000 Guests. Ktwt wity of aaa and tma wata Sih aboaad la abaadaae, Tin An. an no How ufwts thawaa baach. wateh raaa sat sad H't. SmSmm Sha mmeh KHuht aoathwast cramurfnnt,aDdttsaMstaejof aa InTtgorattna ocn bwm thftwghout thm uroror. i. . Bant yaa kav mon aaiaaaaSehMialTaBtaastBaaau ba touttdontb Atlaatte Mt8aUii apoa UMbMnitUal aad stecM Boeas Snd r tUAoWie. StUlwatarand 8aif SmtUat. - Ineoaipaiabfa) Bod ami Dw Sa FhlilBavHaaar Mrin poiata of tiadi- rtjoaal and Matoric btawt'ptiiclm, Tala. Pool. BiBe. Mashv . fjl lfl9liNTENTl6NSj Fr handsome illustrated booklet . .v-.;.-:raJ. SUr.lMna EXCURSION FARTS Now io Effect to Beaufort Faod fie seashors season is now open and Summer Excursion ti. k. ts are on ss'e at ail si a' ions to Morehead Llnf, N, C, and Ct-aufort. N. C... good ' to- return ou'S October 81st. : lV '"'fJZ' Cot complete mformation from any ti. Vet s -"nt. ' r; i-h''--'. X. W, CROXTON, 0. IV At J.-? Norfolk, VW. .'-FIVE "N'T3 13 TME rial- AtUN A:' DuBOIS,4 ElanaserMorehead City, N. O r r DI1 y wAm for cuew . I Xor lily im. Our LINE Delightful Short Sea Trips To andL - ssetv.tlons address, roaio maeriosi quiok in ribult Ore prompt teliaf from BACKACHB tIDNBfV and BLADDER, TROUBLB, RKSUMATISM, CONQESTION of the CIDN3T8, INFLAMMATION of the ELADDER and aO annoying URINA IRRSaULA.RrTIE3. A poalura boon t UIDOL.S A1ED and BLDBRL rrC7L3 .and Ibr WOMEN. -. ' ear in -KS1T' RSCOMWfllOATCJf
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
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July 11, 1912, edition 1
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