Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Woodville Advocate (1878), 12 Sep 1883, p. 2

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“'Incleed. but we shall ; Dolly's 0,, 8mm over her brother's interests now. and shehas told me how essential it is those interests should be well protected; new I happen :0 know the: fihough the servants left 1“ Dn- ” u any andvl will have a ran 11 ' it tolzxi hit." 3 time 0‘ u t a goes on you muan’t think of crossing." he says. with a ahudd “1.be 0.9qu by thp 991d; U or that “' VI Ill- Bnt as they turn into oxfé'lia 31R“ 3 d shelter in a shop doorwa till :1 hailgdhparrggll “ng V a cab can b9 The snow is falling thick and fast, and is driven into their faces at all corners by an easterly wind that has a blasting force in “8 flying wings. Overhead all is thick, veiled, impenetrable, and underfoot the cold, pure, white, cruel shroud of snow is rhpidly enveloping all things. They have a fair excuse for‘silenoe. and‘ WEIR"? glad of it. A A.-_._ " 1 am at Miaa' Thynne'sflia‘e‘ ' " says, etimy, and Darragh, unless $232013; be disconeous, has no choice but to let him come. '1']: In Dolly’s voice rou§ea hit; {RE-his halt reverie. “ Ronald go with Miss Th nn - snow is falling so thickly :I'm iii-9:31 12:: will _lmvo a difligpltygbout a cab." " To think of that girl being my wife's friend. and nothing more to me all my life â€"and I could worship her l" the young man thinks, as he looks at the slander, graceful form draped in a long velvet Mother Hubbard cloak, deeply trimmed with fur, wbich is making to; the door. “ You will have Mr. Thynne to cater for your amusements then, and my father to see you safely over. What more can you want 7” Captain Maokiver says, discontent- edly. He feels that he has betrayed him- self to Darragh; and. worse still, he feels that__l)arrsg_h Ia_despising him. " We must do wifhout you, I see that," Dan-ugh Bays. venturing to smile at him now'ghat aygthinkihe .13. not coming. " What nonsense we’re talking.” Ron'ald interrupts. “ I tell you, Dolly. I can’t get leave. You're the dearest little girl in the world, but the chief won’t. consider your clairgg before ghe regiment'a.” '7 I shall always know he‘s not worthy of her. Even if they marry and have a dozen children, and he makes the best of husbands and fathers. I shall always remember that he would have been false to her if I had been willing to let him. Dolly deserves a staneher man than this; but it wouldn’t make her a bit the happier to know it," Darragh thinks. as she prepared to get herself away. after delivering herself of that remark relative to what she should do were she in Captain Mackiver’s place. “ If you say that, I shall go.” Ronald says. " What influence you have over him, you see, Darragh." Dolly laughs. “Ron- ald, don‘t look glam as if you were going into banishment. We will have a glorious time over there; Mr. Thynne will be in Galway, andâ€"" ' ”He has fallen in love with me against his will," she thinks. "and he is engaged to this gem of a girl who is ready to lay down her life for him.“ The complication is an awful one to Miss Thynnel His love for herself in a trifle that she can' put aside lightly enough; it does not flatter or appeal to her in any way. But his perfidy to Dollyâ€"unspoken, unacknowledged as it is even lâ€"how can that be put aside and forgotten ‘_I_ “ Dear Ronald, do consider it settled that you go, it you can get leave. Imust go. Will you let me go without you ?" “ Shall I ?" he asks. carelessly, turning to Darragh. “ If I were in your place and Dolly wished it, I should go," Misa Thynne replies. busying herself with her wraps and fireparing to depart. A sense of chill as come over Duragh, causing her to draw her fur wrap closer around her, and to make her long to get into the brighter outside air. Cheerful as the blaze is which comes from'the fire which Captain Mac. kiver has been so assiduously stirring. it fails to warm the girl, who has just discov- ered that an even fiercer fire is burning in the heart of the man; Darragh uses no shallow sophistries to herself on the sub- ject._ Dolly is not pleading importunstely, but she is putting her case with all her power of words and looks before Ronald. He is “ her own," the one man in the world who belongs to her, and to whom she belongs; and she does not sample to let her claim to him make itself manifest before this other girl. _ The People Loved Her Much. betlde] T V "T m. "-"o", .. mm"... And we are together for sunshine or rain. And sfmehow the glamor 'twere ruin to one Comes back when I reach for these easy old shoes. â€"[Good Cheer. townn,’ 7"," fl -_ “'“ -- "- Finds often a wearisome troub‘e condoned. When, galley chair waiting, life's rose tinted ues Return wan the advent of homely old shoes. Come, wgée. drop the mending, and sit by my a e, - Let u; biuild up a castle, my sweet one, in pa n For “5-19."; grows; the stronger, whatever ., .v,“ V_-â€"o_ _.-... ~- poatpdned. Still man. let his home be in fields or in V._‘, _u', w...â€" u. usuuluvu auto .. All glossy and spotless, close-fitting on d trig. No mortal had ventured to presage your fate. [nose-jointed, and ‘011 . and horelessly big, Yet never till now u lit 6 theme or the muse, 0 beautiful, lovable pair of old shoes, Though business may vex with its ups and its downs, Though ship’siu‘ley delay, end though bills be _ “ind',-,,"--_ -_ “v r vvvvvv Ivl vwnolvl The poor loot hove oohedin the rich palace . our; How blisatul the moment when, reckless to choose The pilgrim In torture drew forth the old s 008! Ye were new long ago. and in dignified mint“ _ twink: . __- V“. -. ...--. “mung... u. And on. thrust in satchel, have travelled star. When. gondomned to do penance for earlier Though‘gygi ye are one, 0! most mltohless of HUSBAND’SORRELATWNS, A Pal: 0‘ 0M shun. __-___ .. _â€".v ”v... vuv‘nuvu' uuu uwcull’ nuuu ' . “ Deu- Darngh, I wish with all my heart; thu Mr. Th nno were coming with us; it wqplggaka t porgoot it by vol-9.”, ” How about his leave ?" Dal-real: asks. “ Telegraphed for it and got it. deu- old boy.” Dolly replies; then. seeing her friend's [we still clouded. she hastily adds: “ I)nnr nap-nnh I mink -leh -II ...... L--_; “ Ronald's going too: didn‘t he tell you ?” Dolly says in surprise. for, though Dan-agh has only just met them at the station. Dolly takes it for granted that Captain Maekiver'n movements are of sufficient importance to be known to the whole party: “ I wish we were over," Darragh whis- pers. an Ronald and his sister move away to the book etell; to be snowed up on the line wouldn’t be pleasant, with your father- §n-lew that into be for our sole compan- Ion." -V_ -â€"v .vaI " I'll get Punch, and all the rest of the weekly papers. to heguile the journey with," he says by and by, when they are all stand- ing on the platform waiting for the porter to give the parting admonition to jump in, which signifies that the train is really about to start. " I never want literature to help beguile the time away when I can see ; all this snow makes it as light as day. What a cold loyely journey we shall have." And Ronald is obliged to seem to think his mother as absolutely right as she thinks herself. But all the while he knows that Dolly will not think likewise. and fears there may be a division in that Darragh camp to which, against his own sense of reotitnde, he is going with the rest. “ Then Dolly will be his guest instead of he Dolly's ?" “ Exactly; Dolly and that Miss Thynne, who's going for no reason that I can see. Will be your father‘s visitors, and there’s and end of is. Ronald; it's none of out doing that Dolly goes at all. but, as she will go. we're doing our best for her, and for you; " Not at all; it will onlyilaie‘ its-ll i‘fieliouse were lent to him. or he were renting it," MFP-Jlmlflver says: _ “ But it’s like buying the right to intefere and find faulu with the household arrange- ments," he stumbles, “ and you see if it doeaq’t make a row with the servants." "Win: .ilr my hon-i: 7'10 and he‘l not " Dolly won’t know it till she gets there, and then she will have no choice in the matter: your father is a man to have his own way, Ronald, when he thinks his way right," Mrs. Maokiver says decisively, and Ronaldmho is not sure of how his betrothed stands with respect to ready money. gives up the argument against his father's inten- tfon. "'I‘ve my doubts about Dolly's knowing where to pare, and she’s shamefully igno- rant of the use of scales and weights; laughs at the idea of weighing every ounce of meat as it enters the house." Ronald’s mother says to him when, just before they are starting for the train this evening she is giving him to understand that as his father will provide funds he need have no serugles about staying at ZD_ar_ragh. “ Robert is always glad to see any of you, you know he has always been," poor Dolly says, fighting bravely against her own conviction of things being very differ- ent now Robert is married. Besides. Dolly is suffering from a qualm or two about the matter of expense. She does not know that Mr. Maokiver means to pay the bills at Darragh while he stays there. and that his wife has acquiesced in this extra expense because it Will enable her to see when she overhauls these hilis whether or not Dolly Is an “economical housekeeper," and if Irish servants waste or use more than English ones. “Go with you! are you all going mad together?" Miss Maokiver replies, with supreme contempt; "there's my father talking of going with you, and staying with you without a. thought of whether Robert Annealey will like to find a. house- hold established there on his return.” "He looked'au her, 5nd seemed t'o chal- lenge her to wish bun to go with us, against hlB inclination," Dolly says, half complain- inglgr. " No. you were not ‘ ohurlish ;' you couldn’t be that to alsdy, but you were not gracious." Then Mary comes into the room, and Dolly puts her in possession of the heads of her case, and asks the sister who knows the truth if ”it isn't odd that Ronald should rather seem to dislike the ideawof having Miss Thynne's society!" _ l “ You startled me, my own," she resumes cheerfully; “for a. moment I fancied you thought I had been ohurlish or unclvil to theimportent Miss Thyune, and in that case I should surely be called to fierce account for my misdemeanor by her fire- estiug lover." mAfter all, Dolly knows nothing, fears nothing, auappoga nothing! “ Good heavens! do you see ‘2" his guilty conscience pricke him into exclaiming; then fortunately for Dolly’s peace of mind, prudence arrests the flow of his words, and forces him to reflect. “ Ronald, I wish you could feel differ- ently: shoot Darrugh_'1‘hynne 7‘7’ The idea that Ronald does not like this girl whom she is hoping to win for her best and closest female friend in that married future which is before them both. is disap- pointing and distressing to her, and so it is almost with a reproaohtul cadence that she says: She has forgotten the feeling of being In the wey and per lexed which poeeeeeed her just now when 3 0 turned round suddenly to see Ronald's curious look at Darragh Thynue, but she has not forgotten the oil'- oumetance that caused it. DOB?- “ It I told you all I thought, you would probably bo so much oflouded with me that you would advise Dolly to drop my acquaintance; I don't want that calamity to come to pass; therefore I will only say do what you think Dolly will like best.” "1“an she driven off, and he goes back to " It you think I ought to get it. I wnll get it.” he says. and though he would give much to be able to say it in tones that he would use in idle courtesy to any other woman, he cannot help mfusing far too much earnestness into his words for them to sound well in Dnrragh’e ears. " Thank you in Dally ’3 name for offering to brave the danger with her; but how aooqq your lpgvp ?'_’ " Here' s a osb- . if you insist on crossing to night, I shs_ll go with you." he cries,“ he hands her in. 8and she bends her head andgsys: _ 5pm; ragh by Killeeu are very nice in their way. economy and regard for their new master's pocket are not the rocks on which they nnlul DI The King of 8 sin reviewed the tr00ps at Logron Setur sy. and afterwards re- oeiveds oordielweloome st Burgos. He will return to Madrid on Mon sy, sud preside ste Cabinet Council. when the question of his journey to German will be decided. It is believed that {More ion the Prime Minister will beohsrged wit the reconstruction of the Ministry. . ___ -_ ___o v.â€" _ _.u.vn‘ v- LyaandenN. Y {all into as sail of sour milk rquntly and wasdrowne The Trchborne claimant has sent from his prison to Mr. Quartermaine East another letter, half whine and half blasphemy. in whicl he says: “ If our Saviour came from heaven and appeared before Gladstone and his colleagues in the Cabinet and told them the truth He would not be believed. but in all probability insulted it He mentioned my name. There are none so blind as those who will not see. And one'of two things are certain, either the truth is distasteful to the Government, or they are under a threat of displeasure from the Throne. Fair play and justice have not been dealt out to me. I do not hesitate to say that such a state of things could not have taken place in any other ocuntr but this. and would never have been a lowed to take place in this country in good King George's time." “ No variation or shadow of turning,” Datragli repeats, absently. " That's a fine ‘oharaoter to give a man; I should fear to give it to any one for fear of having to take it awayâ€"for fear of the man tarnishing it, or being careless about it and letting others dim it for inm." “ You are fond of raising bogies.” “ No, I'm not; the difficulty I’m raising now is a real flesh and blood one," Darragh says, shaking her head sagely. and looking into the corner with as fixed and earnest a gazfia as if the “ difliculty” was there visible to ex. Dolly shakes her head. “ My pride in him and love for him are always satisfied,” she says, “ Ronald is such a firm. true man, there’s no variation or shadow of turning about him. You see one can’t feel loving anxiety perpetually that a person should do when you're as sure as you can be at any- thing in this world that that person can never do wrong." “ Indeed, I héven’t. Dolly.” Darragh says with emphasis; “and it strikes me that you ought to be feeling it for Captain Meckiver now.” “ Your brother and you are very fond of one another ?” “ I’d do anything in the world for Robert; it seems nonsense saying that, for a girl can do so little for a man, after all, and he has a wife now to do that little for him. But 1 think you understand me ? My brother, and his success, and all that he has done, and can do, and may do. are dearer to me than any career of my own could ever be, even if I could have a brll-‘ liant one out out for me. Haven’t you ever felt that for any one ? A9 month-old oh_i_ldAot_ Edgar Palmer, of _.s,_ ‘v .o - " Yea,” Dolly says happily ; “ that’s the way with liver. I’ve seen Robert quite cross two or three times; never cross with any bod y. you know, but cross in the air at large; and afterward he has told me in was all liver.” “ Men shouldn’t have livers," Darragh replies soornfully. “ Really, one would think the delay and the doubt pressed more heavily on the gallant young soldier than it does on hisold father or on us girls.” ‘ " Poor dear boy ! I suppose its his liver,” Dolly says apologetieally to Miss Thynne. whom she (Dolly) fancies must be much amazed at Ronald’s orankiness. r She does not say to Ronald that he is fidgety and so very tiresome to dealwith, as fidgitiness has no part in her composition, but she shows good natured toleration for his infirmities and pities him from her stand- point of satisfaction with the existing order of things, for finding his share of the bur- l(zen laid upon them greater than he can our. l Rumors are flying about the hotel of stoppages on the line near Holyhead, but these Mr. Maokiver, who has quite enough of hotel expenses} by midday. disregards. If Ronald was in his normally reasonable and considerate condition of mind he would institute inquiries, scent danger from afar, and take all proper and wise precau- tions to avert it. But as it is he is feverish, alternately moody and exoiteable in a way that makes Dolly wish with all her heart tfiat she had not urged him to come with t em. SHADOWS OF TURNING . But the run from London to Chester is a slow one this evening in consequence of the snow wreathing in several places on the line and checking the progress of the train. But not until they arrive at the quaint old city on the River Dee do they realize the force with which the storm is raging. But at Chester they are peroeptibly conscious of the iron rule of winter being established. At Chester they hear rumors of stoppages on the line to Holyhead being inevitable on account of the enormous snow drifts,which are being piled up higher and higher each hour. 80 Mr. Mackiver, sorely against the 1 wishes of the two girls, who are anxious to push on to their bourne. rules that they remain there for the night at least, possibly for; the next day_also. full.’ i‘ I’ll give you a. text to think of on the long jouxuey you’re going; ‘ Let. him who §h_i_uketh he Btuudeth take heed lest he says», But it is no use! In reply to his repeated requests that she will advise him as to gels and that book or paper, Mary only Meanwhile Ronald and his sister Mary have walked away to the bookstalls, where he begins impatiently turning over hooks and papers, asking her opiniOn, and talking to the man at the stall, with the obvious intention of preventing her from speaking o? :helsubjeot which 13 nearest to the minds 0 0t . “She’ll get to understand Ronald, and like him better soon. I hope," Dolly says to herself, and then she recalls to her memory sate examples of how her father and some of her mother’s lady lrlends had been antagonistic to one another. “But they were old, and ugly. and intelering.” the girl reminds herself; “Derrsgh is neither; hnt nien are so herd to pleggel" hm." Dal-ugh soya quickly. “ We shall have enough of these men b and by, Dolly; why couldn't you and havobeeu lets go ourselves now 7” I! 'l‘hc ()Inlmnm Aanlu. (To be continued.) CBAPI‘ER XI. --Tho wheat growor’a monoâ€"of two woevil'o choose the loan. 8mm. m 'rnn “(cannonâ€"To do 00d work the mechsnic must have ood hesltr. Ii long huurs of confinement in 0 use rooms have on- feebied his hand or dimmed his sight let him st once,snd before some organic troubi'e smears. take plenty of Hop Bitters. ms system wi I be rejuvenated. his nerves strengthened, his night become clear. and the whole constitution be built up to s higher working condition. Mr. Henry Adams. amember olaweslthy amily in New England. was on Friday formally received Into the Church of Rome at Paris. ' At the examination at Limerick of Dr. ‘Connolly and Patrick Connolly. brothers, who were arrested at Brut! on the charge of implication in a murder conspiracy. Michael Dineen testified that the Connellye compelled him to swear that he would shoot John Oarroll,rent warner of the Earl of Limerick. and promised the Head Cen- tre would pay him £50 for so doing. The prisoners and himself lay [in waiting several times for Carroll, but the witness‘ courage failed, and he did not shoot him. The witness swore the Connollys also pro- posed the poisoning of Carroll and his sister. The prisoners were remanded. was so large that the .couple decided to have the ceremony performed a little earlier. The wedding party obtained the services of an expert guide, who con- ducted them to the ballâ€"room by ashort out. The ball-room, lit up by seven flambeaux. looked brilliant. The bride and groom etood under a large arch of stalaotites. and eleven young ladies and gentlemen stood around them. The responses of the parties, though uttered indietinctly, were reverberated throughout the chamber. It was apretty‘ eight, and after the couple had been pro- nounced man and wife the crowd began to come in, and Mr. and Mrs. Huber received the congratulations of a large number of friends as they held their flret reception hall a mile underground. The wonderful Luray caverns. in Vir- ginia, were the scene of a romantic wed- ‘ding a few days ago. It was the first marriage ever performed there. A party of Pennsylvania excursioniste went down to examine the caves. and among them were Mr William A. Huber and Miss Belle F. Goo ling both of Mechaniceburg, Pa. Both were young. and were known to be aflianced. When they reached Luray and learned that among its wonderful under- ground halle there was a spacious room. called the ball-room, they determined to be married there. taking some of their friends in their confidence. The Rev. J. W. Rel- gart agreed to perform the marriage cere- mony, and a chosen few were told to be present at 11 o’clock. The secret, however. . got out, and the crowd ud There may he remains of stone age ya whites, but there are no certain remaim of er white savages of the low order. We may er well doubt if there ever were any white Id savages; it is more likely that the white ut men were developed late in the race history I,” of the world from ancestors far on in civil- is ization, with its improved supply of food. 1" its better housing and clothing, its higher ry intellectuality. was one main factor in the re development of the white type. Here. Id however, it must be remembered that there to is notawhite race in the sense in which 18 there is Carib race, or an Andaman race lg It includes several race types, and even is the same languages, such as English or German, may be e oken by men as blonds Id as Danes or as darfi as Sicilians. The fair~ :0 haired Scandinavian type has something of y the definiteness of a true race; but as one travels south there appear, not well defined 1e sub-races, but darkening gradations of .o bewildering complexity. The most is reasonable attempt to solve this intricate problem is Professor Huxley’s view that the white race is made up of fair whites of the northern or Scandinavian type, and dark whites who are the result of ages of mixture between the fair whites and the darker nations, though it is perhaps hardly prudent to limit those dark ancestors to one variety, as he does. If now we cannot trace the white man down to the low level of primi- tive savagery, neither can we assign to him the great upward movement by which the barbarian passed into civilization. It is not to the Aryan of Persia nor to the Semite of Syria that the art of writing belongs which brought on the new era of culture. The Egyptian, whose hieroglyphics may be traced passing from picture to alphabet, had his race allies in the people of North Africa, especially the Berbers of the north coast-people whom no elasticity of ethno- logical system would bring into the white race. 0f the race type of the old Babylon- ians, who shaped likewise rude pictures into wedge phonetic signs, we know but little yet; at any rate, their speech was not Aryan. and the comparisons of Lenormant ‘ and Sayce have given some ground for con- necting it with the Turanian language, belonging to a group of nations of whom one. the Chinese, had, in remote antiquity.worked out a civilization of which the development of an imperfect phonetic writing formed part. If the great middle move in culture was made, not by any breach of the white race, but by races now represented by the Egyptian and Chinese, it is not less clear that these nations came to the limit of their developing power. The white race had, in remote antiquity, risen high in bar- baric culture when their contact with the darker naticns who invented writing opened to them new intellectual paths. The Greeks found in ancient Egyptian theology the gods of the four elements, but they transferred this thought from theology to philosophy. and developed from it the theory of elements and atoms, which is the basis of modern chemistry. They found the Babylonians building terraced temples to the eleven planets in the order of their periods, and this conception again they transferred from religion to science, founding on it the doctrine of planet spheres, which grew into mathematical astronomy. It may moderate our some- what-overweemng estimate of our power to remember that the white races cannot claim to be original creators of literature and science, but from remote antiquity they began to show the combined power of acquiring them and developing culture which has made? them dominant among mankind. A_‘.- -LAI__ - ORIGII 01' 'l‘llB \Vlll'l'l‘.’ MAN. An Underground “'eddlux. ”can" It a! A." of Mluure Evoluuon cl Baa-u. stone age remaimot . We may my white 35 to $20 8:49: 3:323. “Wm: and Shorthuud Muaht In commuohl course of Collegiate ln-Ilme. Ill-nun. Write (or ammo 'to Prinoi Al A. P‘ mxmua'r. nu. p ' TE LE G RAPHY world for quietiug anti allaying all irritation of the nerves and curing all forms of nervous com~ plaints, giving naturalchildlike refreshing sleep always ? . And the will tell you unhesitatingly ‘ Some arm of Hops !" CHAPTER I. _Ask any or all of the most eminent physi- cians “ What is the best and only remedy that can be relied on to cure all diseases of the kidneys and urinary organs; such as Bright's disease diabetes. retention or inability to retain urine. and all the diseases and ailments peculiar to Women"â€" And they will tell you explicitly and emphati- cally, "Buchu." Ask the same physicians " What is the most reliable and surest cure for all liver diseases or dyspepsia, constipation. indigestion. biliousuess, malarial fever. aguo. e. " and they will tell you : “ Mandrake I or Dandelion I” Hence, when these remedies are combined with others equally valuable Audcompounded into Hop Bitters. such a Ask the most eminent physician Of any school what is the best world for quieting anti allavimz nl' No family should be with ut LYDIA E. PIN'KHAM'S LIVER I'lLLS. The ' cur onstlpation. biliouxncn, and torphmy of the ‘ver. 25 cents per box. emu-r, 81. 81: bottles for 85. Sent by mall in the form of pills, or of lozenges, on receipt of price. 3| per box for either. Mm. Pinklmm freely answers all letters of inquiry. Enclose set. stamp. Send for pamphlet. Both the Compound and Blood Purifier are pn‘puud at 2:13 and 1215 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Mesa! LYDIA E. PINKIIAM'S BLOOD PURIFIER will eradicate every vestige at llumors from the Bluodmud give tone and nth-n (h to the system, of man woman or child. Insist on uvlng it. For all those Pnlnnnliaonplelnte end Wonk-ale. no eon-on to our but female population. _â€". A Medicine for Woman. Invented by 3 Women. l'rcperod by a Womll. The Greatest lit-dial Dlwowery Since the Duv- et llletory. {Flt revives the drooping spirits, invigoretoe and harmonizes the organic functions, gives elasticity and firmness to the step, restores the natural lustre to the eye, and plants on the pale check of woman the fresh rows of life's spring and early summer time. WPhysicians Use It and Prescribe It Freely ‘9 It removes raintncss, lintnlency, destroys ell craving for stimulant, end relieves weakness of the staunch. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, is nlwnys permanently cured by its use. For the cure of Kldney Complnlnts of either sex this Compound I- unsurpassed. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. V f ,4» MM “Sold by all Drugglsta.‘(€0 (l) (Concluded next week.) Vllal Que-lions ! Is a Positive Cure bes_t_ (11ng i9 th

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