Times & Guide (1909), 7 Nov 1913, p. 7

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Baby‘s Own Tablets are the best @edicine a mother can give her little ones. They are absolutely ‘eafe, being guaranteed by a govâ€" ernment analyst to contain neither opiates, narcotics or other harmâ€" ful drugs. They are good for all ghildren from the newborn babe to the growing child. They cure conâ€" stipation, indigestion, expel worms, break up colds land make teething easy. In fact they are a cure for all the minor ills of little ones and & box should always be kept in the house as a safeguard against sudâ€" den attacks of stomach or bowel troubles. Mrs. J. P. Richard, St. Norbert, N.B., says : "I have found Baby‘s.Own Tablets all that is claimed for them. My baby sufferâ€" ed from his stomach and bowels and the Tablets certainly did him good." They are sold by all medi cine dealers or by mail at 25¢ a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine‘ Co., Brockville, Ont. Mr. Bennet asks whether there is not a remedy, and though his own principles would not permit him to "go so far, he tells us that his plain man will presently become exploâ€" â€"give and even relingquish his fortiâ€" tudes in favor of a little fun. Of casimse there is not a simple remedy, g.:ve are invited to acquire some kind of selfâ€"knowledge and to deâ€" termine which things really interest and which bore us. It may be obâ€" jected that one cannot be happy by trying, but it is Mr. Bennett‘s point that you can, and he has a way of being right. We do not clapâ€"our friends often enough on the back, or if we do it becomes just a habit which annoys them and gives us no satisfaction ; there are those among us who spring out of our beds shouting Hurrah! but after a time this beâ€" comes as much a part of the routine as shaving. Arnold Bennet Thinks All That Is * _â€"Needed Is To Try. Is Arnold Bennett a happy man 1 The question may seem superfluous and even impertinent, but it is prompted by a little book called ‘‘"‘The Plain Man and His Wife‘"‘ which he has just published. â€" He points out that the plain man tends ake his life all means and no w to become too busy to examine the treasures of his soul; to grind away doggedly without experiencâ€" ing the joys of consciousness. When the glow of health comes back to sallow cheeks; when lanâ€" guid weakness gives place to vigor ; when you notice some pale, 6Xâ€" Rausted invalid restored to active healthâ€"enquire. More than likely you will find the cure to have been ‘yet another of the thousands &1; ready wrought by Dr. Williams Pink Pills. Headache and neuralâ€" ia, Bt. Vitus dance and twitchâ€" Eg of the limbs, indigestion and rheumatism, eczema and disfigurâ€" ing eruptions, and the ailments of growing girls and women all disâ€" appear when the veins are filled jh the new, rich blood Dr. Wilâ€" ffams‘ Pink Pills actually make. Here is one instance among thousâ€" ands; Mr. F. Ashford, Haileybury, Ont., says ; ‘‘Some years ago I comâ€" pleted a lengthy term of service in India, the last three years being spent in the beautiful but treacherâ€" ous Poshawar Valley. Ague and dengue fevyer were rife, and alâ€" th h I was fortunate enough to e‘e a severe attack of .either, on my return home it soon became apparent that the enervating cliâ€" matic conditions had left their ravages on my constitution, In short the reaction had set in, and inexhorable nature was exacting a ~severe toll from years of strenuous labor. My first warning of the imâ€" pending breakdown were severe pains in the back of the head and eyes, insomnia, irritability, a gonâ€" eral angaemic condition and an in-l definaible ~nervousness. Life had lost its zest, work became imposâ€" gible and companionship intolerâ€"| able. It really seemed that I was swiftly passing to that stage where| nervousness ends and insanity beâ€" gins, when by chance I read an ?.rtisement of _ Dr. _ Williams‘ P Pills. I confess I was skeptiâ€" cal of them doing what doctors had failed to do, but concluded that the cost was small, and perhaps,| the chance in their favor, and so| decided to try them. To my joy| ‘there was soon an â€" improvement, | ‘and a continuance of the treatâ€"| ment effected ‘a complete cure. I| was now as fit and healthy as any | man and> am grateful that the j lucky perusal of an advertisement . brought to my notice the wonderful |â€" curative properties of Dr. Wilâ€"|â€" liams‘ Pink Pills." 1 old by all medicine dealers or foy mail at 50 cents a box or six ‘boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, €nt. HOW TO BE REALLY HAPPY. Gladdens Thoss Who Regain New * _ Health and Strength BABY‘S OWN TABLETS LIFE‘S SUNSHINE It is better for a girl to be given in marriage than it is for a man to be sold. Nearly every man is true to his first lovyeâ€"himself. ‘"‘Look here, Pat,""‘ said an old gentleman to his Irish servant, ‘"‘toâ€"morrow evening if you bring my tea without spilling a drop in the saucer I will give you a shilling to yourself."" ‘"Right, sir," said Pat, and the following evening he won the shilling by bringing the eup in one hand and the saucer in the other. ‘‘Ah| you have guessed, then, that I wanted to tell you that I love you?" "Â¥es; and I want to say ‘No,‘ and get it over with." "Williamsburg." No home is safe or can afford to miss the manifold advantages of havyâ€" ing Nerviline on hand in case of acciâ€" dent or emergent sickness. Large family size bottles of Nerviline, 50c.; trial size, 25¢., all dealers, or The Caâ€" tarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Canada. â€" _ Both Waiting For It. "At last,‘"‘ he sighed, "we‘re alone. I‘ve been hoping for this chance. ‘‘So have I," she said, very frankly. "It seemed as if an angel had charmâ€" ed away the pain. In ten seconds I was well. Nerviline â€"has a wonderful name in this locality, and is considâ€" ered best for cramps, diarrhoea, flatuâ€" lence, stomach and bowel disorders. I urge all my friends to use Nerviline. "MANLEY M. LEGARDE, "My cries attracted a neighbor, who came to my assistance, and in a moâ€" ment‘or two handed me half a teaâ€" spoonful of Nerviline in some sweetâ€" ened water. Deadly crampsâ€"the symptoms are not to be mistaken. Suddenly and without warning the patient experienâ€" ces such agony in the stomach as to contort the countenance and cause him to cry aloud for help. ‘"My eyes bulged out and the veins in my forehead stood out like whipâ€" cords. "Last summer I was stricken with a frightful attack of cramps. I feared the pain in my stomach would kill me. Then it is that the wonderful power of Nerviline can make itself feltâ€"it cures so quickly. ‘ A new species having the appearâ€" ance of an electrically lighted ferry boat, has been secured in the Ausâ€" tralian, Bight at the great depth of 2100 feet. This curious fish, which has fiftyâ€"three brilliant light organs on either side of its body, which itself shines like a mirror, has been named the tudor. It was hauled to the surâ€" face by a trawler and will be placed on exhibition at the Australian Muâ€" seum at Sydney, N.S., Wales. More than a hundred other entirely new varieties were obtained, all the speciâ€" mens inhabiting these submarine depths being more or less luminous. Several fish of a jet black color, with a skin like velvet studded all over with scintillating encrustations of bluâ€" ish light were also obtained, some beâ€" ing shaped like a pair of bellows. Agonizing Pain Prevented by Keepâ€" ing Nerviline Handy On the Shelf. Cramps at Night Require Prompt Remedy | The peninsula in its wilder parts, indeed, is a veritable paradise for big game, In its vast, wideâ€"spreading forâ€" ests range many noble species that are worthy of the skill of the keenest of hunters. The annual report of the railway department for 1906 contained a photographic reproduction of a scene that quite amusingly illustrated the perils that await the railway pioneer when he intrudes into the domain of wild nature. The picture reveals a wrecked railwayâ€"train, a locomotive completely off the rails, its tender reâ€" duced to scrapâ€"iron, and its wheels off to one side, buried deeply in the dirt. The cause of all this mischief is shown in another picture. It was a wild elephant, a tusker of imposing size. ; The billiardâ€"players at once made a hurried exit. Mr. Phillips having been summoned, took post a few yards from the uninvited guest, whose eyes he could see shining in the darkness of its hidingâ€"place, and was lucky to kill it. It is now several years since a tiger was shot within the precinets of the town. The honor of this particular kill belong to Mr. C. M. Phillips, the head master of Raffles Institution. The tiger had not swum the straits from Johore, but had escaped from a cage in which it was awaiting shipment from Singapore. It caused consternaâ€" tion by walking into the compound of Raffles Hotel, and seeking refuge unâ€" der the billiardâ€"room in a detached building. An Exciting Time in a SingapOre Hotel. As late as 1869, an authority on sport in the Malay Archipelago wrote that in Singapore there were always a few tigers roaming about, and that, on an average, they killed a Chinaâ€" man every dayâ€"generally one of the men who worked in the gambier planâ€" tations, which are made in newly cleared jJungle. Although there is no danger toâ€"day that tigers will spring upon unwary travelers about Singaâ€" pore, write Messrs. Arnold Wright and T. H. Reid in "The Malay Peninsula," there is a certain excitement about living in a place where the following incident occurred, and where its repeâ€" tition is not impossible. A Case in Point Hlustrated. Illuminated Fish, MALAY TIGERS. Pat Won It. Singapore ED. 7. An Irish M.P. was telling a story of a man who complained to three friends, an Englishman, a Scotchâ€" man, and an Irishman, that his servant was constantly breaking china. ‘"‘What do you think I ought to do with her?"‘ he asked. The Englishman said, "Disâ€" miss her.‘‘ But as she was otherâ€" wise an excellent servant her masâ€" ter was unwilling to do that. ‘‘Then take it out of her wages,"‘ suggestâ€" ed the thrifty Beot. ‘"‘That wouldâ€" n‘t do much good,""‘ was the reply, "for her wages are less than the amount of damage she does.‘" ‘"‘Then raise her wages,‘"‘ said the Irishman promptly. Coulson was earnestly engaged in conversation . with a _ business friend, but stopped and asked the man his business. He was agent for a series of religious books, and when Mr. Coulson told him his library was already well filled, the agent persisted in exploiting the merits of his wares and, thinking he might at some future time make a sale, asked if he might leave some tracts. ‘‘Yes,""‘ replied Mr. Coulâ€" son, ‘"with the toes towards the door." Skin diseases yleld to LIQUID SULPHUR. The law of the harvest is to reap more than you sow. ow an act and you reap a habit; sow a habit and you reap a character; sow a character and you reap a destiny. Book agents have become such a nuisance that most business men give orders that they are not to be admitted to their private offices. One persistent man, however, by one pretext or another, g.a,ineti inâ€" terviews with the various influenâ€" tial citizens. He reached the head office of theâ€" Bank of Toronto, and when the clerk was engaged, he walked into the office of the presiâ€" dent, Mr. Duncan Coulson. Mr. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, &o. For more than a generation Cuticura Boap and Ointment have afforded the most ecoâ€" nomical treatmont for affections of the skin and scalp that torture, itch, burn, scale and destroy sleep. A singlesetis often sufficlent. Cuticura Boap and Cuticura Ointment are sold by idruggista and dealers everywhero. For a hbaral free sample of cach, with 32â€"p. book, send postâ€"card to Potter Drug & €hem. Corp., Dept. D, Boston, U. S. A. § Carman, Manitoba.â€""‘A breaking out between my fingers was the first trouble. Ib was very itchy and spread to my finger tips m affeating the nalls, Jtb first fl} :\-‘ appoared in watery blisters rf’ Q {and they were so intensely Cg ’3 ftchy I scratched them and G â€"â€" J let the water out making 7 sores, . They would swell up, itch and burn and finally \ 2/ the nells would loozen and i & t come off. I spent many Ni sleepless nights. I did not dare to put my hands in water except to wash them. "I kept using ointments, â€"â€"â€"; â€"â€"â€" Olutment,. but was not cured. Sometimes the remodies would help a littlebutI wasnot free from it altogether. _ I was that way for pine years trying everything. I heard of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for them and before I had used them half & dozen times I noticed an improvement, By washing with the Cuticura Roap and apâ€" plying the Cuticura Ointment frequently I was cured in throe months." . (Signed) Miss Florence E. Sanderson, May 20, 1918. | & C @~V '9{"‘ â€"a â€" y C xz \/ WATERY BLISTERS INTENSELY ITCHY Between Fingers, Spread to Tips. Would Swell Up, ltch and Burn. Did Not Dare Put Hands in Water, Cutlcura Soap and Cut}â€" cura Olntment Cured,. ACTS" TOWARDS DOOR. Mr. Duncan Coulson. What He Thought. ISSUE 44â€"13. The mortality surpasses the averâ€" age among functionaries, tramway and gas workers, itinerant fish and poultry sellers, drapers, saddlers, bakers, millers, butchers, boatâ€" men, carters, sailors, cycle dealers, Finally, day laborers are bad lives, so are doctors, miners, stone M. Bertillon claims that engine drivers, men employed in wood cutâ€" ting and in malting, school teachâ€" ers, lawyers and clergymen live the longest. The mortality amongst doctors, employees of the post ofâ€" fice, commercial travellers, grocers, fruiterers, hatters and some other trades, such as watchmaking and tanning, is low. Domestic servants and coachmen employed in private families also represent a low death rate. The most healthy occupations are naturally those followed in the open air, but there must be movement, otherwise the constant exposure is bad for health. Thus gamekeepers and park and forest keepers live long, while drivers, who are exposâ€" ed to the air without movement, are not long lived. The principal causes of death noâ€" ted are intemperance, disease of the chest, heart, liver and nerves, diabetes, suicide and accidents. The Chief Causes of Death, Says Dr. Jacques Bertillon. Dr. Jacques Bertillon, the wellâ€" known statistician for the Departâ€" ment of the Seine, Paris, has preâ€" pared tables relative to the rate of mortality and causes of death in different occupations. : ‘‘We‘re not going to have much of a wedding. Jack and I want to have everything as simple as posâ€" sible.‘‘ ‘"Well, you will have it all right. You‘ll have each other, won‘t you ?"‘ ‘‘Many judge from Bibber‘s red nose that he‘s a heavy drinker, but ho‘s not. His nose is like a gas meter."‘ ‘"How so 1‘ "It registers more than is conâ€" sumed." s Try Murine Eye Remedy If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn‘t Smart â€"Soothes Eye %ain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25¢c, 50c. Murine Eyye Salve In Aseptic Tubes, 250, 50c. Eye Books Free by Mail. An Eye Tonlc Good for All Eyec that Noed Care Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicage Story of a Merchant Who Almost Lost HIs Business and His Health Through Neglecting Early Sympâ€" toms of DIisease. "My life for years has been of seâ€" dentary character," writes T. B. Titchfleld, head of & well known firm in Buckingham, ‘"Nine hours every day I spent at office work and took exercise only on Sunday, I disreâ€" garded the symptoms of illâ€"health, which were all too apparent to my family. I grew thin, then pale, and before long I was jaundicedâ€"eyes and skin were yellow, my strength and nerve energy were lowered, and I was quite unfitted for business. In the morning a lightness in the head, particularly when I bent over, made me very worried about my health, Most of the laxative medicines I found weakening, and knowing that I had to be at business every day I neglected myself rather than risk furâ€" ther â€"weakness. Of course I greow. worse, but by a happy chance I began. to use Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. I was forcibly struck by the fact that they neither caused griping nor nausea, and it seemed incredible that pills could tone, cleanse and regulate the system without causing any unpleasâ€" ant after effects. Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills acted with me just as gentle as natureâ€"they gave new life to my liver, strengthened my stomach, and won me back to perfect good health. My skin is clear, dizziness has disapâ€" peared, and my appetite, strength, spirits are perfect." Refuse anything offered you inâ€" stead of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills, which are sure to cure. Sold in 25¢. boxes, $ Woe believe MINARD‘S LINIMENT is the est: Mathias Foley, Oil City, Ont. Joseph Snow, Norway, Me. Charles Whooten, Mulgrave, N.8. Rev. B. 0. Armstrong, Mulgrave, N.8. Pierre Landere, senr., Pokemouche, N.B. Thomas Wasson, Sheffield, N.B, Tommy (on a visit)â€"No, I thank you. § Tommyâ€"That ain‘t loss of appeâ€" tite. What I‘m suffering from is politeness. five for $1.00, at all druggists storekeepers, or postpaid from Catarrhozone Co.," Buffalo, N.Y., Kingston, Canada. Tommy‘s Auntâ€"Won‘t you have another piece of cake, Tommy? _ â€"Tommy‘s Auntâ€"You seem to be suffering from loss of appetite. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria That Played â€" Out Feeling Was Quickly Remedied and Health Restored. Weary Tiredness Changed to Vigor SUICIDES AND DIABETES. Bibber‘s Beak. Politeness. and the and _ _A Vancouver man awoke from his slumbers and heard a man trying to get in his front door. He turned loose at the man with a shotgun, and a policeman chased the stranâ€" ger who took to flight. He was caught and spentâ€"the night in a cell. In the morning it was found that the supposed houseâ€"breaker was a neighbor, who had mistaken the other man‘s door for his own while in a bibulous condition. Mrs. Maloneâ€"Sure, Oi‘m doing it, sor. Oi haven‘t let him have a wink ay slape now for three days. Keeping Up. Doctorâ€"Remember, _ Mrs. Maâ€" lone, I told.you that your husband is failing rapidly and we must keep him up as long as we can. Some men temptation can exile, You can‘t get them to flinch ; But most of us preach by the mile, And practice by the inch. â€"‘"‘They made me!" said a retired tailor. f ‘‘Where should I be if it wasn‘t for suits?" chimed in a young lawâ€" yer. Before I married my wife I could listen to her voice for hours and hours."" ‘"And now ?" ‘‘Now I have to." ‘That‘s the last time,"‘ she said when he had departed, "that I‘ll ever try to be nice to a brute.‘"‘ But suicides are by far the most often met with among the drink selâ€" lersâ€"and persons in their employ, chimney sgweepers, butchers, fruitâ€" erers and musicians. "Clothes don‘t make the man,‘"‘ quoted a sage. Very busy with the good work, but no more efficient than the old reliazble Putâ€" nam‘s Corn Extractor, which cures corns and warts in one day. Fifty years use proves the merit of Putnam‘s. Use no other, 2. at all dealere. "‘I will confess to you,"‘ she said, ‘‘that I am older than I look. I will be thirtyâ€"one my next birthday."‘ ‘"‘Really ?‘ he replied. ‘"Hardly anyone would guess that you were more than about twentyâ€"nine.‘‘ Blood troubles yield to LIQUID SULPHUR ‘Does your wife talk in her sleep, major }*‘ ‘‘No, I talk in her sleep. It‘s the only chance I get," Buicide has also its high and its low rates of occurrence, though it appears in all professions. It is rare among the clergy and funcâ€" tionaries and just those classes which follow the healthiest occupaâ€" tion.. It is more often found among grocers, hardware dealers, drapers, coopers, polishers, toâ€" bacconists, lawyers‘ olerks _ and architects. But it is frequent amongst ‘"‘camelots,"‘ shop assistâ€" ants, cutlers, coiffeurs, domestic servants, costers, lawyers, doctors and chemists. Buicide and dighetes are two principal causes of death. Generalâ€" ly, it is only persons of a certain social position who are affected by this malady, such as functionaries, teachers, doctors, lawyers, â€"wine merchants, farmers and the clergy. The clergy are particularly subject. cutters, shop assistants, drivers, grooms and jockeys, newspaper venders and pavement merchants, printers, blacksmiths, messengers, chimney sweeps, barbers and musiâ€" cians. y Lord‘s Day Alliance Active. LIQUID SULPHUR cleansas the blood. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper, MRS. A. SAICH, of Cannington Manor, Sask., Writes:â€"‘ My brother sufâ€" fered severely from eczema. The sores were very extenâ€" sive, and burned like coals into his flesh. Zamâ€"Buk took out all the fire, and quickly gave him ease. Within three weeks of commencing with Zamâ€"Buk treatment, every sore had been cured." His Only Opportunity. Made Theso People. The Tactless One. Worse. Fact. Suitable for Mills, Manufacturing Plants, Printing Houses, Etc. 2 Wood Split Pulleys, 12% x 48 in. for 3 15§16 in. shaft. 1 Wood Split Pulley, 12% x 48 in for 2 15/16 in. shaft. 1 Wood Split Pulley, 12% x 28 in, for 3 7/16 in. shaft. 1 Wood Split Pulley, 10% x 36 in. for 8 7/16 in. shaft. Pulleys of smaller sizes and Shaftâ€" ing of various lengths and sizes to be sold at very low figures. Box 23, Wilson Publishing Co., Toronto. Pulleys & Shafting C ANCER, _ TUMORS, LUMPS, ETO., internal and external, cured â€"with. out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co., Limited. Collingwood. Ont GALL STONES, KIDNEY AND BLAD. der Stones, Kidney trouble, Gravel, Lumbago and kindred ailments positively cured with the new German remedy, "Sanol," price $1.50. Another new remedy for Diabetesâ€"Mellitus, and_ sure cure, is "Sganol‘s Antiâ€"Diabetes." Price $2.00 from druggists or direct. The Sanol Manufac turing Company of Canada, Limited. Winnipeg. Man. FOR SALEâ€"SILVER PATCHED FOXES, also dark reds. Wish to buy 100 pair of Mink for breeding purpores. G Bros.. R. R. No. 1, Strathroy, Ont. ELLIO’I’I"S BUSINESS COLLEGE, TOâ€" ronto. Canada‘s Popular Commerâ€" cial School. Magnificent Catalogue Afree. YY â€" Women:locally. Balary and Comâ€" mission. Make Five to Ten Dollars da‘g. spare time a.coegted. Zamples free. J. L. Nichols Co., Publishers, Torcnto, Canada. qTAMP COLLECTORSâ€"HKUNDRED DIFâ€" o ferent Foreign Btamps. Catalogue, Album, only Seven Cents. Marks Stamp Company, Toronto. “7 ANTED.â€"PERMANENT MEN OR Women:locally. Balary and Comâ€" COUNTRY WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR Sale in good Ontario town. Excellent opening for man of energy. Write Wilson Publishing Company, Toronto. Paw Knows Everything. Willieâ€"Paw, is man an animal ? Mawâ€"Yes, my son, most of them are brutes. â€" Pawâ€"You go to bed, Willie. F RUIT, 8TOCK. GRAIN AND DAIRYE Farmse in all sections of Ontstic Some snaps. S$. FRAKK WILSON & SONS3, 1 ELECTRIS BYNAMO 30 K.Wg7l1£ !B&TS, D.G., At a Very Reasonable Figure for Immediate Sale. Minard‘s Linimont Cures Carget in CoWs ‘‘There is one essential difference between the activities of a fireâ€" man and of a policeman.: ‘‘What is it I‘ ‘‘While the fireman runs out, the policeman ‘runs in."" ‘"‘There between man and ‘What "‘While H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Streat, Toronto. FACTORY BITES. WITH OR WITHOUR Railway _ trackage, in _ Toronto, Bramnton and other towna and oltles. Education. Fatherâ€"Well, what did you learn in school toâ€"day 1 H. W. DAWSON, Colborne St., Toronto. Johnnyâ€"Nothin‘", but I guess the teacher learned sumpin‘, & ___ day furs are received. & Shlipments hold separate on request. Fall price list now ready. Write for It. HIRAM JOHNSON LIMITED, ©494 St. Paul §t. Mail Dept. "C" Montreal. We are the oldest RAW FUR HOUSE as woll as the largest collectors of CANADIAN RAW FURS in Canada. That means larger experience, larger markets and a LARGER PRICE to you. Ship direct to us. Returns made same L1QUID SULPHUR=â€"cures ECZEMA. _ ym _ _q__ 5 s i & tos yys i S m s hes Etss e i esn C Jn | §4 _f- ind y w <hp slp sos > ts Bnag en epv e N Why we pay more for your 73 Adelaide St. West, TORONTO RAW FURS The Heart of a Piano is the Action. Insist on the "OTTO HIGEL" ESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES IN Brampton and a dozen other towns. NEWSPAPER FOR SALE. FOR SALE FOR SALE STAMPS AND COINS Pianoe Action ACENTS WANTED. FARMY FOR SALE The Difference. OR GENERATOR MISCELLANEOUS. EDUCATION.

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