The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, April 26, 1905, Image 3
I ^
I THE PULPIT.
a AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY
P BISHOP D. A. COODSELL.
|sg Subject: The Face of Christ.
H Brooklyn, N. Y.?A very large audi3?&.
^- ? ? T-.v,/.??r,/,lA Cnmlor tn
ence uiieu iue iiiuciua^ic ..
listen to Bishop D. A. Goodsell. His
subject was "The Face of Christ."
The text was irom II. Corinthians iv:6:
B "The glory of God in the face of Jesus
Christ." Bithop Goodsei? said in the
H course of his sermon:
Kg As you read the Bible both in the
H Old and New Testaments you are im
pressed with the great number of
times which the word "face* is used.
I When you travel in Eastern lands you
|i find that this word is used far more
tm often and in many different relations
I among the Eastern people than we our
selves are accustomed to use it.
This word face is used in referpnce
I to a man's whole character. 1 am told,
I everywhere in the East, and we have
a great many traces of it in the Bible:
I and now when we come to think of it
I isn't it true that we are accustomed
I to recognize each other more by the
I face than by any other one thing. Is
I it not wonderful that upon the few
I elements in the face, the forehead, the
H eyes, nose, mouth and chin there
19 should be such ar. infinite variety of
?9 expression stamped by the great Cre
ator?
~ ? ffonom 1 rnnviption amOHC
-Lxitrx c ao ? ^? _
us that the face will work out the
Inner character, so that whatever may
be the beginning of life -when we have
lived with ourselves a long time we
iwill be pretty apt to show upon our
faces what kind of a person we have
lived with. It is impossible for any
person to give way to avarice without
showing it on their face. If he had an
open face once it will change: and so
the man who gives way to the forces
of passion, whether he gives way to
lust or whether he gives way to drink,
or whether he gives way to appetite
for food, it will show out on his face.
We write upon our faces what we live
.with and no man can wear a mask so
completely that those who are wise in
these things are not able to read behind
the mask.
Now, what one is there among us
that has not desired again and again
to have lived when the face of Jesus
Christ could have been seen. I think
there is no devout soul that in his
trouble has not said, Oh. that I
could look into my Master's face. Oh,
that I could," live as the little children
did, "have rested my head against His
breast and have heard Him say to me
as He said to them, 'Suffer them to
come.'" ^
You can scarcely go into a Christian
home to-day where Christian education
I lias presided -where there is not at least
one or more representations of the
face of Jesus Christ. I have observed
according to our experiences, according
to our wants, we fasten upon the
representations of Jesus Christ's face
that are most satisfying to us, most
fitting. So that if we are under deep
penitence of sin, we are apt to have
the'face of the suffering Christ upon
the Cross, and if the sorrows of the
.world have burdened our hearts, we
twill carry there the face of the tbornfcrowned
Christ in oar homes. If we
fcave dwelt upon Christ in His
strength, in His power, in His resistance
to evil, in the calm majesty 4of
one who knows he is innocent, we
.Would most likely have the picture of
Christ before Pilate. From the days
of the Catacombs up to the present
time, men have been trying to put
Christ's face before humanity, and
;why? Because all souls in their greater
moments, in their spiritual moments,
and therefore in their religious moments,
would like to have Him brought
near oy. xney wouia use 10 nave miu
made more real. . .
. The best thing is to so carry Jesus
Christ in our heart that we sball see
'Him and behold the glory of Cod in
,the face of Jesus Christ.
. The actual picture must remain the
same. We may study it, we may unj
derstand its history. It is not at all
probable that any one is going to see in
a moment what it took the artist
years to produce, though this may happen.
But as we grow spiritually it is
possible for us by spiritual sight to
behold our Lord, to behold Him more
clearly as the years go on.
When we study this one word, the
(word face, we find that it stands related
to three great facts and to none
other that I know of, and these three
facts are, first, revelation, then inspiration
and finally reward. This is
exactly what the Apostle means by
this text, that he who studies the face
of Jesus Christ he who enlarges his
vision by spiritual imagination, will
have the revelation of the divine truth
<*ome to him. For do we not know that
Jesus came to reveal God to us, to reveal
God to a world in which the dim
eye of sin could but imperfectly see
Him. But the trouble is that our eyes
eee as we are educated to see. I have
often noticed while passing along the
street that a man is usually interested
in the trade he represents. If he
rwas a hatter, he looked at my hat; if
lie was a tailor he looked at my
?.clothes; if he was a shoemaker he
Oooked at my shoes; if he was a bootblack
he looked to see whether they
iwere muddy or not, and so our vision
is trained by what we are doing, by
,what we are thinking. If our eyes
are trained only to the things of time,
then all the beauty that we see is in
the things of time, but by using these
as stepping stones to something higher
and nobler, then we see by the power
of God's revelation that there is a
God here in this world, and that He is
Ruling the world in the interest of
Jesus Christ.
I believe that you would have
thought yourself victims of fate if you
had not been taught by Jesus Christ
doctrine of divine fatherhood. You
iwould have thought perhaps that this
;wor!d -was made by chance if you
had not seen Him standing in the
stern of the ship and saying to the
troubled waves, "Peace, be still." But
because He has come, because He has
passed through all the phases of our
life from infancy to maturity, because
we nas oeen xemptea, uecause ne suomitted
to -wrong in order that He
might do a great and holy work, because
He has given the most perfiect
example of what humanity ought to
be under all phases and circumstances,
because He is here and was God
manifested in the flesh, we. His brethren
in the creation, and we. His brethren
In the redemption of the cross,
know that we are tear to God, for
God so loved the world that He gave
His only begotten Son to die for us.
jjjj I have to travel a good deal in my
iwork, as you know. Very often I wake
oarly in the morning, and lift the curtain
of my sleeping car that I may
see where we are, and what the prospects
are. Sometimes it is clouded,
sometimes it is clear. There are pools
in Ihft HneirJ-a tha frnntc nr
JU liiV Uiivnv-J uvoiuv kuv V?
perhaps we are running alongside the
lake and I look at the lake and out
there I can see things mirrored. It
has been a great pleasure to me sometimes
to pick out the stars. Why there
is Orion and there is Sirius, there Is
the big dipper and there is Jupiter and j
there is Venus, the morning star, and
there is Mars. I didn't have to look
up. 1 looked down and saw it reflected.
And then I would see the round orb
- . A T 1,1 coo what
Of tne mora aiiu *
phase of the moon was on by looking
down as I could by looking above.
Then I have seen the wind set the
glassy surface into waves, and it would
be only belts of broken light. That is
the way it is in human society. We
are looking down upon the world which
reflects human weaknesses, bumau sin,
human passions. There isn't a glassy
place to reflect the glory of Christ in.
There are all kinds of passions at work
and the best that we can 6ee is the
ruffled surface of humanity, but I see
bars of light that are on the surface,
then, wben I look up I see the glorious
Christ.
Now, finally, the glory of God in tbev
face of Jesus Christ is revealed, not 1
only as a revelation, not only for inspiration.
but for reward. How full
the New Testament is of this idea that ;
the sight of Jesus Christ shall be the I
reward of the saint and the Old Testa- I
ment. too: "My eyes shall see the !
King in His beauty,*' "We shall be sat- I
isfied when we wake in His likeness," j
"We shall see Him and know Him as
He is." How many more passages does
your memory bring up out of your I
religious education that teach this doc- !
triDe?
We wbo are here tbis morning, if
we believe in God we shall not only see !
those who have gone before, wbo have j
been in our homes, but the great am
hition of a devoted soul win De grau- i
fied?we shall see God.
blessed are the pure in heart, for :
they shall see God. According to the
measure of our inward purity do we i
seem to see God here. When we shall, j
by the washing of regeneration and .
the renewal of our hearts and the ,
sanctification of our spirit, until we j
can say the Lord hath made me whiter |
than snow. We walk with Him, our |
hand is in His hand and our head is j
on His bosom. He carries us when ;
we are weak, as a shepherd carries the \
lamb. He heals our disease. He com- i
forts ue in our sorrows. He is in our .
homes when we are there, in our shops !
when we are there, in the streets when j
we are walking, on the sea when we ;
are sailing. I
We shall see Christ, not in His hu- '
mniation, but in His exaltation; not j
as a babe in the manger, but as a king I
of the universe; not as humbled be- j
fore Pilate, but as ruling all things j
and judging all things.
I believe in heaven because I believe
in God. I do not know where It is, I !
think that I am convinced that It is a .
condition rather than a place. This is j
shown by the parable of Dives and j
Lazarus, one in paradise and one in ;
L n/wilrJ tnlk flProSK the !
JiCll, JCl IUCJ vvu>? ??? ,
gulf. That must have been moral
rather than physical. But I do not
know that if God is everywhere, my
soul shall soar through space and find i
Him everywhere. It may be that j
heaven is everywhere, as God is everywhere
to the devout soul.
Getting at Life's Values.
Things that tome easily are not of
much value. Vacation time does not ]
often record noteworthy accomplish- J
ment. It is when the pressure of life i
is at its highest, perhaps close to the i
breaking point, that results usually |
count for most. That time that we are
looking forward to, when this present i
grinding pressure will be off and we j
shall have an opportunity to do something,
is not likely to record nearly
as good work as we are doing under
friction and stress. Those particles
of carbon might have been nothing
more than coal or graphite if consuming
heat and enormous pressure had
not crystallized them into a diamond.
If such a weight is just now upon us,
let us rejoice at the opportunity we
have for getting at the precious things
of life.?S. S. Times.
Preparation For Work.
The morning is the gate of the day,
and should be well guarded with
prayer. It is one of the threads on
which the day's actions are strung,
and shduld be well knotted with devotion.
If we felt more the majesty of I,
life, we should be more careful of its |
mornings.
He who rushes from his home to his i
business, and waiteth not to worship, I
is foolish, as though he had not put on I
his clothes or cleaned his face, and as
unwise as though he dashed into battle
without arms or armor.
Be it ours to bathe in the softly flowing
river of communion with God before
the heat of the wilderness and
tho burden of the way begin to oppress
os.?Charles H. Spurgeon.
The Bible.
Alone it has civilized whole nations.
It is the one book that can fully lead
forth the richest and deepest and
sweetest things in man's nature. Read
all other books?philosophy, poetry,
history, fiction?but if you would refine
the judgment fertilize the reason,
wing the imagination, attain unto the
finest womanhood or the sturdiest
manhood, read this book, reverently
and prayerfully, until its truths have
dissolved like iron into the blood. If
you have no time; make time and read.
The book Daniel Webster placed under
his pillow when dying is the book
all should carry in the hand while
living.?Newell D. Hillis,
Worth the While.
Not a single effort made for truth
and right, but is worth the while and J
trouble We have no need to question
"How." "When," or "Where." It is
enough to know that for every bit of
work faithfully done?for every pure
and holy thought, generous deed and
4-K r\r*r\ i o or* lmffl ll i T1 f* fP
(vlliUiy WU1U, IUUC AO UU
ward, known or unknown, seen or unseen,
and far exceeding the value of
our effort and labor.?Scottish Reformer.
A Mockery.
To be dishonest during the week, to i
defraud one's creditors, to rent prop- j
erty for saloons or brothels, to water !
stock and sell the water to the public,
to live in sin and then to go to church
on Sunday to worship, or to pretend to
worship at home, is mockery. If
there is one thing the Bible declares,
it is that God abhors such worship.
He must be wQrshiped in truth.?Sunday-School
Times. f
? - i
The Cheeriest Music. i
We can set our deeds to the music .
of a grateful heart, and seek to round j
our lives into a hymn?the melody of !
which will be recognized by all who
come in contact with us^ and the !
power of which shall not be evanescent,
like the voice of the singer, but
perennial, like the music of the
spheres.?Wm. M. Taylor.
The Key and the Lock.
" ' "
.Let, tflen, our prayers in; iuc
that opens the day, and the lock that
shuts the night," and also from morning
to night our staff and stay in all
our labors, enabling us to go cheerfully
up to the mount of God.-'Canon
Farrar.
I TCew York City.?Blouse jackets made
; "with postillion effects are among the
; latest the season has to offer and are
I exceedingly chic and fashionable. This
; one is made in box pleats that give ex
ceptionally good lines to the figure, and
1 _
BLOUSE JACKET.
is shown in chiffon broadcloth -with
vest and cuffs of velvet, revers and
turnover cuns or neavy jace, u combination
that always is satisfactory
and effective. The design, however,
is appropriate for all seasonable suitings,
and when velvet is too heavy, silk
or any contrasting material that may
be preferred can be substituted. The
postillion with basque extension is separate
and can be used or omitted as
preferred.
The jacket consists of the fitted lining,
fronts, back, vest and revers,
which are stitched to the fronts, their
under edges being extended to give the
stole effect. Both fronts and back are
box pleated and are joined to the belt.
The 6leeves are arranged over linings,
which are faced to form the cuffs, and
ere full above the elbows, with rollover
flare cuffs that give an exceedingly
A Late Design 1
i r"
I
i: (
smart touch, but which can be reversed,
as shown in tbe small view,
whenever preferred. The postillion
and basque are attached to the belt.
The quantity of material required for
4V..TV f !r?A if? flTTA i- o **rl C f TI' ?i"n fr.
IUC 1UC\1I UUi QldjKZ SO U ? C JMiUO
one, four and one-half yards twentyseven,
or two and one-half^yards fortyfour
inches wide, with or. and threejfourth
yards of all-over lace and one
and one-half yards of velvet to make
as illustrated, and two and one-half
yards of silk for lining.
Kid Camrltafi.
In a fashionable restaurant a pretty
girl with brown eyes was seen wearing
a delicate gray costume to perfection.
The dress was of soft chiffon velvet,
and the blouse was made in the quaint
bib effect and worn over a guimpe of
gathered mousseline in ivory white.
This was pretty rather than surprising.
The accompanying hat was both.
It was a quaint little tricorne, covered
with tile gray chiffon velvet. Where
the crown was caught up there were
white eainelias?camelins made of kid!
rue sort quainy or un? kiu ienus useu
admirably to the purpose, quite wonderfully
expressing the texture of this
always interestiug and now modish
blossom. At a reception a notable hat
in bright red was seen. Its brim
soared high at the left, and it was
trimmed with a lar^e shaded red ostrich
plume, which hung off the back
over the hair. The peculiar part of it
was the three rows of very large red
Deads tnat surrounded tne crown. Tiie |
finish of these beads imitated that of
a pearl. Though not absolutely new. )
many turban brims are made entirely
of rows of rather large beads^
I
Again the Shirt Waist*
Evidently the shirt waist suit Is to
be as good as ever. It is certainly trim i
and smart and positively aisimguism;u
as compared with skirt and waists totally
unrelated to each other. In
white lawn there are dainty affairs as
fetching as they will be suitable. Fine
tucks, Valenciennes lace, embroidery
and French knots are noted in the
decoration of these crisp suits. There
are cape-yoke effects and there are
straight up-and-down effects. The
skirts show only enough trimming to
keep them in countenance with the
waist
This Hat ! Stylish.
A round black maline hat is one of
the mushroom order. This hat was
built up enormously in the back, tilting
it far forward, and inclining it
slightly to the left on the wearer's
forehead. The under part of the brim
on the back and sides was filled in
with a profusion of primroses in many !
tones of pink and dull reds. The flowers
were without foliage, and were
crushed together in a mass of glowing
color.
Thla In Silk Tear.
This is a silk year, and ribbons of
great beauty are used lavishly on the
new hats. As a rule they are of the
softest and most pliable silks, and are
put on, not in stiff bows, but folded
and crushed into rosettes. Several
tones of a color are used in these rosettes,
giving a flower-like effect.
Tucked Blouse or Shirt Waist.
Dainty waists made of fine lawm
and tucked in lingerie style are among
the most attractive of the season and
are shown in many variations. This
one is eminently simple and can be
laundered with ease at the same time
that it ie smart and attractive. As illustrated,
the material is Persian lawn,
the tie and belt being of pale blue,
but tbe waist is adapted both to similar
thin materials and to all those
suited to tucks, whether of silk, wool
or cotton. The sleeves are quite novel
and are tucked at the wrists where
they are joined to the straight cuffs.
The waist i9 made with fronts antl
back, tbe back being plain, simply being
drawn down in gathers at the
>y May Manton.
J j
waist line, while the fronts are tucked I
at the shoulders aud are finished with
a regulation box pleat. The sleeves
are in shirt waist style, finished with,
openings which are cut beneath the
tucks and finished invisibly. The collar
consists of the stock and the tie,
which are made complete and finished
at the centre back.
The quantity of material required for
the medium size is three and seveneighth
yards tweuty-one, three and
three-fourth yards twenty-seven, or
two yards forty-four inches wide, with
one^fourth yard of bias silk for tie,
HOW TWO BEAUTll
PEL\
Female Weakness
ru^ Cures
*++? + +*?? *?+? + ??+?++* <
4
J Mrs. Mable Bradford. 13 Church atreel
4 lington, Vt.., Secretary Whittier Oratorio
Jety, writes:
i "Peruna is certainly a wonderful me
?for the ills of women. I have he;
* spoken of in the highest praise by
J and certainly my experience is well w
t of a good word.
i "I began to have severe paihs aero
jba.ck about a year ago, brought on
1 cold, and each imbsequent month br
t me nain and distress.
" Your remedy Was prescribed, and th
(it acted upon my system was alma
?good to be true. I certainly have reg
my health and strength, and I no 1
suffer periodical pains and extreme
; tude."?Mable Bradford.
Thousands of Women Cured Every
Year by Correspondence?This is
What Dr. Hartman Proposes to
. Do For You Without Charge.
Women who suffer should read the evidences
presented here. We have thousands
"C fpnin orratpfnl fripnHs who tell the
same story.
Half the ills that are peculiarly woman's
own are of a catarrhal character. Female
weakness was not understood for many
years.
Dr. Hartman deserves the credit of having
determined its real character. He has
Strange Furniture.
A man living at Queensbury not only
uses his coffin as a piece of household
furniture, but he has also a grave made
In the local churchyard headed by a
gravestone on which his name is set
out in conventional style. Underneath
is the line, "Not dead, but waiting."
One man, at Tong, near Bradford,
kept his Sunday clothes in his coffin,
nnd another, who ate porridge at breakfast.
used his coffin as a meal bin.
Some years ago a Keighley man kept
butterfly specimens in his coffin.?London
Mail.
' They Compromised.
"Will you be my wife, Guenivere?" ]
"No. Charles. 3 think far too much
;>f you for that. I still want your
friendship. Let me be "your stenographer.
That is the only way in which I
can submit to man's dictation."?Cincinnati
Commercial-Tribune.
Btatx or Ohio, Citt of Toledo, I ..
T ~ f W*
JjUtAD VUU.11I. j
Frank J. Cheney make oath that he is
senior partner of thu firm of P. J. Cheney &
Co., doing business! in the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay the sum of one hundbed dollabs
for each and every case of catabbh
that cannot be cured bytheus# of Hall's j
Catabbh Cdbe. Fbank J. Cheney.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
. ?>? j presence, this 6th day of Decern?
Ibeal. f ber.A.D., 1886. A.W.Gleason,
' ?' Notary Public.
Hall'sCatarrh Cure is taken internally, and
acts directly on the blood and muoous sur- j
faoea of the system. Send for testimonials,
free. F. J. Cheney 4 Co., Toledo, 0.
Sbld by all Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Would Shocb Her.
"Papa, what would you say if Mr.
Featbertop should ask your permission
to marry me?"
"Put your fingers in your ears, my
daughter, and I will rehearse a few of
the remarks I shall probably make" if
he ever does."?Chicago Tribune.
i
St.
Known the world over
promptest, surest cure
V ??
I The one without Talves.
JOHI
96-HO Cex*
r
i
FUL WOMEN ESCA
fIC CATARRH BY I
5 Is Usually Pelvi
Catarrh Wherev<
- ^ ^ ? *** *** ***+*+*<
* made catarrh and catarrhal dis!
eases, including pelvic catarrh, a
Kfe ]0Dg study.
Peruna cures catarrh, whether of the
Eel vie organs or any other organ of the
uraan body.
Pe-ru-na, a Natural Beantifier.
Peruna produces clean; mucous membranes,
the basis of facial symmetry and a
perfect complexion.
The women have not been slow to discover
that a course of Peruna will do more
tovrard restoring youthful beauty than all
the devices known to science.
Many & girl has regained her faded
beauty, many a matron has lengthened the
days of her comely appearance by using
Peruna. _*
Our Richest Universities.
The Leland Stanford, Jr., University
has the greatest endowment of them
all. Its productive funds amount to
$20,000,000 par value. Girard College
comes next, with $17,715,000; then
Harvard, with ?16,755,000, ana Columbia,
"with $15,347,000. All others are
in seven figures instead of eight. And
the Stanford endowment is the gift of
a single individual or estate,' instead
of an accumulation of gifts, as in the
eases of the other colleges and universities,
excepting only Girard.?Boston
Herald. '" *
The Royal Military College at Bangkok
now accommodates 300 cadets.
Pox hunting seems to be on the wane
in England. N.Y.?14.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, soften the gums, reduces Inflammation,allays
pain, cures wind colic, 25c.a bottle.
In 1890 the last instance of boiling to
death took place in Persia.
J do not believe Piso's Cure for Consumptlonhas
unequal for coughs and colds.?Joan
F.Boyib, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1900.
Copper money in France is being replaced
by aluminum.
32 YEARS SEL
IWe are the largest manufacturers of1
ingto con:
3o. 858. Combhtttloo Baejr with crtr* 65 styles of
stick seat ?ntl Ij in. rubber tires. Price #>??
complete $?S.OO. As good as tells ,
for (30 more. TSER. Bat
DKhirt Carriatf* (D> Htrnm
Jacobs
;?.vhe Rheumatism and N<
ia Ace
GENEF
ABSOLUTELY SAFE
Accepted ty Insurance Companiei
Generators put in on trial
Catalogue sent f
Please slate your needs a
Iron Pipe Fittii
SUPPLIES FOR STE/
U SIMM03V?
tre Street,
PED " 1
(ID OF PE-RD-NA. j
ic Catarrh. Pe
ir Located. j
edding, 3134 B Clifton Place, St. Louii, j;
;r trying many different medicineg ! j
i to health, that Parana was ?: the ];
ich could be depended upon. I be- ;;
when I was in a decline, induced ;;
ikness and overwrought nerves.
feel stronger during the first week ;
and my health improved daily until ;
irfect health and enjoy life as I nev- [
(."?lizzie Bedding. I'
In Peruna these women find a promp4
and permanent cure.
Thousands of testimonials to this effect
are received by Dr. Hartman every year.
The good that Peruna has accomplished ia
this class of cases can scarcely be overestimated..,
< | If you do not derive prompt andj;
11 satisfactory results from the use of! >
|| Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hart- J!
# man, giving a full statement of your!
11 case, and he will be pleased to give; ;
< | you his valuable advice gratis
$ Address Dr. Hartman, President of|;
The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, <\
!! Ohio. All correspondence - neld strictly J >
<! confidential. ][
Not Fast Black.
Esther has very black eyes. One day
she came in crying, her face all
streaked with tears and dirt
"Oh, Esther, dear," cried her motheq
"what a dirty face!"
"Well," answered the tot betwee?
her sobs, "I dess your face would M
dirty if you had to cry, 'tause you ha#
black eyes, too."-'Little Chronicle.
?
In summer time the air used for vear
tilating the House of Commons in Lowdon
passes through blocks of ice." -
J&s MOTHER CRAY'S
SWEET POWDERS
ff FOR CHILDREN,
" -L A Certain Oan far FgrerfahaM*
nMs Constipation, He
Sf ' Stomach Tro?Me?? TMtUai
' t Disorders, ud De#tr??
Mother Bruy. Worma. Th^BreitkiiBCaMjr
Now York Citj. A. a. OLMSTED, LlRoy. K T?
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vehicles and harness in the world sell- fl
;umers exclusively. I
Ho. SIT. Canopy Top Surrey. Price atopic*
1 for It. $T8. Am food M tell* for $3S more. (i
Mfg. Co., IlUhtrt, IndUunt | ^
Oil I
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AND ECONOMICAL. |
s without charging extra premium.
I. Satisfaction guaranteed
ree on application.
nd we will send estimates.
ngs and Valves.
IM, WATER AND GAS.
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