Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, May 23, 1900, Image 1
i
FORT MILL TIMES.
VOL. IX. FORT MILL, S. C., WEDNESDAY, MAY 23,1900. NO. 10.
101 tew OF THE
Rare Spectacular Celestial Phenomenon.
?
TO OCCUR ON THE 28TH INST.
The Path and Duration of Totalltv? I
Where Observations Will be Made
bv Scientists.
Veiling ton, r>. C., Special.?The
forthcoming total eclipse of the sun on
May 28. is attracting world-wide attention.
smd astronomers everywhere have
long been making preparations for observing
and photographing the phenomenon.
Besides making the usuai
time observations, interest largely centers
in photographing the corona, the
coronal streamers, the spectra of the
chromosphere, and particularly the eel
ehratcd flash spectrum appearing both
at beginning and end of totality. Fortunately
it will be posible to witness
the phenomenon from many sections of
the United States.
The Johns Hopkins University expe
iitions to observe the solar eclipse will
work in unison with the United States
Naval Observatory and under the supervision
of the latter. The observa?ories
of the Naval Observatory will be
divided among five parties. At Pinchurst.
N. C.. there will be four astronomers
from Washington, under the direction
of Professor Skinner; the Johns
Hopkins party from the Coast and
tioedetic Survey, under Professor G. A.
Bauer. At Griflin. Ga., there will he
one Naval Ohsjcrvatory party, consisting
of Dr. U. S. Mitchell, of Columbia
University; Professor Henry Crew and
Dr. Tutall. of the Northwestern University
of Virginia, and L. E. Jewell, of
the Johns Hopkins University; Professor
S. J. Brown. Astronomical Director
of the Naval Observatory, will conduct
observations at Barnosville. Ga.
rw~ ? ? - -i ? "
i .it wucsfs aiici universities or mo
country will be well represented. Expeditions
will be dispatched by Harvard.
Vale, Columbia. Princeton, the
University of Pennsylvania, the University
of Virginia, the University of
Chicago, etc.
On May "S the circular shadow of the
moan cast by the sun upon the earth,
and about eighty miles in diameter,
will conie sweeping across the American
continent from New Orleans to
Cape Henry. Along the centre of the
path traveled by this swiftly moving
shadow t he sun will bo completely hid- I
den for a period of about two minutes. '
More than forty miles away, on either
tide of the track the eclipse will be
partial, not total.
\n eclipse of the sun that will be visible
can occur only when the moon is
new. At that time she passes exactly
bet .veen the earth and the sun. According
to the calculations of Professor
laimslen, the round black shadow
in out of space same time after sunrise
on ttie morning of May 28. This
gigantic arm will come into contact
with the earth somewhere near the
Re villa Gigedo islands in the Pacific
ocean. With tremendous velocity the
shadow will rush toward the mainland
and will enter Mexico, near Oorrientes.
at a speed of more than 100 miles a
minute. In eight minutes it will have
crossed the Rocky Mountains, and by
7:SO central or 8:30 eastern time it will
liave crossed the Gulf and entered
Mexico. Then on it will pass, over its
selected path, until it Is lost again in
space.
The period of totality of the eclipse
varies at different points along the
track. At the Rocky Mountains the
spectacle will last but about thirty seconds.
and at New Orleans the period
will have been lengthened thirty-seven
seconds. At Union Point, Green
county. Gu. the centre of the path for
the United States, the time of tality
will be niney-two seconds, while those
who are at the Atlantic coast, just
south of the city of Norfolk, will be
able to continue their observations for
lor, seconds
Agulnaldo Heard F-rom.
Manila, by Cable.?-A proclamation
purporting to have been issued by Aguinaldo,
and dated May 14, from Polillo
Island, one of the Philippine group
<-ast of Luzon, is circulating in Manila.
It says the commission appointed by
President McKinley was appointed
without, the authorization of Congress
and that hence it can not treat officially
Ft urges the Filipinos not to surrender
their arms at tbo instigation of the
commission, and on promises which
Congress may not ratify, and ho also
urges the Filipinos to enthusiastically
welcome the comnriesiou when it arrives
in the towns and provinces, asking
them boldly for the form of government
they most desire, as the Americans
permit freedom of speech
Rev. Robert Wood Barnwell, of
Selmn. A1 was elected Bishop Coadjutor
bv the Kpiscopal Council at Mo- '
bile. Ala. '
*
k I
PENSIONS FOR PATRIOTS
The Amount to be Received by the
Different Clashes.
Twelve dollars and thirty cents is the
allowance of seven thousand and fiftyone
pensioners of the State of South
Carolina. This is the allowance not
for a month, but for twelve months.
It is what the State allows its pensioners,
soldiers of the Ix>st Cause, who
are more than 60 years of age and who
liavn vw%? 4 1 ?iAft ~ * ?
V uut mvi r iiia-ll f IW U ycttl IIIcome,
or widows of old soldiers who
may be similarly circumstanced. Old
soldiers who were wounded and who
have an income not in excess of $250 a
year are in the same class. Then there
is another class known as Class B,
which numbers 302 and these are each
to get $16.40 for the year. Class A,
which is made up of those totally helpless,
receive $72 a year and it numbers
forty-eight.
This is how the $100,000 appropriated
by the State of South Carolina for
its indigent Confederate pensioners Is
distributed. It is a great deal for the
State to do for its soldiers, according
to the views of he economic members of
the General Assembly.but it shows Iiqw
little there Is in the pensions for each
of the poor soldiers and widows who
feel constrained to apply to the State
for which they fought. It is a charity |
which is not asked for by all who de- j
serve it. For many years the old soldiers
felt a delicacy about asking for
the pension the State offered. Now that
delicacy is passing away to a certain j
extent and the pension lists this year .
are six hundred larger than they were ;
last year. The increases anil the I
strength of the lists are largely notice- j
able In the border counties on tho
North Carolina lin?>
It Is a hard matter to confine the
lists to those who are striitly entitled
to the benefits of he pension appropriation.
The county boards, made up of
old soldiers, have to be relied upon to
a large extent, in fact practically entirely.
If frauds creep in It cannot be
the, fault of the Stute boarfl, as the
greatest publicity is given to the lists
that are approved and circumstances
show that most of the counties are extremely
rigid in their regulations and
examinations.
The checks for the pension money j
were made out Friday. The rolls for j
Chesterfield and Florence Coonty are
not exactly straightened out and information
has heeu solicited on them;
and no roll or return has even yet been
received from Charleston. The State
board estimated the Charleston list to
hi* nhmit thr* cum a it loo* *"* *"
bin. of course, can send no money to
the pensioners in Charleston until the
approvaed list is received here and
checked up. The cause of the delay in
Charleston is not explained.
Winthrop Commencement.
Following is the programme of the
commencement exercises of Winthrop
College: On Friday evening, June 1,
the Winthrop Chapter. United Daughters
of the Confederacy, will hold a
regular meeting. An interesting programme
lias been arranged, hut by far
tlie most enjoyable feature will bo the
annual addrc-s hv Gen. Miliedge L.
Bon ham, of Anderon. On Sunday
morning the sermon before the Y. M.
C. A. will he preached and on Sunday
evening the baccalaureate sermon will
lie delivered by Bisho Duncan, of the
Methodist Church. Monday evening the j
literary societies will uuia meir joint
celebration; Tuesday morning: is to be
devoted to the annual concert and reception.
The alumnae meeting cornea
on Wednesday morning and on Wednesday
evening the culmination of it
all, the address before the graduating
class by Mr. J. C. Hemphill, of Charleston,
and the awarding of diplomas and
certificates.
A Progressive Daily,
The Columbia State is just now
showing commendable enterprise in its
news service, which is full and complete
in every detail. Its editorial utterances
are always vigorous and locid,
and while one may differ ever so widely
from its opinions on matters concerning
the general welfare of the
State and nation, we are bound at all
times to respect its utterances for
their candor and fairness. The State
is a truly great paper, always alive and
progressive, and is doing much to ad
vance South Carolina's industrial and
other interests.
Wants A5sistance.
Washington. D. C., Special.?In accordance
with the request of Attorney
General Griggs, the judiciary committee
of the House of Representatives
considered means of dealing with the
Neely ease and like offences arising in
Cuba. I lip need <1 action was explained
by the attorney general In a letter
to Chairman Kay of the committee.
Strikers (Irow Desperate.
St. Ixmis, Special.?With the suspension
of negotiations the strikers and
their sympathizers are growing desthoir
sympathizers are growing desperato.
lip to the present time tho
shotting has been done by t.he Transit
employes or officers, but the strikers
took a hand in this game today. A
raotorraon on the Isaclede Avenue line,
named J. R. Richardaon. was shot in
the head between Grand and Theresa
avenues, dragged from his ear and bru.
tully beaten. A special officer on the
same car was disarmed and beaten into
insensibility. Patrolman Ku.ton wat
shot In the haok of the head while acting
as a guard on Jefferson avenue car,
-a air gun being employed
SOUTHERN PRESBYTERIANS.
Much Interest Being Manifested in
Their Meeting.
Atlanta. Ga.. Special.?The commissioners
to the Southern Presbyterian
General Assembly, which is holding
its thirty-ninth annual session in the
Central Presbyterian church, of this
city, met for the first business session
Friday. The attendance was larger
than Thursday, and an active Interest
was shown in all the proceedings, not
only by the 200 commissioners, but a
large number of visiting members and
laymen of the Presbyterian Church,
officially connected with the Assembly
and many resident Presbyterians. The
day s sessions opened with devotional
exercises, after which the transaction
of routine hllslnosK wn..- Iinixnn
Clerk Alexander read the committee
report, which had been appointed by
Ine Moderator. The personnel of the
committees is considered very important,
as much of the work of the
Assembly will be directed by them.
1 he committees on records for each
State were named as follows: Alabama,
Byron Clark, tiro. Stevenson;
Arkansas, \Y. T.' Walter. .1. M. Carothers;
Florida. It. A. Hardin, P. McGregor;
Georgia, H. S. Brown. S. D.
Reynolds: Kenturkv .1 H swntm I
M. C. Moore: Memphis, R. A. Hrown, |
A. E. Dimmork; Mississippi, V. R.
Gaston. CJ. W. Taylor; Missouri. T.
I). Latimer, D. McCarr; Nashville.
\V. IJ. Shoemaker, .T. .1. Wood; North
Carolina, Dugald Monroe, George
Hartiield; South Carolina, J. F. Lloyd,
H. L. Money; Texas, J. S. Anderson,
W. 11. Mitchell; Virginia, T. T.
Wade. I). M. Killani.
Interest was intense as the stated
rlerk read the overtures from the
Synods and Presbyteries of the South.
The overtures were referred to the
proper committees and constitute the
work which will come before the Assembly.
The Presbytery of Suwanee, Fla.,
protested against the "spectacular ami
theatrical features" of children wearing
fancy costumes in the exercises to
be held on Children's Day, May 27.
A time was set apart for raising
funds foi foreign mirslonarv
work. The question of divorce and
re-marriage will be a leading one before
the Assembly. The Synod of
Alabama and the Presbyteries of Memphis
and Norfolk sent, ill overtures
asking for definite Church laws, governing
the re-marriage of divorced
people.
The question of salaries for secretaries
of the executive committees will
be an important one, many overtures
being filed asking that no increase he.
made in them. On the adoption of a
new hymn book, there were overtures
strongly protesting against a change
this year, it being claimed that the expense
will be too great.
Hester's Cotton Report.
New Orleans, Special.?Secretary
1 Hester's weekly New Orleans cotton
exchange statement shows that for the
260 days of the season that have
elapsed, the aggregate movement into
sight is behind the 260 days of last
year 2,008,000 bales and behind the
I same days year before last 2,071,000.
The amount, brought into sight, during
j the past, week has been 56,780, against
68,157 for the seven days ending this
late last year. The total movement
for the 260 days from September 1 to
date is 8 681,198, against* 10.689,406 last
year. The movement, since September
1 shows receipts at all United
States ports 6,444,610, agHlnst 8.139.685
last year; overland across the Mississippi.
Ohio and Potomac rivers to
Northern mills and Canada. 1,116,368.
against 1.21 4.268; interior stocks under
September 1st. 54,331, against 265,002;
Southern mil! takings, 1.171,851
gainst 1.070,451.
Presbvterlans at St Louis.
St. Louis. Mo., special.?The 112th
annual session of the. Presbyterian
General Assembly, the law-making
body of that Church, began thf day
at the Washington and f'ompton Avenue
Presbyterian church. Nearly 1.000
commissioners and delegates attended.
Thf? C^ftfiiAn AXL'inir to ?
ters pending. probably will occupy a
fortnight.
Brevit'es.
Three municipal ice plant* are projected
at New York to meet the raise
in price by the Ice Trust
Rev. Dr. Henry Granjohn. of Baltimore.
bis been appointed by cho Pope
Bishop of ^ueson. Arizona.
After shooting at his wife and missine
her. Henrv Simmon- Rrmon
Me., shot his daughter nod then killed
himself.
Dr. Johannes Trojan, editor of the
comic-satrical weekly. Kladderadatsch,
arrived ait New York ' .; . week from
Bremen.
Probably fatal in jailed were inflicted
upon Jacob HarneU. a nonunion
carpenter, at Chicago 111.
Thursday night by strikers.
BILL ARP AND M GERMS."
He Differs With the Doctors About
Bactilli.
BUT IS OPEN TO CONVICTION.
Test Being Made by Doctors to Prove
That Mosquitoes Produce MalariaOther
natters.
"Prove all things and hold fast that
which is good." Science is doing that,
! hltt ft conme ^ 1? ?
I wuv *v o\.utuo i w uiC lliUt UH' IUUUVI11
j doctors attach too much importance
to a cerm theory. They are trying to
I cure all sorts of diseases by exterminating
germs, microbes, bacteria ami
other invisible infusoria. Maybe they
were not intended to be exterminated
but are a part of the economy of nature.
There are botts in a horse's
stomach and wolves in a cow's back
and fleas on a dog for some useful
purpose, and it may bo that these invisible
germs are a necessary part of
our organism. We eat them in food
and drink fbcin in water and breathe
J them in the air, but. still I reckon
there arc a poisonous, infectious kind
that do produce disease and pestilence.
I was ruminating about this from having
read in a London paper an account
of the experiment now being made by
the British'Medical Society to discover
the true cause of malaria in the
Pontine marshes that for centuries,
has proved a slow and certain death to
the poor peasantry who work thcro
i and have to work there to making a
j living. These Campagnean marshes
i lie adjacent to Rome and cover a terj
ritory twenty-flve miles long and ten
I miles wide and are wonderfully productive,
giving three crops a year, but
the malaria soon pales and sickens the
strongest men, and they have to stop
j their work and go to the hills to die.
To discover and remove the cause has
( been the problem of the ages, 'l hreo
hundred years before Christ these
| marches were solid land and the Api
plan way wag built upon It. Slowly
! and surely the water encroached upon
j the land and submerged it, destro.v
ing the Appian way, the aqueducts
' and arches. Julius Caesar and Aui
gustus Caesar spent immense sums to
! drain them, but without avail. They
were finally given up to the labor of
the slaves, and Pliny tells of one man,
Cecllius Claudius, who owned 4,110 of
them, all males, who worked there
and were not allowed to marry. Their
n riinl fn in ? oo in n?nt?h rv.. * ?? P-11
VI uv i MIVV, " tuj IU ??\?irv UUl a Ul in lliu
and die. About 125 years ago Pope
Pius VI made another effort to drain
tho marshes but Jailed, and since then
all efforts and all hope has been abandoned.
Hut now a new theory comes tip before
the scientific school of medicine
and has agitated the medical savants
all over the world. It is claimed that
a malarial climate does not produce
mosquitoes but that, mosquitoes produce
mnliria. and it is their hites or
etings and suction of the blood of the
peasantry and thereby inoculating
them with poison and producing malaria
that eventually wastes the life
away. This theory has found many
strong advocates in L>ondon and Paris
and Berlin, and now they are preparing
to prove it. The Knglish government
is having a wire gauze house
built, and it is to be placed in the middle
of the Pontine marshes, and two
Bngliah physicians have volunteered
to live In it for a year or more and
test the effect of the climate secure
from the mosquito. Just think of
that! Living in a wire gauze house
right in the midst of the most noxious
miasmatic climate in the worid, and
all for.the sake of science and humanity.
If thoy prove their theory then
they will cease to use quinine for the
malaria hut build wire houses and
wear wire cowls or hoods over their
heads and faces and .fence out the
mosquitoee and turn their next attention
to exterminating them. They say
it is a big thing, financially, for there
are two million acres in those marshes
and will be worth if they succeed
a thousand dollar* an acre, and
that makes two thousand million dollars
for Rome and the pope.
Hut still I am dubious. I don't believe
the mosquito introduces malaria
into the human system. His proboscis
draws out blood but nuts nre
cious little in The germ theory lias
become a scientific fad and has not
yet been proven. The doctors all
went mad about Pasteur and his inoculating
virus, but that has subsided
and we never hear of it now. Kolas
are too ready to believe any new
thing. Appendicitis raised a mighty
rumpus for a white and every sick man
imagined he had it, and it must be
cut off, but the disease is now doubted
and the use of the knife almost abandoned.
Just so folks take up with
new doctrines of polities and religion.
Dr. Vance, of Nashville, said not ioug
ago that if a shrewd, smart man with
a lively tongue was to declare that it
was necessary for salvation that a
man should Jump off the roof of a
house onto the pavement> he would
And followers who would be jumping
all over tbo country breaking* their
arms and legs and necks on this new
road to be>aven. What upon earth
these Mormon elderH and proselyters
expect to accomplish is a mystery to
me, and I am amazed that any person
with common sense can lie fooled
by them. They ought to be scourged
?-d out of this country.
Speaking of germs, a philosophic
friend writes that the doctors have
TAILOR-MADE
JJ ^
BOYS' SPRING SUITS
_ T. B. BEIX "The
Xprnmptlr procured. OR KOFEE. S - lu 1 '*
1 ft or photo fur fr*?e rej>"rtnn patentability. Hook * 11? \* vA.
W t<>Obtain IT.h. and Korrifn I'.-i tout* andTrad-Mark*." ft
^ FREE Fairest torum cv r oB- rr<l t ? iiivrnbtr< ft
PATENT LAWYERS OF 26 YEARS* PRACTICE ft
| ? 20,000 PATENTS PROCURED THROUGH THEM. <A
| J) All business confidential, hound advice Faithful ft |
IHwrriw. Minlcrato charges.
STC. A. SNOW & CC4 I
V PATENT LAWYERS, |
j J) 0pp. U. S. Patent Office, WASHINGTON. D. C.& |
now located them in the car ciinsions
and church pews, the scats in ihe
theater, the air in crowded assemblies
and even the poor school teachers
with consumptive chests have been
excluded from the schoolrooms for I
fear of breathing the germs of disease
into the pupils, lie says that everything
is impregnated with bacteria
save money.
Iiut the last phase of the fight is he
tween mosquitoes and miasma in the
Pontine marshes?which is cause ami
which the effect and I'll wager my
dollar that these two doctors will die
within two years. "The pestilence
that walketh in darkness" is not a
mosquito. They aro a nuisance, an
I affliction, and so are fleas and flies and
! ants and roaches and many other lit- |
j tie pests which are here for a purpose
nnd try our patience. Mo.-qui- 1
. i ut;o uo^ni w wiuivj itii', imil IIM'.V UOX1 L
! now. The law of rouiponsatlon has
j come to my relief. I have become
| quite deaf in one ear and so 1 can turn
\ the pood ear down on the pillow and
1 tell the mosquito to ')lo\* nls little
I horn and sinp his little soup if lie
i wants to. My skin is so tough he
j oan't bore a hole In It, and so I dory
him.?Bill Arp in Atlanta Constitution.
Bits of Femininity.
The special point in the new lingerie
is Its tit.
I.aee boleros bid fair to return their
wide popularity.
Jeweled and enamel buttons and
buckles reign supreme.
The old-fashioned "sliot" taffeta is
seen in many imported frocks.
Cray wool muslin built over white
taffeta is a late, fetching fashion.
Sleeves nre either finished long to
ilie knuckles or else reach only to tho
idbow.
Molts must bo citlur a very narrow
hand or a wide sash girdle to prove
modish.
The return of the pompadour waist
*ith long points and front is hailed
with delight.
ICibbon and silk sashes nre found to
lie a feature of the summer's wiuir
muslin frock.
There has come a return of the fan y
apron of sheer muslin, lace and a
hit of a ribbon.
Most of tlie skirts of wash dresses
are with tucks which are allowed to
fly at the knee.
I'nllncd lace sleeves will be seen
everywhere as soon as it is possible to
ay wraps aside.
l.iltht toned cloths, trimmed with
white, are jroin^ to be in the very forefront
of smartness.
It Is the fashion now when buying a
handkerchief bodice to purchase hat
md parasol t?> mutch.
Evening frocks arc beautiful with
rich embroidery of pearl and birds and
flowers In patuvnl colors.
i A Nicer Way.
f.raee (to little brother)?"Come, j
Freddie; it. is your bedtime. it is
nice for little boys to go to bed early,
you know."
' Freddie (pouting)?" 'Taiu't so nice
as to sit up early, as you and Mr. Wig\
gins do!"
* (
SPRING SiiTS.
K^Ji %
FROM 75 CENTS UP.
PROPRIETOR
OLD RELIABLE STORE."
r rtrr
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
3entr.nl Tim? at Jacksonville .inA Anv.nnnah.
Easlfrti Time at Other Points.
Seheiliile in KflYet*Fehrunry 25th. 1000.
NottTitnoi vn. jx.VY: Is! "
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I renton 11 uopl M..p 0 4mi|
Ar. Aiken. I 2Slip 780a
Crunitevllle.... I lur.Xint I 2 li,|?' 7 l.a ...
An fim ?.. I o ii V.mp M iOn|
Lv. C<iiUinbiittao. Ky) ... I uopl lu6*| 7 Ida
Kingvilla 4?.p 28k 7Hs
(I.anstoburg. fttflpl 8, *4ii?
Hmm hviii.- . , j t H JOn
Suiiiint rville . ; up 5'.'; ' I > Hon
Ar ( mriesfon s |.,p 7 ?ai {11 l.f*
Lv. Connubial So. liy.7 . 11 .Kin 1 LV.a i ."Ufta
Ar. IVrry
" Sally ... . IM.'p' 2!t7i>
" Springfield U'nUp' -I.J'
" Hliii'kvillii . 1 1 -i IUCi SlCa
" Barnwell 1-'. j> II'Jo. s -Mia
" Savannah .. :i ipl h l. r ! ?:*r>r?
At. JneksonTillc P.H.) 7 iup 928e ?!85p
Trains III anil 14 i initial exeept Sunday I
arrivo anil depart from Hamburg.
Slooping Car Sorvico.
Excellent daily jmssonger serviro h?twwn
Florida and Now York.
Nos. lit and '.iJ?St w York and Florida Line
Ho 1. Daily exeejit Sunday, eotnposod e.xelu
sivnly of piillman finest Drawing ltooiji Slrap
inv, Compartment and Observatory ('ars.betw
'a New York,Columbia anil St. Augustine
os. ..i and IU -New York and Florida Rx
press, Drawing-room steeping cars between
Augusta ami New York.
i oilman drawing-ro on sleeping ears between
Port Tampa, Jaeksonvillc, Savannah
YVn hmgton mill New York
Pullman sleeping ears lie; wi-'oi C'liarl illoaad
Richmond Dining ears lielwcen O.iarlotte
niul Snvannah.
Nos. :i.i and .'Hi?IJ. S. Fast Mail. Tlirongli
Pullman drawing-r mm bulTot sieening ears lietween
.laeksonvilli* and New York and Pull
man s.eeping ears lietwenn Augusta and Charlone.
Dining ears servo all lneals unroute
Pullman sleejijng ears lietween lackaonvllla
iindColuinlui enrouIn daily between Juekiioiivilie
anil Ciiu inii.iti, via Asheville.
FRANK S.HANNON, J. M-Cl'DP.
TiiirilV 1*. A lieu. Mgr.. Triitbe Mer
Waxhinjrion. 1>. C. Washington. T>. C
W. A.TI.'KK. 8. H.HAKDWICK.
(ii'ii. fH'S. An't. As I lieu. ia?.-. Atf't..
\v ociiiuutf ion. D. O Auuaui, Gain
the Comoosin? Room.
Mr. Sinallonps?That now ninn on
tin- .liir.l machine is n funny tfiiy.
Mr. ItetlirnHev Is lie 7
Mr. Sinnlloaps Yt?s. He's Iwn soltin:;
uj> i.lo Transvaal war stuff oil
owning, and just now ho wont ovor to
tho oopyontter's ilosk nn? inskoil fot
nioiv 'Kopje.'- r.altltn^N. AwerU-an.
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