Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, July 11, 1907, Image 2
I "Th.o Fort Mill T'mios,
A DEMOCRATIC
H *B. W. HitAl.H\>Kn. - 1M. and Prop. |
On^' v< nr ?1.00
Six months f.O
M Thr'.'o 10
(.Mi MppiWatjon to tlio I'Ublishor, o<1.' *
?V(M ."iroa ai" miOr kllov.Ji to]
Br .thoMt* inti ror.t'v!.
iOntorcl nt the posiofllceat Fort Mill,
fi. <1.. mo('.i:ii1 o!:t?s matt< r.
.1TTT.Y 11 10A7
'.J :
The average country newspaper
conies out in a new dress
.about as seldom as the editor's
The n : r' < ' \\ (" "
TO has the tallest weeds in his cornfi
d& and t feu -st in
? hi3 hills.
We notice that the R-jck Hill
newspapers do not have near so
I much to say about the game of
baseball as they did some days
ago. Guess the sporting editoris
away.
Work is a moral and physical
| upiifter; it is a panacea for sor- I
row; idleness brings moral decay
and furnishes an incentive to
crirn . The avalanche of crime
V/hicii is sweeping orer our land
h today is largely duo to the fact
too many prefer to got a living
by swindling and stealing' than
lay honest work.
When you pull down the town
in which is your home, you are j
p illing down yourself, and who 1 j
you build up your town you are
building up yourself and your
neighbor. Try and banish from 1
your mind the mistaken idea Hi it
all good things are away oft* in,
some other locality. Give your
i-II ? ! i _ - .
lA/wil <111 111C JJi'tllt-U IS. Cclll ICJfllimately
bear. It certainly will
do you no harm and will cost
you nothing, and above all, patronise
your ho no institutions.
It is not surprising that some
.of our young men seem to have
such hard work to be decent.
. .... Just remember that-the first man
jto dwell upon earth was no saint.
If we-can rely upon history he (
was a liar and a sneak. The first i
woman kept bad company, and, I
woman-like, pried into things
thar did not concern her. The
fir3t child born was a murderer
and killed his brother. Our first
ancestors wore a tough lot and
it is hard to got it out of the
biood.
Running a newspaper is just
fike running a hotel, only different.
When a man go< s into
hotel and finds something on the
table which does not suit him,
he does not raise hades with the
landlord and tell him to slop his
old hotel. Well hardly. He-sets
that dish to one side and wades
into the many dishes that suit
him. Jit is different with some
! newspaper readers. They rind
p,n article occasional';/ that d >os
not exactly suit them and, without
stopping to think that it may
please hundreds of other read. . >,
make a grand-star 1 play and loll
+ editor how a n:rncr shoul 1 !>
frun and what should he put into
it. But such people aie becoming
fewer every year.
Talking: of intemperance, did
! you ever notice that fathers of
| drinking* boys are seldom found
in the thick fight against whiskey?
An overwhelming per cent
of the active agitators are men
v. ho never experienced the awful
havoc wrought in the family circle
by dissipated sons. Ninetynine
per cent of those who drink
form the habit before they are
pf legal age when it is a crime !
to either sell or give them the
jljBtuflf. If ail men would resolve,
at this critical period, that the
man who put the bottle to their
pon's lips should suffer the consequences,
the results would be
n mo3t gratifying. B t so long as
parents are indifferent, present
conditions will continue.
The evolutionists have for a
long time been trying to find
the missing link jqst where the
ape drops his caudal appendage'
and turns to a man. They have ,
never been able to propagate
Siniiu species, Dut tne inventor
has been more fortunate, for he
has found the missing link in the
farm implement bu.-iies3. The
time was when the small farmer
boy's dreams wore haunted with
the thought of when harrowing
time would come and when itcamo
he felt at night like he was worn
pff up to the knees, b it that time
is past. Now the old man can
l harrow, seated on his harrow
k cart and do better work with all
case. Anoth* r iinolement milks
^vt'necows without a pain or an
1 ;tche and empties the slop to the
\hogs without a marm iring word,
lafter a hard dav's work is done.
\ Purm work fa not the drudgery
that it was some years ago.
*i "I huvd'fir *!l7lM?\w:il\sug s i-'.i I * \
I 1 ' yivir<i\>:i :t < ui? > '
By Wi:'.* fhv ii >1 nl r/im\ !:i i'l ut
luoQt, nuii! I ti*?sl hiJwW ii m \mi
fciilve; th'.it bus Vbo h<ivo mid .
i ' \ \
BS|^Bt4nrrot't. of Nor. b Ml IK O, Qnarun- j
8SKMki' '1 f?>r PH*;s. itn Jih, bit f :>> ull drag j
A Ncrth Carolinian's View* of Tillman.
Many years ago I first, heard
lion. Ben Tillman, the irrepressible
and one-eyed statesman,
speak in Yorkvillo and Itock Hill
during his lirst campaign, lie
was then denouncing tne Bourbon
democracy, the Huprenot aristocracy
of South Carolina, j
whose ambition was to rule or
uin. The entire press of the
n. .
state, every townsman, every j
wealthy aristocrat and the political
machine were in arms against
"Pitchfork Ben." It was a bitter'
campaign that Tillman and the
down - trodden country people
waged against the maimed Gen.
Butler, the cavalry hero in the
U. S. senate and the landed aristocracy
who believed in the old
regime. Tillman won the fight
and the sobriquet Pitchfork still j
clings to his name.
From the gubernatorial chair
his ability, fearlessness, rough
honesty and genius lwtve won
him a national reputation. In
rough debate ho is a peer of any
in the U. S. Senate, and he can
use classical language in debate,
for he is a hard student.
As a stump speaker, he is a
bitter, incisive and forceful
orator that captures and holds a
crowd, north south and west.
J once heard him in Charlotte
follow the silver-tongued orator
of Virginia, Senator Daniel, now
mentioned as a candidate for the
presidency. The crowd was wc?i n
out and gave the one-legged hero
a faint applause, but after the
|one-eyed orator with his famous;
pitchfork had spoken five minutes,
applause followed in quick
succession nearly every sentence ;
until the crowd forgot their hunger
and punctuated every sentence
with a yell.
Like Rev. Sain Jones, he was a
master of invective, and dealt in
words that every man under- \
stood. He captured that immense
crowd in Charlotte and held it
until the finish, when a hundred
throats yelled. "Go on, go on."
Then I said, "Ben Tillman is a
genius!"- lie is a man of splendid
family, his brother held a
high position in congress for
many years oeioie me war. At
home he is gentle, kind and polite,
and his life has always been
clean and above reproach. He
was a leader to break the shackles
from South Carolina's aristocratic
oligarchy and afterwards
his genius and his noble tight in
congress for the rights of ike
.South have conquered his aristocratic
enemies. Now, like Saul,
Tillman stands head and shoulders
above hi s comrades and no .
other Southern man can draw as
big a crowd as he. As a lecturer
he made l'or many mont hs &i5'H)
per month as he draws immense
audiences. Now he is a rich i
man ami his unaided won re- [
nown and wealth. All honor to '
the rough, magnetic and bold
Ben, with his pitchfork to stir
the Republican leaders and expose
corruption and graft. Kutherfordton
(N. C.) Sun.
Trihula'-iow of a Filbert ivL't chant.
In tearing away the ceiling of
a Filbert storeroom recently
workmen discovered -17 pairs of
socks which had been stolen from
the bedroom of one of the former
proprietors of the store who 1im<1
slept in the building. The socks
had evidently been carried there
by rat-' and the discovery clears1
up a mystery that had caused
the merchant no little worry in
days gone by. The story is
vouched for by a reliable citizen
and he declares that the thing
became so annoying that the
merchant had to give up his
room. Every morning nearly
when the storekeeper arose from
his bed .and began dressing he
would miss his socks. lie first
thought it the work of a practical
joker, then he thought lie was
being victimized by some lightfingered
thief. II 1 set traps for
either contingency but there was
no satisfactory results. The socks
continued to disappear and the
merchant grew desperate. He
even threatened to adopt the
plan of the famous Kansas senator
and wear Irs shoes just so.
Indeed on several occasions he
would have been forced to do
this had it not been for a plentiful
supply in the dry goods department.
of the store
He finally gave up his room in
disgust and never had the mystery
of his disappearing socks
explained until the other day
when he was apprised of the discovery
noted above. Yorbviile
Now Era.
It will doubtless interest many
of our readers to kn</?v that Prof.
W. F. Massoy, so long and successfully
identified with the
Practical Farmer, has severed
his connection with that paper
and will hereafter write regulariarly
for the Progressive Farmer,
of Raleigh, N. C. Certainly no j
man in Southern agricultural
work Has won a greater following
than Prof. Masssy, and as his Ike
work has been in the South,' no ,
will hereafter contribute only to
Southern farm papers. His letters
will appear in the Progresivo
Farmer each week.
I For first-cl^ss blacksir.i thing, \
wrightihg
^ ncBSKmH^"
CANAL 13 2,500-YEARS OLD.
At I.cftst the Corinthian "Was Undjr
Contemplation as
\ Ago as That.
"Speaking of cannls," said the
engineer who had he en talking
about Panama, "a very interesting
canal, and one not much heard
of, is (hat connected with the gulf
of Corinth and the gulf of Aegina
in (Jreece.
"It's some older than any we
have in the western hemisphere,
also, for Periander, tyrant of
Corinth, proposed to cut through
til*. isthi.'iiiM ;i? lnn? mrn !i? ltMO
years before Christ. Superstition
stopped him, however.
''Julius Caesar and Caligula
took it up again when Home had
hold of < I recce, hut it was too
much for them. Then came Nero,
and he went at it with Vigor, hut
the work stopped when he died.
"Others kept pounding away
at It for the next several hundred
years', hut it was not until 1SS1
that real work of the Nero energy
was put upon it. Then ("Jen.
Turr, aide-de-camp to Victor I'mmanuel
of Italy, organized a company
and worked on lill the money
gave out in 1890, the chief obstacle
being some kind of Hint
which dynamite couldn't break.
"About ?10,000,000 was spent
up to 1890, and then Mr. Syngroa
took hold, organized a new company,
with $9115.000 working capitaL
ami. finished the job in 189'..
iX oniy1 about four miles long,
hut it is 09 feet wide at the bottom.
about 80 fret wide at waterline,
20 feet ami three inches
deep in water, audit is cut nearly
all the way through solid rock,
rising at some points for 209 feet
above the canal.
"It is like a canyon, and ships do
not take kindly to it, the entrance
being bad, a strong wind blowing
through it as through a great air
..t .. fi -?jt
Minii, ami mere is at limes a
strong reverse current.
"It is sin interesting trip
1 hrough the ennnl, and it saves 1 "J:t
miles of very rough water nnil 20
hours of time; but so far skippers
prefer to go through the ]K'iiinsuh\
rather than through tlie canal,
though with some changes wliieh
will he made it is believed the
ennal will become of general use
as soon as a few ships begin to use
it and remove the* prejudice now
existing against it."
A NEGRO AND STEAMBOAT.
River Man's Reason for Eelieving
Colorod Man Good Roustabout
?Superior to Whites.
"The suggestion came out of St.
Louis the other day that white
labor had replaced the negro 011
the wharf and that after long
service the black roustabout was
about to enter upon the dee line of
his sway," sai l an old river mail,
according to the New Orleans
Times IJeniocrat. "All of which,
I ma\ add, I accept with a grain of
sail, as the saving go'-s. Somehow
! can never think of the successful
and really \ aluahlc roustabout
as anything but a black man.
"The negro seems to have been
born to the calling, lie is. as a
rule, forul of the steamboat, and
naturally takes to steamboat
work, lie has always hovered
around the river. Of course, you
will find negroes hack in the hills
and scat tered around in t lie higher
altitudes, but the vast majority
of them you will find quartered
in the lowlands of the country, ami
on the rivers, where he can hear
the Hotter of steamboat wheels.
There is one other fart to he mentioned
in connection with the ne
gro's peculiar fitness for steamboat
ng.
"l>id you ever hear the steamboat
mate talking to the 'musters'?say,
for instance, when the
boat was a little late in pulling
oat and during the busy season?
llast not, eh? Well, there is something
in store for 3011, sonic thing
lurid and forceful, am) something
that will force* you to run <h>*
gamut of the emotions. The point
is that the negro is stimulated
and urged on to quicker work by
ii.:- i i ** *
iiu^ Mini m iiiiiv. rroianny is an
es^enfinl in tin* mate's calling.
The negro needs it. 1 was just
wondering if the while man would
ever gel used (o it. Maybe so, but
I have liiv doubts about it."
Queen Mary's Hnrp.
The harp of Mary, Queen of
Scots, has been bought by the Society
of Antiquaries of Scotland
for $1,500.
An Old Time Tacky Party.
The Village Improvement Society
will have an old time tacky
party in the town hall Friday
night, July J h5th. to which all
are cordially invited. Anjadmission
ot ten and fifteen cents will
he charged, and ice cream and
lemonade will be on sale in the
hall.
- ?
i Mr. I Joy J Smith spent Monthly
in O.arl-/tie.
I 7
I ' * :
S* ' i? niirtjlx.
%
/
f v/r. p
|"Nothing Si
j r
|Like Succes
$ ??
a except saving the resu
.< labor or business. If
I ^ small way, save a part.
* the large, if left in 01
m
small sum?even a dolla;
1^ it's here for you subjec
i
!* 4 PER GEriT INTEREST,
! !?
$ COM
?>
l 0
HTHE NATIONAL
u
, r (ABSOLUTE
|J RGGS HILL, I#
Good Price fcr Cottco Assured.
There is every 'ndication now
that the short cotton crop in the:
South is going to he a blessing to!
South Cnrolina, and especially to
upper South Carolina. The late
government report of the crop
j condition shows that the condition
in South Carolina is 791
against a ten-year average of 82:
or only 3 points behind. The
condition in the entire South was
1 72 against a ten-year average of ;
i 83. The greatest deficiency is
in the Ivg cotton producing
States of the West.
This has already begun to
cause higher prices, and despite
the efforts of the cotton association
to prevent such dealings,
farmers throughout the State
are reported to be selling their:
entire crops for fall delivery at
prices ranging from 10 to 12
cents. The argument which is
l>iit to the farmer is that the
j price is always low when the
i crop begins to come in and that
by soiling in advance they git
a price at the start which will in
j all probability be much higher
than prices in the open market.
Be that as it may, the people of
this State are going to malai a
cotton crop this year, if nothing
unforseen shall occur, and are
going to get good prices for thH
staple It is, of course, impossi-!
ble to predict what the price of
I of cotton will be, but with the
general crop 13 points below the
J average, a short crop will result
and prices must necessarily soar
skyward. Many are of the opinion
that cotton will be 15 cents
this fall and some predict 20
cent cotton.
In this section cotton has improved
wonderfully within the
past two weeks, and many of
our farmers who a short time
P - I
uuuuj-'.iil were lacing
a year of disaster now have reas
on to believe that the crop will
be the most profitable one in a
! number of years.
Gold Kill.
Misses Mary Boyd, of Charlotte,
and Mary Withhcrs and
Hammie Smith, of Steel Creek,
; were the guests of Miss Lessie
Epps Friday night and Saturday.
Miss Corrinc Faris has returned
from a ten weeks' visit to Florida.
Her uncle, Mr. Frank Fai is.
and Mr. Melton came with her.
They will both visit the .Jamestown
exposition before returning.
Miss IsabeHe Crcighton is visiting
Miss Grace Crook.
It is announced that the meeting
at Philadelphia will start
next Tuesday. Rev. Ik A. Yongue
will assist Rev. Owings.
- In every postofficc in the.
| union which transfers mail di!
rect by railway mail service the
postmasters are weighing all
mail originating in the office and
sent to the railroad. This will
continue for a period of six
months and from July 1st for
1 30 days an accurate record will
I be kept of all mail received on
all railroads carrying mail. Every
piece of mail originating in
the office was counted for seven
days in order to determine the
revenue and cost of handling the
home business of those offices.
The medicine that sots tho whole world
t Milking,
Tho r?>inody on which till doctors
agree,
Tho proscription till your friends are
talcing is
Ilollister's Pocky Mountain Tea"?
l'arks Drui? C?">.
- / j
A FCETuMATE 7EXAN.
Mr E* W. Goodloe, of Ii7 St. Leois
St. D ,11ns, Tex. says, "In the past yotjr
I have become acquainted with pn.
KiUK'sEitw Life IMlls. ntnf
I ever before tried so oilt "JJ,
pos"s of malaria ami hUUcmshffk"
They don't ^riml or gripe. j 35c gt alj
drug stores.
'AY YOU TO SAVE.ft
iyi^ls \
s" K\ i
*
*!
5 :
?! !
Its of success be it from Sit '
your success comes in a Si !
o K ... 51 !
oiuaw amounts soon yield !
nr Savings department. A i |
v will start an account andf j
t to your call any time. ? j
POUNDED QUARTERLY. J
' f
. UNION BANK.*; I
:ly safe.) i.
- - S. G.p
qw.n.r r""iiui_> .j li_
BBUABKABLE BE80US.
That truth is stranger tiiuii fiction,
lms once more been demonstrated in
tlm little town of Fedora, Tenn.. the
residence of C. V. Pepper, Ho writes, j
"1 was in bed, entirely disabled with |
hemorrhages of the lungs and throat, j
Doctors failed to help me, and all hope
had tied when I began taking Dr.
King's New Discovery. Then instant ;
relief canio. The coughing soon ceased; i
the bleeding diminished rapidly, and in
three weeks I was able to go to work." i
(inaranteed cure for coughs and colds j
.The and $1.00 at ail drug stores. Trial !
hotf le free.
NOTICE
All persons living within the
town of Fort Mill, S. C., are
hereby notified to get their hog
pens in first class condition.
Any person or persons failing j
to comply with this notice will
be cWlt with according to law.
V. D. POTTS
Chief of Police.
|
WHEN THE BRIDE PROMISES .
TO OBEYThat's
a Fake.
\VHK?V-T1IE BRIDE PREMISES!
IMPERIAL FLOUR?
That's the Truth,
Jones Sells It.
Phone 14.
AN OKDINANCK.
if ordained mid by tlio
town council now sitting in common
council and by authority of srniio;
That after ilie passage of thin ordinance
i! shall bo unlawful for any peronii
/\r iu?rci\i?c f.v h? ?f - *? ---
............ n> i?Jitt <JII t?n> nmn 111
tlio town of Fort Mill, S C. after 1J
p. 111. without a reasonable excuse.
Section 'J, That any person or per
sons violating the above onlinaiice shall
he pnni li <1 by -a fine not exceeding
00 or less than $i."iO and cost, or
more (than ' 25 days.'work upon the
stroets nor less than 5 days work.
Done and ratified ill couneil assembled
this 12th day of .Tune
W. L. HALL.
Attest: Iut'd '
A. H. MoElhanoy. Clerk.
IT your buggy gets "rattled"
or your horse loses a shoe, tell
your troubles to Young, the village
blacksmith, and be made,
happy again.?Adv.
I HELLO CENTRAL, |
| give ma No. 11, \
\ttie MODEL Steam;
% *
? Laundry Agency. |
z We do correct Launder
| ing. Let us know early in j!
j the week nnrl wo will r?o!1 Z
\\ at your door and j?et your j
\\ laundry. Give us a trial, and ?
\\ if the work is not satisfac- J 1
!} tory, it costs you nothing. J
11 It satisfies everybody, why, 5
? not try a bundle? All work 5
!| guaranteed. *
I R. F. GRIER, Jr? f ,
and . i
f Agent. |
/
Grand Sixty
Sixteen of the Best Kn
able Papers and Maga2
One year for
Read this Wc
Planters' Journal, Memphis. Tenn.
American Farmer. Indianapolis, hidSuccessful
Farming. Des Moines, la.
Maxwell's Talisman Magazine, Chicago
The Farm Money Maker, Cincinnati, 0.
Green's Fruit Grower, Rochester, N. V.
Modern Stories Magazine, New York.
Southern Poultry Fancier, Atlanta.
Seventeen Great Paper
All One Year 1
zfc,y This offer, which will be ope
new subscribers to The Times, ant
scribers anti will pay up one year
Send the subscription price?$1.
and get it and the above named p;
IS?! H?
Bj|
SSOUTHLRT
f THE SOUTH'S Gl
I?
|
g< I. nexoolled Dininu Car Se
ffl Convenient Schedules on
^ Tliroimli Pullman Sleeping
Jamestown Exposition Rs
sy
fi For full information as to ratei
2= Southern Railway Ticket
| G. B. ALLEN,
S AGP. A., Atlanta, Ga
S1
* gi][lrg m gM]
|JOB PRIN'
1 NEATLY EX
1 THE TIMES
[Hi Letter heads. Nootheads Billheads
Fid Circulars, Envelopes, Etc. at the 1
work. Send us ybnr orders and v.*?
| Tto
I gi m] SMISEM WEi
RiFWlil
8
B Call Phon
I Wc have Pork, sausa
Irish Potatoes, Cahbn
Pickles, Peaches, and,
Can.led Goods. Whca
Feed, Molasses all ki
Paeon, Ilams, Flour, X
thing to eat. Fresh Fi
guarantee fair prices a
Call, as 1 want to sel
the 4th of July.
Yours for
W- X_._ 2
la????gryxaag i.uu.m.iu?1?i
I W. H. H
/? DIOALE
/< WINES, LIQUORS, CIC
125 East Council Street,
We quote you the follov
A Brandies, Wines, Etc.:
1 Gallon New Corn Whisl
yif 1 Gallon l-year-o!d Corn V
^ 1 Gallon 2-year-old Corn \\
1 Gallon 3-year-old Corn
ly 1 Gallon 4-year-old Corn W
?2 1 Gallon Now Rye Whiskey
<< 1 Gallon 1-vear-old R.vo \A
1 Gallon 2-year-old Rye \\
1 Gallon James E. Pepper
?* 1 Gallon Old Henry Rye VV
4 4 1 Gallon Echo Springs R>
<2 1 Gallon Apple Brandy (ne
1 Gallon Apple Brandy (ol
>*> 4 Quarts 7-year-old Corn (c
12 Quarts Mountain Corn (
(\\ 4 Quarts Old Henry Rye ..
44 4 Quarts Rose Valley Rye.
H 4 Quarts Malt Rye
f /. 4 Quarts Hoover's Choice I
;{ We can furnish you anythi
orders v.ill receive prompt at
USSXXWWW VV 1
Read The Times' ]
Day Offer!
own and Most Rada^
:ines and The Times
Only $1.50.
)nderful List.
Southwest Magazine, St. I ouis. Mo.
Blooded Stock, Oxford, Da.
Unit lL??r?n.?re Man-mltia ?l;
..Vu.?mvw('va O I'm k^(ltillV | iTllllllV:apUII^.
l hc Welcome Guest Ma# , Portland.
Woman's Home Journal, Boslon.
Home Queen Magazine, N Y.
Practical Farmer, Philadelphia.
Rural Weekly, St Paul.
s^Value over S9,0(W
or Only $1.50,
'n only a short time, is made to
:1 to those who are already subin
advance.
50 to The Times, Fort Mill, S.C.
ipers one whole year.
[US dirSMIS ?JOISTS i
4 RAILWAY.!
\m
reatest system. i
i
" fil
'vice, RSJ
nil Local Trains. g||
r ('ars on Through Trains, pi
ites now in efi'fet. I??
i, routes, etc., consult nearest ^
jent, or IS
r. w. hunt, 1
0. P. A., Charleston, S C. jS.
# b
j
@ TrSlS I??
Ti^G |
ECUTEI) AT |j
OFFICE. X ?
\w
, Statements, Handbills, Posters, fjt
owesfc prices consistent with good gl
3 will please you
lc "Pimcs. |j
CgM] iMfflgj SOO
UBLIC AT LARGE! I
c No. 2h.
ge, Hccf, Swqct and |
tge, Tomatoes, Corn, 5
in fact, all kinds of
t for (thickens, Cow
inds, Sugar, Coffee,
leal and almost anysh
each Saturday. I
nd entire satisfaction.
I out and go fishing
I
business,
IALL. j
\4\<tS4\ ?\4S4\4S4\?N4MS4\4
OOVER, 1
its in y>
;ars, tobacco. Etc. ?>:
- - - Salisbury, N. C.
ving prices on Whiskies
koy $1.50 f|
Whiskey . 1.75 Sy
Whiskey. 2.oo
Whiskey 2.50 //
Whiskey 3.00 >>
1.75 gg
Whiskey .2.00 yy
Whiskey . _ 2.50
Rye Whiskey 3.00 <^
hiskey 3.00 >/j
re Whiskey 3.00
w) * 2 .50 'A
d) 3.00
;asc goods) 4.00 />
old) 7.00 'A
^rTTTTTTTTT- iv r
3.80 J?
3.70 fSi
lye 3.00 ?8
np: in our line and all mail *
tention.
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