Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, September 25, 1913, Image 6
^ i
V
Distinction.
"Who 1b that mllltaryloofclng chapf
"That, sir, la the hero of a rumored
war."?Puck.
ECZEMA ITCHED AND BURNED
Falmouth, Ky.?"Two years ago I
was troubled with akin and scalp
troubles. 1 would hare pimples that
would break out and form sores on
my face and head, with terrible Itching.
The ecxema on my face and
head Itched and burned and when I
scratched It. It made sores and 1
was very disfigured for the time being.
My head became so sore I could
nnt If wHIi a m>?K.
WUVM ? r*i?u ? WUIW, It IfCWUO
mass of sores. My hair fell oaf
gradually.
"1 was afflicted about a year before
I used Cutlcura Soap and Ointment
and after using them three weeks I
was getting better and In less than
three months, after using eight cakes
of Cutlcura Soap and Ave boxes of
Cuticura Ointment, I was completely
cured of eczema." (Signed) Prank
Vastine, Dec. 12, 1912.
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free.with 32-p. Skin Hook. Address postcurd
"Cutlcura, Dept. D, Boston.**?Adv.
"Eternal punishment" may bo the
price of being too poor to buy a
divorce.
ARE YOU CONSTIPATED?
Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills have
proved their worth for 7?V yean. Test theni
roufeif now. Send for sample to 572 Pearl
St., New York. Adv.
Hp who has no mind to trade with
the devil should be so wise as to keep
away from his shop.
doks vorn hi-: an AriiKt
Try Illcka* OAPUDINK. Ifa t?nuid? pleasant
to lake?effects Immediate?ro-nt to prevent
Si<-k Headaches and Nereutia Neadictra also.
Yotar money liarlt If nnt nallaA?<l ?A*? ? *"1
60c. m medicine ?lores- 4Ur.
To removo grease spots from wallpnper,
dip a piece of flannel in spirits
of wine and rub the spot very gently.
Important to Mothara
Examine carefully every bottlo of
CASTOKIA, a safe and aure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
In Use For Over SO Yeara.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Caatoria
Pithy Postscript.
A striking illustration of the saying
that the pith of a lady's letter la
In the postscript occurred In the case
of a young lady who. having gone
out to India, and writing home to her
friends, concluded with the following
words: "P.S.?You will ace by my
signature that I am married."
Marked Similarity.
"If 12 personB were to agree to dine
together every day. hut never stt In
exactly the same order around the table,"
didactically stated the professor,
"it would take them thirteen million
/vuip, ?i. iiiu i atr ui uur utiuicr A uaj,
nnd they would hr.vn eaten more than
four hundred and seventy-four million
dinners, beforo they could get through
all the possible arrangements In which
they could place themselves.
"Yep," snnrled Uncle Pepyn. "That
would bo nearly as many ways as a
small boy rearranges himself during
n long Bernion.?Judge.
Aftar a Pleasant Evening.
Mr. Sydney Fluxion told an "amusing
story for the purpose of illustrating
a point at a recent dinner. A
certain convivial soul, who had been
Invited to dine with a friend, whose
house was at the end nf a dark nnd
muddy lano, was advised to bring a
big lantern. After a very Jovial eve
nlng the convivial one left and struggled
home through the inud, firmly
gripping his heavy burden by the
handle. Next morning he received
this messnge from his host: "Herewith
your lantern; please return parrot
and cage."
( ^
From
Our Ovens
To
Your Table
Untouched by human
hands?
Post
Toasties
?the aristocrat of Readyto-Serve
foods.
A tal>le dainty, made of
white Indian com ? presenting
delicious flavour and I
wholesome nourishment in
new and appetizing form.
The steadily increasing sale
of this food speaks volumes
in behalf of its excellence.
An order far s package of
Post Toasties from your
grocer will provide a treat far
the whole family.
% *
"The Memory Linger**'
Pontiim Ore*) (Vnuaar, LMwl
B*tU? Creak. Mlcktirea
, /
! oocx>ooooooooooooo
MISHAPS OF MR. HAP
By AUGUSTUS G. SHERMAN.
By the banks of a Sylvan Htream,
gazing vacantly Into the far distance,
, stood liapgood Dorsey. His friends
called him Hap for Bhort, and he needed
those friends sorely juBt now, for
all that liapgood Dorsey wore on the
present occasion waB an umbrella.
"I'm ilnno fftr " I./. ? r. * -a i..? t--*
4wt| iiu oiavru lU^UUnuusly,
using the umbrella as a shield.
"What in tho world am I to do?"
It was a serious question. Ilapgood
Dorsey, a young bachelor on his an,
nual vacation outing, two miles from
his country hotel, night coming on,
uo habitation in sight, had come out
of the water after a vigorous swim
to iind his clothes missing.
"It was that tramp 1 saw lurking
around in the distance." Hap now told
1 himself. "I don't care for the clothes
I ?it was an old suit, and nothing o 1
value in the pockets, but?how am 1
going to get to shelter?"
Hapgood Dorsey did not rage or
swear. Ho was a sensible, reputable
young man, rather shy and reserved,
especially with the ladies, but manager
of a large manufacturing establishment
and on the way to further
business promotion.
"1 t's a mean trick, was the hardest
thing he could find to say. "1 can't
go hack into tho water and stay all
night, I can't walk into town in this
plight. I'm up a tree, or; rather, 1
wish I was!"
It. was scmo time before Hapgood
Dorsey could make up his mind what
to do. He had a dim Idea that in his
stroll from town to tho present spot
he had passed a farmhouse. Ho finally
started in the direction of the hotel.
dodging part tho open spots between
trees and bushes and the umbrella
in constant play.
Never was a man more thankful
than he that It was growing dusk
Somewhere, he vaguely remembered,
ho had read a poem on "Tho Dying
Day." He wished this one would stay
dead, with no afterglow. Ala3, there
was a line or two about "the Bable
garments of tho night." Hap wished
thoy might become tangible,
j "What luck!" "What luck!" he
chirped, as he struck a barb wirt
i fence and made out a barn and a house
i ^^^^^^_____
|?Ti?i?PFSHD
I
j L
"I'm a Thankful Man."
oeyond It. Ti.e plnco lias a t? nr.nt?
Hap was assured of thlB as ho noticet
a great washing out on the lino ii
the yard.
j It required skill, bravery, end the
stoicism and endurance of a Nortl
American Indian to irot over turn
barbed wlro fence, but at length Ifaj
negotiated the adventure successfully
Ho started a leap with an "Ouch!" anc
; ho ended it with a "Geewhillikons!'
but he was now 0:1 its field side ant
! made tracks for the shelter of tht
j barn.
Slipping through the open doorway
barricading hitnself behind a heap o:
j hay, Hap proceeded to carry out hlf
i plan to secure attention and succor
"Oo-hoo! O-loe-o!"?all the haili
Hap had ever heard he now proceedet
to deliver, first in a feeble venture
some voice, and then more audibly
! and with some irritation.
"There's nobody at homo in tlia
j house, that's sure," he decided a
j last. "I'll Investigate. Maybe 1 cai
1 find some door or window open. Jus
1 let me get some clothes?I don't inlrx
j whose they are; 1 don't cnro wha
they are?jumpers, overalls, tennis 01
bathing suit, I'll grab them quick. Tliii
Is a horrible predicament, nr.d I an
a desperate man!"
Hap and his umbrella made the torn
i of the vicinity. No one was in tin
house, as he had surmised, nor wai
i there any avenue of inlet easy of ac
j cess.
"I'll do it, 1'vo got to do it!" de
j cided Hap grimly, as he stood looklnj
over the line of family washing hang
, ing up to dry. "There's a white oneno,
that would be too prominent. Tin
blue one is bigger and becomes nn
better. Yes, tho problem Is solved
and I am saved. Ha! ha!"
Hap became tragically jolly and tin
oddity of the occasion helped to mak<
him so. Ho almost chuckled with re
lief as he took a blue dress and a sun
bonnet from tho line, and he smiled a
ho thought of how he would recite hi
unique adventuro at his club in th<
city.
Then Hap repaired to the bam
When ho came out he carried tin
umbrella closed. Tho dress was room;
ind long, the sun bonnet was comfort
able and sheltering.
%
"I'm a thankful man." ho said devoutly.
and started down a traversed
country road carrying the spot of hla
i ruthless pillage well In his mind.
"ThiB outfit looks as if it belonged
to some old farm dame." he ruminated.
"All right. She shall have the
, flneBt silk gown and Sunday bonnet
in town tomorrow for this timely accommodation.
Hello!"
Hap dodged behind a tree. The
moon had come up and Just then with
> a vivid scream a young girl turned
a curvo in the highway, in hot pursuit
waB a browsy, bold looking individual,
whom Hap at once recognized
aB his deBpoiler at the brookside.
I "Give up that watch!" ho was shouting.
"I'm going to have it."
The terrified girl must havo made
out Hap. Sho ran frantically up to
him.
AK ? -
v/ii, inujr, save me:'' snc pleaded,
clinging frantically to Hap.
"Huh! an old woman!" roared the
tramp. "I'll demolish both of you if
i you don't give up that watch!"
"Let go, please," pleaded Hap in an
embarrassed way. and at Ills masculine
tones his charge uttered a new
shriek.
"A man!" she quavered.
."Luckily for you, and something of
an athlete," vaunted Hap, rather
proudly?biff!
Down went Mr. Tramp, scientifically
bowled out and gasping for breath,
prostrate on the ground.
"Hun for some help," Hap directl
ed the bewildered miss, and we'll put
i this bold highwayman where he belongs."
11c stood valiant guard over the disI
comtited thief with a club until the
young lady, running back to a neighi
bor's, returned with two men armed
with pitchforks. In the meantime Hap
learned from the thief where his
clothes had oecn hidden.
"Why, say, Miss Rose," exclaimed
one of the men, pointing to her rescuer,
"this one can't be right, either?
I a man?dressed up in a woman's
dress!"
"Yes," fluttered Miss Rose Barton,
; "and it looks like mamma's dress,
too!"
> "I will explain," observed Hap, and
> he did.
I And then, clothed in his right mind
?uu hi ui? own mure, liapgqod Dor>
Bey felt it a duty to pay a visit to the
? Itarton homestead the next day.
> "I've come to return what I borrowed,"
he reported, handing a neat package
to Robo's mother after an introduction
from his blushing hostess. "You
will llnd a Bilk pattern, also, Mrs. liarton
a slight acknowledgment of your
kindness in unconsciously ussisting
my?escape.
"Young man, you did bravely last
evening," observed the practical
housewife, "and 1 want to thank you."
Only ono thing could come of a
bright, sensible young man like Hap
meeting a lovely, affectionate country
| maid like Rose.
It was an engagement, and the silk
pattern came in finely for a gown for
Mrs. Ilarton at the wedding.
(Copyright, 1913. by \V. <!. Chapman.)
Hens That Exercise.
According to Samuel E. Malinn of
St. Paul, Minn., the egg yield of a hen
can positively be increased if means
are taken to give her plenty of exercise.
A dispatch the other day related
Unit Mahan had established a sort of
treadmill In connection wiii. i>io
chicken coop, Eays the New York Sun,
and compelled his hens to walk the
rungs constantly for ten or fifteen
minutes at a time, so that exercise approximating
two hours daily was taken.
A 30 per cent, increase in egg
laying was reported within a period of
nine days.
' When news of tlio achievement
1 reached some of the college analyists.
they began to liguro on the likelihood
of change in tho component, parts of
1 tho egg. What the result will he, as^
sinning tho hen exercise story to be
' truo, leaves all kinds of room for spec
ulution. It is a well-known fact that
| cattlo worked hard make tough el1
eating when killed. Huilding up of
' muscle gives greater strength, but the
5 tenderness vanishes.
Old Passion Play.
^ Slnco 1801 the peasants of Vorder*
thlersee, a remote village in Tyrol,
huvo had a passion play of their own.
} Its text dates, however, from the mid1
die of the sixteenth century. Tho last
* porfornianco was glvon In 1905; the
> next ono will tako place in 1915. In
preparation for this coming produet
tion, these peasant players reached
i the conclusion early this year that
t they needed new scenery, a new stage
t and also a new roud that would bring
1 visitors in greater numbers to their
t mountain festival. To raise the
r amount required they gave during the
s months of July and August a scries of
l performances of the drama, "Juda
lien llur," drawn front General Low
r Wallace's famous novel by one of their
0 members, a peasant who appears to
s have produced an altogether satisfac
- tory dramatization.
Sulgrave Once Robbers' Nest.
? Sulgrave, whose manor house, the
:* ancestral home of the Washington
- family, tho Peace Centenary commit
0 tee desire to purchase as a place oi
e pilgrimage, has associations not en
I. tirely of a peaceful character. For tho
smiling Northamptonshire village to
0 ward the end of tho eighteenth con
u tury was the headquarters of a guns
of highwaymen, known as the Cut
i- worth gang. Chief of tho band was
b the parish clerk of Sulgrave. who al
s ways went to church fully armed, lest
b justice should catch htm unaware. Tho
booty was stored In the church, so
i. that the bold, bad clerk might be at
0 hand to protect it. Hut treachery
)' stepped In, and four of the gang wore
> hanged In 1787 at Northampton.?Ix>n
don Chronicle.
4
I
J'-r ' ;'V "7"-*' "*
" # \
I SEED SELECTED EARLY
I
Farmer May Be Reasonably Sure
of Corn Stand Next Year.
i
Consideration of Strength and Character
of Corn Stalk, Height of
Ear From Ground and Size of
Shank Should Be Noted.
<Uy C. P. BULL.)
One of the main reasons why seed
I corn should be selected early is to be
I reasonably sure It will grow the fol'
lowing year when planted. Early sei
lected seed corn is the corn that usu
ally gives the best stand. Without a
| good stand it is impossible to get a
maximum yield, and it costs no more
1 to raise a Held of corn with a perfect
stand than it docs to raise a field with
a 60 to 70 per cent, stand.
Every good kernel of seed ccn has
in it a live, though very small, corn
plant. This plant is tender and easily
injured, unless kept under favorable
h ^
Ready to Select From the Standing
Corn When f.nrn le Cnl?/.?n^ I"
This Way One Can Consider the
Stalks From hich the Ears Are
Taken as Well as Ears Themselves.
1 conditions. Seed corn that is not
thoroughly dry before cold weather,
will in the northern climates, freeze,
which will cause the kernel to expand,
thus injuring the germ or little plant,
lowering its vitality and often destroying
it, so the kernel will not germinate.
Few farmers save enough seed corn.
One bushel of shelled corn will plant
from seven to dght acres. One hundred
to one hundred and twenty selected
ears will make a bushel of
shelled corn. At this rate it will take
I from twelve to fifteen ears to plant
j one acre. It should be remembered,
i however, that the. first selection is
not always perfect: and oftentimes
j upon second selection and germination
test, half of the first selection
will be thrown out. Thus it is seen
i .. .. . ...
i mat mere snoutd always lie selected
in the fall at least twice as much
seed as the farmer expects to plant.
There is little danger of petting tco
much seed corn. Any surplus, if the
seed is good, can usually be sold at a
| fair price.
i In case one has 110 "special seed
| plot" in which his best and earliest
maturing ears were planted, it is then
, necessary that his seed be selected
from the field. The most practical
method to do this is to go through
I the field with a sack tied across one's
shoulder and select the choicest and
best matured ears. Two rows of corn
may easily bo examined at once. During
the process of selection, consideration
of the strength and character of
tho stalk, the height of the ear from
the ground, and the size of the shank,
j should be noted.
A stalk does not necessarily have
I to be large to be a big producer. A
! tall spindling plant lodges very eas,
ily. The stalk should bo of good size
and strong at the base, gradually tap:
ering, and not necessarily tall. Strong.
vigorous stalks of medium height,
! usually produce the best and earliest
matured ears. The ear should be attached
to the stalk by a medium-sized
I shank, which is long enough to allow
the tip of tho car to hang down.
I All ears in a cornfield will not maj
ture at the same time. A variation of
fifteen days in maturing of oars in a
field is not uncommon. One of the
i reasons why a good selection of corn
cannot be made from the shock or
from the field late In the fall, is that
one is unable to tell tho time tho ear
matured.
Drainage of Wet Lands.
For tho management of wet lands
the usual advice is to tile drain them.
, but an intelligent German farmer "ow
1 living in this country suggests that it
sometimes pays better to make arti|
flcial ponds. In Germany, he says, an
acre of fish ponds is often reckoned
worth more than an acre of wheat.
The dams may be built with farm
labor at small expense, and the ponds
I add considerably to tho beauty of tho
' : scenery. Very often, also, the ponds
' j can bo used to some extent for irrl1
! gation, and Irrigation will work wonJ
ders.
Put Bees In the Cellar.
' Have everything ready to put the
; bees into the cellar. Never place the
hives flat on tho floor, but raise them
1 about two inches to provido ventilation.
J!
HIT HIGHEST MARKET PRICE
Easier Done With Grain Crop* Than
^ With Livestock?Animals Must
Go When They Are Ready.
It is much easier, generally speak*
Ing. to hit the highest market price
with grain crops than it is with livestock.
There are various powerful
interests that rflm at certain seasons
of the year to depreciate the prices
of meat products and grain. The
grain farmer is leas at their mercy
than the stock farmer, because ho
can. as a rule, hold his grain for u
few months until tho market suits
him. The stockman cannot do this
with his cattle, sheep and swine to
anything like the same extent. Cattle,
sheep and swine must go when
they are ready for market. It is the
best thing a farmer can do to sell
when they are ready, that is, when
they have reached a weight at which
ho cannot add more weight at a
profit. Tho only advice th^it it is safe
to give on this point is to avoid being
a market chaser, and to sell fattened
stock when it is fit to ship. Thero
is a large expense connected with
holding fat stock and in many instances
the market goes the wrong
way. Every farmer knows that with
corn at, say 50 cents, he is assuming
the role of a speculator by holding a
bunch for a higher market, aftermost
of the food of support and the food
of gain becomes a diminishing quantity.
diminished to such an extent that
he cannot make a profitable increase
on his stock.
REJUVENATE AN OLD ORCHARD
Increase in Size and Color of Fruit
Is Very Largely Due to Judicious
Use of Prune Saw.
(Dy S. VAN SMITH. Colorado Agricultural
College.)
Our attention is being called every
day to the example of some farmer
with an idea, who takes a pruning
saw and goes into an old and unprofitable
orchard and makes it pay attrac
live dividends. Proper cultivation and
spraying; are important factors in
such a rejuvenation, but the increase
in size and coior of fruit is very largely
due to judicious pruning.
In old orchards which have been
neglected the thing most noticeable
is the fact that the tree tops contain
too much wood; too many limbs.
Many of these are large limbs which
should have been cut out years ago
whev. they wore small and the shock
to the tree would not have been so
great, to say nothing of the saving of
plant food used in the production of
1 mMu r4
I Irrigated Orchard Near Montrose, Col.
this superfluous wood. One of tho
most valuable qualities of market
fruit is good, attractive color. It takes
light and plenty of it to make good
color and tho tree top with too many
branches will keep out the sunlight
and, consequently, will not pioduce
well-colored fruit.
In market fruit, size as well as color
is important. The tree that tries
to produce too many apples will be
unable to bring them to a good size.
Thinning the fruit will aid very materially
in increasing tho size, but a
good deal- of work In thinning can be
saved by taking out some of the extra
wood this winter.
HELPFUL TO BEE BEGINNERS
One Method Which Cannot Fail to Assist
Is to Give Delinquent Insects
Good Shaking Up.
fRv MRS R 1-" lOSPPIT \
! A method I have just learned that
' cannot fail to help beginners in boo
culture is to give the bees a good
shaking when they become delinquent
in their work. When you move them
a short distance to prevent their going
back shake them in front of tho
entrance of their respective hives. Tho
most vicious bees can be made very
I tame by shaking. I shako them off
! the comb into a large dishpan. When
j the pnn is shaken about the same as"
you would shake a corn popper tho
I bers roll over in a confused mass and
after a nilnute of shaking, rolling and
tumbling they can bo picked up with
the hands, providing, of course, that
you do not hurt them.
Profitable Industry.
A profitable industry is being developed
on many of tho government
' irrigation projects in the production
i of honey, and reports Indicate that
I this honey is superior in quality. Alfalfa
is the chief source from which
tho bees secure their supply, and as
It blooms constantly from early
spring till late in the fall, the bees
have something to work on all the
time, which allows a greater amount
of honey to be stored.
\ ' I
Fcra S|T 1
Galled \
Horse ASa \
Try It W | 1
W After
there
/jKs.
HANFORD'8
Balsam of Myrrlt
For Galls,
Cuts, Lameness,
Strains, Bunches,
Thrush, Old Sores,
Nail Wounds, Foot Rot
Fistula, Bleeding, Etc. Etc. ^
Made Since 1846. "IX*
Price 25c, 50c and $1.00
All Dealers
W. N. U.. CHARLOTTE, NO. 39-1913.
* ?
Tin* less a man amounts to the larger
he shows up In a group photograph.
SULPHUR?THE GREAT
HOME REMEDY
Mr. Warren C. Cares, 10S So. Ohio
Ave., Columbus. Ohio, writes as follows:
"I suffered intensely from
Eczema which covered, my body
and arms. After trying three physicians
and one skin specialist and 29
different ointments and lotions, 1 accidentally
learned of Hancock's Sulphur
Compound and Ointment. I tried
them and the first application gave mo
instant relief from that awful itching.
1 persisted in their use and in one
week I had hardly a trace of the eruption."
If any reader questions this
testimonial as not being bona fide and
unsolicited, an inquiry sent to the address
above, enclosing postage will
convince anyone beyond question.
Hancock's Sulphur Compound and
Ointment are sold by all dealers. Han!
cock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore,
Md.?Adv.
Some young men would rather love
and lose than never love at all.
-1
Uric Acid Is Slow Poison
lixcess uric acid left in the blood by
weak kidneys, causes more diseases
than any other poison.
Among its effects are backache, headache,
dizziness. irritability, nervousness,
drowsiness, "blues," rheumatic attacks
! and urinary disorders. Later effects
are dropsy, gravel or heart disease.
If you would avoid uric acid troubles,
keep your kidneys healthy. To stimulate
and strengthen weak kidneys, use
1 loan's Kidney Pills?the best recommended
special kidney remedy.
A Ml sslsslppl Case j
Mrs. A. S. Payne,
fKOl K. Third Ave,
t'oluinhus. Miss,
"1 had terrible
puln:< in tny
hack and hips. My
hlndder was bndly
liiflained. I often _
cried out In puin. ?
I'ocloi i didn't
help me and 1 was
nil run down,
lionn's Kidney
nils brouirht relief
from the first
nnd three boxes
cured tne. I have
felt like a different
person since."
Get Donn'i at Any Store. 50c a Box
r- CAN'S "V.TLV
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
SORE EYES
Dr. Salter's Eye Lotion
relieves and cures sore and inflamed eyes in
24 to 48 hours. Helps the weak eyed, cures
without pain. Ask your druggist or dealer for
SALTER S. Only from Reform Dispensary,
W S. Broad. Atlanta. Georgia
rncc Nickel plated paten toil wire crabbing
r lltr trap to the boys who will sell to their
friends only five copieB of my Bong at 10c a
copy. Send postal card now for the songs.
JUNIE MERLE, 5 St. John's Place, Rldgewood, Brooklyn, N.Y.
/T\ 1/ ft It A I/O nn<> High Grade
Vr a HtUllMRO V-XiiBhing. Mall
Iljjhnjf orders given SperHmL?
rial attention. Priors reasonable.
Service prompt. Send (or Price List.
^ bASSEAC'S ART STORK (It AttlJtSTON, 8. C.
HAIRRBALSAW
1 rrJ>*r,llion<of
For Restoring Color and
Uoaut y to Cra y or Faded I lair.I
60c. and >1.00 at Druggists. j
If KdiiiCllkBl
N . . IOpium.Whiskey and Drug Habit? troat114
led at liorno or at Sanitarium Book on
IJL4RI subject Krnn. lilt It. M.WOOI.I.RY,
I i a?v <nrt)itKiMr?Kiia, itlasta, iituuu
Kl.KtiANT IIOTKI. I'KOI'KKTV FOK SAI.K
? Two story brick hotel, IS rooms, acetylene
I lights plumbing fixtures all In. neat hotel
i furniture, only hotel In town and doing? live
1 business Opposite station. good town, west*
rrn S < A. iv. I'oiflr & Co.. Columbia, 8. C.
I.A OIKS. ATTENTION?fourteen'* Famous
Superfluous llnlr Ilentovlnir Treatment la the
! greatest known Positively eradicates super nuous
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1