Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 20, 1894, Image 3

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    "Bellefonte, Pa., July 20, 1894.
Farm Notes.
—Never sell a good cow unless at a
price far above her worth. Sell the
poorest aud keep the best.
—Great as is the cattle industry the
value of poultry and eggs produced in
the United States annually is but little
less.
—Purslaine (parsley) is hard to kill,
and has millions of seeds. It grows
very rapidly, and can only be eradica-
ted by constant warfare on it.
—Wood ashes are not as useful or
as valuable as the salts of potash, but
if plentiful they will be found very
valuable, as they contain both potash
and lime.
—The sheep is the best paying ani-
mal on the farm, and this has been
demonstrated even by leaving out the
value of the wool. Mutton breeds
have never failed to give satisfaction.
—Water costs nothing, yet there is
more water sold off the farm
than anything else. By inducing larg-
er growth, with the use of fertilizers,
the plants contain more water and
draw less upon the soil proportionately.
—Farmers lose more by the use of
inferior tools than may be supposed.
An hour's delay each day amounts to
long length of time during a month.
Scrub stock does not inflict greater
damage than the use of scrub imple-
ments.
—A hog pasture without shade is al-
most as bad ae a barn without a roof.
It is wot in the interest of the farmer
to compel the hogs to endure the heat
of the sun. They prefer the shade at
times and thrive better when they can
get it.
—The better condition in which the
tarm tools are kept, the less effort is
required on the part of teams, and on
the part of the workmen also; yet
farmers will use their implements a
whole year without sharpening them.
No other mechanic would.
—Pasture land will soon cease to be
a fixture on the farm. A pasture
means that fences must be maintained,
the cost of which is in some sections
greater than the gain by the use of the
pasture. High farming is leading to
the system of bringing the food to the
cows instead of driving the cows to the
food.
—Crops differ in their preferences
for plant food, just as may be noticed
with animals. A crop of corn does
not take from the soil the same sub-
stances as does a crop of clover, be-
cause it does not feed upon the same
kind of food. When these facts are
better understood there will be greater
yields from the soil and at less expense.
—Hay should be a paying crop on
rich land. With a yield ot two tons
per acre it is one of the most profita-
ble crops that can be grown, and
leaves a large proportion of roots in
the soil to enrich it. If hay is selling
at $20 per ton the value of the sod on
the land, for turning under, may safely
be estimated at $8 more.
—1It is remarkable that, while in the
South the cow pea is used for green
erops, to be plowed under, yet in the
North it has been neglected, though
repeated experiments have demonstra-
ted that the cow pea will thrive wher-
ever corn will grow, and especially
when required for green manure only,
as the seed does not have to mature.
—A piece of land that is apparently
unprofitable may need but a small pro-
portion of some special fertilizer to
enable it to produce abundantly. It
may contain potash and phosphoric
acid and yet fail to give good results,
because nitrogen is lacking. It is only
necessary to resort to the special plant
food that 18 required to make land
yield as it should.
—The use of broad tires on roads is
a subject that should receive attention,
Instead of cutting up the road a broad
tire serves as a roller, and packs and
smooths the road. It is not necessary
to have heavy wheels because they are
broad. In this age of steel broad
wheels may combine strength, light
ness and efficiency, and their use
would save the roads and also permit
of drawing heavier loads.
—Whether green manurial crops
add fertility or not to the soil the fact
remains that by green manuring and
the the use of lime there is an in-
crease of humus. Mulch or shade of
any kind promotes the formation of
humus, and thus the land is made ca-
pable of retaining more moisture and
of hastening chemical processes. All
lauds have been improved wherever
green manuring has been resorted to.
—It requires quite an amount of
boiling water, scrubbing and hard
work to remove every trace of ‘‘fer-
ment’ from a milk can after it bas
been used. Those who content them-
selves with simply shaking a little
soapy water in the cans and rinsing
them with clean water need not be sur-
prised if the milk quickly sours, as the
least trace of any portion of the pre-
vious milk will hasten a change in the
new. Boiling water and carbonate of
soda should be used freely.
» —Manure is more subject to loss in
very dry weather than at any other
time unless a large amount of absorb:
ent material is provided and the heap
turned over occasionally, as it may be-
come overheated and ‘“fire-tang.”
When this occurs the ammonia is giv-
en off as a gas. As it is the most val-
uable portion of the inanure its loss
shou!d be guarded against. Drench-
ing the heap with cold water, first
making openings to allow the water to
reach the centre of the heap, is an ex-
cellent method of preventing loss.
New Mexico Thunder Storms.
People at a Distance Learn of Their Doings by
Way af the Rivers.
«To Las Vegos, the Meadow City of
New Mexico,” writes an overland tour-
ist, ‘an excellent pipe system brings
pure water down from the upper Gal-
linas River, which you way drink
cooled with ice frozen upon the same
crystal stream. The reservoir, six, or
seven miles above the town, is a large
mountain shaded lake formed by dam-
ming the river. Over and above the
work of the water company, the river,
during the present summer, has been
the subject of a vast deal of individual
damning owing to its liability to get
both ‘way up’ and ‘riled’ for no cause
obvious to a stranger.
“My first experience of the Gallinas’
turning loose was on an afternoon in
June. The town was bright with sun-
shine, with a clear sky overhead, as I
sat on the hotel veranda enjoying the
beautiful spectacle of constant lightning
flashes in a dense cloud that veiled the
mountains to the northwest.
“Stepping indoors for a glass of water
I discovered that where a clear stream
was wont to flow, a thick, muddy liquid
was all that could be drawn from the
faucets. A few minutes later, crossing
the bridge over the river that divides
the new from the old town, I perceived
taat the clear, shallowe stream that I
had seen rippling over its pebbles an
hour before had become a roaring, tur-
bid torrent, which was rapidly rising,
and already threatened the bridge. It
came within a foot or two of the strang-
pieces, so that floating logs could barely
pass underneath before high-water mark
was reached.
“Las Vegans know precisely what to
do in such an emergency, and, with fil-
ters and settling tubs, had, before night,
a sufficiency of water only slightly
clouded for domestic use. The river
fell as rapidly as it had risen, and the
walters next morning were only a trifle
higher than usual. The pipes before
the end of the next day were flowing
and people seemed to give the matter of
the flood but little thought and less com-
ment.
“The cause of the river's going on
such a bender was the thunder storm
which I bad watched in the distance the
day before, and which had fallen about
the headwaters in the mountains, where
it probably bad attained the dignity of
a cloud-burst. It was learned later in
town that the rain had washed things
out considerably among the hills.
Roads were so gullied as to be impassa-
ble, and in some places had dropped
sheer into ravins which they
skirted so that new trails had to be
made. In places much dead timber had
been washed down mountain side to be
lodged in valley thickets or carried
down stream in the river's flood.
“But the unusual raininess of the sea-
son, even with the drawbacks of occa-
sioned high water and smashing hail,
has been a god send to New Mexico, and
has brought the country out in its best
and most beautiful aspects. The some-
times arid mesas (table-land elevation)
and prairies near the foothills are green
with luxuriant grass, and lakes and wa-
ter holes are filled "to overflowing.
Stock find a good range about anywhere
they choose to go, and the flocks and
herds grazing, widely scattered, on vast
emerald plains, present a charming pas-
toral picture to the traveller as he is
borne through the Territory along the
path of the iron rails.”
Florida Water.
To make Florida water take two
drams each of oils of lavender berga-
mot and lemon, one dram each of tum-
eric and oil of neroli, thirty drops of oil
of palm and ten drops of oil of ruse.
Mix these ingredients well with two
pints of deodorized alcohol. It will be
ready for use in two or three days after
mixing.
——For the first time in twenty or
more years the pear trees in this region
have been smitten with the fire blight.
It is a milder attack than is common,
but its suddenly fatal effect on small
branches here and there in the tops of
trees causesalarm. No cause has yet
been determined nor is any cure or
remedy known. It is called fire blight
because the leaves of the affected twigs
look as if scorched or scalded. Quince
trees are much affected by it and apple
trees.occasionally. For two years past
bushes and hedges of privet have suffer-
ed greatly from a similar infliction.
Where the dead twigs are within reach
it is considered best to cut them off as
far down as any discoloration is found
under the bark, both for the sake of re-
moving an eyesore, and because another
stroke of the kind next year is less like-
ly or is likely to be less severe. Atter a
year or two of prevalence it usually dis-
appears for a couple of decades or long-
er.— Tyrone Herald.
—— Utah will be a state of the Amer-
ican union. the bill for its admission
now being in the hands of the president,
who will without a doubt sign it. The
objections that were formerly sufficient
to keep it out have now been removed.
It will very properly, therefore, be-
come the forty-fifth state, with poly-
gamy abolished and an industrious and
growing population within its borders.
Utah, indeed, will be one of the most
promising of all the far western com-
monwealths, It has long been trying
to get into the union and this year will
close the struggle of more than a gener-
ation,
No Use in His Business.
Mrs. Hastack. “Here's a pair of old-
pants you can have.”
Heavy Waite. “I'd take dem pants,
mum, but dere ain’t no seat on ‘em, an’
I'm a great feller fer sittin’ down,
mum,’’
———
w=—A Brooklyn deacon has invented
a money sieve which sorts out the pen-
nies, nickels, dimes and quarters which
he collects in the church contribution
box.
A healthy Indian may not even
know how to write his own name, but
be is well red just the same.
—-—Read the WATCHMAN,
CAMP MEETIN' TIME.
Camp meetin’ time's a comin’ an’ the yaller-
legged chick :
Will help the loss preacher in his fight with
sinful Nick— ;
An’ soon the shouter’s music will be ringin’
full an’ free,
As the story of salvation is told to you an’ me!
Camp meetin’ time's a-comin’-the arbor’s
cool an’ green,
The vines that clamber round it make a fra-
grant, welcome screen—
An’ ’neuth it, in the shadows, where the coolin’
breezes float,
Echo scon will catch up an’ fling back the
music’s note !
Camp meetin’ time's a comin’—it makes my
glad heart feel
Old time religion’s good enovgh, at nature's
feet to kneel ; ;
An’ while the birds are singin’ in the glorious
sunny air
You ean take your load of troubles, an’ leave
your burden there !
— Atlanta Constitution.
——————————
Away Out West.
A Cotton Storm in Colorado—A Bug Empor-
wm.
A cotton storm, looking exactly like
a snow storm, is a common sight in the
cottonwood groves of Colorado. The
white, fluffy material grows in long
bunches, loosely attached to stems, and
the fibre is very short. At the lightest
breeze that stirs the branches tiny bits
of it take to flight, and one tree will
shed cotton for weeks. It clings to one's
garments, it gets into the house and
sticks to the carpets, often showing a
trial of white footprints where a per-
son has comein ; it clogs the wire-gauze
screens till they keep out the air as
well as the flies ; it fills the noses aad
the eyes of men and beasts. But its
most curious effect is on the plants
and flowers, to which it adheres, being
a little gummy. Some flowers look as
if they were encased in ice, and others
seem wrapped in the gauziest of veils,
which flimsy as it looks, cannot be
completely cleared from the leaves.
It covers the ground like snow, and
strangely enough it looks in June, but
it does not, like snow, melt, even under
the warm summer sunshine. It must
be swept from the garden and walks!
and carted away. A heavy rain clears
the air and subdues it for a time, but
the sun soon dries the bunches till on
the trees, and the cotton storm in again
in full blast. This annoyance lasts
through June and a part of July,
fully six weeks, and then the stems
themselves drop to the ground, still
holding enough cotton to keep up the
storm for days. After this the first
raintall ends the trouble for that sea-
son.
Buying a Horse.
An amusing horse story comes from
one of our sporting neighbors. A gen-
tleman who concluded to ‘weed out”
his stables and get in some fresh blood
sent a horse to one of the recent sales
and received as the result $150. A
day or two afterward, wishing to re-
place the animal, he visited a well
known horse exchange, and after care-
fully examining the stock finally se-
lected a good looking animal which, he
was told, had recently arrived in a car
from the west. The price asked was
$300. This, although more than the
purchaser cared to give, was finally
acceded to, as the animal was a fine,
showy beast and seemed to answer all
his requirements. So quite satisfied
with his acquigition, Mr. Z. paid the
price and ordered his new purchase to
be sent to his stables.
“Why, sir, I thought you bad sold
Tommy,” said his head coachman that
evening when he returned home and
found the man waiting for him.
“Well, James, and eo I did,” an-
swered his master. “What of it?”
“A man brought him back, sir, this
afternoon,” returned the servant, sup-
pressing a grin, ‘and said that you had
bought him this afternoon and that he
was to deliver him.”
Mr. Z. fairly jumped. “Great Scott!"
be exclaimed as the light slowly dawn-
ed upon him, “You don’t mean to say
that I have actually bought back my
own horse and paid $150 more than I
got for him I" So it proved.
Death in a Bee's Sting.
The sting of a honey bee resulted in
the death of Jonas D. Godshalk, of
Lansdale Pa. The bee stung Mr. God-
shalk on the chin last week. The
wound became very painful at once and
several physicians were called to treat
the case. All efforts were unavailing,
however, and death resulted.
The physicians say it is an extremely
rare case for death to result from the
sting of a bee.
——The biggest mosquito story of
the season comes from a Maine man,
who says that when he approached his
summer cottage the other day he
noticed, or thought he noticed, that
somebody had taken the liberty of
painting his door over ; but before he
had found words suitable for the occa:
sion his wrath turned to dismay on
discovering that the change of color
was due to the mosquitoes, who were
waiting for him to come and let them
in.
——W. H. Nelson, who is in the
drug business at Kingville, Mo., hasso
much confidence in Chamberlain’s Colic
Cholerasand Diarrhoea Remedy that he
warrants every bottle and offers to re-
fund the money to any customer who is
not satisfied after using it. Mr. Nelson
takes no risk in doing this because the
Remedy is a certain cure for the diseases
for which its intended and he knows
it. It is for sale by. F. P. Green.
: The Makeup.
He—Stage kisses are not real, are
they ?
She—They are quitz what they are
pointed, I think.
—--To gain strength—Hood’s Sarsa-
parilla
For steady nerves—Hood’s Sarsapa-
rilla.
For pure blood—Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
——8aid the hay fever workingman
to the dipsomaniac leader “You be Deb-
bed.”
) © en,
——REyes and ears have we that we
may see and hear ; brains, that we may
reason and understand ; so there's little
excuse for much of the suffering that is
tolerated. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medi-
cal Discovery is fast becoming the one
recognized remedy for all diseases re-
sulting from thin, impure and impover-
ished blood.
Indigestion and dyspepsia, scrotalous
affections, liver and kidney diseases,
sores and swellings, catarrh and con-
sumption, are blood affections. With
purified, enriched and vitalized blood,
they flee as darkness before the light !
Dr. Pie.ce’s Golden Medical Discovery
is the only guaranteed blood- purifier
and liver invigorator. Sold on #rial!
Money promptly returned, if it doesn’t
benefit or cure.
—
——1It may be of interest to readers
to know that the paper for the Bank of
England notes is made from new white
linén—never from rags or from any-
thing that has been in use before. So
carefully is the paper prepared that ev-
en the number of dips into the pulp
made by each workman is registered on
an automatic dial.—Sz. Louis Republic.
——
——A horse kicked H. S. Shafer, ot
the Freemyer House, Middleburg, N.
Y., on the knee, which laid him up in
bed and caused the knee joint to become
stiff. A friend recommended him to
use Chamberlain’s Pain Balm, which
he did, and in two days was able to be
around. Mr. Shafer has recommended
it to many others and says it is excellent
for any kind of a bruise or sprain. This
same Remedy is also famous for its cures
of rheumatism. For sale by F. P.
Green.
——Miss Richgirl (of Chicago)—And
80 you kissed the blarney stone at the
Columbian exposition ? Ha, ha! It
was nothing but a Chicago paving
stone,
Mr. Smartchapp—So I heard at the
time, but I thought perhaps you might
have walked on it.
Then she married him.
—— When the blood is loaded with
impurities, the whole system becomes
disordered. This condition of things
cannot last long without serious results.
In such cases, a powerful alterative is
needed, such as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, It
never fails, and has no equal.
——Of late years Madame Alboni,
the great contralto, who died in Paris
the other day, had become so fat that
she could not walk without the assis-
tance of two strong men.
Business Notiee.
Children Cry or Pitcher’s Castoria.
When baby was sick, we gave her Castoria,
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria,
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria,
When she had Children, she gave them
Castoria. 38-43-2y
READ RULE XV.
“Articles that are in any way
dangerous or offensive, also
patent medicines nostrums,and
empirical preparations, whose
ingredients are concealed, will
not be admitted to the Exposi-
tion.”
Why was Ayer’s Sarsaparilla ad
mitted ? Because itis not a pat-
ent medicine, not a nostrum,
nor a secret preparation, not
dangerous, not an experiment,
and becauseit is all that a fami-
ly medicine should be.
AYER’'S
the only
SARSAPARILLA
Admitted at the
WORLD'S FAIR
Chicago, 1893.
Why not get the Best? 39-17-1t
New Advertisements.
War
CAN'T PULL OUT?
WHY THE
Bow on the JAS. BOSS FILLED
WATCH CASES, made by the
KEYSTONE WATCH CASE COM-
PANY, Philadelphia. It protects
the Wateh from the pick-pocket,
and prevents it from dropping.
Can only be had with cases
stamped with this trademark ©
Sold, without extra charge for
this bow (ring), through Watch
dealers only.
Ask your jeweler for pamphlet,
or send to makers. 89-27 4t
Printing. Printing.
Yue JOB PRINTING.
Fine Job Printing Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
+ Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing. FinelJob Printing.
FINE JOB PRINTING}
Fine Job Printing: Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing,
Fine Job Printing. .
Fine Job Printing
Fine Job, Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
—{AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE]-
New Advertisements.
A N EYE SPECIALIST
H. FE. HERMAN, & CO., Limited.
Formerly with
QUEEN & Co., OF PHILADELPHIA.
AT W. T. ACHENBACH, JEWELER,
BELLEFONTE,
SATURDAY, JULY 21st
From 8:30 a. m., to 5:30 p. m.
There is no safer, surer, or cheaper method
of obtaining proper relief for overstrained and
defective eyesight, héadache, and so forth,
than to consult this specialist, The happy re-
sults from correctly fitted glasses are a grate-
ful surprise to persons who have not before
known the real profit to themselves in wearing
good glasses, No charge to examine Jon
All glasses are guaranteed by H. E.
Herman. 38-49-1y
ANTED.—Honest, temperate,
| energetic men to solicit orders for
| FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL NURSERY
STOCK. Permanent employment and good
wages ; also liberal inducements to local
agents. Varieties especially adapted to Penn-
gylvania. The business easily learned. Write
at once for terms and territory. Address
R. G. CHASE & CO.,
39-18-8t 1430 South Penn Square, Philadelphia.
| Miscellaneous Advs.
y Buggies, Carts Etc.
| YD UGGIES CARTS & HARNESS
| AT HALF PRICE.
$90 Top Buggy......837| We Cut the PRICES
, $95 Phaeton $54 and outsell all competi.
| 4 Pass. Top Surrey. $47 tors.
SaoTond Wagon 50! Buy of factory and
| 816 Road Cart.. 5
3.85save middleman's pro-
$4.75
2.50."
Morgan Saddie..... 31.65 Catalogue Free.
U.S. BUGGY & CART CO.
| 88-30-1y 2 to 12 Lawrence St., Cincinnatti, O.
MEedical. Saddlery.
A YER’S SCHOFIEL 'S NEW
5 HARNESS HOSUE
THE ONLY
3 SARSAPARILLA We otiond a most cordial invitation to our
ADMITTED patrons and the public, in general, to witness
one of the
GRANDEST DISPLAY OF
Light and Heavy Harness
ever put on the Bellefonte market, which will
be made in the large room, formerly cccupled
by Harper Bros., on Spring street. It has been
added to my factory and will be used exclu-
sively for the sale of harness, being the first
exclusive salesroom ever used in this town, as
heretofore the custom has been to sell goods
in the room in which they were made. This
Sisgens room hsg-been refitted and furnished
with glass cases in which the harness can be
nicely aisplayed: and still kept away from
heat and dust, the enemies of long wear in
leather. Our fasstory now occupies a room
16x74 feet and the store 20x60 added makes it
the largest establishment of its kind outside
of Philadelphia and Pittsburg.
We are prepared to offer better bargains ia
the future than we have done in the past and
we want everyone to see our goods and get
prices for when you do this, out of self defense
ou will buy. Our profits are not large, but
y selling lots ofigoods we can afford to live in
Bellefonte. We are noi indulging in idle
philanthropy. Itis purely business. We are
not meking mueh, but trade is growing and
that is what we are intrested in now. fits
will take care of themselves.
When other houses discharged their work-
men during the winter they were all put to
work in my faetory, nevertheless the bi a
houses of this city’ and county would smile
we compared ourselves to them, but we do not
mean to be so odious, except to venture the as-
section that none of them can say, as we can
= “NO ONE OWES US A CENT THAT WE
CAN'T GET.” This is the whole story.
The following are kept constantly on hand.
50 SETS OF LIGHT HARNESS, prices from
$8.00 to $15.00 and upwards, LARGE
STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS per
set $25.00 and upwards, 500 HORSE
COLLARS from $1,50 to Ba
each, over $100.00 worth o
HARNESS
AXLE GREASE,
$400 worth of Fly Nete sold cheap
8150 worth of whips
from 15¢ to $3.00 each,
Horse Brushes,Cury Corabs
ens Chamois, RIDING
SADDLES, LADY SIDE SADDLES
Harness Seap, Knee Dusters, at low
prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand
for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25¢ per
pound. We yl Siiningto be found ins
FIRST CLASS HARNESS STORE—no chang:
ing, over 20 years in the same room. No two
shops in the same town to cateh trade—NO
SELLING OUT for the want of trade or prices-
Four harness-makers at steady work this win-
ter, This is our idea of protection to labor,
when other houses discharged their hands,
they soon found work with us.
JAS. SCHOFIELD,
Svring street, Bellefonte, Pa.
33 37
INuminating Oil.
Coons ACME.
THE BEST
BURNING OIL
THAT CAN BE MADE
FROM PETROLEUM,
It gives a Brilliant Light.
It will net Smoke the Chimney.
It will Not Char the Wick.
It has a High Fire Test.
It does Not Explode.
It is without an equal
AS A SAFETY FAMILY OIL.
We stake our reputation as refiners th
IT IS THE BEST OIL IN THE WORLD.
Ask your dealer for it. Trade supplied by
THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO.
Bellefonte Station
Bellefonte, Pa.
asm
37 37 1y
Miscellaneous Advs.
HE ART INTERCHANGE,
Is now in its sixteenth year, and has estab-
lished for itself such a reputation for reliabil-
ity, progressiveness, and excellence of charac-
ter, that it is recognized as the leading art and
household magazine in the United States.
Among the departments—all treated by ex-
pert workers and able designers and writers.
are :
Wood Carving, Home Decoration,
Instruction Department, Embroidery,
Tapestry Painting, Architecture,
Artist Biography, Sketching,
Drawings for Illustration, Fine Art,
Decorative Art, Photography,
Miniature Painting, Pyrography,
Leather Work, Art Criticism,
Oil, Water and Mineral Color Painting.
A years’ subscription gives you, besides the
12 elaborately illustrated monthly numbers,
36 superb studies in oil and water colors, for
framing or copying—facsimilies of paintings
by well-known AMERICAN artists, and 24 large
sheets of full size desigus for home art work.
All colored and other designs are accompanied
with careful directions for carrying them out.
EVERYONE who sends the regular price of
$4.00 for one year’s subscription direct to our
office, will be presented with
“PICTURESQUE VENICE.”
This is an exquisite portfo'io of fine plates,
in color, showing various views of the historic
city of Venice, accompanied with descriptive
text, all printed on heavy paper, with wide
margins, making ita dainty work for the libra.
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