6 QUIT KICKING. Quit kicking just because you think The old world's going wrong; There's always something ' somewhere Ul' happiness and song. Ucsides, you never inuile the world; Lite's scheme Is not your own; Quit kicking, take what happens, and Just reap what you have sown. Quit kicking. When the play is bad Remember what you've lost /Borne other fellow s gained, and so. In summing up the cost ts'e llnd that In the rtid we know What other men have known— Results? We lake them as th. y come— We reap what we have sown. Quit kicking, man. The world's not bad, At K ast, It could be worse. We li\e and dream; that's worth the while; We ponder themes and verse; We sii;g and love; we hate and feel; We laugh; sometimes we weep— B>> all the pulsing passions are Compassed in the sweep. Of what \v,> are and what we feel— Quit kicking, man! The blame, If, in this whirligig of chance And time, you lose the game, Is with the man who whiles his life Complainingly away; Just laugh, old man; just dream, and love; Just live—and live to-day! •—N. O. Times-Democrat. Txy cy.s Scoundrels 4 Co. ByCOULSON KERNAHAN Author o! "Captain Shannon.' 1 "A Book ol Strange Sinj." "A Drad Man's Diary," Etc. Copyright, 1899, by Herbert S. Stone Sc Co. CHAPTER XII.— CONTINUED. It was true that they had been fooled, but who was so great a fool as the man who had hugged himself for his own cleverness and had laughed at the conspirators as his dupes, and yet Lad been so blind as not to know that in coming there that night he was de liberately putting his head into a noose of his own making? But if I was to die I would at least sell my life dearly. Even while Number Two had been speaking, I had sought the pocket where lay my revolver. The next in stant would have seen me whip the weapon out, and indeed my finger was already on the trigger, when a deris ive laugh from one of the party stayed ruy hand. The laugh came from Number Five —the man who, either from jealousy or because he was himself ambitious of being elected to fill the post of the dead leader, had all along endeavored to throw t old water upon Number Two's projects. "The old story!" he said contemptu ously. "Every clumsy bungler, who makes a mess of what he has under taken, tries to excuse himself by put ting the blame on somebody else. You remind me of a schoolboy, who when be is fairly beaten in a game calls out "Cheat! Cheat!' Why don't you admit that you've failed, and have done with it." I was thankful for any diversion which turned to another quarter the attention which I had anticipated was soon to be centered upon myself, and I took the opportunity which the re spite afforded of edging cautiously towards the door. While I was doing so Number Two's reply came cdld and clear: "Fellow councillors, the traitor among us stands self-revealed. When the bomb which ought to have de stroyed the royal family fell harmless ly in the roadway, and while I was Standing there gnashing my teeth with rage, I felt instinctively that some one person was watching me when every other eye in the assembly was fixed upon the show. I know instinctively if I am watched, even when the watch er Is behind me, and my eyes vrent straight to the watching person on this occasion. He was sitting on a stand — had chosen the place, no doubt, that he might gratify his jealous hate by being a witness of my discomfiture— exactly opposite. When he saw that I had discovered him he drew back out of sight among the crowd, but not be fore I had seen that he was long-faced and high-shouldered. Look at the man who has just spoken, the man who is trying lo belittle me in your eyes be cause he fears that you will elect me to the post that he hankers for himself. Look at him, I say, and see whether he is the man I have described or not. He thinks, ro doubt, that he is safe be cause he I# wearing the beard which we all wear, and had none when I caught sight, of him on Jubilee day. But he has shown his hand too plainly on this occasion. I told you that there was a traitor in our midst and he stands there!" Here was a curious throw of Fate's dice indeed! Little did I think on Ju bilee day. when some instinct of self preservation caused me to seek to disguise my identity from Number Two by humping my shoulders and dropping my jaw, that I was uncon sciously mimicking one of the syndi cate of scoundrels and so probably saving my own life. Before I could ask whether it would not be a cowardly thing to shelter my self under so curious an accident and to let another man be made answer able for my action, Number Five had leapt forward and confronted his ac cuser. "Liar!" he screamed, almost hys terically. "Coward and liar! take that!" As he spoke his nand darted to wards the knife in the wall, which was doing duty as a candlestick. I saw him clutch the handle and wrench the Wbapon trom its place, and then as the candle fell «nd we were piunged in total darkness, he sprang upon Number Two with upraised blade. In the second before the candle went out I had seen the other conspirators start forward instinctively with out stretched hands to stay the descending knife; and for the next few seconds the picture so formed remained on my retina like a tableau vivant, in which, as if Time's pendulum had suddenly stopped, we see action frozen in a mo ment's space into inaction, life caught and fixed in an instant to still life. Then, as the picture thus imprinted on the retina lifted rigidly and edged anglewise away until it swam a;id dis solved out of ken in an upper corner of the shed, 1 seemed to see the suc ceeding and inclosing darkness writh ing around me like the coils of two huge wrestling and intertwining black snakes; 1 heard the scuffle 01 feet as the two combatants swayed backward and forward 011 the lloor; there was a cry, the thud of a falling body; and the nt'xi instant some one struck a match. The picture that presented itself was exactly like that I have seen in melo dramas, when the curtain, which has fallen upon some tragic situation, lifts for a moment to allow the spectators another glimpse of the ghastly sight. Number Two —his tie and collar torn open and hanging loose —was leaning back white-faced and panting against the door, looking almost stupidly at a gaping cut across the palm of his right hand. The others were bending over Number Five, who lay on his back upon the lloor. his features twitching and working horribly, while his nerve less hands fumbled at the handle of a knife which was buried up to the hilt in his throat. 1 have said that the whole scene re minded me of a "curtain" from a transpontine melodrama, and the stageness of the situation was sus tained by the subsequent introduction of the inevitable "comic relief." The man who held the match was bending over the body on the lloor, and the other conspirators had natu rally drawn as close to him as possi ble, in their eagerness to see what had happened or to render help. Sudden ly the man who was holding the match dropped it with a yell. "Damn your clumsy, clumping feet!" he roared, as lie stumped backward and forward whistling with pain. "Here am 1 with an ingrowing nail that has given me hell and Old Harry for weeks, and you must needs go set your hobnail hoof upon it." "Beg pardon I'm sure," answered a voice from the darkness. "Beg pardon be damned!" came the reply. "A man's 110 right to bring feet like those among gentlemen. They're only fit to hire out, instead of steam rollers, to crush stones on a country road." In the meantime another match had been struck, and the man with the in growing nail found another grievance. "J3e damned if he ain't standing 011 the candle with 'em now," he grum bled. "Here, move 'em, will you, if you can do it without knocking any body down. You'll kill some one be fore you've done, if we con't have a light. I feel like a black-beetle on a kitchen t'oor, I do, when you're walk ing about with those boobs on." "Is he hurt?" asked some one, when the candle had been rescued and re lit, and attention was once more turned to the prostrate man upon the floor. "No, he ain't hurt; he's only dead, that's what he is," said the fellow with the ingrowing nail, whose number on the council I subsequently discovered was Number Six. "It would take a power - o' hurting to trouble a man who's wearing a necktie like that. You might as well talk of hurting a skewered chicken." "Gentlemen," said Numter Two, "you are my witnesses that I struck in self-defense. It was he who drew steel on me, not lon him. Besides, even if this hadn't happened, the necks of none of us would have be«<n safe if he had been allowed to leave this place alive to-night. How he did it I don't know, but there's no question but that it was he who changed the ball that I had prepared for Jubilee day. I saw him with my own eyes sitting in the building exactly opposite. And what would have been easier for a t;tan who knew our plans, and had th« run of the building opposite, than to play tricks with the other end of the festoon upon which the ball was htijig? No doubt, after I had fixed the b.mib and gone away, he managed to it in some fashion and then haul i: up and change it. If you remember i invited him to assist me in carrying out the project. But he was too clever for that. He knew that if anything went wrong I should naturally suspect him (and, in fact, I was inclined at first to suspect. Number Seven, who assisted me) and so, after this fellow had ac quainted himself with my proposed plan, he goes and installs himself in the building that faced my headquar ters, so that he can spoil the game without incurring suspicion. It was very prettily planned, and, no doubt, if we knew the truth the poor man who went to his account over that at tempt on Lord Cranthorpe was a vic tim of this same Judas's treachery." As he 3poke he spurned the body on the floor with his foot. It seemed to stir. "Damme! I don't believe he's dead, after all," said Councillor Number Six. Kneeling down and placing one hand on the prostrate man's shouMer, he began to ui-cto the buttons of the waist coat. "Lmph!" iie grunted. "Tht e's a pound or two of stiff horsehair pad ding in the man's shoulders. You can feel it jutting out where the coat joins the sleeve. Wanted to make himself look broad and military, I suppose. A rum fancy. Now let's see if his heart's going." Opening the shirt at Hit! collar, he slipped an open palm over the victim's left breast. Tiiua he sprang to his feet with a CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY u, 1904 startled cry, "My uod! mares," he said. "It isn't a man at all, but a woman!" "A woman!" chorused the con spirators. "Yes, it is a woman right enough!" said the fellow. He stood for a mo ment or two staring meditatively at the body, and then, with eyes nar rowed to slits, he looked curiously at each of us in turn, as if expecting to find n one of our faces something which might indicate a previous knowledge of the victim's sex. In this he was disappointed, for I watched the faces of the others meanwhile, and eouid detect no such sign as he sought. This, in fact, was hardly to be won dered at under the circumstances. Some physiognomists tell yon that \t you suspect a man of lying, or an ene my of flinching, you should look him in the eyes. Do so by all means, but better still, watch his mouth. Many men will bra/en it out boldly with their eyes, but all their hardihood can not quite control the traitor mouth from betraying secrets to those who can read the signs aright. Several times eyes have looked unwaveringly into mine, as if steadied by the con sciousness of truth, even while the word "liar'' was plainly written on the lips. On the occasion of which I am writ ing, the lips of those present were hid den by the false beards and mus taches which we wore, and physiog nomy (I never yet met a man or wom an who did not plume himself, or her self, 011 being an adept in that science) was disadvantaged thereby. But, if the expression counts for anything, one and all were taken aback and be wildered by the surprise which had been sprung upon them regarding the victim's sex. "Did you know it was a woman?" asked the man who had made the dis covery, wheeling round sharply upon Number Two. "Indeed, I did not," was the calm but decisive reply. "The possibilities of such a thing never as much as oc- NUMBER TWO, SCOUNDREL THOUGH HE WAS, KNELT DOWN. curred to me. But what you say about her shoulders being padded goes to prove that 1 was right in accusing this person of having played tricks with my plan for celebrating the jubilee. I distinctly said that the man I saw watching me was liigh-sliouldered as well as long-faced." "Do you think the chief knew this person was a woman?" inquired the man who had constituted himself spokesman. "He must have done so. Each mem ber of the council was selected by him, and was known to him personally. No doubt he had good reason for what he did. In fact, if you think of it, there were one or two little affairs planned by him and carried out under his superintendence that, if we had thought of it at all, we might have known only a woman could have worked successfully. All the same, if I'd suspected we had a woman amongst us, I'm afraid I should have funked the whole business. The woman isn't born yet, and never will be born, that I'd trust my neck to. Sooner or later they're bound to play you false. I've known a good many bad men in my time—men who were sensual as hogs and as cruel as tigers—but the biggest brute of a man living couldn't stoop to the black treachery that some women are capable of. And they can be as treacherous to the man who's faithful to them and works his fingers to the bone for them, as they can to the blackguard that kicks them to death with hob-nailed boots. I tell you what it is, my friends, it's lucky for us we have made this discovery while our necks were safe. Some one has been playing us false ever since our chief died (and we don't know that some body didn't play him false, and that he wouldn't have been among us to day but for that same somebody). But there lies the traitor, beyond all doubt, and you see if things don't work better with us now that the Judas who has' been trying to circumvent us is out of the way." No one dissenting from this view of the case, Councillor Number Two dropped his platform manner, and ad dressed himself to the practical side of the question. "Well, my friends," he said, "we don't stop now to argue whether I'm right or whether I'm wrong. Let's have that wig and beard off. It's pos sible some of us may be able to identi fy this woman." He plucked off the disguise as he spoke, and then stag gered back, his face grown gray as putty, the pupils of his eyes unnatural ly dilated, and his breath coming i,t short, quick inspirations. "My God!" he gasped; "and I've killed her!" "Yes," said Number Six; "the job goes down in your account right enough, my friend. You make your self easy about that. There's iui one here w juld be sc mean as to want to do you out of It." The taunt passed unheeded, if not unheard, for, to the dismay, and prob ably to the disgust, of the onlookers, Number Two, scoundrel though he was, knelt down beside the corpse with a look on his face that seemed strange ly out of keeping in that company. Councillor Number Six was appar ently not a sentimental person. "H'm!" he sneered. "First we stick a knife into folk, and then we do the handkerchief business over 'em. Seems to me this syndicate ought to turn itself into an amalgamated mur der and mourner company combined. 'Murders committed on the shortest notice; funerals to match; tears al ways in stock. If you don't see the kind of corpse you'd like in the win dow, step inside and ask for another. No extra charge for handkerchiefs.'" He spoke to unlistening ears, as far as Number Two was concerned; see ing which the fellow slapped the kneel ing man on the shoulder noisily. "Cheer up. my buck!" he said; "you had a lot to say against women just now, but you seem mightly low down all at once because one of 'em's met with an accident." "Yes," answered Number Two, ris ing and looking around wftariedly; "I've a good deal to say against them, as you observe, and that particular one* has a good deal to say against me, if she could say it." "You've taken good care she can't," sneered the other. "But, look here, my friend. It strikes me that that lady caniK here meaning mischief. When a woman wants to make it nasty for a man, she ain't too partic ular if she makes it nasty for his mates, too. That's the worst of a woman. When she's set on a thing she goes at it blind. Now we don't institute too rigorous an investigation into the moral character of those who have seats on this council —not too rigorous, that is—but we hope, for the sake of all our peace of mind, not to say our necks, that there aren't any other ladies who want to get equal with you. Otherwise we might have old Jonah on board at. once." "1 don't think you need fear any further trouble of the sort," answered Number Two, with a mirthless smile. Then he turned to address the com pany more generally: "I had a proposal to submit to you to-night, gentlemen, but perhaps it will be best for all our safety if we get out of this place as soon as possible, and out of sight of"—he hesitated a moment, gulped at something in his throat, like one suffering from physical sickness, and then, as if impatient of his weakness, pointed deliberately at the corpse—"of that. With your per mission we'll postpone this meeting. It won't be safe to meet here again, es pecially after what's happened. I know it's desirable to change the place of meeting as often as possible, but for the present I'm absolutely positive that the gipsy wagon at Leigh is safe. Let us all meet there at midnight the day after to-morrow. Do you agree?" "Yes, we agree," said Councillor Number Six. "But first we must get rid of the body. Is there a pond handy? If we button a brick under the coat so that it can't slip out, and pack the pocket with stones, she'd keep down all right." [To Be Continued.] MODERN LOGIC. Am Propounded l»y u MlMcliicvoua Little to Her Ac cuiiiiifr Father. When Edith's papa came in from his office late one spring afternoon he happened to see the little girl playing in apparent innocence by the flower borders behind the house. So, in order to join her at her play, he entered the yard through the back gate instead of going around to the front, as was his custom, relates Woman's Home Com panion. When 'r.e walked up to the flower borders, which were the pride of his young wife's heart, he was dismayed to find that, his small daughter had carefully pulled up all the bulbs which her mother had planted, and was busily engaged in putting them back in their places upside down. She knew rhe was doing wrong, for her face flushed guilt ily when she looked up and met her father's stern, accusing eyes. Without a word he took her in his arms and carried her to the nursery, wh.ere he punished her as severely as he thought the transgression war ranted. That evening, as she sat in her lit tle chfir reflecting on her sins, she looked at him reproachfully. "Daddy," she said, with the shine of tears in her violet eyes, "if you'd 'a' come in the front way, as gentlemens oughter do, you never would 'a' knewed I done it!" Serial Al»l u( loan. Joey's mother, who had been away for a fortnight, returned unexpected ly. After the first greetings were over and she had straightened the sofa pil lows and rearranged t-he books on the tables she turned her attention to her son. "Joey," she said, sadly, after a brief examination, "I don't believe you have had a bath since I went away!" "Yes, mother, I have. Honestly, I have," protested Joey, "only you haven't looked in the right place!" "Looked in the right place! What do you mean?" "You looked at my neck. You ought to have looked at my arms. They were just as clean this morning! You see I've been bathing in chapters—a chap ter a day. Le,gs are onu chapter, arms arc—" "O Joey!" "Well, if you've got to wash your self, that's the only exciting way I know!" whimpered Joey. Youth'v Companion. A FILIPINO SENTINEL Joke Played on the Crew of an American Warship. Tlioy really Admired the < ournjee Dinjila > e«l l»> u )laa »I Straw—All Am iitinK laeiUeat of the Philippine War. Soon after Aguinaldo had established his government at Mololos, and had | gathered the main portion of the Fili j pino army about him at that place, his | busy spies brought him information thai | the American forces were preparing to | advance from Manila upon his neWeap- I ital. Hastily dispatching a considerable force from his army, he sent it to resist j the advance of the Americans, and set j the remainder at work to erect fortiii | cations about Mololos. The forces dispatched to resist the ad vance of the Americans, displayed great J activity, and employed every possible ; means at their command to delay the j advance of the enemy. They destroyed I roads, burned bridges, and laid an am | bush in every tongue of timber that j reached the highway, and in every tan j gle of bushes and vines that offered con j cealrnent for a line of troops. I A favorite method employed by the | Filipinos called for the display of a high I order of courage. Selected marksmen i were sent into the tops of tall cocoanut and palm trees, from which concealment j they were directed to fire upon the ad | vancing Americans. Owing to the dense j foliage of intervening trees these men ! were seldom able to use aimed fire un j til the enemy was almost upon them. I Many, in consequence, remained in the \ trees to obtain this advantage, and lut few who did so ever escaped capture or j death at the hands of the Americans. Sometimes, however, the sharp j shooter remained for some time undis j covered in his perch among the leaves, j In the bivouac of one of the regular reg- I iments, made in a grove of palm trees, | not far from Mololos, the occasional 1 crack of a Mauser rifle, seemingly over i head, caused a careful examination of I | "THE FILIPINO SENTINICf, WAS A MAN OK STRAW." '.he surrounding tree tops by the troops in an effort to discover if possible the j place from which the sound came. The j tirer was discovered at length, clothed in j the green leaves of the palm, lying stretched out at length on a branch ol the tree. While the land forces were moving forward on the highway not far from the sea, the United States monitor Monad nock followed up the movement abreast of the troops. Occasionally, as she pro i ceeded, she cast a shell into the Fili pino entrenchments that lay within view j of her decks. Once, just before dark, as the ship neared Mololos, an extensive line of works was discovered, in front of which a whitp-shirted Filipino sen tinel was leisurely pacing back and forth. A shell was quickly discharged at the works, but the missile falling a little short struck the ground near the sentinel. Other shells followed in rapid succession before the darkness put an end to the firing, a number falling so near to the man that, they covered him with dust when they struck the earth. He remained, nevertheless, on his post until an officer appeared and took him away. A new sentinel almost immedi ately took his place, and standing rigid ly erect in front of the works gave no evidence of fear, although a number of shells struck almost within reach of his hand. On the following morning the senti nel was obsorved still on his post in front of the works, apparently as de fiant and fearless as ever. A number of shots were then rapidly fired at him, and more would have followed had not the captain discovered that the gunners were firing at the sentinel instead of at the works, and caused the firing to cease. After the fall of Mololos, and the re tirement of the Filipino forces, the great ship fell back to the place where she had bombarded the sentinels. To the surprise of all on board the sentinel was still at his post, as rigidly erect and im movable as when shot and shell were falling fast and furiously about him. A boat was quickly lowered and u crew sent ashore to connoiter. The sailors rautlously approached the sentinel, who stood the meanwhile silently In his place. As they came neai] they discov ered to their chagrin and amusement that the Filipino sentinel whose supreme courage they had so much admired, was simply a man of straw, a substitute, and a dummy. TT. R. PRTNKERTTOFF, Lieut. Col. U. S. A., Retired. Made It Warm for 111 m. She —And did her face light up? Arthur —In a way. Her eyes snapped fire and her cheeks burned with rage.— Town Topics. Snlzer'a Fnrllrat Cane. Another new thing. Can be eat six Mir.es during a season and sprouts again with lightning rapidity. Next to Salzer'x Teo sinte it will make more green fodder thai* anything else, cheap as dirt and grows everywhere. . Of Saber's Renovator Grass Mixture, just the thing for pastures and mead ows, Mr. E. Ilappold, Kast J'ark, Ga., writes, 1 sowed Salzer's Grass Mixture on soil mo poor two men could not raise a funs on it,' ami in forty-one davs after sowing I had the grandest stand of grass in the County. Salzer's Grass Mixtures sprout quickly and produce enormously." 100 000 [ burrcl* choit* iSeed Potatoes. BAI.7.EHK NEW NATIONAL OATS Ilerc is a winner, a prodigy, r, marvel, ; enormously prolific, strong, healthy, vigor j ous, producing in thirty States from 150 to 300 I >u. per acre. ou had liest sow a I lot of it, Mr. Farmer, in 1904, and in the fall sell it to your neighbors at $1 a bu. for seed. JI.'ST SEXD 10c IN* STAMPS to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, V\ is., and receive in return their big cata log and lots of farm seed samples free. : [K. L ] Daily Guide to Flattery.— If you meet a woman who stronglj suspects that she is a beauty, ask her earnestly it all her luniily are beautiful. Baltimore Amer ican. A Remarkable Diseovory. | A German chemist lias discovered a heal ing agent in coal nil which has created quite a sensation amongst sufTerers wher ever it has been tested, on account of the j wonderful cures accomplished by its use. | A few applications are sufficient to cure i muscular Rheumatism, Neuralgia, head | ache, tooth, ear or backache, lameness, sprains, chilblains, in fwi every severe j pain. _ It is sold in drug stores as I)r. j Bayer's Penetrating Oil in 25c. and 50c i bottles and warranted to cure or money 1 refunded. It is the truth that changes the times and not the times that change the truth, j —Ram's Horn. To Cnre a. Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. A man's life is worth what it cost» i him.—Raru s Horn. aa Mrs. Haskell, Worthy Vice- Templar, Independent Order Good Templars, of Silver Lake, Mass., tells of her cure by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. " DEAR MRS. Ptnkham : Four year# ago I was nearly dead with inflamma tion and ulceration. I endured daily nntold agony, and life was a burden to me. I had used medicines and washes internally and externally until I made up my mind that there was no relief for me. Calling 1 at the home of a friend, I noticed a bottle of Lydia. E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. My friend endorsed it highly, and 1 decided to give it a trial to see if it would help me. It took patience and perseverence for I was in bad con dition, and I used Lydia E. Pink- Lam's Vegetable Compound for nearly five months before I was cured, but what a change, from despair to happiness, from misery to the delight ful exhilarating feeling health always brings. I would not change back for a thousand dollars, and your Vegetable Compound is a grand medicine. " I wish every sick woman would try it and be convinced." MRS. IDA HASKELL, Silver Lake, Mass. Worthy Vice Templar, Independent Order of Good Templars.— t&ooo forfeit If original of about letter proving genuineness cannot be pro duced. It Cures Coldn. Coutrhs, Bore Throat, Croup, Inftw onza. Whooplnir Couirh. Bronchitis and Astbiu*. A certain cure for Consumption In flrst staicea, and a mire relief lu ndvuneed stages. Use at once. You win see the excellent effect after taking the first do*«. Sold by dealers everywhere. Larga bottles 26 cents and SO cents. THE WIRE BQLRD FENCING C Tti 111 r:UT Strongest. mo»»t durable and economical fencing o» tho market. This In a etronjr v;itrment. but U buaed on actual experience, and absolutu fauts. Wehatf tiie proof. Write for free sample und circular*. DM TruMi A Cable Y» at* Co., CJO CM? Bid*., SMOTHER CRAY'S" SWEET POWDERS FOR CH3LDREN, A OrtainCuro for FcTcriebaesa* i 'oiiHtipaf ion« Ilcailftcue, Htomncli Troubles, Teething J>; border*, and I> oh troy Mother Gray, WorniM. Thoy Hrottk up < "Id* Nur«o in Child- 1" '-4 hours. At all I>ruKKiMt», i&cUu ron'H Homo Kamplo mailod FKhE. Addrosu, Row York City. A. 5. OLMSTED, Lc Roy, N ■ • P ATE N TS fc'IXZQEItALD tic CO., Uux Zi., Wash ill K ton., X>. a
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