The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 19, 1882, Image 5

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    Keep the Reacon Light in Trim,
“Do your lights, sir, never go out ¥'' I said |
To the keeper of Calais light;
“ Da you never forget to trim your lamps,
My friend, for a single night 1"
“ Never [Impossible I" eried the man;
“For to me would be all the shame ;"
And his bright eyes flashed as he looked aloft |
At the steady lambent flame.
#11 1 should neglect my doty, ma'am,
Weeks hence would go forth the ery—
“A keeper at Calais forgot his trast,
And acrew went down to die!’
“It seems sometimes as if the eyes
Of the world were fixed on me,
As the myriad stars of the firmament
Look down on the cruel sea.
“80 I'll never forget to light my lamp,
That it’s radiance far and wide
May warn ‘poor Jack’ of the hidden rocks
That lark "neath the restless tide.”
1 thought, ns I went my homeward way,
Oh! would we were all as trae
And faithful in trimming the beacon lights
Of home, as we journoy through.
Al! thei we should never, never hear
The voice of the drowning shout:
home,
We looked ! but the light was ont!"
A LITTLE COWARD.
i
That was what Miss Merivale had
called her that morning when she
trembled and turned pale because the
black mare reared with her. She
begged Sir Robert to take her off, and
stood in ignominious safety while
Agatha Merivale mounted Stella and
rode off triumphantly down the avenue,
She was a coward, Shedid not deny
it, and was sometimes very much
ashamed of it. But no one had seemed
to mind it until Agatha Merivale came,
with her bold, dark eves and her dash-
ing ways, her riding and hunting ; and
ev erybody admired Agatha so much,
even Sir Robert !
She almost hated Agatha! You!
see, until Agatha came they had been |
so happy at De Rossett. Little orphan |
Madelaine Leigh had never been so
happy in her life as here at the hall,
with sweet Lady de Rossett, who was
her guardian, and her son, Sir Robert.
They were so kind and good to her,
They petted her and loved her so.
now Agatha had come, and for two
kept the house in a turmoil of gayety,
life wretched,
Lina’s maid reported that everybody
Merivale. Lina made a stern resolve
that she would run away from the hall |
when that event took place
away! She would run away now!
Not far though—she was too much of |
a coward to venture far into the world |
alone; but she would go away ACTOSS |
ter-in-law, who lived in a quite com- |
fortable
hall, =
Mrs. Harrington was an invalid, par-
alvzed and confined to her bed.
were inclined to shun her; but sweet,
bright little Lina had won her way |
into the old lady's heart, and was al- |
ways welcome at the lodge.
Y es, she would run away to Aunt!
missed, Sir Robert might feel a mo- |
ment’s uneasiness about her. Seizing |
her hat and a light shawl she flew off |
across the park, ealling Leo, Sir Rob-
did not like to cross the fields alone,
being possessed by a great terror of |
"bulls; but with Leo she would not
mind it much,
Leo.was calmly taking a nap on the
front portico, but he started up and
raced after her with a joyous bark.
But at the little gate that led from the
park into the fields Lina was greatly
disconcerted by an unexpected en-|
counter with Sir Robert and Miss
Merivale, who came laughing and talk-
ing along the path, both looking bright
and handsome in the golden rays of |
the setting sun.
She brushed past them with a hasty
« good-evening,” but Sir Robert turned
back to speak to her.
“ Where are you going, Lina?" he
asked.
“To Aunt Margaret's,
swered, not looking at him.
“Alone, Lina? Are you not afraid ?
If vou will wait a little while 1 will go
with you,” Sir Robert said, looking
down kindly at the girl's flushed cheeks
and averted eves.
”
she an-
“1 will not trouble you. Leo will take
care of me. And you would be late
for dinner if you went with me.”
“May I come for you, then, after |
dinner ¥” Sir Robert asked.
Ishall stay all night,” was the hurried |
answer, and Lina turned to go.
moment. i
“Lina” he said, in a low tone, |
“what makes you avoid me so lately?
What have I done to offend you?”
them again.
“I have not avoided you,” she said,
coldly. *“ You have been very much
occupied with other people. There, 1
will not not detain you.”
She waved her little hand haughtily,
and walked dway from him. He
watched the pretiy, white-robed figure |
for a moment, and then Leo cu ne and |
fawndd on him, «
“Leo, Leo!” called Lina's voice.
“ (30, Leo,” said his master, and the
obedient dog trotted off down the path |
after the girl
It was rather dreary at the “lodge”
that evening. Mrs. Harrington was |
out of humor because her agent had |
failed to call that day to receive a’
thousand pounds that she wished him |
to deposit for her. And Parkins, her |
nurse and housemaid, let the maid |
lage, “ where they will certainly get |
and made her langh a little, she for- |
got her grievances and chatted a
very pleasantly. At 10 o'clock she |
drops and let her go to sleep.
“There ! the spoon is gone.
can Parkins have put it!
would you mind running down into |
the pantry and bringing me a spoon? |
soon as she had finished.’
Lina did not altogether like to pass |
gown the long stairs and silent entries |
leading to the pantry, but she went
and Leo trotted after her. As she
stood in the pantry, looking around for
spoons with no light but a faint gleam
from the hall Jamp, a sound of Jow
voices caught her ear,
The pantry was on the ground floor,
its iron-bharred shuttered window look-
ing into the garden. The sound was
outside the wi indow, and Lina paused
to listen. The first word that caught
her startled her.
“ A thousand pounds and all the
old woman's jewelry and plate!”
said a man’s voice, in a husky under-
tone.
“Yes,” was the reply in a woman’s
voice—the voice, Lina knew, of Park-
ins, Mrs, Harrington's model, soft-
yoiced, lady-like nurse—* and there
‘won't be any trouble about it, because
have let the women go away to stay
i: and sent the gardener on a
errand to misses’ brother’s t wen-
| She'd be no hindrance § anyway-—a a silly,
| timid little thing. But
| Jot her get out of the way,
{ ins, coolly.
“ But see here, Molly, why not do it
inow? Then we'll have
! {get away before daylight,”
| man,
“] tell you it is not safe befora 11
i o'clock,” Parkins said, positively. “Peo-
ple may come in,
{ her out of his sight for long, and that
| idiotic young Marsden may come moon
{ing in. Wait till half-past 11, and the
| west door here will opat And,
{ Jim, look here, when you get this
| sw: ag you are to take me with you
| your wife, mind.”
The voices grow fainter,
i
i
{
be
the house. But Lina had heard enough,
Nick with terror she leanad against the
pantry wall 4 moment and tried to
What did it all mean? Rob
bery, murder! And no help near. Her
to
would be
the hall, But
instantly dis
and then poor
absence
CON ered, Knew .
Aunt Margaret would be alone with
those wretches, No, she must not gO
but to stand here id would be no
good, She flew 1 the halls and up-
stairs, Leo pacing by her At
Aunt Margaret's door she paused, and
a sudden thought she
wold send Leo ho
“Where is the spoon,
long you staid. Ge wid heavens |
is the matter ¥” fxd
she saw the girl's white, terrified face.
Lina began some evasive answer, but
instaatly remembered that Aunt Mar-
garet must be told the whole story or
nothing could be done to save her.
She did tell it, and Aunt Margaret
listened in silent nation, and
usly with :
" Why didn’t
she
idle
Yinn
alot 1
side,
game her.
ne for Ip
How
Bn
child ¥
the old lady, as
onster
| you run right | hot
“ Because 1 knew Parkins would be
up here in a few minutes and find 1
and then
Ah, well, So you staved to save
the old woman 1f youn could, What are
you doing, child? Why don't you lock
the door and pile things against it?
if I was just able to rise out
| of this bed I”
But Lina did not speak for a moment,
had found a pencil and paper and
rapidly writing a few words,
When she had finished —
“Now,” said, “ashen
she
‘Parkins
couch here in your room, and she must
else, I will be back in
a moment. Leo?
Out of the room she darted,
hall door, which she un-
barred and passed through. Then,
{ kneeling in the shadow of a pillar on
| the portico, she tied the note tightly
iin her handkerchief round Leo's
i neck,
and
i it down if you don't.
« What do you want?"
A new
and grufll voice answered, insolentiy
“You know well enough what wo
want, miss, We wants the thousand
and the diamonds and wa
to have them.
or you'll be sorry.”
Lina sprang to
the pistol, A flood of ®
her cheek and brow, She
sulted and threatened, and
overpowered te Irror, she
the door and called out,
clearly:
her fect
dor rushed to
had been in.
indignation
went toward
quickly and
in, I have
Robert and
directly 1
the
a th Ww :
then a
not comix
and Si
“You're
sent for help,
men will here
armed; and if you
down 1 will shoot you like
A moment's si
coarse laugh, and
“ All gammon, She
fo send. Break the
Parkins’ voice;
to fall upon
and oracked
panel broke, a
in: the whole
fall when--1
ports } om Len
b nil lets © asl
and the wii ors pat
“Go away ins
clear
“Une more rusi,
n> yelled the grufl
What followed the w
+ the crash
ds and bolts, the
the furniture Lina
it, shot after shot from
voll of pain and rags
them. The door was down,
the men was the room
fired her last shot, uRning
bed, snatched Aunt rire
and turned to the
denly came a wild shriel
Then &
I am coming,” an
sett hurled hin
ruflian outside the door .
and sprang into
body, and this
14
his
he am
break do
lence followed,
hadn't
down,” in
and heavy blows began
the door It treabled
beneath the battery, A
pan’s hand was thrust
emed about
ang bang! came two re
no one
HOOT
xd th
VOIee, ‘0
confusion
face
0s, Gide Cli
ne
Mazi §
hand,
Aunt Margar
and Aunt Margare
if turned 1x her bed
¥ hor
stan § n her
r he tween
warly ruflian;
self, who had ne
& year, feet
floor. Two seconds changed the as
of affairs, After that the burglar
sprawled senseless on the Aunt
Margaret sprang back on her bed with
a wild “Thank God!" and the little
heroine of the scene lay in Sir Robert's
arms in a dead faint,
“ Oh, Robert, why didn't you come
he murmured, half an hour
G0
sooner: sae
when she opened her eves
: ’
Wfterward,
ng
3
i)
Ty
a)
for
ow Ww.
after that, kissed his forehead, and a
“1s that you, miss?" said a smooth
voice from the hall. “Why, whatever
are you doing in the dark there ?”
Lina sprang up as if she bad been
shot.
“I am sending
i said, speaking
throbs of her heart
i frame. “He is restless
his master. Go home,
home, sir!
The dog, with one farewell lick of
t her hand, bounded down the steps and
vanished in the dewy darkness of the
the dog home,” she
quietly, though the
shook her whole
here without
Leo, straight
ght.
“Oh, God! let him go safely and
| swiftly I" prayed the girl in her heart.
Then she went in and helped Parkins
bar the door, and they went together
upstairs.
Aunt Margaret lay very quietly on
her pillows, but with her black eyes
Parkins was silent for one instant,
expostula-
tions, which no one would heed, and
finally the civil nurse prepared the
couch for Lina, and took herself off,
observing, sweetly :
“If Miss L
the door
room
eigh will leave
and will come instantly.
“Thanks, Parkins, but 1 hope] shall
not have to call you,”
ing as sweet as Parkins herself,
Then as she glided to the door as
soon as it was closed, she turned with a
: face of dismay, and whispered:
“The key is gone! She took it when
she was fidgeting in and out with the
sheets and pillows.”
“ There is a bolt besides,”
garet answered,
Lina gave a sigh of relief as she
slipped the bolt into the groove, and
felt that she had at least some little
| protection against the enemy.
“ Now, child,” Aunt Margaret said,
Aunt Mar-
“I never touched one in my jife i
{ said the “little c ward * whut if 11
{ one now I would try.’
“Yery well, Take my safe key—it
is under my pillow—and unlock the
They are just as my husband
ago, and said they
were all right. That is it. Put one
of them on the foot of the bed, and if
those wretches come, try, my dear, to
use it,
left hand.
Thank God! I can use
can against
the door. There, you can’t move any-
| thing else, Now, come here, little
girl, kneel down by me, and let's say
our prayers toge ther
| clasped tightly in her two cold, trem-
bling little ones, Lina knelt down
there, and, burying her face in the pil-
Her petition was not a very coherent
one; it was only a wild, passionate cry
{ for pity and help, ind meanwhile she
was listening with every nerve
| strained for sounds from the outside.
A lamp burned in the room. On the |
mantelpiece a softly-ticking clock
marked the slow minutes. No other
| sound broke the stillness
Presently asob shook the girl's figure,
She was thinking r of Bir Robertand his |
tender care over her.
Oh, if she had only not been 80 way-
| ward and proud this evening all w ould
{ have been well. He would have come
for her and they would have been safe,
But surely, surely, he would come yet,
He could not fail to find the note
and she knew he would come to save
ler. But yet horrible doubts came
| to her as to whether the note would
reach him. It might be lost, or Leo
might wonder about and not get home
until it was too late,
Too late! Lina shuddered and
| sobbed again as she thought what that
{ might mean. Ob, it was hard to think
of dying so helplessly, so horribly, with
help so near.
sound came until 11 o'clock had
assed, The little clock softly chimed
the half hour. Then, in a few
ments, ¢
steps in the passage and the knob of |
the door was softly furned.
Breathless silence in the room. Then
a gentle tap at the door. Lina clasped
Aunt Margaret's hand convulsively,
and the old lady spoke.
“Who is that?” she asked, steadily.
“It is me, Parkins, ma'am. Will
you ask Miss Leigh if she will kindly
open the door? 1 have the toothache,
and want some laadanum.”
“ What a fiend it is I” whispered
Aunt Margaret. Then aloud: “Go
downstairs and get something, Parkins,
1 cannot trouble Miss Leigh.”
Lina hoped that
urge the point a little,
prolong the parley and gain time.
But a whisper in the passage fol-
lowed, and then a man’s voice :
Tow.
“ Don't you know I came
I found your note?” he said
went to my and I fount
there when 1 left the drawi
11 0 C Le WN kK.
“ Where
Lena
as Soon as
“ Leo
him
room
ask
« Never
were i
taken by
My brave
Two months
and the men
Aunt Margaret walked
and gave her testimony
and selfq
hers wit i
tears;
directness WISSOSSION,
gave
but
and no one won
was going to ma
lv lovely.
Sir Robert
the
ft t}
The erowd around door |
} 1@ COUrs-
walking gt, and
wre for Leo, who followed
el ers Site i
HOES AS S50
beside Sir Robe
nd Aunt Margaret's wedding yoes-
to L Ina was the thousand pounds
he diamonds that | been saved
he courage of “the little coward”
Dipping Sheep in Kansas,
near the
Z was In
i feature of
is to cure
to whicl
and one that
inevitable
enactment of ringent
against the Nn rtation of d
:
especially from Colorado
Cor
pro-
i
The smoke ascent
rress, the
“ geab,” the only disease
Kansas sheep are sul it
insider
laws
iseased
sheep and
Missouri. “Scab” is a skin disease
resulting in loss of
sometimes
1
in the
though hig
was thought
It can be entirely
sheep twice In
les
sulphur
Mr.
the latter preparation
ww the of
and tobacco or |
Wadsworth uses
and estimats
at five cents a
{ O it ‘scab’
The operation of
dipping presented a curious spectacle,
A long tank over a fire-box half buried
in the earth was filled with a greenish-
vellow fuming mixture of lime, sul-
phur and water. This was boiled for
half an hour, then let off into a narrow
tank four feet deep and sunk in the
earth, extending from one sheep pen
to another, with the further end slop-
ing gradually up. When the nauseous
ready the sunburnt herds
man called to the dogs: “Round em
up, puppies,” and off flew the dogs,
flattened to the ground, their bushy
tails streaming behind like banners
and their tongues lolling their eager-
head.
500 sheep just beyond the yards and
drove them toward the corral. A part
of the flock was finally driven into a
passage at the end of the
Those who picture the shepherd
as an innocent creature with a pink and
white complexion, clad in a white frock,
carrying a crook wreathed with ribbons
and garlands and playing upon a pipe
after the fashion of the Eclogues and
Siearaion would have found their illu-
sions sadly dispelle ed by the sight, The
gentle sheplierds were three swarthy
men in flannel shirts, top boots and
broad-brimmed hats, with splashes of
green and yellow variegating the
carthly hue of clothing and hands.
The first man, seizing a sheep by the
hind leg, jerked it into tho tank, where
it sank under the surface, emerging of
{a vivid greenish hue, only to be
promptly soused again by the second
herdsman, who was equipped with a
One after another the
sheep were pitched in until the tank
was full of hideously colored ereatures,.
bleating, sneezing and coughing, which
were at last allowed to scamper out of
ul dripping in
state of great disgust on the flooring
of their pen. This process is usually
whenever
“geab” enters a floc sheep
were merinos, the brecd iiost popular
| in Kansas. Mexican sheep yield very
Wale!
jt
3 ESO
for mutton, and here the
tendency in both sheep and cattle is
constantly to grade up to a better
stock.—Kansas Letter
sss I
The Visionary Robin,
A happy robin wasone day chanting
a requiem over the deceased summer
in the forest. Having finished, it said :
“And now I'll away to the balmy
land where all the year the nagrnolias
are full of humming birds, where
In response to the bang of a gun in
a small boy’s hand the robin concluded
not to go south, and two days after it
was sold for a quail on a railroad lunch
counter for a dollar.
Moral : Don't sing too loud until
you are out of the woods.—Puck.
FACTS A N y conN ENTS,
Some people, gays the
Tournal, affect to believe that thay de
rive no benefit from advertising,
the reason that they cannot trace any
particular transaction to any particular
advertisement, Neither can we attrib
ute the growth of vegetation to any
partioular drop of rain or ray of sun
shine-—but ft is very evident that with
out rain or sunshine it would fail to
flourish,
A woman was lately indicted in
England for causing the death of her
child by denying it adequate nourish
ment Investigation showed, how
ever, that the mother had fed the child
regularly on corn starch, mixed with a
LHitle milk, ignorant of the fact that
starch isunable to supply the necessary
to hiildren,
circumstances the woman Was,
acquitted, 1t 1s a lesson
and nurses would do
rr, “
nutriment
these
of course,
young ¢
which mothers
well to rememix
in a recent av
Europe is no longer abl
and the total
348,000 (K)
The London 1
lo savas tha
fend
(2218)
@
her population,
produ ed fell
below the annual ©
anh (8 HAN)
in the 1
crop of
year at
ODS
) Misuinp
of this
nited Kingdom
Great Britain is
to O00 (00 to
. bushels
giency is
wheat
estimated
NULL (HX)
tion at about Lik)
After deducting
sed, there wi
supplied from
about 130.000.0608 b
more than this,
and the
consump
WH) i
bushels
required for
deficiency to be
: of
and perhaps
ER HIA
ign countries
ushels,
Civilization has its peculiar diseases
from which savages are comparatively
free, as Yaey in their turn are
tered by pi lagues whicl
become civilized. Among these dis
short-sigtedness, or my-
ts prefer to call it,
ntly more prom! nent
Ever bservant person of middle age
must have become convinced that the
wearing of « much more
now Was a of
slaugh
as they
A 2 Oi
i dit Ou
ye-glasses Is
than it
common ROOre
been collected fully sustain this o pinio
A recent examination of the pupils in
the public schools of New Yo rk city
has shown that the JRopartion
ferers from myopia |
high as eight and one-half and even
twelve and one-half per cent, while
at Columbia college no less than sixty-
ning of the students were Hear.
sighted, or a fn I third of the whole
I'he disease found to increase
he length of sch aol life, and 1s
tedly aggravate
lighting arrangements in the
room and the poor type
win)
MARIN,
aan
of sul-
8 10 S0mo Cases us
10
1
erage school
Lanny text.
question
laws :
loy of
a viluable im.
often ari
Supposa a
some large
ment in the
: does the patent belong to hi
wers? They
HL 3 Were i
entitled to
i He I's
18 a matter quite
wis hired.
mi mery «
empl always say
wr his time,
he
ying hha i
whatever
outside th @ e dul
For exampl le,
FINE comj y
which he
plow manufactt
fan empl
g in il sine SN,
nent, Look
proven nts ui
they were selling. They
that he should transfer
plows sued
laimi ng
ym, for they said they
him by hi
il OV Is assur
experienc
§
ws and devising
was made pe
suggestions from other
employes and
with empl }
to the
wal these facts
their
ves i clonging
id th
ons they n
the rs, unless
paid to
ties for the
the time,
they
GxXercise
I~
in man-
give
‘mpl we
does not
employer tl i an improve
ment which the e e ersglove invents, If
in this case the superintendent was ma-
by tions from
atded SUgRes
&
teriadly
3}
L818
inventor,
were en-
but the
wer a
was not sole
ane perhaps his com]
r persons, he
Hors
i
titled to A share in the patent,
i
it give the empl
right t
Character of Our Population,
Accord
tin there are
were in 1
taken, of cok
and of foreign
figures do not show,
Intest census bulls
» United States, or
when the census was
red inhabitants 6,682,549,
born 6670.945, TI
however, the com-
parative strength of these elements of
our population. The children of colored
parents were enumerated as colored,
while the children of foreign born
parents were taken as native white in-
habitants, Based upon the census of
has been
made of the national characteristics of
our population:
Hing g to the
280, 1
ORG
1890, .
American white, ..... ....
Foreign born
Both parents for eign
One parent foreign
"O48
i: 679,
By this calculation, sixty-one per
cent. of the whole population is native
vhite, thirteen per cent. is foreign born,
ten per cent, represent children of both
cent. have
one foreign parent, and thirteen per
cent. is oft he colored race. Of the
foreign born population, 2,772,169 came
from Great Britain and Ireland. Other
.1,968,742 | Mexico
1,854,671 | Denmark. .
19, 8 | Helland
181,720 | Poland.
106,971 | Tialy vn 44,200
104,541 | Anstria.... 85,668
88,621 | Russia... ... 85,722
Bohemia.... 85361 |
Greenland, Gibralter, Malta and
Japan together have about 1,000 chil-
No country on
Germany
Ireland. . ..
Sweden. ...
Norway.....
48,557
China. .
Albany Argus.
Thought Himself a Woman,
John Talboy Binns, one of the most
ever entered the
died in that
recently, aged
himself to be a
woman's ways,
institution with
Binns,
16, 1853, and was
at that time forty One years of age
When a young man he joined an ama-
teur theatrical clubs, and the height of
institution
years, Believing
and affecting
he was dubbed in the
the title of
‘ 113
‘salli
acters. lle became quite a mono-
maniac on this subject, and his infatu-
At all Yimes and upon all occasions he
believed himself to be a dashing beauty,
at whose feet scores of ardent suitors
knelt, and upon whom society smiled
with favor. Clad in feminine attire
whenever a ball or concert was given
for the patients, he was the center of
attraction. At all times he affected
an effeminate voice in conversation, and
acted in every respect like one of the
female sex. The air of a woman
never desertad him, and everybody
who visited the house called on “Sal
lie” and purchased specimens of his
handiwork
An old Indian graveyard has been
unearthed near Athens, Ga., and many
enrious relics have been found.
LDHIIC NEWS,
EASTERN AND NIDDLE
A wonxsAn who was making some repairs
on eleotrio light wires in New York
minutes,
Ar the Connectiout
vention in Hartford Thomas M.
Damoeratio State con
Ward Northrop
Afred R. Goodrich for
Hanford for comp
for secretary of slate,
troller,
Hrothers &
ton,
Tur assigness of Wellington
Ca,
have sent a eireular to oreditors which s
the liabilities of the firm to he $531,654.02
Tue Longfellow Memorial associ i
Boston has iss
of Amerioa”
the fulfillment
r the
wholesale dry goods dealers of Bo
hows
weil 8 elroular to the *
inviting ten-cent subses
of
A memorial
side
toward of the plan
pssociation fo erection of
poet's late re
N.Y, two
employed at
Hobe
the
strack lal
of
Av Cortland, brothers
and lake
works, quarreled,
Gerard
Robert
blow with a plove
i pride fous
inflicting a fatal injury
Mus. Mintan Osaoon, of Warner, N
widow of the founder Of (he USZOO
ligious seet, died a few days ago at the i
old age of 100 years
of Mayor
of the
Cleveland,
New York Demoeratio
governor, ub
Pus letter necepling
*
the nomination
has been y
lished.
barrel eo
aps blew up
A TUMBLING mtatning 50,0k0
at the
Bridgeport, (
building
breech
Mets
with terrible force,
¢ Union
ic cartridge shoy s
the
wion oocurred was blown to ato
in whi
the «¢ xp i
red.
} »,
Irish National
1y NO One was ingu
Yum + officers of the land
» have issued a eiroular from
¢ relative to the
at the
emphatically protesting aga
to be in ful
the publi
}
Leet) 1 i
ade th land le #gue 1s no i
, and declaring the league
and stres gt! .
Joo ws Brox es,
Farr
a young man in the emplo
1 a telephon
he grasped the shaft. 1
} i nd with fearful
wrapped ro
red from
through a hatchway to the gr
Wire, §
and the
g until
He fell
wind below, and
His head
: 1
eg was stil dangling
WHS SOV the Ix
WHS A
SIAM TONS A
from the
SOUTH AND WEST.
Tur Chicago R ahaa 4 ge reports the cor
an of 1,
Hm
for nine months of the |
It estimates the
at 10,600 miles, an an
built in
miles, fot 1d aanstracti
for the entire yoar
than ever before
Resi.
Arexaxnen H. Srernexs was elected
ernor of Georgia by a may
estimated at f 30.000 to
ALC non
AIK a th 0 gent
Yan
All ©
Wey
ity
SLO,
Demoey offices
inees for stale
successful, pral assembly is also
largely Democratic.
John Brooks (colored), who had confessed
to making a bratal assault upon a little i
was taken from the sheriff at Jacksonville,
Tenn., by a large crowd and hanged.
Jomx Laon and James Rigby, two farmers
of Palmer, lL, guarreled about the
on of some land and became invol
pos
aiid ved in
a lawsuit, from which Rigby came out vie
The other afternoon Leigh's son
hed Rigby and, pretending that he
lesived to effect a peaceable settlement
ed fire with
tOrious,
SHPO
open & revolver, kil
Fuaxx James, the notorious outlaw, brother
of the Inte Jess
nor Critte
and
surrendered to Gov
Missouri, at Jefferson
was delivered to the
rities at Kansas City.
surrendered to Governor Crit
& Jame A
aden, of
Jackson
aunty auth
nk James
len, he handed him |
that he (the governor)
iis pistols and stated
was the only man
except himself
uty years,
3
lispatch says tha
, the newly-elected governor, ¢
ignation of the office
the KE
and an
od for November
candidate for
governor i is ree
ighth Georgia
NTORs 1 from
It was
ill the vaoanoy was order
Gartrell, the tod
the
Ax
election
defen
contest election of
. not with the hope of getting in,
but to show alleged frauds and intimidatio
Oldo's crop @slim
yanties of the
Fux folld 1 Ley
based on returns from all the o
Nate:
TRI, 811:
barley, 1,897
0;
wing are
Total number of bushels wheat, 45,
rye 406,151 ; 18,435,779 .
J B7,0006,
potatoes {probable}, Per
potatoes,
Oils,
bable),
#0000 (xX,
oorn (pi
of an Sweel
100; tobacco, 74;
potatoes, 101. Yield per
Wheat; 16.7 ; rye, 15.8; oala, 28
Ar lowell, Kansas, an Miss
a young lady of seventeen, tried to rescue her
cent. Average crop
sorghum, %; corn, 87;
bushels
19.9,
acre in
; barley,
Rosecranse,
seven-year-old sister from their burning res
dence, when both lost their lives,
Tur steamer Atlantico brought from Vera
Crus, Mexico, to New
sailors from five foreign {four Nor
wegian and one Swedish), and four sailors
Orleans
vessels
grom one American vessel, the bark Commo
dore Dupont, all wrecked on the coast of
The vessels were riding at anchor
off Tampico and Pueblo Nuevo, and were
driven ashore by a gale.
tract of land in Arizona.
Tue vote in Arkansas on the liquor license
question stands 78,880 for licenses and 45,041
Sixers freight ears and two engines were
Cedar Rapids, Jowa, causing an estimated
A rine at Warrington, Fla, a village ad
joining the Pensacola navy yard, destroyed
twenty-four buildings, inflicting a total loss
of about $30,000,
Two convict guards at Darrington,
ch other with pistols until both
A raematune explosion of a blast took
Mo.,
a railroad boss, a
and six other
place near Mountain Store, by
nd four
# seriously
injured.
By a collision between a freight train and
a wood train noar Bridgeville, Del, an
gine and four cars wore demolished and
eleven train hands were injured n
seriously.
en
ore or leas
Grear excitement was caused in Qin.
cinnati by the bratal murder of A. W. Ross,
a prominent citizen, treasurer of the Coal
com
missioners. Mr. Ross was returning to his
home in Glendale, a suburb of Cincinnati,
late at night, when ho was set upon, his head
Ir.anmes have destroyed the courthouse at
Tenn., with all it
Tue total number of eases of yellow fever
at Pensacola, Fla, up to the 9th, was 1,300,
and of deaths 112.
near Shelbyville, Ind., exploded, instantly
killing George Young and fatally injuring
his partner, Harry Bmith.
Ar a baptismal ceremony near Canton,
Ga., a bridge gave way and 200 spectators
fell into the water. No lives were lost, but
quite a number of persons had legs or arms
broken.
H. OC. Mrap, a wealthy old bankerof Wau.
paca, Wis.,, was found murdered in his
bank, where he had been in the habit of
sleeping. His safe was unlocked and its con-
tents, consisting of several thousand dollars,
gone,
81. Louis’ fair has been a great success
this year, the receipts in one week reaching
$103,000, against $77,000 last year.
Tue Rev. J. L. Denton, Arkansas State su-
perintendent of public instruction, com-
mitted suicide by jumping from the balcony
of a house in Fayetteville, He had been
mentally unbalanced.
ss we comm
FROM WASHINGTON,
A sraTeMmeNt prepared at the postoffice de
June 80, 1882, was $110,000,(600.60, an in
The amount of orders paid
$115,008, 768 64, On this
the gross revenue
which, after de
previous year.
to
business
of
amount
Tur naval board appointed to investigate
the loss of the Jeannette met and organized.
of the postoffice department for the fiscal
Tue signal service estimates that at least
thirteen million dollars of property and
many persons remained safely in port on ae
eount of warnings from the departmeny
Inpian Commissions Paton has notified
for by treaty stipulations that they will be
expected to labor for a livelihood.
A Wasumnaron dispatoh says that Mr, H,
H. Wells, the newly appointed special United
Bates attorney, who has been introsted with
the eonduet of the investigation into the
alleged star route * jury fixing’ transactions,
large number of affidavits already taken and
of the other evidences now in the possession
that
instituted
of the
letter
is not likely any legal proccedings
immediately. Foreman
star-route jury, bas
to Distriet Attorney
Corkhill protesting against the investigation
will be
Dickson,
wiilten a
Mr,
the most serious charges have been
department of justice.
that **
the creatures of the attorney-
and nothing eould be more absurd
these charges.”
FOREIGN NEWS.
Foun long dissecting knives stained with
lish and Undsr-Becretary Burke, have been
found in a house in Dublin,
Worserey, at Cairo, issued a
the British
troops engaged in the Egyptian campaign on
courage, gallantry and good
CTENERAL
general order complimenting
their endurance
behavior. The order says that the queen is
x ud of her soldiers, and General Wolseley,
, thanks them for their
alor and discipline.
Barrsu troops have begun to leave Egypt
for England.
Miss Apprarpe Puoorars, a well-known
south of France.
Tur city of Presburg, Hungary, has been
anti-Jewish riots there.
Tur czar of Hessis, as an act of clemency,
commuted the sentence of death of
and Jewsejeff, political eriminals,
agormy
y hard labor in the mines for an indefinite
complete failure. It is the worst season in
NILYy years.
l'une steamer Durban,
England for the Cape of Good Hope a few
government to observe the transit of Venus
A Tain conveying Chillian soldiers from
oo to Toa, Pera, was partly blown from
ne by torpedoes laid by the Monteneros,
al ol some seven or eight soldiers were killed.
wo Italian consul, Signor Picasco, was in
the train, and miram
but was captured by
ously escaped injury,
the Moutoneros, who
asked $100,000 for his release.
A DISPATON Manila, Philippine
Islands, says that the fatal cases of cholera
from
in the town nd
daily,
{einit f the
vicinity of Lhe
yw average from thirty to forty
and the deaths from the disease in the
town average twelve daily,
Spvenarn slight earthquake shocks have
been felt in Panama.
Sivor January 1, this year, the Coban
board of fr eodn have decls
20,900 slaves in accordance with the emanei
nen
m law,
Tun cost to England of the Egyptian war
raised by an income tax,
Ar a great fire In a hardwire factory in
s chief of the Parisian fire brigade
was killed and several men were injured.
Ar a conference of delegates representing
28 000 English colliers it was resolved that
notices to employers for an advance of fifteen
per cent. be given.
Bisnor Warsn, who has just returned to
London from a visit to Ireland, in St. Peter's
cathedral referred to the Irish question. He
condemned in scathing terms the agrarian
crimes, but quoted statistics to show that
there was loss crime in Ireland, proportion.
ately, than in England, Scotland and Wales.
land similar to that enjoyed by Canada.
Domine a dense the
Herder, from New for Ham-
burg, ran upon the a few miles
from Cape Race,
ing and was completely wrecked. All the
fog
York
rocks
The number of per-
The Herder was val-
ued at $500,000, and her cargo at $155,000.
The Wells in Sahara,
French enterprise is steadily
A large number of wells have
santine alone
One of the cur-
epths. The learned engineer, M. Jus,
it was of an excellent flavor,
A Strong Man's Feat,
A story of remarkable
At New Philadelphia,
Winkler,
Tuscarawas county,
Ohio, a
cal endurance. On of §100
he carried a barrel
about 225 pounds, to Canal Dover, ¢
distance of three miles, in
minutes. Under the wager he could
have rested fifteen minutes, but
stopped but four minutes of the time,
and came in on the
little § atigued.
a wager
of flour,
RII
up in the
many,
goods from abroad has made a boom
in wages,
so-called “lack-luster”
dentally discovered
Thuringian forests
pearls was acci-
by a
and felt a tiny grain of
Previous to this
tried without success,
lucky workman
in less than a week hundreds of his
same work, and handsome goods were
produced that now find a ready sale
in the markets of the world.
———ET I ————
According to the last census New
York has 9,765 growers of hops, who
cultivate 39,072 acres in the crop, with
a product in 1879 of 21,628,931 pounds.
Next comes Wisconsin with 4, 438 acres,
and a 2 duct of 1,966,427 pounds;
then California with 1, 119 acres,
and 1,444,077 pounds production.
Of the New England States Vermont
takes the lead with 265 acres, and a
yield of 109,350 pounds; Maine comes
next with 48,214 pounds; then New
Hampshire, with 23,955 pounds, and
Massachusetts 9,895 pounds. Only
eighteen States raise any hea and of
these five raise less than 10 pounds
each,
WISE WORDS,
Be silent and safe; silence never
betrays you.
Every man desires to Yve long ; but
no man would be old,
The man who never excites envy
never excites admiration,
Present evils always seem greater
than those that never come,
Bome men cannot stand prosperity,
Others never get a chance to try,
An evilspeaker differs from an
evil-<doer only in the want of oppor
unity,
Never let your zeal outrun your
charity ; the former 1s but human, the
latter is divine,
Those days are lost in which we do
no good, Those worse than lost in
which we do evil,
Use sin as it will use you; spare it
not, for it will not spare you; it is
your murderer and the murderer of
Use it, therefore, as
a murderer should be used; kill it be-
fore it kills you,
The conditions of success are these:
work; second, concentration:
fitness, Labor is the genius
changes the ugliness of the
into beauty; that turns the
Nothing is so contagious as enthu
it is the real allegory of the
brutes, Enthusiasm is the
no victories without it.
Kind words are bright flowers of
earthly existence; use them, and
especially around the fireside cirele
They are the jewels beyond price, and
make the weighed-down spirit
When misfortunes happen to such
as dissent from us in matters of
religion, we call then judgments ;
when to those of our own sect, we call
them trials; when to persons neither
we are content to
attribute them to the settled course of
things,
a — a
HEALTH HINTS.
The remedy for overwork is rest.
As far as one violates law he wastes
power.
Good nutritive vigor is the founda
tion of good health,
Men and women
abusing their bodies,
Hundreds of women die annually for
want of change of labor or change of
insult God by
Rapid consumption of the vital
To cure stammering Dr. Foole's
day
with the teeth closed.
1f people will live twice as fast as
they ought, if they will perform as
much labor in one day as ought to be
in two, nothing will save them
would,
Farmhouses may
be,
be, and ought to
better located than city residences,
» house drains are
sluggish, the fogs frequent, the air
stagnant, and the efMluvia from the out-
buildings confined, should always be
avoided. Next in importance to loea-
tion is cleanliness in the surroundings
of the farmhouse,
nn AI 55
Coffee as a Cure for Malaria,
As a disinfectant it
powers. As
taneous d¢ odoriz er it has no «
the sick room, as all exhalations
immediately neatralized by
passing a chafling dish with
coffes grains through the
may be urged that an article
such powers and capacity for
action must be injurious as
are
simply
such
ment, and not without deleterious
properties; but no corresponding ner.
vous disarrangements have been ob-
served after its effects have disap-
peared as are seen in narcotics and
other stimulants, The action im-
parted to the nerves is natural and
healthy. Habitual coffee drinkers gen-
erally enjoy good health. Some of the
oldest people have used coffee from
earliest infancy without feeling any
depressing reaction, such as is produced
by alcoholic stimulants.—New York
Commercial.
IOP wil.
Professor Robert Odlum, of the Na-
tatorium, this city, was cured of a
severe attack of rheumatism by the
use of St. Jacobs Oil.— Washington
(D.C.) Star.
* S———————"
The Brooklyn-New York bridge will
be the largest suspension bridge in the
world. The length of the main span
is 1,595 feet six inches. The entire
The Boston Pilot says: St. Jacobs
msthetic farmer in Alleghan
Mich., is building a barn of
butternut and white
An
AAAI 5575575 0,
Our Progress
As stages are quickly thandoned with the
completion of railroads, so the huge, drastic,
quickly abandoned with the
introduction of r. Pierce's “ Pleasant Pur.
ative Pellets,” which are sugar-coated, and
Bite larger than mustard seeds, but composed
By druggists.
Tax france became the monetary unit ef
France in 1785, but gold coins of this name
were first made in 1260, and silver coins in
Tennyson's “May Queen.”
Who knows that if the beautiful girl who
died $0 young had been blessed with Dr
Pierce's “Favorite Prescription’ she migh
have reigned on many another bright May
day. The “Favorite Pres ery sion” 18 & ce:
tain oure for all thoss disorders to which fe
males are liable. ly Ponriry :
rach country air gives vigor
y do pure and fresh thoughts
mind.
As pure and f
to ti
WO RYELO, ¢
ivigorate the
If the blood ba impoverished, as mani.
fested by pimples, eruptions, uloars or run
Dr. R. V. Pierce's
general debility, take
" Bold by drug-
“Goldon Medical Discovery.
We.jndge ourselves s by what we feel capa
ble of doing, while others judge us by what
we have already done.
A Nrig. General . Stateme nt.
PrILLIPSBURG, , June 18, 188],
H. H. Wanxzs & Co. Sin -] owe to your
Kidney and Liver ( Yura al the strength I have
The doctors all told me I was going
Brio. Gex'y 8 A. Heoxuax,
). R. R of N. J.
Tae trouble and worry v and wear and tea
that comes from hating people makes hating
unprofitable,
to die.
For nysrersia, INDIGESTION, depression of
spirits and general debility, in their various
forms; also as a preventive against fever and
ague and other intermittent fevers, the “Fe
ro-1 Sospizor ated Elixir of Calisays,!” made
by Caswell, Hazard & Co.,, New York, an
sold by all Druggists, is the best tonic; an
for patients recovering from fever or olhe
gickness it has no equal,
Young or middle-aged men, suffering f+
Nervous Debility and other ae 84
should send to Prof. Marston, 198 Falton St.,
New York, for his valuable treatise on Dis-
eases of Men. Niled .
£5 Cents Will
. Buy
a Treatise upon the
orso and his Disease-.
Book of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner
of horses, Postage stamps taken. Bont
goetbaid by New York Newspaper Uuion, 15
‘orth Street, New York.
Natural petroleum, deprived of its color
und disagreeable odor, is what Carbeline i
made from. As now improved and perfect:
it is a beautiful preparation, and perform:
all that is claimed for it as a hair restorer.
"Decline of Man, _
Nervons Weakness, Dyspepsia, Impoten a:
Sexual arm cured by “Wells' Health i:.
newer.’ ruggists. Send for pamph..
fo E 8. Wh, Jorsey City, N. J.
"The Science of Life, or Self- Preservation, 8
medical work for gvary man-—young, middie-
aged or old. 125 invaluable pres ptious.
Tr ¥
EE RY,
AN EXTRAOHDINARY
Avsrrx, Texas, Pebrosry 20, 1881,
To Mr. J. W, Graham, Draggist:
Dear Slr My case was an aouts form of Dronehitis,
and was of one and a hall year's duration. | em
ployed ihe best medion] aid possible, but failed
raiddly, until the doctors sald 1 would die-that my
cane was incurable. Thrown upen my own resoures,
Igot abottle of DIL. WM. HALL'S BALSAM YOR
THE LUNOA, and in siz heurs fell & decided relief,
In three days the cough almost disappesrsd. Now
that my chapoes of life are good for many years, 1
sarneatly recommend the above 10 every sufferer of
throat er Jung diseases i ies ial toi
LEN NF
Al Ah hans i
A for the cues
virile powers Bold 1 ur 4 i §
¥
ATLA, Chemist, B15 First avenns, ia
26 Cents will hr a Treatise upon the
Horse and his Dissssss, Book of 100 pages. Valuable
19 every owner of horses. Peslage siampe taken, Bent
postpaid by NEW YORK KEWSBPAFER UNION,
150 Worth street, Now York,
THE MARKETS.
NEW YORK.
Beet oattle, good c prime, lw
Calves, com'n to prime veals
Sheep
Le .
Hogs Live,
Dressed, cit
Flour— Ex, Bt, goc v 4
West, good to choos 4
23
Ek
So
FE
aon
ADREIRERRE
“gs
SW
*
-3
On ow
No. 1 White.
Rye—8tate
Barley—Two rowed State ,
Ungrad. West, mixed.
Yellow Bouthern. ....
Ounts—White Bate,
Mixed Western... ..
Hay—~Med. to eh, Timothy
Btraw—No, 1, Rye, .
Hops—Btate, 1851, choles |
Pork—Mess, new, for export 21 +o @n Li]
Lard—City Beam, 1275 (@13 75
Refined . gr oo a" 00
Petroleuni-—Crode 5
Refined cen ;
-Biate Creamery. ....
Dairy.
West, Im. C reamery.
Factory, aha
Cheese—8State
Bkime,
Western ,
Eggs—8tate and Penn . . ..,.
Polatoes—L. 3 bhi
BUFFALO,
Bieers—Good to Choice
Lambs—Wastern |
Bheep— Western. . |
Hogs Gi »od to choice Yorks.
Flour—"y ground n. process,
Wheat No. 1, Hard rd Duluth ‘
Corn~No. 2, Mixed. ..
Oats—~XNo, 2 | Mixed Western.
Barley “Two-rowed State . ..
BOSTON,
Beef—Ex, plate and family.
Hogs—Live .
City Dressed. ..
Pork—Ex. Prime, per bbl, |
Flonr—Spring Wheat patents 7 25
Corn—High Mized ....... ain BS
Oats—Extra White 51
Rye—State
Wool—Wsh'd comb & delaine
Unwashed
WETERTOWN (MASS, ) CATTLE MABEETY.
Beef —Extra quality
Sheep— Live weight.
Lambs
Hogs
BO
2dEI=Re
oh
BREE
BREESE REE ans
w,
AOR!
a
2ageR
Batter
EEE
BE
SEER
*a
—-
wm
actory .
w
KEELER BES.
TRE
LTBRESES BYowa
Emmet
ROBE En SIEGES APRESS
5
w=
BEERENSE.S gman
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour— Penn. ex tamil, good 5 50
Wheat—No. 2, Red.... .
Rye--Biate
Corn—State Yellow.
Mixed :
Butter reatnery Extra Pa.
Cheese—N. Y. Full Cream.
Petroleum~—Crude . . Fa
Refined |. .
a
B2X3R
i
sale
REETMATISH,
Kouralgia, Sciatica, Lumba,
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell-
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Scelds, General Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all ther
Pains and Aches.
No Preparation on esrth equals §v. Jacom On
a a safr, sure, simple snd cheap Extersal
Remedy A trial entails but the comparatively
billing outlay of 50 Cents, and srery ons suffering
with pais can have cheap and positive proof of is
claima, 8
Directions in Kleven languages. 1
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS
IN MEDIOINE.
A. VOGELER & CO
Paltimore, Md., U.
TRY NU—e
An Only_ Daughter Cured of
Consumption,
When death was he surly szpected, all i a
fasled, and Dr. H, James was he op
many herbs of Uslonila, be sech ally i - =
ration which cared his aly child of Consum
Lin chilid is now in this country, snd sajaring
of health. He bas proved tothe ‘world that U
tion can be positively and permapenily eared.
doctor now gives this Recipe free, only Two Liree
ornl HAPs 40 PAY SL pene herb alse cures Nig
Sweats, Nsuses at the Nu nach, and will break
fresh Cold in twenty a" nr hours, To Saidad
Co, EZ Race Strost, Miiadeiphis, aming this paper
The trosantidotete
SIE TE the effects of missma
is Hostetter's Stom.
CELEBRATES ach Bitters, This
medicine is one of the
most popular reme.
dros of an age of suo.
comsful proprietary
specifion, and i» in
“anmenne demand
wherever on this Con.
tinent fever and ague
exis. A winegisms
ful three times a dar
is the yeni ble
preparative on
coaptering 8 malan
otis atmosphere, reg
visting Lhe liver, and
BTOMACH, QEHEES pa
RYE iS 7 Druggists
mach, For sale by all
and Doal
ors generally,
gAMARIT, Is unfailing and infalf.
QURES AND AR
8.4.
ble in curing Epileptic
Fits, Spasms, Oenval
sions, St, Vitus Dance,
Alcoholism, Opium Est.
jeg, Scrofula and all
es) Bind Dis.
ems, Teo Clargymen,
lawyers, Litgrary Mon,
Merchants, ® Bankers,
Jodien and all whose
thom, ogularities
the blood,
bowels or Kidueys, or
who requis a Derve
tw i ppetinset or
stim SAMARL
TAN yr in in
valuable, Thousands
ERV Ti procisim it the most
wonderfal Invigoraat
that ever pustained the
mnking mdtem. Yor
po by all Droggiste,
me -R Ss, A. Vi In NB- MEDICAL CO.
Sule Proprietors, St, Joseph, Mo.
FIVE-TON
HAGOR SCALES $60
Al rem and Steel, Double Brass Tere Bean
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KNOWLEDGE IS POWER
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THE SCIENCE oh viirToN. OR, SELF.
fs a medical treatise on Exhausted Vitality, Nervous
and Physics! Debility, Prematore Decline in Many
is an indispensable treatise for every man,
young, middle-aged or old.
THE SCIEN ee RE VARTON. OR, SELFe
Is beyond all comparison the most
work an Ry MaLon over publah of } +1] Toquira
hat at the marry or single oan ei
ne wih to know but what is fully explained. —Terenie
Glade,
ne SCIENC or E: OR, SELF.
r RE RY ATION.
Rol to Tor tk and the in
hy ne rs I. Sh f
1 t. a tions for « erms
route and. chronic Sreasen, tor each of which a ‘arnt
sla jcian would charge from $3 to $10, —Lenden
THE SCIENCES virion. OR, SELF.
Contains BO French: fine steel engra
uelin, embesysd, SNOT IT
cand, BI and beauty, warranisd to
medical boek in every sense than can be ob
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where for double ths price, or the meney will be doy
ed in every instance, — Author,
THE SCIENCE OF LIFE SELF.
RESERVATION, 0
I eh pe to all other treatises on
ibjacts that Somparison | is abaoh utely mation
ton Herald,
THE SCIENC Es: OR, SELF
PRESERVATION,
Is sent by mail, sscurely sealed, postpaid, on receipt of
price, only $1.95 (new edition). Small illustrated samples,
Ge. Send now,
The author can be consulted on all /diseases requiring
skill and experience. Address
PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE,
or W. H. PARKER, M.D.
Beaton, Matte
FOUNDERS, PRINTERS, ETC.
STEREOTYPE
late of H. Hartt & Cu,
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