.\%2o(Y)en Self-G)ntrol, Greatest Asset By Ella Whnln WTlco* "My Dear Madame: "An article on Self-Control, with a feiw lines In verse that might be com mitted to memory, would be of incalcul able value to our girls and particularly to our young men. who so often com mit deeds that can never be undone be cause of lack of this virtue. "A MOTHER." The mighty forces of mysterious space *Are one by one subdued by lordly man. The awful lightnings that for eons ran Tbelr devastating and untrammeled race Now hear his messages from plaoe to place Ijlke carrier doves. The winds lead In his van; The lawless elements no longer oan Besist his strength, but yield with sul len grace. His bold feet, scaling heights before untrod— IJgbt, darkness, air and water, heat and cold— He bids go forth and bring hhn pow>er and pelf. And yet, though ruler, king and demi god. He walks with his fierce passions un trolled. The conqueror of all things, sa-re him self. Self-control is the quality most need ed in human nature to-day, and the one most rarely found. Just In the degree that a human be ing develops the power of self-control he approaches divine power. Just in the degree that a human be ing is self-indulgent, so he wanders from the divinity which is within him self and from every high attainment that is worth while. Self-control means the conservation of all the powers of mind and brain and body, and the ability to use those powers successfully for any high pur pose. Self-indulgence means the scatter ing of all these forces and their ulti- Build Foundations mF Of Good Concrete Ifflk your supporting piers and walls of ALPHA Iffi® By Portland Cement, sand, and crushed stone shoveled mj into forms. The cost is low and you will have a ■ m foundation like solid stone, that will not rot or crumble. ■ ALPHA'KffCEMENT ■ is the special kind of Portland Cement that we recommend for ■ ■ your use in foundation walls and every other job where strength m ( v and permanence are needed. Cheap cements may spoil the m % job, but when you use ALPHA your work will grow stronger B % with age. Use ALPHA and be sure of satisfactory results. M % ALPHA has been on the market for 24 years. It is'im % i time-tried, tested cement that we knew is of I M % £ unusual quality. We guarantee it to be uniform, 1 Br pure, live and active, and to more than meet Bp the U. S. Government standard. I. >v£''Z.N & CO., 9th and Herr Street*, Harrisb^ i<a JOSEPH BURKHOLDER. Hummol.town GEORGE S. PETERS, Palmyra H. R. DUKBOROW, High.pire MUTH BROS., Elizabethtown SAMUEL DULL, New Cumberland J. W. MILLER, M ccha nioburg WEST SHORE SUPPLY CO., Wa.t Fairriew A. J. SPOTTS. Carllale S. E. SHENK. Newvilte El changes before any 'milk | I T a g t hour . 1 y' the | j | inlg to needs. Use the Bell , . ■ | Buy Coal Now—Cheapest || This is the month to order next winter's supply of coal. There's ] I ! a material savins to be effected, and the wise folk are taking advantage |I ! ot present low prices. Buy before the advance comes, and buy &lont- ]! ! gomery coal thus Insuring the moat quality for your money. j | J.B. MONTGOMERY ! Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets ; Try Telegraph Want Ads Try Telegraph Want Ads SATURDAY EVENING I mate destruction. Self-control should be taught first In the cradle and In the nursery. Instead, parents. nurses. governesses and teachers usually find it less taxing to encourage tlieir charges In self-indul gence than to teach them self-control. The child who screams for his bonbons or his toys can be taught self-control bv being left alone until he wears out his mood, and later can be reasoned with and made to understand the bene fit which will result from self-control. But such guidance and teaching are taxing to the elders, and therefore the majority of children grow to adol escence and maturity without having been so taught. One possessed of powers of observa tion and who has made any study of human nature must wonder that so many decent human beings exist in the world with so little assistance and guidance in the direction of self-con trol during early youth. The control of the appetite in chil dren and early youth is the first step toward self-control; the control of the mind in the habit of study is the next step; to thoroughly master one lesson before another is begun, no mafter how long the time given to the attain ment of this end. Is of the utmost im portance In the shaping of a child's character. But how many parents and how many teachers direct their ener gies to this end? Our schools destroy the powers of concentration and lead away from self control. Children enter our kinder gartens almost invariably possessed of wonderful powers of concentration. Thev leave high school with very little of this quality remaining. The Bible tells us that "he who overcometh is greater than he who taketh a city." The greatest rewards are promised to those who overcome. Self-control In its fullest sense means the overcoming of all that is weak and Ignoble In their nature and the development of all that is highest and best. It is never too late to begin the attainment of self-control. STORY NO. t—INSTALLMENT STORY NO. 2—INSTALLMENT NO. 6. N0.6. W<j£FsLYs f ? Tbe PurswfwPleasure The Pleasure Qf EDW* BLISS By EDW# BLISS Oosrrlltit. by Pmth* ■rchnnp. toe. AH Owrtebt, 1815. br P*th» Bui.nn, Inc. Al awrloc plctgr* "*l}U ird »n Ifitiu monaf piston rl«Uu and ill farcigß copyrights atrieUy r«m lad. eopjTtibts itnctlj raorftd. IV. Rita frowned and toyed nervously with her glass, as, looking: up, her eyes met those of her husband, who at a remote, obscure table, was en tertalnlnp two rather flashily dressed, noisy young women. For Just a sec ond their eyes held, his own startled, hers contemptuous. Then the bitter, indi(f«rent smile that hod lately been graven upon his lips came back and he turned away, lifting his glass to his table companions. She left the place Immediately. In the library she halted him late that afternoon, Just as he was on the point of leaving tho house. Bhe wait ed till the servant retired, boiling at the amused Indifference upon her husband's face. '•You wish an explanation for the unfortunate coincidence of this after noon?" he murmured. "No-o," she shook her head thoughtfully, surprised to And her self cool outwardly while she boiled and seethed within, "not exactly that, James. I merely wished to tell you that it must not ooour again. If you must choose such associates, kindly have some respect for me and do not Intrude them upon me." The Child Touche* the Frivolous Woman's Heart. "I beg your pardon, Rita," he an- Bwerort coldly, "this place that I thought might be made a home has become a public place. Every place Is public for me. If I have no home I must go in public." "A public place—" her breath came with a little hiss at the insult. "I mean you have made no home for me here and your life belongs to society and is wasted in the pursuit of pleasure. lam showing nothing more than curiosity .In seeking to find what amusement you gain by such a pursuit when I follow pleasure my self. i am flattering your Judgment. You regard pleasure as preferable to a husbr.nd. I wonder if It will sub stitute for the wife I hoped to find." CoM, passionless, haughty external ly. she allowed the ma:d to coif her hair, ther. dismissed her. Motionless ■he studied her reflection in the mir ror, cupping her chin in her hands and observing herself carefully. Bit by bit little atoms of conver sations they had held, little Intimacies thftt steadily, almost imperceptably grow less frequent, tiny happenings pieced themselves into great complete events. She recalled having heard a man once lecture upon the atoms that bred a world. And slowly, before her eyes, the eyes fastened relentless ly upon ;he mirror, there grew a pic ture First it groped feebly for place, then more rapidly projected itself. A faint rustle sounded beside her and she started, afraid to look about, for fear lest she disturb the vision that had risen so clearly before her. Slowly she turned, looking into a child's inquiring eyes, the eyes of the baby her husband had held that day. She put out her fingers fearfully half afraid to find this infant anything save a materialization of her dream. Sharply she drew back her hand. "Don - * be afraid, lady," Billle said encouragingly. "I won't hurt you." A little laugh, half hysterical, sprang from her lips at the infantile assurance. Then, In the relief of the moment, impulsively she reached out and grasped the friendly arms of the child that were extended toward her, mandatorily seeking to be taken up. lifting him to her lap, laughing aloud for sheer Joy as something within her that had hurt a moment before sud denly was dissolved by the spray of tears leaping to her eyes. V. "No, I won't hurt you. I'm not a burglar. I'm Billle," the youngster as serted when he had been sufficiently welcomed. "I know," she nodded brightly. "You Just came to pay me a call, didn't you?" " Billle frowned, cogitating deeply. Truth won, though he looked up Into her eyes anxiously to see whether this friend would be "hurt by his frankness. "No—o, not 'zactly that Mamma went to sleep and I Just came here. I come to play with the boy. Where Is the boy?" he started suddenly erect In her arms, looking about eagerly. "What boy, Blllie?" She knew In advance what the answer would be. yet could not refrain from baring her aoul to the hurt. "Why, the boy—your boy—the bo; what belongs here." "But there Is no boy here." She wondered at herself, purposely letting the lash of this innocent child's tongue thus scourge her. "No boy! Why, I thought there was a boy In every house—Just like home. I'm the boy in our home." Some quick instinct caused him to reach out and clasp his arms about her neck, the neck of this beautiful creature whose eyes were so sad and longing. "Did he get losted?" he whispered sympathetically. "No—o, Blllie. Yes," she suddenly smiled through the tears that sprang to her eyes. "Yes he got lost a little bit. He Just wandered on the way. Don't you understand, Blllie?" She felt amazingly anxious that the child should understand, was vastly relieved When the frown of perplexity cleared Upon his brow. "My Mamma will think I got losted When I ain't losted at all. I knows Where I am." Together they laughed delightedly at the merry Joke they played, thi« grownup and this child. "Why, lady, you're crying! What you crying for?" Billle tugged a bit tighter at her neck, roughing her perfectly coiffured hair in his gusty sympathy. "Ain't you happy, lady !" ."That's why I'm orylng, Billle —I'm so happy," she murmured. With a sigh of contentment at this ■omewhat hazy explanation, Billia curled up In her lap like the healthy little animal he was and proceeded to go to sleep. roeffEAL Tff*fmSTßE/VGTh DEPTONOI? | MADE IN A HEALTH RESORT « AT DRUG STORES; 81-ooPerBOTILE THE PEPJONOL CO. i/Vr4_ANT(C CITY HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH (Tenderly, an hour lator, with ft light in her eyes whioh no one had ever ■een there before, she relinquished her precious harden to the mother, smilingly pleading forgiveness for the Bleeping truant. And then she turned to meet her husband, Just stepping from the car. Linking her arm in his, she led him to the library, designedly selecting the same chair to seat him in which he, on another day, had seated her; de signedly perching upon the arm, toy ing with his hair while she struggled for words, words that were the harder to utter because of the cold, puzzled look he gave her. "Oh, I wish BUlle were here now," ■he cried, a little catch In her voice. "Then I could make you understand. Jim." "Billiel" He turned toward her In quiringly and something in her eyes confused him, set his pulses dancing, made everything blurry before him. "Don't you ramember, Jim? Billle —Sam and Mary's baby. Oh, I've had such an adventure. Billie's been vis iting me—Billie came over to play ■with the little boy in our house. He •went to sleep in my arms, Jim, went to sleep with his arms about my neck, and they weren't sticky a bit — well, only a little bit. He wanted to play, Jim, with that boy that belongs here and I told him the boy was losted, Just a little bit lost. Oh, Jim, don't you—can't you understand — you help me—hunt for him?" He leaped to his feet, his arms Ifiung wide as though to clasp her to him. Blushing rosily, but with the gayest of trickling laughter upon her Ruth Lay Stil! as Death, After Her Fall Down Stairs. Hps, she caught the expression In his eyes and retro.-d from him, all eager to bo caught that she might lay her face against that shoulder she had regained, yet with the maiden instinct for flight. Back — back and Jim laughingly advancing toward her, laughing with a curious eobbing sound intermingled with it. And then he halted, the shadow of Impending catastrophe gripping Its Icy hand upon him, freezing his hlood. His Hps uttered a cry of ■warning, even aa Rita's shrilled forth <>ne of terror and appeal. The rip ping of lace sounded as her heel caught In a ruffle of her boudoir gown, tripping her. The heavier eound of falling portieres as she dragged them down in clutching for support against, the fall. With a sick ening crash she plunged down the Stairs. VI. Dr. Judd gently withdrew himself from the clutching fingers of the Rev erend Deane. He had felt very sorry for this old man who, since the day of Rita's acldent, had paced up and down—down and up outside the man sion, wistfully scanning the physician'* face when he came and went, for newi of his daughter's condition. "The operation was a complete suc cess and she is almost able to toe about," he said, then, as the old man turned away with a sign of relief: "but I think you had better come with me today. She may need you now." He whispered in the clergy man's ear and the old man straight ened as though he had been stung, his face working convulsively. Then he nodded quietly and followed the surgeon to the room where Rita sat in a chair, her husband standing beside her. He did not mind the coldness of his son-in-law's reception, did not mind the hesitancy of his daughter's kiss. He deserved all this. He only wished to be with her, to help her in her hour of misery, the misery he could feel running as an undercurrent beneath Dr. Judd's cheery words. "Yes, little girl, you came through the operation nobly. It was a com plete success. I didn't think you had the strength for such a battle aa you put up—" . Rita blushed, looking meaningly tip at her husband. "I had Just gained untold strength —before the fall." "Well, It worked wonders. It saved your life, Mrs. White. And now in a few days everything will be as it was before except the happiness of moth erhood can never—" Like tiny threads of steel her Angers gripped his wrist. He nodded, avoid ing the horrified expression in those eyes. She did not weep—-he only prayed that she would. She merely stared stonily into space. Her hus band tenderly placed his hand upon her hair. She did not look at him. The Reverend Deane was upon his knees, fondling her Icy fingers, but she seemed not to be aware of his pres ence. Dr. Judd motioned them from the room. "She must be alone until she re covers from the shock," he explained. Alone? A bitter smile curved her lips as rfhe stared Into space. Her eyes were the eyes of one seeing wraiths, her ears seemed fairly peaked with the tensity of her listening. Alone? Always alone she would be. Always alone with the ghosts. Always alone, listening for the pattering of baby feet through the place. Always alone, searching for the "losted" ones shs never was to find, though she knew her life would be consecrated to ths search. Stonily she stared; eagerly she list ened. And no tears would corns, would ever com* to soothe and balm the soul of her. WITO PAYS? (End of Story Number Two.)* The third story, "When Justfc* Sleeps," commences is our next issue. To be Continued Monday. MRS. MOVER ENTERTAINS Millersburg, June s.—Mrs. G. Roy Moyi-r, of Pine atree», entertained the following at her home on Thursday: Miss Sara Kessler, of Mllllieim: Miss Ruth Miller, of Elizaliethville. and lira. Cad. Schelhua,. at Haocishurfc KEEPTHEPULLETSGROWINGAND FA 77 EN 7 HE COCKEREL Early Separation of Sexes, Correct Feeding and Free Range Secure Proper De velopment Rations For Young Stock After Age of Eight to Twelve Weeks Suggested by Expert By Prof. Harry H. Ijewis Heed of the Department of Poultry Husbandry, New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station. COPYRIGHT, 1915. From the time chicks attoht an afro of from eight to twelve weeks and arc able to leave the brooder, the problem of the poultryman becomes one of In suring a uniform, continuous growth until the pullets are put Into the lay ing houses In the Fall. In the case of the cockerels, the same problem is present until they are sold for meat. In this article Prof. Lewis tells how to solve these problems successfully. DURING the summer months the successful poultryman makes every effort to keep the young stock growing rapidly. From the time they leave the brooder the chicks should not be subjected to any check in their growth, for such a check re tards development and makes them of small size and possessed of less vigor. There are three factors necessary to their satisfactory development: First, the early separation of sexes; second, providing proper environment, and third, supplying sufficient nourish ment. As soon as the pullets and cockerels can be distinguished, it is essential that they be kept by themselves for the remainder of the growing period. The pullets, when running by them selves, make a better growth, and fur thermore can be fed to secure a nor mal slow development at smaller cost than would be necessary if they were to be put into condition market. The cockerels, on the other hand, must be fed special fattening rations in order to put on a high quality of flesh in a minimum of time. In the case of Leghorns, the surplus cockerels should be disposed of as broilers in most cases at about twelve weeks of age or when they weigh about one and one-half pounds. With the heavier breeds, such as Plymouth Rocks and Wyandottes, most of the cockerels can be kept to the roaster age and marketed in the Fall when six to eight months old. The male birds cannot be put into proper condi tion economically if they are allowed to run with the pullets. They not only require different methods of feeding but the presence of each other acts as an Irritation and serves to check the proper growth of each. The following ration has proven very desirable for finishing cockerels which arc to be sold as broilers. It. should bo fed mixed with skim milk and in a crumbly, not sloppy condi tion. It is best fed in trough, only enough heing given at a time so that the chicks will clean it up between each feeding. One feed of the mash a day is sufficient. Equal parts of cracked corn and wheat should be fed morning and night in addition. Skim Milk Broiler Mash Ground oats 2 5 lbs. Cornmeal 25 lbs. Wheat middlings 25 lbs. Beef scrap 15 lbs. Granulated bone 10 lbs. Total 100 lbs. The broilers which are being fed these rations should be given plenty of green food and plenty of water to drink, and should have rather re stricted range, thus keeping down the exercise and hastening the formation of fat. ' y Where the heavier cockerels are to be grown to roaster age they should be given during the summer plenty of green grass range with shade. When they arc from six to eight months old and two to three weeks before they are to be killed, It will be found de sirable to confine them in crates or small yards and feed them a special fattening ration. For such purposes the following ra tion will be found very useful. It should be mixed very moist, with skim milk if possible, if not, water will answer. It should be fed in pans or water-tight troughs. No water should be given the birds to drink during the finishing period other than what they get from the mash, the mash being mixed very wet. Fattening Mash Cornmeal 4 0 lbs. Wheat middlings 20 lbs. Ground oats 20 lbs. Beef scrap 20 lbs. Total 100 lbs. Three feedings a day of the above mash, if only small quantities are given, so that the birds are allowed to I For Your | '(I. Poultry House |j If you want a covering that will keep out the winter cold and 11 |j| summer heat; a roofing that will not crack, run, rot, warp, ill HI rust or leak. Let ua show you the best roofing we know of— ||| 111 — Pronounced "RlTaa In If J I RfcfiSß&O I M COSTS MORE - WCAES LONGER _ ffl W We recommend RU-BCR-OIQ be- ®ll-BER-OtQ. You get the genuine % cause we know that if you use it here-the "Ru-ber-oid Mon," shown fil W you will get satisfactory service. above, appears on every roll. ft. W Our customers who have used The U. S. Court of Appenla h«« enjoined ff H&l-UR-OlU tell us that it ha® •aved imitators from using the word 'Kubberoid Jf* them many repair bill®. RU-BER'OIQ or any similar nam« as the trade nam® or fA NJ costs more than low-grade roof- brand" of their roofing. NJ ings. but it is cheaper by the year. Come in and let ua show you JjJ N JUI EIR-010 roofi li'd more than HU-MR-010- We can supply Col- 55 X 20 years ago are still weather- red p U . UR .(>(Q (Ka-lor-oid) in (O proof. beautiful, never-fading Tile Red r>J There are many imitations of and Copper Green. | Henry GUbert & Son, iarK%a. | JUNE 5, 1915. v *"■ 1 ■ %/ The White Aseel Is one of the oldest races of fowls. According to histor ians this is the fowl whose battles are alluded to in the "Institutes" of Mena. 1000 B. C. "Aseel" is an Arabic word meaning; "high caste." The rulers of India bred this fowl for fighting, and to this day both sexes are extremely combative. Aseels are known n black, blaclc red, white, Duckering, gray, spangles, speckles and mottles, but the first three are generally accepted as the distinct varieties. In 1850 or thereabouts the people of Cornwall, England, using the black red Aseel and some of the local fowl, evolved the now famous Dark Cor nish. Others using the White Aseel in like manner produced the White Cor nish fowls. The latter, while partak- get hungry between feedings, will re sult in a profitable increase in weight. The feed for pullets differs from that given the cockerels in the fact that it is not forcing and not designed primar ily for flesh growth. It is intended rather to maintain a uniform develop ment over a considerable period of time, with the idea of getting the birds into maturity before cold weather sets in. The pullets on range can best be fed a combination of cracked grains and dry mash. The cracked grains are fed broadcast twioe a day about the range, and consist of equal parts of whole wheat and cracked corn. A dry mash which experience has shown to be very valuable for rearing pullets contains: Wheat bran ' 60 lbs. Gluten feed 10 lbs. Cornmeat 10 lbs. Ground oats 10 lbs. Granulated bone 10 lbs. Beei scrap 10 lbs. Total 100 lbs. This mash should be kept in large, self-feeding hoppers, so that chicks can always have free access to it. Free range furnishes the best condi tions for vigor and proper growth. As soon as the pullets are separated from the cockerels they should be placed im mediately on the summer range, which should consist of a rather large area, preferably free range. Under free | range conditions, plenty of green food lis provided, which stimulates the ap -1 petite and increases digestion. Natural ; shade Is needed to protect the chicks ' from the hot sun and to create proper conditions of moisture. When allowed to roam over an ex tended area, the birds secure a large quantity of food material in the form of grubs, insects and weed seeds. These not only induce an excellent growth, but also cut down the cost of other purchased feeds. Furthermore, free range furnishes sanitary conditions which are essential to the best health and development. An attempt to mature pullets In There Are Dollars ! in Summer Eggs Prices are usually better than in I the Spring and it pays to know 1 how to get eggs at this time. Next Saturday, Reese V. Hicks, general manager of the largest poultry farm in the world, will tell our readers how to get good re sults from an ordinary back-yard flock. He will explain how the de pressing effects of summer heat may be overcome economically and the hen's productiveness increased i thereby. | He will advise the amateur as to i the breeds best fitted for summer ! laying and how to feed and care for them. COPYRIGHT, 1915. WHITITASEEL ing in a general way of the huge mus cular formation of its Aseel progeni tor, proved to be a most excellent table fowl, with fine grained, soft flesh. Aseel fowls In America are bred only for ornamental purposes. The variety has never become popular here be cause the females are poor layers and both sexes have hard muscles that make them undesirable for the table. Aseel fowls weigh from five pounds for | females to six for males, and in this respect differ in comparison with the Cornish fowls, their descendants, which run from six to eight pounds for the females, and eight to eleven for males. The latter also are less pugnacious and make better market poultry, while they at the same time possess about the same characteristics lof form and color as the Aseel. small, bare yards without free range will, in Uie great majority of cases, result in failure. The poultryman will appreciate that in all of this work the ultimate aim is vigor and a natural in herited strength and vitality. Unless he Is able to rear each year a large number of pullets to replace the old birds which are sold after they have passed their usefulness for egg produc tion, his chances for success in the poultry business are slim. Vigor is insured, then, by healthy, vigorous parent stock; by the early separation of the sexes, that each may be given every opportunity for devel opment, and by the furnishing of proper range during the summer period. It Pays to KNOW To make money with poultry, you have got to know how to hatch, feed and care for them. Guess-work is expen sive and unneccessary. The International Correspon dence Schools willgiveyou theexact information that you need. Their course in Poultry Farming ii sensi ble, comprehensive and practical. It will help you to get the last dollar out of your flock. Learn Poultry Keeping Avoid Costly Mistakes The time to learn how to keep poultry is before you make costly mistakes. The I. C. S. will train you in the methods followed by the most profitable poultry plants. Hun dreds of money-making poultrymen owe their success to the I. C. S. "I made aeveral attempts to eatabliah a poultry buaineaa; bat it was not unfit / had learned the principlea contained in the I. C. S. Courte in Poultry Farming that I wa* able to meet with any de gree of aucceia," write* G. M. Burr, Meihoppen, Pa. "J now have a well e*tabli*hed and auc cestful poultry buainesa." " The I. C. S. Courae in Poul try Farming ia full of valuable information and very practical," write* Frank Borton, Elba, N. Y. "Ihave had the beat reaulta from applying the methods taught by you," Poultry Book Sent Free The I. C. S. will be glad to send you free, a handsome 56-page book ■ that tells how you can get the special B training that you need to make poul- I try-keeping profitable. They will •how you the best way to hatch, how to feed and raise poultry, how to build poultry houses, how to estab lish and operate a money-making poultry farm, and how to breed stock that will win prizes. To get this valuable book, simply Mark and Mail the Coupon [rNTTßN"iirc«po«rsmoTn Box KW SCR ANTON. PA. I Explain, without any obligation on my part, how I I I can qualify (or the position before which 1 mark Xl I I DPonltry Farming OMechsn. Engineering ■ ■ _ Poultry Breeding _ Mechanical Drafting I I _ General Farming _ Autombile Running ■ " _ Soil Improvement _ Gas Knglncs I _ Fruit and Vegetables _ fttatinnarr Fnrlnttrtag | ' _ M*e Rtoek Dairying _ Electric a I Engineering I ■ _ Civil Service _ E#«-trlf. f.l* ht'r A fUUw*ys I ' - Bookkeeping _ Civil Engineering 1 - Stenography _ Salesmanship I Building Contracting _ Advertising * LJllcttlacJeet. k Plsai'g LJWindow Trimming i I l I Present Employer | I •»" j m.t» 13
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