PEARLS OF THOUGHT. A silent hour under the stars may whisper to your soul great thoughts of •ternity. Honesty is of all things ihe most cunning, because it is the ociy thing that the cunning do not foresee. T') find friends when we have no need of them, and to want them when we have, are alike easy and common. Progress in evil is so rapid and in evitable that long after one has entered upon crime he believes himself still only in passion. If you are not truly rich, why remain poor, since there is no need of it. Tako a little stock in tho "gold tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich." This "gold tried in thefira" is in the market now, and though it is never be low par value, yet all can buy it, for the price is renunciation of sin. You had better purchase now, for soon you will move away from the market. The groat highroad of human welfare lies along the old highway of steadfast well-doing; and they who are tho most persistent and work in the truest spirit will invariably be the most successful. Success treads on the heels of every right effort. A Confederate Shoe. An interesting relic of the war is on exhibition in tho store of a shoe dealer in Church street. It is a shoo weighing two pounds, one of a pair worn by a confederate at the battlo of John's Isl and, 8. C. After his capturo ho ex changed shoos with a private of the One Hundred and Fifty-sixth New York. Tho latter wore them for a while and brought them to Kingston, N. Y., in 1864. Tho shoo is of rude construction, having rawhide uppers, with a hard wood sole half an inch thick, covered at the edges with a strip of wrought iron half an inch wide. Beven iron rivets fastened the solo and uppers together. Tho heel is of wood, and covered with a heavy iron plate shaped like a horseshoe. This shoo was made in England for tho uso ol the Confederate army, and iB similar to those worn by miners there. — New York Tribune. c ONB ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts fentlyyet promptly on the Kidneys, aver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL UUISVILLE. KV NEW YORK, N.t. N Y N C—ls **TERN* V Instantly-Stop Pain ffjfp. AHDSmDItrCURCAU .p-vvV coSsM 4 A representation of the engraving on oar wrappers.— RADW ▲ * Jb CO. new YOIUU IA A tiAtSIA-, Uilf Certain till ||lj||||kffl «a«r tiUßtla tUe World, llr, UriUlvl J. Ih n'i ki'hl.n>. Ajtfcaaamo DEMCIfMC *URK *OK A lil. or N<l FAY. ■ pMWI# N. W ntuimld, Att'jr, WaA. ( D. tC%AA r ° r II- Hond V.for list of prices we pay fPVV for rare coins.Ac. MERCER. Ciaclnaatl. 0. HUMAN (HAlp. Where Crops of, ItiArdf Grown} Bought and| Sola. It Is Recognized as a/Regular Article of Corrimerca, In remote Swiss,, German and) French villages, traffic in human hair is as re cognized a portion of the commerce as the sale of butter and eggs, and is, to th e young peasant girls, a very im portant matter. They grow their hair with a view to selling it, just as their fathers and brothers grow their cereals and raise their cattlo for the same pur pose. In many cases, where they are fortunate enough to have it of a good marketable\color and fine texture, they get for their'ware more than their male relatives could hope to clear after many years of hard\toil. The great drawback to the lucrativc ness of hairfarroing is the slowness of growth and'tho fact that the same head is rarely known to produce a romarka ble fine crop twice. An objection to ii is a dislike, to a woman, te part with ..what isla nature-given orna moat. Wo)may feel positivo that io the districts where hair is sold it is s proud distinctionfto be'in constant pos session of a good crop which is defi nitely understood to bo "not for sale," and which argues well for the amount of worldly gooda enjoyed by its pos sessor. Here, where there is no recognized commorcialVvulue placed on luxuriant locks, it was a year or two ago quite fashionable toiliavehair short and wavy, like a man's. There, howevdr, tho con solation has to be administered in the shape of hard cash, and even with that great consoler in their'hands tho peas ant hair growers can seldom see theii shorn tresses gathered up by the in diHeront purchaser with equanimity. One villago market is held ovory sec ond Friday, and is attended by buvors from Paris only. Theso walk about tho street—tho village boasts but one j long narrow one—while the girls stand about in couples so that they may givo each other moral support. The busi ness is transacted in a large room. The sellers, having had their hair combed out and cxitmined. wait for an oiler. If this bo satisfactory the buyer takes up a bright pair of shears fastened to his waist, and cuts the treasured tresses, papering and pocketing them quickly so that the detnuded girl may see as lit tle of them as possible once they havo passed out of her possession. She then goes off and uses all the means she knows of to cultdvato a new crop, which occasionally is successful up to the third and oven fourth tron«action«, though rarely is the first bargain bet tered. The crop, however, is capri cious; occasionally a second growth and a third have been known to exceed th e first iu length and fineness to a sur prising degree, though, if the color be fair aud particularly of golden sheen, the second crop even is almost invaria bly not satisfactory in this one particu lar. Purely whito hair, if long and fine, may be converted into a little fortune by its possessor, supposing she bo so minded. Albino women havo been known to obtain for a crop of hair white as snow and fine as spun silk tbo nice littlo sum of $759, which certainly would make linir farming a remunera tive occupation, supposing that only two such crops could be railed and dis posed of in a lifetime. It is said that the French ex-empress Eugenie paid S2OO an ounco for hair to match her own, which was, in her youth, that much-priz-jd huo which is the same as virgin gold. The difficulty of exactly matching hair is much greater than might be supposed by the casual observer, who sees only the four Colors known by hair experts as type colors white, black, brown and blondo. Each of these produce numerous shades, not less than sixteen of every type, and the subtile difference in these shades of hair is wonderfully perceptible, as thoso who havo a littlo and want to match it speedily find out. llair which is artificially colored to match is most unsatisfactory, as the hue is not stationary. Hair died on the head is a far mora enviable possession, as it requires fre quent redippings, and its ownor (tho waves of hair dye boing inscrutable) has usually to disappear from social ken during the process. Not alone that fact, but nlso that medical in?n declare softening of the brain to bo brought on by the use of hair dyo as well as diseases of tho eye, makes this a most undesirable practice. A fine head of virgin-gold colored hair will bring from S2OO to SSOJ, accord ing to its length and luxuriance, nnd to those who have it and are anxious to convert it into hard cash it niaf be pleasing to hear that there are orders in advance for all that can ba produced of this description for tho next five years. Sitting 1 in tiie Saddle. It!■ the Engliah method of horie manship that is being taught altogether in the riding schools of this country now. The English style is widely dif ferent from that wihich the best Ameri can riders used to employ. English men sit far back in their saddles and rely on the pressure ofithe ball of the foot in the stirrup to keep them in place. It is not the most favorable system, cither, for theJ horse or for the rider. It means hardJer work, for each, and it is the more fatiguing. The American way of riding, which was taught in Kentucky and South Caro lina, when a boy could jump on the back of a thoroughbred and steer him over the roughest country, was to sit nearly erect in tho saddle and depend upon the pressuro of tho knees and thigh to hold the seat. The English system is artificial and the American is natural. You obtain an easier scat and a better control of your horse by the leg pressure than you can possibly do by virtually swinging yourself on your stirrups. You could not possibly bareback in the English fashion at a gallop; but the American way make;, it perfectly ca?y to do so. But the im ported notion has conquered in our fashionable riding schools, and you can hardly see the genuino American rid ing without traveling down tho rural districts along tli-j S>uthern border.— Morse and, is table. How Tea was Introduced. Tea came into uso almost by acci dent. Bomo Bhuddhist priests, going on a missionary expedition from North ern India to China, took with them the dried leaves and also some cuttings of an indigenous shrub, which was said to have the power of correcting any inju rious properties in the brackish water they might meet with on the way. The decoction thus made pleased tho mis sionaries so well that they continued, as a matter of taste, to drink it after they reached China, and introduced it to their converts. They also set about planting the precious shrub, and al though it did not thrivo so well in China as in its nativo Assam, becoming smaller both in stem and leaf, it was so well liked that it soon formed the foundation of the favorite beverage of all China. Thence it was brought to Europe, to be drunk and desired by Englishmen of every degree. And it was only of late years that As*am tea has come into the European market, to bo looked upon rather suspicously as the rival of its own degenerated Chi nese daughter. How FEW people are blessed with presence of mind when danger threat ens ! A lamp explodes; five out of six run screaming from the vicinity, leav ing it to do its deadly work unchecked; tho sixth snatches up a woolen shawl or blanket and smothers tho flames. A woman faints in a public place. A struggling, suffocating crowd presses about. Suddenly three or four in the crowd begin to exclaim, "Stand back! Give her air!" But not one of them makes a move to stand back him self, and the crowd gathers more and more closely, until some one with tho gift of leadership comes to the rescue. The wheels of a carriage become in terlock with thoso of a heavy wagon. Tho horses are terrified and restive; an accident seem imminent when a man cries, to the one next him, "Help me lift the carriago clear!" In the flash of an eye it is done and the peril averted. Leadership lies in thought; cultivate it. yon who can. THE London I'hnes will be about $75,000 out of pocket for accepting as genuine a batch of manuscript that not one Yankee editor in a thousand would have given a second look at without smelling mice. Purify Your Blood At the coming of spring the bloocl should be puri fied, as Impurities which have been Accumulating for months or even j-ears, are liable to manifest themselves and seriously affect the health. Hood'* Sarsaparilla 1* undoubtedly the beat blood purlfler. It expels every taint of impurity, drives out scrofu lous humors and germs of disease, and gives to the blood the quality and tone essential to good health. Hood's Sarsaparilla "My daughter suffered terribly with sore eyes, caused by scrofula humor. We were obliged to keep her out of school for two years. We had medical attendance, but she failed to gain relief. At last* knowing that Hood's Sarsaparilla had cured my mother of rheumatism, aud believing it must be good for the blood, 1 concluded to hove my daughter try It, and it has entirely cured her."-CORNELIUS YBAOKR, 412 East Main Street, Marsh all town, lowa. Purifies the Blood "Hood'sSarsaparilla ha* cured me of salt rheum, which I have had for years. I do think It is a splen did medicine. 1 am 40 years of age and my skin is Just as smooth and fair as a piece of glass.' —MRs. LILLA CLARK, South Xorwalk, Conn. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists, fl; six for $5. Prepared ouly by C. I. HOOD * CO., Lowell, Mass. IQO Poses One Dollar Safety Bicycles OF ° r ' bu>^ell A Gigantic King. T&g Lobengula, of Matabele Land, is pictured by a recent visitor as a giantr, weighing more than 280 pounds. "Never," writes the visitor, "have I seea such a bruta' and cruel expression as ho has. Howe or, he received us very well, and after our royai letter had been read and transacted, some excellent beef was produced, and we were soon busy tearing it up with our teeth and lingers. Next week commences the big war-dance, so probably we shall not get away for at least a fortnight. The King returns to his capital to-morrow, owing to gout. He is now being attended by witch doc tors. Last September and October he killed 400 people, but has never touched a European." Catarrh Can't bo Cured With LOCAL, APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of tho disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to on re it you have to take internal remedies. Hall's C atarrh Cure is taken internally, and nets directlv on the blood and mucous sur faces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is no quack medi cine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics kuown, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. Tho perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces ?uch wonderful results in curing catarrh. Hend for testimoni als free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Props., Toledo, O. Sold by druKuistg, price 76c. ALL the bank note currency of the Italian Government is engraved and printed in tho United States. Fifteen contestants clad for the fray. Armed with good steel and in battle array. Striving for lucre, as brave Knights of old Strove for their honors and medals of gold. Driving each shining oen over the paper, Seeking to sound, as tne most proper caper. The praises of remedies known the world over— From Paris to Calais, from Calais to Dover; But each Knight vainly strives—language fails in description Of the manifold virtues of "Favorite Prescrip tion. When ill or depressed with that "dragging down" feeling, consequent upon weakness, suf fering from headache, weak or lame back, and the many ills common to the weaker sex, take Dr. Pierce's Prescription, which is guaranteed to give satisfaction or price ($1) returned. See printed guarantee on bottle-wrapper. I)r. Pierce's Pellets—gently laxative or ac tively cathartic according tojlose.__& r » cents. NEW YORK CITY consume* 3,360,030 eggs daily during SLv Novels Free* sent by Cragin & Co., Phila., Pa., to any one in U. S. or Canada, postpaid, upon receipt of 25 Dobbins's Electrical Soan wrappers. See list of novels on circulars around each bar. This soap for sale by all grocers. WASHINGTON, 1). C., is to have a pneumatic street rail way a mile and a half long. Different to Everybody Else. Mabel—"Mamma, dear, in what way am I not like most people?" Mamma- U f am sure I cannot tell you, dar ling!" Mable—"Because most people always like new things best, and the other day, you know, you said, when I fell and hurt my knee, that X>r. Tobias's Venetian Liniment was a very old remedy, that your mamma always Uhed it when you were a little girl for aches and pains, and 1 think it iB just splen d id, too. I don't care how old it is, 'cause my knee is all well again." All druggists sell it. PITS stopped free by Dft Ki. INK'S GREAT NEKVE RESTORER. NO Fits after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and 12 trial bottle free. Dr. Kline,B6l Arch St.. rhila., Pa. Old smokers prefer "TansilPs Punch." OIL CURES PERMANENTLY NEURALGIA, Instant Relief, First Application. Boonville, Mo., Dec. 28,1885. I suffered dreadfully with neuralgic pains in head which affected face and eyes. I could not attend work. I obtained instantaneous relief from first application of St. Jacobs Oil. H.M.CLARK. Suffered 4 Days .Severely. 4G2G Fenna. Ave.,Pittsburg, Pa., Feb. 18,1880. I suffered very severe pains from neuralgia for four days, but wus cured by St. Jacobs Oil. Mrs. JOHN KLEPPLE. AT DRVGGISTS AND DEALERS. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Ballimort. MD. "Oh, So Tired!" is the cry of thousands every Spring. For that Tired Feeling take Ayer's Sarsaparilla and recover Health and Vigor. It Makes the Weak Strong. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Ely's Cream Salm Willi. CURE reffiftffko] CATARRH.Pd I Price 5Q Cents. I Apply B»lm into eaob nostril. ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N. Y.BHK2b£2& §P- C ' NORTHERN PACIFIC. II LOW PRICE RAILROAD LANDS * FREE Government LANDS. MI1A!AION8 OF ACITES Minnesota, Nortn Dakota, Montana. Idaho, Washington and Oregon, crun CAD publications with maps describingthe SEND run bent Agricultural, Urasing and lim ber Lands now open to Settlers. »cnt tree. Add res i CHAS. B. LAMBORK, ' :m. Haul, !>llnn. A VULCANIZED FIBRE XLE WASHERS. CH K A FEST AN O B EST. OUTWEAR FOUR LEATHER ONES. Ask your Hart 1 ware Dealer for them, or writi* to Vulcanized Fibre Co., 14 Dey St., New York. DATCIITC No Fatent. No Pay! Book tree rAlCfllO N. W. Fitzgerald * Co., Wash., I), r AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT DK. liOBII, North Fifteenth Street, rhllndelphlK. Tweuty year, 1 experlencj in special dl teases; cures the worst cases of Nervoa* Complaints, Blood Poisoning, Biotones, Eruptioni. Piles, Catarrh, Ulcers, Sores, Impaired Memory Despondency, Dimness of Vision, Lung, Liver stomach, Kidney (Brlght's Disease); confidential tiircall or write for question iistjsnd boo*. ■ifi Wm i m I prescribe and fully o*. dorse Big G as the only specific for the certain cure to ft of this disease. _ MtosmatMA aet «eV o.ii.INGKAHAM.II. D., iffw aiwiiriecffr w Amsterdam, N. Y. Wo ba*e «old Blr G for RP|_ . . many years, and it hat VWUTUlOkialatlO^^^,.| T e D tho beat of a»tl»- faction. «A JS D. R. DYCHK A CO.. Cbleaco. 111. Trl Sold by Drufglata. SIO,OOO FOUND IN AN ASH BARREL. A New York rag-picker is reported to fcava found SIO,OOO m greenbacks in an ask barrel. This was a rare piece of good luck, but how much more fortunate is the sufferer from consumption who learns that, although the doctors mar have pronounced his case hopeless, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery will cure him. Consumption is a scrofulous disease of the lungs. The " Dis covery," which is tho most potent blood purifler of the age, strikes right at the root of the evil and thero is no resisting it, if taken in time and given a fair trial In the cure of all scrofulous and other blood taints, no matter from what cause arising, scalp diseases, old sores and swellings, It absolutely has no equal. i§F OPFBHBD for an incurable case of SC SC M Catarrh In ttis Haad by Mil W the proprietors of OR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY. W0 SYHTTMI W CATAKMB.—Headache, obstruction of nose, discharges BF 112 falling into throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, r/ ' V*»' tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid: eyes weak, ringing In ears, fir .if deafness, difficulty of clearing throat, expectoration of offensive matter; PualiL Av breath offensive; smell and taste impaired, and general debility. Only a v/ 112 '•i: few of these symptoms likely to be present at once. Thousands of cases result in consumption, and end in the grave. By its mild, soothing, antiseptic, cleansing, and healing properties. Dr. Sage's Remedy cures tho worst cases. This infallible remedy does not, like the poisonous irritating snuffs, "creams" and strong caustic solutions with whioh the public have long been humbugged, simply palliate for a short time, or drive the. disease to Mu luno *, as there is danger of doing in the use of such nostrums, but tt prodhteea perfect and pernsncot en res of the wont caaea of Chronic Catarrh, as thousands can testify. "Cold in the Head" is cured with a few applications. Catarrhal Headache is relieved and cured as if by mafic. It removes offensive breath, loss or Impairment of the sense of taste, smell or hear in*. watering or weak eyes, and impaired memory, when caused by the violence of Catarrh, as they aJt frequently are. Dr druggists. M cents. WEBSTER'S UNABRIDGED ANCIENT EDITION. A so-called "Webster's Unabridged Dictionary " Is being otiered to the public at a very low prioe. The body of the book, from A to Z, is a cheap reprint, page for paga, of the edition of 1847, which was in its day, a valuable book, bnt in the pro gress of langnage for over FORTY YEARS, has been completely superseded. It Is now reproduced, broken type, errors and all, by photo-llthegraph process, is printed on cheap paper ana fllmslly bound. A brief comparison, page by page, between the reprint and the latest and enlarged edition, will show the great superiority of the latter. These reprints are as out of date as a last year's almanac. No hon orable dealer will allow the buyer of suoh to suppose that he is getting tho Webster which to-day is accepted as the Standard and THE BEST,—every copy of which bears our imprint as given below. VST If persons who have been induced ta purchase the " Ancient Edition" by any misrepresentations will advlso as of tho facts, we will undertake to see that tho seller Is punished as ha deserves. G. & C. MERRIAM & CO. SPRINGFIXXD, MASS. X Y X U—l3 KEMPS BALSAM NQI 'Somethingjust™ good* KEMPS BALSAM „ IS OUR FAMILY MEDICINE Cures Coughs, Colds, Ssre Throat, Croup.Whoepisf Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma* A eertaia ear* foi Consumption io first stages, aod a sure relief in tdvABM( stages. Use at once. You will see tho exoeUoat sffoof after taking the first doso. Isold bj dealers everywhere Large bottles, 50 cents aad |1 .<». gRAZER^f USST IN THE WORLDUHtMvt XV Get. tho Oenufne. Sold Ewerrwher*. • I»R. KOIHLKB'S FAVORITE COLIC MIXTURE for alt domeatto aulmala will cure M out o( every 10J caaea of colic, wbetlier flat ulent or apaamodlc. Hardy more Ulaa lor 2 doeea necessary. It doe, not c 11- atlpate, rather aou aa a laxative and la .ntlrely harmless. After JO year* of ir: i In more than 3000 caaes our guarantee la wortn something. L'ellc mini », treated promptly. Expend a few cent, and you have a cure on bant, rj i 11 when needed, and pernapiaav*a valuable boraa. If not at your dr.i;]l>:'<. encloae 30 centa for sample uottle, seatjprspald. Addraaa t»R. KUKMI.KK ifc CO., Bethlehem. Pa. lu Dr. ICMAMrt " Jtovortta Colic I We cVer/Wlu reo ommrni Dr. KneMer's Mixt ure" right atony irttJ, jrueoaai. Jt tc | "favorite Cofio Mixturr." Would not the bat coUc medicitf I have tvtr (MIL I fee without it cu lonj a • U-- hortu. ISAAC MOOG, Hone /Malar, | .ISAAC MOStX & BRO., Urmmkly*. Jhw Kerif. | Smtm and iCxchanys stable*, Eaiton Pi, ■ OISO'S REMEDY FOB CAi'AliKH.— Best. Easiest to use. -L Cheapest. Relief Is immediate. A cure Is certain. For ftH Cold In tho Head it hag no equal. ■ It is an Ointment, of which § small particle is applied to tile nostrils. Price, 00c. Sold by druggists or sent by mull. mM Address. K. T. Haultuc, Warren. Pa. Hi Thoroughly cleans* and enrich the blood, by th. Un of Dr. Pierce's Oolden Medical Discovery, and good digestion, a fair akin, buoyant spirits and bodily vigor and health will be established. For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Shortness Of Breath, Bronchitis, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred affections, it ia an efficient remedy. "Golden Medical Discovery" is the only blood and lung remedy, sold by druggists, and guaranteed by it6 manufacturers, to do all that, it is claimed to accomplish, or money paid for it will be promptly refunded- WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL. ASSOCIA TION, Manufacturers, No. 063 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. $3 SHOE foir GENTLE MEN An«l Oilier Advertiaed Specialties Are the Bent in «he World. None genuine union.* name and price are stamped on bottom. SOLD EVERYWHERE. If your dealer will not .supply you, send postal for Instructions how to buy direct from factory without extra charge. W. 1,. OOKiLAS, Brockton. Ma»«. DR. SCHENCK'S sjssm OEAWEED Okl d TONIC Is a Posit IT© Curo for ■SM DYSPEPSIA H And all Disorders of the TMgest- BR * TO Organs. It is likewise a flßi corroborative, or strengthen *ing Medicine, and may be taken with great benefit In nil cases of Debility. For Sale bf •11 Druggista. Price, 112 1.00 per bottle. Dr. Schenck • New Book on Lungs Liver and Stomach moiled free. Address. Dr. J. H. SCHCNCK & SOU. Philadelphia. GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST. - By a thorough knowledge of the natural lawj which govern the operations of digestion and nutri tion, and by a careful application of the flne proper ties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps lias provide 1 our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured bev erage which may save us many heavy dootors' olll«. It is by the Judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until btrong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping our selves well fortified with pure blood and a propsrly nourished frame."— "CixrU Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sol I only in half-pound tins by Grocers, labelled thus: JA.IIES EI*PS A- CO., Homoeopathic Chemist*. Londox, Ekoland. IPSJI COMBI NINSS AHTICUSIJL wkoiaMltfactory 112 RPF paid for on deiiyefy. irTaiK/Trsrns mikk. P d f * c Vtiit DELITIBI. LDscsii co-> >U n. so, St, ruiu^ra,
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