The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, June 03, 1908, Image 7

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    ttaUtual
Constmaiion
J lay bepcrmanenih oercom by proper
tymonal efforts yitMKe assistance
I m the one '
truly benciicto.1 IftMUve
I Syrup oj tigs and LUrtr of 3am
crt enaoieft one to form tjuir
Kabifa daily SotKnt" nilnrvrt fo ita
ture ma
tire may be gradually diSrSed"t
when no longer needed aslhebesioj
remedies, wKen required, are to assist
AaWe and hot to supplant the hetun.
J junctions, vh ten must depend ulti
toately upon proev rtouriitrtmeht,
proper eJJorts.eW rint iivinggtntraM.
Io get its behejuiot effects, always
0ty tKe genuine
SyruM KgSEl ixir?Senrvi
' manufactured 6y Uu
California
Fig Syrup Co. only
SOUP EY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS
we me only, regular price 50f rBotO
Ivory Market.
The Ivory market at Antwerp, or
ganized only a decade ago, haB be
come the largest one In the world
larger than the two other great mar
kets, those of London and Liverpool.
FITS,8t.Vitue'Dance:Nervon Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline' Oreat Nerve
estorer. 83 trial bottle and treatise free.
tr.EB. Kline, Ld.,981 Arch St., Pails., Pa.
! According to the report of the geo-
, logical survey of British India the pro-
i duction of coal in that country In 1907
was 9,783,260 tons.
' 22
' Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrnp for Children
( teething, softens thegu ma, redaoesinnamma-
: tion,ailyspain,cnreswindcolio,2Scabottle
Accounts All Balanced.
; A remarkable condition arose In the
Muskogee (Okla.) clearing house the
other day. When members of the as
sociation met at 11 o'clock to adjust
their bank clearings It was found that
there was $40,000 In checks in the
day's business, and that when settle
ment was made the accounts of each
bank against all other banks balanced
to a penny. No bank had to pay a
cent to the other.
Ladles Can Wear Shoe
One Rise smaller after using Allen's Foot
Ease, a powder. It mkei tighten-new shoes
easy. Cores swollen, hot, sweating, hing
feet, Ingrowing naiH.cornsand bunions. At
ftlldrjggistfiandho?tores, 85c. Don t ac
cept any substitute. Trial package Frsi by
mail. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy,N.Y.
v Concrete Fly Wheels. t
For slow speed pumps in the Rand
mines, South Africa, a novel flywheel
has been adopted. High freight rates
make iron and steel machinery very
costly, and the use of concrete rims
for the flywheels of ten pumps Is
Stated to have realized a saving of
about $10,000. The flywheels are driv
en by electric motors through worm
. gear- about twenty revolutions per
minute. Each wheel is fourteen feet
In diameter, with a cast iron bosses in
which sixteen spokes of four-inch tube
are screwed, and the rim has a base
and an outside of one-fourth - Inch
sheet iron strips, e-arated by dt
tance pieces. The strips are bolte
together, the concrete , . rim" between
being thirteen inches wide and ' thir
teen inches deep, strengthened by four
one-fourth inch wires Interlaced witli
the distance pieces. The weight of
the wheel 1s 8,000 pounds and that of
the rinl 6,000 pounds.
Mark Twain in his
earned $700,000.
lifetime lias
More proof that Lydia E. Pink
bam's VepetablcCom pound saves
woman from surgical operations.
Mrs. S. A. Williams, of Gardiner,
Maine, mtes:
I was a great sufferer from female
troubles, and Lydia E. Pinkham's Vepc
table Compound restored me 'a health
in three months, after my physician
declared that an operation was abso
lutely necessary." .
Mrs. Alvina Sperling, of 154 Gey
bourne Ave- Chicago, I1L, writes :
" I suffered from female troubles, a
tumor and much inflammation. Two
of the best doctors in Chicago decided
that an operation was necessary to save
my life. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound entirely cured me without,
an operation."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia K Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that hearing-down
feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion, dizzines9,or nervous prostration.
Why don't you try it ?
Mrs. Plnlthnm invites all sick
women- to write her for advice.
She has (riiiried thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
if
l Farm Topics
THE IMPORTANCE OP FARMING.
How Important the business really
Is can be judge by the fact that there,
are more people engaged in It than
in any other line of productive indus
try, and there is more money invest
ed in farming than in any other one
occupation. Weekly Witness.
A COTTONSEED MEAL.
Six pounds of cottonseed meal may
be considered the most that can be
wisely fed a cow per day, and f out
pounds will generally be a much safer
amount. What additional concen
trates may be needed can consist of
one or more grain products. Pro
gressive Farmer.
GOOD AND POOR BUTTER.
Every year the line Is being drawn
more closely about dairy products
and each succeeding year brings an
Increased demand for strictly first
class grades and a weaker demand
for the poorer ones. In all proba
bility the time Is not tar distant when
it will be almost impossible to dis
pose of poor butter at all, except as
grease and at grease prices. Not
withstanding all that is said against
imitation butter, it Is a truth that
the meanest, filthiest Imitation of all
is made from genuine cow's milk,
but in such a slovenly, incompetent
manner that all value and trace of
genuineness have been eliminated.
Epitomlst. -i
A LOW POULTRY RUN.
A safe and secure poultry run that
requires less material than a high
pen can be made from laths sawed in
two, which would make the sides two
feet high, making the frame of scant
lings and the top of sawed laths, box
boards or similar material. The top
of the run should consist almost en
tirely of trap doors, using bits of old
harness for hinges, which will look
well if cut neatly. The illustration
shows one of the doors propped up to
show the construction more plainly.
The doors are four feet long, the
length of a lath, and may be eight or
ten feet the other way and still not
be clumsy, being constructed of such
light material. -
This trap door is an important fea
ture, as it permits the tender to enter
easily for removing top soli and re
placing with fresh earth or other car
ing for the birds. The frame material
Is of 2x2-inch scantling at the' corners,
A Useful Poultry Coop.
while the side strips are made bt Inch
ards sawed-twoinches wide.- The
earth under this Bhould be slightly
mounded for the-fike of. dryness.
Farm and Homo ... '. - . . .
NEW METHOD OF. CHURNING.
. A new .method 'of. churning butter
has been patented by a native of Fin
land,. A. H. Borgstrom, says the Pa
cific Dairy Review, which consists of
churning the butter at a temperature
in the vicinity of the freezing point.
At this temperature the butter will
not "break," the claim being, how
ever, that the nature of the cream is
so changed that by heating same to a
temperature which permits of the for
mation, of butter, the "breaking"
takes place almost instantaneously.
The advantage claimed for this
method is that "overchurning" can
not take place; that less butter fat is
left in the buttermilk and that the
body of the butter Is Improved and
has greater keeping quality. It is
further claimed that the loss of but
ter fat in churning sweet cream is
largely overcome by this method of
churning. There Is no record given
in the advices of any long continued
practical tests, but If the method has
the merits claimed for It it will cer
tainly change the methods of butter
making.
GETTING CLOVER STARTED.
In some sections of Illinois there
has not been much headway made in
getting clover started. It seems that
on some fields the clover plants do
tolerably well, so long as tbey have
shelter of the nurse plants. But
when the nurse grain is taken oil
the plant soon turns yellow and dies.
We have all presumed that clover
failure wa due to soil acidity, or to
lack of humus, but clover often fails
where neither of these things should
be the cause. It has also been com
monly supposed that clover would
run out after a few years, that is,
it would sicken and die. It appears
that clover exhausts certain elements
of the soil; and -while a piece of land
may not grow clover, it may product
abundantly of other crops. But this
does not help ns out of the matter
of getting a fresh piece of land set.
I have always advised liberal manur
ing of old fields which were to be
seeded, but this will not always fetch
clover. We must look further. The
Tennessee station has discovered an
anthracnese, fungus growth, which
may be the source of the trouble.
TMi attacks newly seeded as well as
old fields, and as yet no means have
been found to combat it. L. C. B..
in the Indianapolis Farmer.
f 1.
HORTICULTU;
X2 HINTS 1
FOR SAN JOSE SCALE.
Lime sulphur washes for San Jose
scale are suitable only for the treat
ment of trees which are in a dormant
state, being much too strong for ap
plication to trees in foliage. Experi
ments Indicate that the best results
follow applications in spring Just be
fore the growth of the tree begins.
Weekly Witness,
CUT YOUNG TREES.
Low headed apple trees are now
generally grown in commercial or
chards. The time to start the
trees to be low headed is In the early
maturity of the young tres when
transplanted to the young orchard.
It often takes courage to cut back
the top of the young fruit trees, but
it should be done when a low tree
is desired. Farmers' Home Journal.
- PENTSTEMONS.
There Is something very charming
about a bed of Pentstemons in bloom
a qualntness that to the lover of
old-fashioned garden blossoms never
falls to appeal. Seed Bown now in
heat and brought on in the company
of stocks, asters, etc., will furnish
plants that will give both bloom and
beauty in August; Like many other
plants, Pentstemons respond to good
culture, and a bed of loamy soil en
riched with half-rotted dung will suit
them. Indianapolis News.
PEAS AND OATS.
I wish to sow three or four acres
of well-rotted and manured ground
this spring with peas and oats. Can
I sow my peas and plow them under
(plowing shallow), then narrow, sow
my oats and harrow them in and get
a good crop, or would you advise
drilling oats and peas together? C.
L. M. It the soil is not too heavy,
It It is a sandy loam, the peas may
be plowed under to a depth of four
Inches. On clay loams it is well to
sow with grain drill, hitching up the
neck straps short and weighting the
teeth of the drill to sow deep. Ex
perience has shown that the oats
may be sown later, when the peas
have Bprouted, sowing broadcast,
then harrowing In lightly to bury the
oats and to kill the little weeds. At
the experiment stations, this method
has worked well. So also has the
method of sowing both sorts of seed
together, though the peas should be
drilled in much deeper than the oats.
The peas also should be sown earlier
than the oats- to give them a fair
start. Country Gentleman.
FORSYTHIAS.
The most glorious flowering shrub
for very early spring is the forsythla,
also known as golden bell. It grows
to a height' of eight and even ten
feet, and has a wonderful yellow
flame of blossoms that absolutely
hide the branches before a single leaf
appears. The branches arch over
and make a delightful shrub that is
satisfactory all the year. It will
make its finest show it planted
against a dark background. Give
each plant plenty of room, for the
branches will spread widely and will
finally bend to the earth again and
root at the tips.
It is little troubled by insects, and
needs only slight pruning. There are
several varieties. The one described
here is forsythla suspensa, and It is
by far the most satisfactory. Young
plants, from two to three years old,
and - about two feet high, can - be
bought for twenty-five cents each.
For a fine group, plant three or four
of these, giving each plant from four
to five feet of clear space around It.
One plant will be sufficient for a
small place. Do not set this shrub
in the middle of an open space. It
needs, background. Indianapolis
News.
NEWLY SET PLANTS.
Newly transplanted plants always
demand more or less protection from
the blighting effects of too much sun
and wind. It is best achieved by
making a shelter such as is shown in
the cut. '
Two ten-foot poles and two three
foot pieces of any .convenient thick
ness for the crosspleces, with four
fourteen-inch weatherstrips for the
legs, constitute the frame. In the
middle of it two hooks should be in
serted on each side, and upon these
the covering fastened, which can thus
be adjusted very quickly. The cover
ing may consist of burlaps or any
kind of rough sacking.
3
Frames to Protect Small Plants.
Being so simple and economical to
make, it is advisable to have enough
frames to protect the number of ten
der plants that are set out In a garden
at one time, says Farm and Home.
They possess other advantages than
sheltering, the young things from the
direct rays of the sun.' They allow
slow, evaporation, and so keep newly
watered ground moist for hours,
whereas if exposed to the sun and
wind it would soon become dry and
caked. On windy days it Is necessary
to let the sacking down on the wind
ward Side of the shelter. In case of
frost the protection that they afford
Is of inestimable value.
FUSE
1
HI
J1FJQ
3.
NPVSTRJ
An English scientist
says the
North Pole Is moving.
rne increasing popularity oi me
self-playing piano has induced inven
tors to extend this style of music
to other instruments. The most re
cent Is an automatic sheet music
cornet, patented by a Chicago man.
Like the piano player, the music is
on a perforated roll. ,
In genuine Havana tobacco there is
not more than two per cent, of nico
tine. In French tobaeco about six
per cent., and In our Old Dominion
product a little over seven per cent.
In the Blue Grass tobacco at least,
eight per cent, and the Sumatra leaf
of Connecticut contains about six per
cent.
The old suspicion that tobacco
effects the heart and even plays some
part in arteriosclerosis the dreaded
thickening of the arterial walls so
common In human decay has been
confirmed by Zebrowskt, a Russian
physician. Rabbits lnnoculated with
tobacco extract, with nicotine and
with adrenalin, all showed marked
thickening and dilation of the walls
of the aorta, or main artery.
The Alpine Journal publishes a
full account of the recent ascent of
Kabru, near Darjeeling, by two Nor
wegian climbers, Messrs. Monrad-Aas
and Rubenson. The height of the
peak, according to the Indian Survey
measurements. Is 24,015 feet. The
oncoming of darkness turned the
climbers back before the. could quite
reach the top; but they report that
they pitched their highest camp at
22,000 feet, and succeeded In attain
ing an elevation of "about 23,000
feet." This, so far as Is known, is a
record.
A special Inflammation of the eyes
ophthalmia electrics seems to
have become common among workers
with electric light apparatus, and now
Dr. Cnellitzer has pointed out to the
Berlin Medical Socle'.y that the
trouble may result from very brief
exposure to strong glare. In an
electric melting of Iron at an engine
factory an enormous arc of fifty thou
sand candle power was produced.
Workmen passing within six or eight
yards were warned not to linger, yet
on the next day twelve of the men
sought medical advice, reporting pain
in the eyes, profuse lachrymation,
spasm of the eyelids and headache.
Ultra violet rays are the suggested
active cause.
The usual method of using solar
heat has been to concentrate the sun's
rays by mirrors, but in the simpler
apparatus with which Frank Shu
man has teen experimenting at Ta
cona, Pa.; the direct rays have been
made to heat a boiler box with a
double glass top. An air space of
one inch between the two layers of
glass forms a Jacket preventing
escape of heat by radiation. Water
in tho pipes generated steam with a
pressure of fifteen pounds, which
was made to drive an engine, and by
ens ploying either a pressure of ninety
pounds was reached. In warm cli
mates a good working pressure Is ex
pacted from water, thus solving tho
perplexing power problem of tropical
lands.
A Vegetable Lizard.
An attache of the Smithsonian In
stitutUn tills of a curious inhabitant
of tropical forests called the lizard
tree, but whli-h, as he remarks, might
well be term-d the centipede plant.
This singular growth consists of a
stem Jolntd like a bamboo, with
green ltaves growing directly from
the bark, and slsi,djr white roots
springing from the Joints, with which
it maintains Its hold upon the bark
of the tree whereon it grows. When
It has attained a length of three or
four feet the lower sections of tho
lltard plant drop off, and, fastening
Ufon aty convenient object, begin
ttelr independent growth.
When thus growing upon the
ground, If tho plant encounters a tree,
It immediately begins to ascend the
truLk. Citrograph.
A Monster Spring.
No State in the Union has larger
or more numerous springs than
Florida. Many of thera form gocd
sized streams from the start and
some of them are navigable. The
largest spring in the State, and one
of the largest and probably the best
known in the United States, is Silver
Spring, which is located six miles
east of Ocala. This spring forms
the source of the Okiawaha River, a
tributary of the. St. John's, and
steamboats traversing the river enter
the spring basin, which has an area
of several acres. The water Is from
twenty-five to thirty feet deep and Is
wonderfully clear, appearing abso
lutely devoid of col jr. Minneapolis
Journal.
An Up-to-the-Minnte Assistnnt.
Assistant ' (to countrv editor .
How's this obituary?".'
Editor "Why, It's my own."
"Yes. That Hasklns chap the
dead shot was In here vesterdav
looking for you with a gun and I
inougnt it anything should happen
you might like to correct the proofs
beforehand."- Life. :
The great Oxford dictionary, which
has been under way for a generation,
has reached "pre."
18 CHRISTIANITY DECLINING
The Rev. Thomas Dixon Points Out
Slumps In Churches.
There are fewer Baptists, Metho
dists and Presbyterians in New York
today than there were 25 years ago,
though the city's population has beeu
more than doubled. . The rapid ex
tinction of churches of these denom
inations in Manhattan during the past
decade shows this. In 1896 the- Bap
tists reported C4 churches. Last
year they only claimed 48. Many
of these claims are pitiful absurdities
mere names of mission halls and
soup kitchens, supported by the char
ity of one or two rich men. One
half of them represent hopes as yet
unfulfilled, declares Thomas Dixon,
Jr., in Broadway Magazine.
The same thing is true of the
Methodists, who reported 73 churches
In 1890 and only claim 59 in 1907.
The Presbyterians reported 71 In
1890 and .only 67 last year. - "
In the year 1840 New .York City
had one church to every 1,800 In
population. Last year we 'could not
find one church to 4,000 population,
counting all our soup kitchens and
mission halls ns -"churches."
There are many sections of the
city which are practically pagan. One
district of 10,000 population, which Is
typical of many more, has one saloon
to 111 Inhabitants, and one church
to 8,190. - 1
In another large district there are
some 50,000 inhabitants, with a sa
loon to every 10,000. In the section
between Twenty-fourth and Fifty
ninth streets west' of Ninth avenue
there Is but one church to 15,000;
while the district between Fortieth
and Sixty-fourth streets west of Tenth
avenue contains 40,503 people, and
has but one church. ; -
And the sad part of the story is
that many of these churches that are
reckoned on the map as living and
performing their duties to these vast
populations are dead and don't know
It.
Crime Increasing.
Crime Is Increasing rapidly In New
York city. There were more com
plaints, more indictments, more
charges preferred and more cases
tried during the last half year than
In any six months In the history of
the city, and the Increase has been in
much larger proportion than the In
crease in population, which is estimat
ed at G5.000.. .
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
With IOCAL A r plications, at they cannot
reach (be seat of tbe disease. Catarrh is
blood or constitutional disease, and in order
to cure it you must take internal remedies.
HaII'i Catarrh Cure is taken internalljr, and
arts directly on the blood and mucous tur
face. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack
medicine. It waa prescribed by one of the
beat phyaicians in this country for years,
and ia regular prescription. It ia compouM
of the bent tonics known,coinbiiMd with tbe
beat blood iiuriliera, actine directly on the
mucous surfaces. 'I he perfect combination
of the two ingredients is what produce
such wonderful result in curing catarrh.
Send for testimoniala, free.
F. J. Chenet A Co., I'rons., Toledo, O.
Bold by drucgiats, price, 75c.
Take Hall' Family Villa lor constipation.
Electric Heat for Plants.
The growth of plants Is known to
be stimulated by weak electric cur
rents applied to the soil, but it has
not been supposed, to be economical
to use electricity for conversion Into
heat for warming hotbeds, as has been
done by G. Hartman In his experi
ments at Turbine, Ont His heater
consists of about 200 feet of one-twelfth-tnch
iron wire wound in seven
two-Inch coils on one and one-half-inch
Iron pipe, the coils, connected In
series, being mounted on porcelain
knobs on a piece of abestos board. A
frame about 6 by 8 feet in size has
a floor, on which Is about five inches
of soil,- and the top of tho frame is
covered with two sashes. The heater
Is placed under the floor. Current is
taken from a 110-volt circuit, but the
energy actually received last year was
flf:etn amperes at eighty volt3. This
gave sufficient heat. The hotbed was
kept quite warm, and tender flowers
and vegetables developed rapidly In
the early spring weather.
The Bristol to Paddington (Eng
ln .1) express covers 118V, miles In
two hours.
Class telephone poles relnjorced
by wire are being used In some parts
of Germany.
WE GIVE AWAY OVER 1000
Valuable Household and Fancy Articles Free, in
Exchange for Carton Tops and Soap Wrappers
from "20 Mule-Team" Borax and "20 Mule- $
Team" Borax Products. Send Postcard for
40-page Illustrated Catalogue.' Address .
PACIFIC COAST BORAX CO., NEW YORK.
sin a ik 1 1 i
FOR
The standard average of the bottom of the mals foot dictates tho
shape of SKREEMER shoes. Tbey fit because they are scientific
in structure. They have fit along with smart style. Look for tho
label, u yon do not nna tnese snoes readily,
write us for directions how to secur them.
FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton. Mass.
Vis!V wu t an. Vsi5ig S" S t
ii , JT ""l"r rVTTTli Im B , V, . X
SHOES AT ALL
rmcis. FOR CVCftV
MEMBER OF THE FAMILY,
MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN.
WO sws's I2.SO, I simI lt.MsMe
J5S world, bmumumm thw Aaaf m
JMAMb tit bailor, nss Isisiaw. awef
mr of arwaVsM. rmlmm Mao smut
ID SSws Qtth wHd Im-dar. SS
W. L Doutfjt $4 ind $5 Silt Edgi Sbsti Cannot
TI'AtTlOIT, W. U DongUs smM and rl
Sold b Ih. teM mIh mhwwIlh.
tiawa Uttiof. IrautBi Mian.
StMM
-f
I
II
111
MISS.
DUFnlA V&Sfe.
KTTTTFSFN
HEALTH VERY POOR
RESTORED BY PE-RU-NA.
Catarrh Tweniy-five Years
Had a Bad Cough
Miss Sophia Kittlesen, Evanston. Il
linois. U. H. A., writes:
"I have been troubled with catarrh for
nearly twenty-five years and have tried
many cure for it, but obtained very liHlS
help.
"Then my brother advised me to, toy.
Perttna, and I did.
"My health wa very poor at the lime t
began taking Peruna. My throat was very'
sore and I bad a bad cough.
'I'erunahatcuredme. Theckrtml
catarrh is pti and my health "
very much improvtd.
"1 recommend Peruna to all my friends "
who are troubled as j was."
PERUNA TABLETS:-Some people pre
fer tablets, rather than medicine in a fluid1
form. Such people can obtain Peruna
lets, which represent the medicinal ingredi'-i
cnt of Peruna. Kach tablet equals one :
average doa of Peruna.
Man-a-lin ths Ideal Laxative).
UWUCTIJUD IT PERUNA DRUB
iUMJfsCTlRINfi C0MPMT, C018IBDS,
Curbing the Chauffeurs.'
A Seattle (Wash.) Jury has fou
guilty of murder an automoblllst wlM'
ran over and killed a little girl. Gain'
victlon Is In the second degree; car--
rylng a penalty of from on td M.
years' Imprisonment and a fins -of
$5,000. A Boston automoblllst who
caused the death of a woman has bees)
held for court and an effort is to he,
made to provide another object lessofj,
for criminally careless chauffeurs.
The police authorities of Chicago aa
leading automobile owners and deal
ers have Joined hands In an endear-'
to suppress the scorching motorists,
and the penalty for infraction of the
speed laws hereafter Is to be imprison
ment Instead of a fine.
The laymen or the various denom-'.
Inatlons In Atlanta have pledged,
themselves to raise $100,000 for for
eign missions during the coming year.
A new process has been discovered
In China by- which ramie fiber be
comes a soft fllasse In n few minutes.
1 If yon miffer from Flu. FuMto ftfdite- m
I bpuou, of have Cbildren.thntdoao, mj
yymmmm New Dtoeovary an TrMtmtMtt
j !! too arn ankevi to do ia to Mod lot
.taBBAB ' 199 oonie oi ur. naj a
EPILEPTICIDE CURE
OnmpliflswlthFfwMl anriDrasxActofOnnsrm
Jun3lth ItfS. rnmpleto dirf-tmns, alautM
timonml. ot rt'HKS. ctr. FKKK bf ainiL
i)irM frtpan. "'-f f"Y nti-l fnll nilTliim
. E UT, St. 0 141 Pull Itnst, I t
F
III rilDC A swtntntted TMrctable 1
WIS l-unt ntA' remly for rltcrnal snS
IntCTnal psln roughs cMa, catarrh. Aetm IMr
magic Simiite, mte Mire. In powder form, n?
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