Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, May 13, 1903, Image 3

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    Poultry Notes.
]£RRB For Hatching.
It is a mistake to sell off all the old
hens and depend entirely on the pullets
for the eggs used for hatching.
Chicks hatched from eggs laid by
hens one, two or even three years old,
are stronger, and usually make better
fowls than those from pullets.
Hens after the first year lay larger
/eggs, and the chicks from them arc, as
a rule, hardier than from younger hens.
The old hens are more patient setters
and, as a rule, are better mothers.
IVo think It better to mate the two
or three-year-old hens with cockrels
that have fully matured, and reserve
the pullets, except those early hatched,
for market eggs.
Much of the worry in raising chicks
is the result of weak stock, and the
more we guard against such defects
the less will be our trouble.—Homo
and Farm.
There is no doubt that gapes are
caused by a small worm gathered from
' the filth of the yard—usually in an em
bryo state and being warmed in the
crop of the chick develops the small
•Form which gradually interferes with
breathing and produces that gaping
which eventually cuds in death.
Incubator chicks have never been
known to have gapes, neither have
those that were kept in clean, grassy
plats. Only those that have had runs
on bare ground. Where filth was al
lowed to accumulate, have ever had
gapes, and all tests have shown exclu
sively that filth produced the disease.
If the chicks are under the care of a
hen, see that the yards are kept clean
and change the location of the coops
every few days. Keep lime scattered
over the ground where there is no
grass and do not let the chicks cat
their food amid filth and mud.
Ducks' Nest!.
The accompanying sketch represents
an easy way of arranging plain nests
>fOr ducks. Make them out of inch
boards, twelve inches high and sixteeu
Inches long. Set boards fifteen inches
apart and nail on a three-inch strip in
front close to the floor to hold together.
Never use a wide strip across the front,
as the duck is liable to injure herself
by falling over the strip in front of
nests. These nests for ducks are ar
ranged against the wall. They are
simply fastened to the wall by one
wire nail driven in at top of each
board, as shown in sketch.—Lewis Ol
sen, in The Epitomist.
Geese Are Profitable.
As advanced ideas in farming con
tinue to spread and better grades of
stock and poultry are kept, the rais
ing of geese continues to be more popu
lar, and as the demand increases the
business becomes more profitable. The
old-time goose that weighed four or
five pounds has now almost entirely
disappeared, and in its place we have
the Toulouse and Embden, both grand
fowls that will weigh from twelve to
fifteen pounds each. They require no
expensive houses, but will need a dry,
warm shed during the cold months.
They should never bo kept In the horse
or cow lot, as they invariably get crip
pled by being trampled under the feet
of the animals. When being prepared
for market they fatten very rapidly on
corn or corn meal, and are ready to be
dressed within two weeks after having
been put on full feed. Geese are prof-
Sitable and are always in demand, and
She little attention required to raise
them will justify the outlay in start
ing.
Food For Laying FTens.
A comparison of feeding a part of
the ration in the form of ground grain
with the entire ration composed of
whole grain has been made by the
West Virginia experiment station, and
the result is published in bulletin
eighty-three. One flock of fowls was
fed a mash in the morning, a second
flock the mash at night, and the third
flock had only whole grain. Results
showed very little difference between
feeding the mash in the morning or at
night, but a material gain in egg pro
duction in the use of a 'mash in com
parison with whole grain. The pens
which were fed mash at night laid
lltiti eggs, the pens fed mash in the
morning 1159 eggs, and the pens re
/ reiving whole grain 1000. Trials with
d yearling hens gave a less difference in
t favor of the mash.
Somewhat similar work has been
carried on by the New York experi
ment station at Geneva, with White
Leghorns and Buff Cochins. The Leg
horns having their grain food only dry
and whole, nte more food at greater
cost per fowl and for the live weight
than did two similar lots having about
thirty-seven per cent, of their grain
ground and moistened. With the Co
chins better results were obtained
where all the grain was fed whole.
.This was probably due to the benefit
derived from having to scratch in the
litter for it. The Hatch experiment
station lias found but little difference
in the number of eggs produced from
, feeding the mash in the morning or at
_/ night.—New England Homestead.
A Fortune In n Desk.
A millionaire named Galland left to
the city of Geneva all his property ex
cept his desk, which went to a lawyer
named Couchet. When this desk was
about to be handed over to him 222,000
francs were found in it. The city
claimed the money, but after a legal
contest Couchet got it
CURIOUS FACTS,
Only the church steeple at Zudyco
tee, near Dunkirk, now rises above
the sanii which overwhelmed the en
tire village in 1777.
In view of the scare as to the per
manency of typewritten records, the
Italian minister for justice has ordered
that no typewritten documents will
be accepted as legal in Italy.
There is at this moment In the
American Museum of Natural History
a single butterfly which cost its owner,
the late Dr. Strecker, of Reading, Pa.,
between $7500 and SIO,OOO. This rare
insect, a female, occurs only in Sierra
Leone; and the collector in question
had to fit out an expedition and main
tain it for over two years with no
other object than the addition of the
Insect to his boxes.
Dutch fishermen make astonishing
catches by means of q very simple
expedient. They put a number of
live worms and insects Into a bottle
partly filled with water, which is then
securely corked. The bottle Is dropped
into the water and the fisherman sinks
his line alongside. It appears that the
wriggling contents of the bottle so
tempt the fish that they fall easy vic
tims to the baited books.
It is discovered that nearly twenty
five women are serving as rural de
livery mail carriers. No women are
appointed as mail carriers in the cities,
and the rostoffice Department is op
posed to women doing such work any
where, it being deemed too severe for
them. The appointments in the rural
free delivery service would not liave
heen made if it had been known that
the candidates were women.
The development of the modern rail
road and steamship makes possible a
trip around the world in twenty-seven
days, as follows: From New York to
Hamburg. 4800 miles, seven and three
fourths days; Hamburg to Vludlvo
stoek, 7500 miles, six and one-fourth
days; Vladivostock to Seattle, 7000
miles, ten and one-fourth days; Seattlo
to New York, 3300 miles, two and
three-fourth days; total, 22,C00 miles
in twenty-seven days.
The disappearance of aboriginal peo
ple before our advancing civilization,
as seen in the islands of the Pacific,
is being repeated in various settle
ments of the far North. In twenty
years the inhabitants of Labrador
have decreased from 30,000 to 15,000.
The natives of southwestern Green
land now number but 10,000, and they
require assistance from the Danish
Government. The extermination of
the seal, walrus and polar bear by
whalers has reduced the Alaskan Es
kimo from perhaps 3000 to about 500.
The Eskimo at Smith's Sound, who a
dozen years ago numbered 300, nre re
ported by Peary as being reduced to
about 200.
ißrenklng It Gently.
After the ship which had come from
New Zealand was tied up at the wharf,
Larry O'Brien was told off by his ship
mates to cnll upon Mrs. McCarthy and
break the news of the death of her
husband, which had occurred on ship
board the preceding summer. The
Brooklyn Eagle tells how he did it:
"Good morning, Mrs. McCarthy," said
he. "Is Denny in?"
"Denny?" said the surprised woman.
"My Denny? No, he's not in. Is the
ship here?"
"Sure, it is. And Denny's not homo
yet? That's quare—unless something
has happened him."
"What would happen him?" Mrs.
McCarthy asked, anxiously.
"There's plenty of things can hnppen
to a man," said Larry, delicately. "He
might have got liurted, or ho might
have took sick with the fever. But
there's one comfort, as Father McGln
nis said once, and that is that time
heals iv'ry grief."
"What do you mane, Mr. O'Brien?"
"I mane if anything happened to
Denny, you wouldn't feel as bad about
it a few months after it happened as
you would right at the time, would
you ?"
"I suppose not," said Mrs. McCarthy.
"I mind whin I lost me first husband
I thought I'd never get over it. But, as
you say, in a few months it was uisier
to bear."
"Then, Mrs. McCarthy, you'll be glad
to know that it's now four months—
nearly five—since Denny died. Sure, it
can't grieve you now as much as it
would if you'd known it at the time."
A Tjpoßrnplilcal Tragedy.
"You must have a bunch of humor
ists working on your linotype ma
chines, haven't you?" asked the poet,
as he entered the office.
"Haven't noticed that any of them
have any failing in that lino," an
swered the editor.
"Well, you're a poor observer. Do
you read your own paper?"
"Occasionally."
"Did you read my poem, 'To Agatha,'
in yesterday's issue?"
"N—no."
"I thought not. In the poem I wrote
a line which rend, 'I love you better
than I love my life.'"
"That was a neat line."
"And one of your linotype humorists
made it read, 'I love you better than
I love my wife,' "
"Er "
"Exactly—my wife. And my wife,
not being acquainted with the failures
of these key thumpers, thinks the
>oem was printed exactly as it was
written, and hasn't spoken to me since
It was published."
And after taking a kick at the desk
he crossed the hall and fell down the
elevator shaft.—lndianapolis Sun.
The length of a honeymoon generally
depends upon the amount of money
you Mart out with.
WOMEN IN THE POSTAL SERVICE.
Their Important I'art in Uncle Sam's
Greatest Business Enterprise.
The following is copied from the
Spare-Time Study:
Women play a most important part
in the administration of the affairs
of Uncle Sam's greatest business en
terprise. In no other field of Govern
mental activity nor in no private in
dustry are there employed anything
like so many members of the fair
sex as now help to conduct the United
States Post Office Department. The
women engaged in the great public
communicative system and those who
are dependent upon them for support
would form a good-sized city. More
over, no other sphere open to feminine
workers embraces so completely every
portion of the domain beneath the
Stars and Stripes. There are hundreds
of women employed in the immense
building at the National Capital, which
constitutes the headquarters of the
postnl system, but they have co-work
ers in almost every town and village
and hamlet in the land, and within
the past few months the field of op
erations has been broadened and post
women are now penetrating the rural
districts, carrying letters and papers
and pnreels to country residents pre
viously so isolated as to have been
practically beyond the reach of mail
privileges.
Some of the highest salaried women
employed in the world, are in.Hie W
vice of the Post Office Department at
Washington. More than a third of
these women are past middle life and
fully one-fourth of them are over
fifty years of age. Indeed, toiling six
and a half hours each day in the struc
ture which forms the heart of the
postal system, are a number of women
each over seventy years of age, who
receive salaries ranging from S9OO to
SIOOO a year. Included in this army
of women, however, are some of the
most skilled workers of either sex to
lie found anywhere in the world—the
famous "blind readers" of the Dead
Letter Office.
The experts nt the Dead Letter Of
fice at Washington—and they are al
most without exception women—per
form some of the most difficult and
most interesting tasks in the whole
range of human endeavor. It is their
duty to take charge of the six million
pieces of mail matter which every
year go astray because improperly di
rected, or for some other similar rea
son, and see that these waifs of the
mail bags get to their proper destina
tion, or, if that be impracticable, to
return them if possible to the senders.
To decipher addresses that would be
absolutely unintelligible to tile average
person and supply deficiencies where
insufficient or wholly erroneous ad
dresses are given, requires talent of
the highest order, combined with ex
perience, and some of the women who
are employed in tlds wonderful identi
fication bureau are as nearly indis
pensable as it is possible for any
worker to be in this world.
The principal expert in deciphering
tangled chirography and putting mis
directed letters on the right track is
Mrs. Patti Lyle Collins, of Mississippi,
and she has asfirstassistant Miss Caro
line Chllds. So great is the skill of
these two women that tlicy handle all
the particularly difficult specimens.
Naturally, in view of the great quan
tity of stray pieces of mail which
come to them they cannot do more
than glance nt each address and If Its
interpretation does not. suggest itself
promptly, the waif is put aside for in
vestigation nt. leisure. All the women
engaged in this line of work must of
necessity possess some knowledge of
nlmost nil langunge, for foreigners
very frequently embody fragments of
their own languages in the addresses
of their letters, and the fnmllinrity
witli geography, which is essential,
would astound by its SCODO any student
or traveler.
In Washington are over twelve mm
dred women who, although they are
not on tlie pay-roll of the Post Office
Department, in rcalily spend a consid
erable portion of their lime in the
service of the postal system. These
are the feminine employes of the
Bureau of Printing and Engraving
who print and gum the millions of
postage stamps used in 1 lie United
States every year. Ail (he United
States postage stamps printed each
year would, if placed end to end, en
circle the globe nearly four times, and
tlie major part of the work of prepar
ing these miles of postage stamps for
use is entrusted to women.
The stamps are printed in sheets of
four hundred, and although the opera
tion of the hand presses on which the
printing is done is performed by men,
each pressman has a feminine assist
ant who lifts the printed sheet from
the press and replaces it with a blank
sheet of paper. Here another class of
skilled feminine workers are employed
—the women whose task it is to detect
flaws in the newly printed sheets of
stnmps. These operatives turn tho
sheets of stamps, as one would the
leaves of a book, almost more rapidly
than the untrained can follow, yet tho
smallest speck in this mass of flutter
ing leaves would be instantly detected
and tlie faulty sheet of stamps with
drawn and destroyed.
Political Advertising.
A campaign manager in St. Paul
says that he put into display adver
tising in the newspaper but a small
sum as companred with what is com
monly expended for campaigning in
other ways, yet tho known results were
vastly greater than from all other
means of arousing the public. He is
sure the time will come when tlie
greater part of the campaign fund will
be used in newspaper displuy adver
tisements.
It is bettor to do one thing well than
to do a lot of things that are not worth
doing.
More About Wireless Telephony.
The principles at the base of wire
less telephoning are well known. It
is sufficient to recall that if the varia
tions of current produced by a tele
phonic transmitter are suitably trans
mitted to a direct current feeding
an arc lamp the words pro
nounced into the transmitter
are heard as if they originated
in the arc. This phenomenon is due
to changes in the volume of the arc
consequent upon changes of tempera
ture caused by the variations of the
density of the current. The changes
of temperature of the arc also cause
changes in the emission of light from
it, and these latter changes are utilized
in the transmission of wireless tele
phonic messages. The fluctuations in
the emission of the light are very rapid
and cannot be seen by the eye. Mr.
Ruhmer has lately sent such messages
over a distance of more than four miles
by day and by night. (In the day
time the appartus must be screened
from the direct rays of the sun, nat
urally). To direct the beam Mr. Ruh
mer uses a 12-inch parabolic mirror.
The arc lamp employed requires 4 to 5
amperes of current for a distance of 1
to 2 kilometres, 8 to 10 amperes for 3
to 4 kilometres, 12 to 16 amperes for
5 to 7 kilometres. The receiver con
sists of a parabolic mirror like the
transmitter, in whose optical axis there
is a cylindrical selenium element in
series with two telephones and a bat
tery. The selenium varies in resist
ance under the action of the varying
light. The luminous beam from the
transmitter determines these varia
tions of resistance corresponding to the
microphonic currents of the transmit
ter. Similar variations are produced
in the receiver and the spoken sounds
are thus reproduced. The process
here described was tried by Dr. Graham
Bell in Washington, who was not suc
cessful over such long distance.
The Day of Influenza.
To sneeze or not to sneeze? That is
the question. Then we sneeze and it
changes to an exclamation. Everyone
is doing it. Headache, bones ache,
coughs, colds and the pestilence of grip
is upon the face of the land. In
Brooklyn Hills the worthy burgher
sneezes an early curfew from his front
porch ,and the sound is mistaken for
blasting in the tunnel. And when the
shades of night draw down, he sneezes
across the field to his neighbor; "Come
over this evening; we're having a little
snack before going to bed. Got some
hot mustard and quinine, and some
thing in a bottle." Then far into the
night the rich,mellifluous sneeze chorus
rises from that house. This is a hard
blow to the warnings of the doctors
who assert that grip is a serious mat
ter, and not to be sneezed at.
Lawmakers Want Passes.
Members of the Montana Legislature
are protesting because a railroad in
that State issued passes to them good
only for 60 days, the term of the ses
sion, when each for the most part does
little traveling.
PAINFUL PERIODS
arc overcome by £,y<liii E. Pink
kam's Vegetable Compound.
Miss Menard cured after doc
tors failed to help licr.
" Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vege
table Compound cured me after
doctors had failed, and I want
other girls to know about it. Dar
ing menstruation I suffered most
intense pain low in the abdomen
and in my limbs. At other times I
had a heavy, depressed feeling
which made my work seem twice
as hard, and I grow pale and thin.
The medicine the doctor gave me
did not do me one bit of good, and
I was thoroughly discouraged. The
doctor wanted me to stop work, but,
of course, I could not do that. I
finally began to take Lydia E.
Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound
and felt better after taking the llrst
bottle, and after taking six bottles
I was entirely cured, and am now
in perfect health, and I am so grate
ful for it."—Miss GEOROIE MENARD,
637 E. 152 nd St., New York City.—
SSOOO forfait if original of above lettor proving
genuineness cannot be produced.
Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound cures female ills when
all other means have failed.
Vienna Is threatened with a strike of
chimney sweeps.
FITS permanently cured.No flts or nervous
ness if! or first day's use oi Dr. KUno's Great
Norveltestorer.s2tr[ul bo ttleuud treatise free
Dr. D.H.KLINE, Ltd., 981 Areh St.,l > hlla.,i'u.
A reformer is generally a man who tries
to convert others to his way of thinking.
Mrs. Winsiow's HoothlngSyruu for children
teething,soften the gums, reduces lnilamma
tlon.ulluyspuin,cureswiud colic.'2sc. auottle
You can't measure a genius by the length
of his hair.
Piso's Curo cannot bo too highlyspokenof
as a cough curo.—J. W. O'BUISN, 322 Third
Avenue, JL, Minneapolis, Minn,, Jon. 6,1900.
The man who agrees with nobody thinks
everybody else is wrong.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color Silk,
Woo! and Cotton at one boiling.
Some pepplq don't care what happens so
long as it doesn't happen to them.
One of the most complete electrical
power plants recently installed Is that
of Osake military arsenal of Japan.
Auk Tour Dealrr For Alton'* Foot-Kane,
A powder to 9hakelnto your shoes; rests the
feet. Cures Corns, Bunions. Swoollen. Sore,
Hot, Callous. Aehing. Sweating Fe *t and In
growing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new
or tight shoes easy. At all druggists and
sh • stores, 25 cents. Sample mailed FREE.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Loltoy, N. Y.
About 150,000 different kinds of beetles
have been discovered thus far by the
scientists.
STATI OF OHIO, CITY OFT OLEDO, I
LUCAS COUNTY. 1 '
FRANK J. CHENEY, make oaththat he Is the
senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY A
Co., doing business in the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said
ilrra will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL
LARS for oaoh and every case of CATARRH that
CUD not be cured by the use of HALL'S
CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY.
J worn to before me and subscribed in my
; . . . presence, this Cth day of December,
- SISAL, }A. D., 1886. A. W. GLEASON,
' —' Notary Public.
I (all's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and
acts directly on the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Send for testimonials,
free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold bv Druggists,7sc.
Hall's Family Fills nre the best.
The chronic borrower seldom pays a
man back in bis own coin.
DOAN'S DEAL GENTLY.
Its the gentle and effective action of Doan's Kidney Pills in Kidney,
Bladder, and Urinary troubles that make them famous with
Men, Women, and Children.
MT. PLEASANT, Onio. — I received the
sample of Doan's Kidney Pills, and never
had any medicine do me so much good in
so little time. I had Congestion of the
Kidneys and Bladder so severe it caused a
pressure on the lungs like Asthma, but
through the use of Doan's Pills I am free
and easy now. GEO. W. SMITH, Veter
inary Surgeon, P. O. Box 41, Mt. Pleasant,
Ohio.
Aged people find Doan's Kidney Pills a
great eomfort for declining years.
They cure incontinence and uriuary
weakness peculiar to children.
BAXTER SPRINGS, KANSAS. I received
the free sample of Doan's Kidney Pills.
For five years I have had much pain in my
back, which physicians said arose from the
kidneys. Four boxes of Doan's Pills have
entirely cured the trouble. I think I owe
my life to these pills, and I want others to
know it. SADIE DAVIS, Baxter Springs,
Kansas.
Genuine stamped CC C. Never sold in bulk.
Beware of the dealer who tries to sell
"something just as good."
P. N. IT.l T . 13, 'O3.
DROPSYrOTJii^
fM Book of testimnma * and lO dnys' troatuvm
"rue. Dr. H. H. OUEEN'B BUNS. BQXB. Atlanta. Ga- 1
Ybursjbra C
_ „ BROMO-SELTZERs
jury-- t JOJLD ISVKif ynir/sieic
A Strange Bequest.
A Bruges philanthropist has just
made an original will. He has left the
town $20,000, which is to be divided in
the following manner: The sum is to
be separated Into seven parts, this be
ing the number of parishes in Bruges.
Each of these portions must be again
subdivided into sums of S2OO, for which
the poor on the books of the charitable
society are to draw lots. The amount
is to be spent in setting the winners up
in a small business or trade.
New Mill Device Tested.
A new device in the rolling of hoop
iron was tested at Monessen, Pa., in the
presence of officials of the American
Steel Hoop Company. It is called a
"repeater" and automatically handles
the hot iron from one set of rolls to
another on the principle of the contin
uous wire rod mill. By its use the
labor of two men is dispensed with at
each train of rolls.
St. Jacobs Oi!
Is the greatest remedy in the world for all bodily
Aches and Pains
for which an external remedy may be used.
Price, 25c. and 50c.
I Coughed
" I had a most stubborn cough
for many years. It deprived me
of sleep and I grew very thin. 1
then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral,
and was quickly cured.
R. N. Mann, Fall Mills, Tenn.
Sixty years of cures
and such testimony as the
above have taught us what
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
will do.
We know it's the great
est cough remedy ever
made. And you will say
so, too, after you try it.
There's cureineverydrop.
Three ilzea: 25c., 50c., SI. All dniftfsts.
Consult your doctor. If he snys take It, j
then do as be says. If ho tells you not I
to tako It, then don't talco it. He knows.
Leave It with hlrn. Wo are willing.
J. C. AYEK CO.. Lowoll, Mass.
| Aching backs arc eased. Hip, back, and
loin pains overcome. Swelling of the
limbs and dropsy signs vanish.
| They correct urine with' brick dust sedi
ment, high colored, excessive, pain in pass
ing, dribbling, frequency, bed wetting.
Doan's Kidney Pills dissolvo and remove
calculi and gravel. Pelieve heart palpita
tion, sleeplessness, headache, nervousness.
FREE—GOOD FOR OLD AND YOUNG.
i FOSTBR-MILBVBM CO., Buffalo, N. Y.
Please send me by mail, without charge,
] trial box boau's Kidney Pills.
i Post-office - -
i State v
i (Cut out coupon on dotted lines and mall to
Focter-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.)
; Medical Advice Free —Strictly Confidential.
jj fi
|F YOU WANT TO INVEST IN A SAFE,
I LEGITIMATE MINING STOCX
In order for fur.her development work and to pnr
chase mae.ninerv at onco wo w ill soli from 100 shurea
up for a short time only at 10 rents a sta:ir\ This is
n rhau o that will brintf biff returns in a short time.
Write for prospectus.
BRANT MINING AND MILLING CO.,
10 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
|
[POTATOES
i 1 Lnr*rcßrovrornof Seed I'otutoentn America. (
, ' 'ihC'lturnl New Yorker" clvcuSulzcr- Knr- M
, I ly \Vliicnnftln I yield of 7 IE (HI. per n. Price* J
1 | dirt clicup. Mnmniolh kceil hook nml mmplc f %
l Teoolnto, Npeltr, Mncurcfhl W lieut, C.Obii. per <
I u.. (Hunt Clover, etc.,upon receipt or 100 poituge. <
I JOHN A.BALZF.RBEKDCO. LoCroMCjWtaj
EMsi
K Createst, Cheapest Food 1
re Jpeion Earth for Sheep, Swine, I
h a f n,0 ' etc :
Billion r Grcss j
1 or ' i
: NM-MUTH'EISHEST
*• YOU Willi, rim*
fOWE H' S
I ijmn t
Mm, WATERPROOF
f ihlk OILER CkOTMIN<
JbWm% EVERYWHERE.
I i ' The bejt material* skilled workman aod.
sixty-ieven yczry experience hove model
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