The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
The Cedarville Herald. W SU BLA1K, Publisher, C E p A R Y IL L E . : ; : QHIO. HOW M U CH A R E THEY, W O R T H ? ' “My friends," I said, "there lives a men whom greatly i adnftre, A men whose warm. ami tender heart glows withhonest fire; A man who cheer* alt those lie meets on life's dark,'troubledway,‘ . ..■ And muke8 them for awhile target the strug gles of to-day. A man with look so bright and kind upon his pleasant face, - » . •YwouliVulmost turn » cynlo’s mind to love the human raoe; •' , A man"—But here a frlotid exclaimed: “We nil admire mirth; < But how much Is ho worth?-I ask; oh,, how much Is he worth)". ‘1 know ’another man,” Bald I, becoming slightly hot; ‘•Who has more wisdomIn his head than all of us have got, Who is a shrewd philosopher, a thinker tar re nowned y For solvingweighty arguments and questions most profound. Has studied ancient sciences os wall as later themes, . . Can toll you of tho distant star that from its orbit gleams; In fact, my friends, I-think that he's the wisest ' • * man on earth." •But how much Is ho worth)" they asked; ‘•pray, how much is he worth!" "There lives,"'I cried, my temper riled, "as beautiful a maid As ever frizzed her tawny hangs or swallowed lemonade, ' As .over from her window gazed upon the rising moon, As ever on piano played a weird, romantic1 tunc; She's wise as she*Is beautiful, as clever she's ' wise; ■ The poets in our neighborhood do rave about her eyes. She lias awinning way, my friends, as she Is of noble birth.” ’ "Buthow much Is she worth)" they asked; •‘oh, how much Is she worth)” —H. D. Muir, inChicago Saturday Herald. THE CARPENTER’S MATE: Plotting tor »■ W ife, and H ow It Succeeded. Twenty years ago I commanded one of their vessels, the Norseman, of the: old AUesworth line of Liverpool. Hho was In the East India trade at the time, and I was about to make my first voy age as master. 1 had been with her the previous voyatro in the capacity of chief mate, and was mors than pleased when the firm called me into thoir pri vate ofilce and offered me the command of tho ship. I had just been married; and it is needless to say that I accepted tho firm’s offer, at the same time arranging to have my w ife .accompany me on the voyage. “ I have a favor to ask of you, Captain Thorn ton," said Mr. Burlingame, the senior partner, when we were, alone, “ and I rely upon your honor to Weep tho matter confidential.” I bowed, and Mr. Burlingame wont on:- ’ “My daughter Evelyn has become infatuated with one of my clerks, and ho has had the assurance to ask hor hand in marriage, lie has boon dis missed from our employ, and I havo •son nothing of him since. My daugh ter has taken the matter to heart, and I have decided to send her out with you on a voyage,, in the hope that the change of scene and tho companion- sbipof you ; wife and yourself may bring hack the roses to her cheek. 'Any thing you can do to assist in having hor forgot this wretcliod infatuation will be appre ciated.” I had Uttlo faith in my ability to cause Miss Evelyn to forget her lover; besides, as I had just entered the mar ried. state myself, 1 could hardly bo ex pected to sympathize with a plan for the separation of two loving hearts. Bat I promised to care for tho ship owner’s daughter as far ss was in my power, and the interview terminated. The following morning my wife and 1 went aboard the Norseman, which was lying at anchor in the Mersey. At nine o ’clock Mr. Burlingame and his daughter came aboard. The .latter was a hand* ’ some young lady o f twenty-two years; but her sweet face was palo and sad, and, although she said nothing, it was evident that the thought of leaving borne affected her deeply. Farewells were over, the anchor was uweigb, and Mr. Burlingame, after a parting grasp of tho hand and a whis pered admonition to “ take good care of Evelyn,!<stopped aboard the tender and returned to short, VYewere towed down the Mersey, crossed tho bar. and dis missing our tug and pilot boro away toward the Cape of Good Hope. Ater we were well under way all bands were called aft Id choose watches. As the crew filed by one o f their num ber. a fine-looking young fellow, at tracted my attention. “ Who is thht young man?" I asked, pointing him out to Mr, Everson, my chief mate. ’ “ Kenneth Garduer; ho shipped as carpenter's mate,” was the reply. dust as the crew ranged themselves “ in a line, a little aft the mainmast, the ladles came op deck and walked forward to where t was standing. As 1 turned to greet them 1 was startled by a scream from Miss Burl ingame, and the next moment I woe holding her limp form in my arms. Hbe was at onoe taken below, and soon recovered consciousness, but could give no explanation of her fainting fib We were scarcely two weeks out be fore 2 noticed a great change in Miss Burlingame. Tho roses bad returned to her cheeks, and she seemed well pleased with her situation aboard the Norseman.. Bbe wept all over the ship, sometimes accompanied by my wife, and some times alone. Several tlmeB I noticed her in conversation with the qarponter’s mate, and, my curiosity being aroused, I walked forward one day and got Into conversation with him, I found Gardner an intelligent follow; possessing a surprising familiarity with the rules of navigation and all matters pertaining to the merchant marine, thought it a little singular that a man. of his intelligence and apparent ability had no hotter position than that of car penter’s mate on an English merchant man, and told him so; ■ ffis reply -was that bis limited re- sources bud prevented his gratifying in any other way his passion for traveling and seeing the world. The. explanation was not Satisfactory, but a look into tho handsome, manly face convinced me that whatever his reasons were for be ing on the Norseman in his present capacity, they did not concern me, an<l I asked him no further questions on the matter. ' In duo time wo doubled the Cape of Good liope, ran the eastings down, and, pressing the Bay of Bengal, sighted one morning the low sandhills and later the flat, sandy coast at the mouth of the Hoogley, Wo look aboard a. native pilot, and were soon lying at anchor at Garden Reach, about seven miles below Calcutta. I went ashore, accompanied by my wife and Miss Burlingame. During tho voyage the young lady had regained £©r health and spirits, and had become well acquainted ,with the carpenter's mate. W h ile'ho took no liberties, I began to feel anxious about the matter, and regretted that the handsomo you th was a member o f my crew. I pitied the’ poor clerk loft in old England, and meditated oh the fickleness of woman. At Calcutta we loaded a cargo o f jute for Melbourne, and’put to sea. On the morning of the. sixth day. out the barometer began .to fall rapidly, and-as the .typhoon seuson was at hand 1 felt a little anxious, although thoro was no indication of dangor in tho cloar sky and thq light breeze which fanned the surfacoof the Indian oc.ean. About two o’clock Id tho afternoon the sky to windward showed signs of h gathering storm. Professional pride told me to crowd on all sail so long os the wind continued fair, but experience whispered that the lives of tho ship’s crow, my wife and Miss Burlingame depended, to a great extent, upon my seamanship and good judgment. I con sidered the matter a few minutes, and then, summoning the chief mato, said: “ Mr. Everson, oall all hands, take in the light sail, sond down the studding- sail yards and booms, skysail, royal and topgallant-yards fore and aft, and close roof the topsails and.courses." The mate, whoso hair and hoard wore whitened by tho ocean blasts of forty years, regarded me in surprise for a moment; then touched his cap and re turned to tho waist. I could see that tho old salt doubted the advisability of tho course 1 was pursuing. Tbo orders for shortening sail were rapidly executed, and' in less than twenty minutes tho Norseman was all snug (ore and aft. In the meantime tbo horizon had hccomo overcast with a heavy bank of copper-colored clouds; in. tho thirty, years i havo followed the sea 1 have never seen the elements ar rayed in a more terrific lino of battle than thoy wore at 3:80 o f tho afternoon: of September IS, 18*10. Tho batches wero carefully battened down and the watch sent below tosecuro what rest they might, while I paced the quarter-dock, restless and uneasy. The breeze gradually died out and a dead calm ensued. The ladies came on deck and chaffed me for shortening sail. The barometer continued falling, and I again ordered all hands called. A line of foam was approaching on tbo star board beam. “ Hard a port!” “ Hard a port, sir!” responded the helmsman. I seized the trumpet and gave my or ders. “ Haul up the courses.” Tho command was promptly executed, and the men started aloft to furL Thoy were too late. “ Down for your lives! Downl” The tidal wave struck us on our port quarter, breaking over tho poop-dock, accompanied -by a fearful gust of wind. Away went our courses, and the topsails were literally blown from the bolt ropes. Hooked for the ladies, who had been standing on tho quarter-deck. Merciful heavens! they had been washed over board, and I saw their agonized faces halt a ship’s length to leoward. With a yell to lower away.the star board boat I plunged into the sea. As 1 rose to the surface I heard a cool voice beside me. “ Cheer up, Cap, we’ll save them sure." I glanced over my shoulder, and saw the carpenter’s mate. It seemed as though Providence had Intervened' in our behalf, for after the first terrible gust the wind had sub sided. We reached the ladies, and looked around for the boat. It was com ing, the crew pulling like demons, Willie in the sheets sat Everson, urging them to greater exertion, . By the time we returned to th* ship the cyclone had broken upon us in all its fury, and for three days we drifted at tbe mercy of the storm. On the morning of the fourth day the wind and sea went down; the damage to the Norseman was quickly repaired, and we stood away for Melbourne. Upon our arrival Kenneth Gardner asked for his discharge, which % could not well refuse him, Aftori tho papers had been filled out I took occasion to thank the young man warm ly In behalf of Mr. Burlingame, and in timated that it would be to his advam tago to return to Liverpool as soon as possible, giving him at the same time a letter of introduction to my employer, which contained a detailed description of tho gallant conduct of Gardner in saving Miss Evelyn’s life. The ladies wero ashore, stopping at , the hotel, and I’ was to join them ‘later in the day. I appeared about five o'clock. Mrs. Thornton was suffering from a headache, and-Miss Burlingame had gone for a drivo. , i The young lady dame in half an hour after, accompanied by Kenneth. Gard ner. After exchanging greOtings/thq latter placed in my hands a document. I opened it* and was taken flat aback at the contents. It was a certificate signed by a leading clergyman of Melbourne, stating that lliram HoldswortU and Evelyn ' Burlingame bad that day been united in marriage, Of course I gave them my'.blessing; 1 couldn’ t help i t 1 believe I kissed the bride soveral times, and would have continued had- not my wife objected, The next thing was to inform Mr. Burlingame of the condition of affairs, and as' gently, as possible I broke the. nows that, his discharged clerk had rather played it on the old man.. 1 re ceived his answer at San Francisco in the person of Captain Grcgson, who hod boon sent out torolieve mo of the com mand of the Norseman; hut the agents of Burlingame & Co..were instructed to pay me a full year’s salary. Burlingame died of apoplexy, and as Evelyn was the only heir she inherited all of his vast, wealth. To-day the firm of Hiram Tloldsworth & Co. own more tonnage than any other in tho United Kingdom.—-Connell Taylor, in Boston Globe. _________________ TH E O C EAN CURE . An English System for the Cure o f Cow- Humptives. Though the sailing-vossel has gone out of fashion with travelers, it still has its uses and its peculiar, excellen cies. As a health-restorer, it cortainly greatly surpasses the steamer, on- which the passenger is hardly at sea in the fullest sense, since tbe steam-engines, the sight and smell of smoke, tho stair ways, the carpets and tbe easy-ohaire continually take his senses back to the land. Lately the use of the sailing-vessel as a means of bringing back health to cer tain classes ot invalids, and particular ly to consumptives, has become a regu lar systom in England, and its rosulth have been submitted to thorough and statistical study. Tho “ ocean cure” for consumptivoBis ■practised by English physicians in this way: tho patient is ordered to embark at tbo end of the month of Septemhes on a sailing-vessol bound for Australia. Once past Cape Finisterre—for Eu ropeans. in former times, the “ ond of tho earth”—the traveler may see no land for two or three months. He is far at soa, with little to remind him of any thing in his past life, broathing an at mosphere which is free from dust and smoke, and also freer than any atmos- phoro on land from tho microbes which often causo disease, For the most purl, he is in a kindly climate, and the slow progress of Ills vessel accustoms him gradually to such changes of nlr as he must undergo. lie arrives in Australia in the summer of that latitude. Hero he is advlsod to remain for a month or six weeks, and then to ro-embark on a sailing vessel hound for England. Ordinarily he reaches England on his return in June, when the dangers to consumptives from tho climate of that country arc well- nigh past- ' Out of fifty-six cases of consumptives, in which this treatment was followed and of which records were kept, forty- four reported marked improvement. In five cases the condition remained the same; in four it became worse, and only ono patient died.—Youth’s Companion The Bagpipe* Settled Them , An amusing incident recorded of *the Peninsular war seems to prove that even the charms of our beautiful Na tional hapipes fail to soothe these sav age beasts. It happoned that while one 6f the Highland regiments was march ing across a desolate part of Spain ono of the pipers for some inexplicable reason found himself separated from his Comrades, Halting on a lonely plain he sat down to eat bis breakfast^ when to his horrorhe saw wolves approaching. When they came very near ho flung them ail the food he had with him, f ul ly conscious, however, that this meager meal would not stay their advance (Or many seconds With the calmness of desperation he then said: “ As ye’ve bad tho meat ye’ll hoc tbo music, too,” and . thereupon he proceeded to “ blow up his chanter.” No sooner did his un welcome guests hear the first “ skirl” of the pipes than they turned in wild terror and fled as fast as their long legs would carry them. “ He’ll h ie it!” said the piper; “ had I thocbfc ye were so fond o' tbe music yo wad hae gotten it afora meat, instead 0’ after!” Then hungrily be went his way, not forgetting from time to time to blow a blast so wild and shrill as might effectually scare any prowling foes.•‘-Tern pie Bar, —Minor and Miner. — He — “ My friend goes on the stage in minor parts,"' She—“ And does he make agood minor?” —Yankee Blade, H O U S E H O L D B R EV IT IE S , —No especial preparation is required to render flower-pot* or other earthen ware ready for decoration with oil paints. Any tint you desire for ground work can be mixed, using linseed oil as a medium, Paint your design in tbo usual way and, wbon dry, it may be varnished o r not as you prefor.—N. Y< World. —Caramel Pudding.—Brown ono cof fee cup dark brown sugar in skillet, do not put in any water, but stir constant ly until brown, being careful not to bum it To a quart of sweet milk add three tablespoons cornstarch, four eggs, ono cup Of white sugar, the browned sugar dissolved In a little milk, boll together. When taken off the stove add tablespoon vanilla and put in molds .set on ice and aorvo with whipped cream.— Detroi t Free Press. v —Barbecued Shoat.—-Take a fore quarter of fat shoat, make incisions be tween the ribs, and stuff with rich bc6ad scuffing. Put in a pan with a 'p in t of boiling salt water, to which add two heads of garlic, a little salt, pepper and butter; let bake until dono. Season the gravy with a tablespoonful of ourrant jolly, mushroom, walnut end tomato catsup, then take up and lay in a dish, i Serve with brown gravy and baked ap p le s—Farm and Fireside. —Plain Boiled Pudding.—One cup sourm.ilk or cream, one-half.cup sugar or molasses, one-half cup butter melted, two and one-half cups flour, two tea- spoonfuls soda, a little sulk Mix sugar and butter and beat till yery ligh t Stir in the cream and salt, make a hole in the flour and pour in the mixture. Stir down the flour until it is a smooth batter. Beat in soda water and boll at once, in a buttered mold, leaving room to swell. rt should be dono in one and one-half hours.—Yankee Blade. —Salt Fish Chowder.—Shred up a- pint bowl full of salt fish, and lot it soak in cold water about two hours. Fry a few slices of salt pork the same as for clam chowder, and put in the bot tom of your kettle, then about three pints of sliced potatoes, three sliced onions and one pint of bread crumbs, sprinkle with one-half teaspoonful o f black pepper, and,add hot water enough to cover; boil until the potatoes are soft, then add one pint'of milk and let it boll up once, and iMa ready to serve. . If the. Ash and pork do hot makeltsultenough season to your taste.—Boston Budget —Mince Pies.—Two pounds, of cur- ants, ono pound of beef suet one pound of raisins, ono and one-half poufids of j brown sugar, ono pound of lean beef |boiled, three pounds of ppalcd and chopped apples, juice of two lemons,' , ono tenspoonful each o f cinnamon, tc oves, nutmeg and allspice; chop the •meat and suet very {Jfie, stone and chop the raisins, rairaU 'ttao ingredients to gether, adding Aptco last, and two glasses of vinegar; line pie platoB with good paste, wot tho edges put in mince meat cover, wash tbo top with beaten egg, bake ih a quick oven.—Boston Herald. _________ • NEW S T Y L E S IN H A T S A Number or the More Itypulwr Shapes end the Trimmings Used. “ Capolino” Is u term applied to a fashionablo form of a hat made in .soft felt, which can .be twisted into aby shape. A groat many havo beaver edges and low black crowns, .while others are of perfectly plain fe lt A silk cr.nklod crown with plush brim, tnd otherS more unique in shape, havo the raised crowns quite at the back, the brims standing out well in front, and j Jfton made entirely of beaver, while ' the crown remains of plain fe lt Some nntrimmed hats have tho brim* covered >with ostrich 'feathers, others again have ■Just a narrow hand of foathers at the sdgo of the brim. Tho “ Capoline" felt |hats are twisted into every imaginable ibape and form, the newest trimming being Sable tails, but far more general Is tho ostrich feather, for which the de mand is so groat that tho price has con siderably gone up—especially for the Lillputian Ups, which are- not only j placed around tho crowns but border i the brlma Cooks’ plumes trim many of the new hats, and are accompanied by boas of tho same feather and muffs trimmed to match, Cloth is universally used for millinery purposes, plaited for crowns, winch often show an appi.qucu bird on the center and fur or beaver edges. Tho varieties o f modes in which the broad brims Can be twisted aro really endless and a distinctive class is o f felt with a crown o f hatters* silk, which means tho same material as is used for men’s high hats. In regard to tho hats with close brims, the Spanish element prevails. The “ Carmen,” for exam ple, i n . felt, has the all-round brim turned up almost as high as the crown, and visible beneath It two fo.ds of soft red silk like tho handkerchiefs which the matadors wear. ’ The trimmings are o f velvet and throe soft, silk pompons. The so-called “ Matador” shape has the brim stitched In four rows, or covered with a net-work o f chenille, with a pointed crown, adorned with pompons bf Silk Or feathers. Tho “ Valrosa” is another Spanish' hat with the brim not So close to the crown, which 1s rounding m top. The fan-shaped bonnet* formed o f or gan-plaits in velvet or cloth, with jetted bordering*, are in favor,- and so is the new heart-shaped bonnet Leather triramihgs dre used and a great deal o f je t On© pretty device-is a jotted owl’s head, placed immediately fiver the can- ter of the forehead, hut os * general rule the trimmings are all massed at the hM ^ o n the crown of tin head,—N. % W EATHER -VANE TOWN. A N *w H am p sh ire V illa s * Where Q*e#> W a il In d ic a to r* Abound. There is'a tiny village in New Hama, •hire which takes special prido in Jt* weather-vanes, and It certainly c*& boast a groat variety of ingeniously coal trived and weather-and-wind-proof spsq. imenspf these useful articles. They wore evidently designed not only for use, hut for ornament, and there is scarcely a barn of any slaft which is not decorated wi th a weather.' vane of a more or less complicate work, manship. ’ Most of those vanes wero made many years ago by an old man who took great delight in carving the queer figures and planning thoir arrangement so they would go through various motions. It is said that ho was in the habit of "try. ing” a figure, when he1had completed it, on his own barn, and then when hi became satisfied that it worked proper, ly, ho would carry It with great pride to the farmer who had ordered it. There is ono which still stands guard over a barn- that has long since been de serted by its owners, who.have loft the lonely farm to seek their fortunes atths West. It is the figure of a soldier,whose 1 uniform is greatly faded from years of exposure, b.ut whose gun still Indicates tho quarter from which tbe iwind is blowing by itsposition. Its evolutions when the wind is, as the weather-wise farmers'say, “hacking or hauling," are quite interesting. There are animals of different kinds, such as cows, horses, pigs and bean, which are used as 'vane-figuros, and- point. with their heads, legs, or tails as the case may he. One figure of a horse, which has long since left its best days' behind it, presents a startling effect ’ from the fact that a horse-hair tail has been inserted in place of tho old wooden one, and being of a length quite out of proportion to the horse’s size, it some times, in a high wind, lashes the pbor , animal’s head in a most uncanny way.— ' Youth’s Companion. • H ow ** T h is) Wo offer One Hundred, Douars Reward for any case of Catarrh that can not ha curedby taking Hall’s Catarrh Cure, him perfectiy.honorable in all business transactions; and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. - West &Truax,WholesaleDruggists,Toledo, Waldlng, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesaii Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hauls Catarrh Cure is taken internally,, acting directly on thebloodandmucoussur- ■ faces of tho system. Testimonials free Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by allDruggists, Ir woman are as sweet os they would like to have the men think they are, why is it that they faaVe such a keen fondness for confectionery)—Somerville Journal. Playing Cards. You can obtain a pack o f best quality , playing cards by Bonding fifteen cent* is postage to P. S. KuBtis, Goal Puss A%’'t, C. B. & Q. R. R , Chicago, III. - { ...................— ■ » . ................. L is t writes at the end of a letter to * friend: “ Now, I must concludo, for my feet aro so cold that i can hardly hold uu pen.’'—Pick Mo Up. Ir you aro tired taking tho largo old fash ioned grtpingpills, try Carter’ s LittloLiver Pills and tuko some comfort. A man can't — standeverything. OnopUladosoi Try them. w Tax man who doesn't think his baby is the prize baby hasn’ t got any baby.—Bing hamton Leader. AS E xtended PoruLARrrr, B rown ' s BnoxcniAi. Tubetuts have fo r many years been the most popular article in use for re lieving Coughs and Throat troubles. TnE color lino, as appUcd to tho sugar problem, is a matter o f refinement—Hutch inson News. Your Worst Enemy 1* that scrofulous humor In year blood which manifest* itself In fe*ur* every time th* ikln U «crateb*d or broken, or in hives, pimples. boU*, and other eruption*, mums «*lt rheum, m brack* out In occasional or mrailBUOot rimnla* sor**. Oat Hid o f It at Once, or som* tiM when your •y*t*m i* weak it will become row master. Hood’e Ssnepsrlll* l* the remedy wbleh will purify your blood, expel all trace ol dicesM and glv* you strength. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold bfotl druggists, lit six forK. Prepared only uy C.I.HOOD* CO,. A' otbecarle*, Lowell. M sm IOO Doses One Dollar S alvation Kt Fi * . . r A m irm MBTHEBS’FRIEND n E u a u u n a II* U t k o » i * OW*f O b riTriNBMSNT. , BfioK to "MOTxms" MAitXn razz. M ls n t u t x t s e u m cu*. ATLANTA, s i SOLO a t AM. M Y AJ Oh. I pass her ev| As Jhurry m myl To that dreary r Where I have to I j t is UhUalij , to il For a eilavo IliitT ■ ghe has lot !*.yytj Which .-be lots vT Fall Inmasses I Though eoiUoujpl Of her ttesHCK»b| Nor to adinlHrtf gbe'ii a true aris| One can easily at From her buugl Fromher .cltlsria From tho coldne| . In a culm aud:j Sheis wealthy*, From tho jewel*! . From the richl Winter's chill o l ' •Still her raimeul What's her se| Sometimes I in Captive to a sor| I.ike the prinf Oft I see a stout Prowling lucre - With most ev| ; Then in fancy iJ Tm the knight | And to be her And the thoug)| While on eusto In the dinay Tima recalled 1 Xwith s’eU-O'jnl All these da>| She is iro-r, 1 al Used for showl Hut the 'wvl -H a l A HAPPY M r. F o r d ’s Pl<] fu l -Wl C? IU.4 ' riear one, and and pinching, ■£ It was the pil thusiasm—liia untried lands, years, but old dout of expetj sure o f tiulit] this bravo lc farewell- She!| Iter tears. “ But it wi| three, before again, Larry! away from hi her grief. Lawrence in liis arms aij eyes as only i “ I must You will 1 will wait : you?" ■•How can I w ill live onl . you aro goDI How shall 1 know yon Yon will >1 Larry?’’ “ Yes. darl| lonely hour ure,’- lie is go| to the scant ily affords, her cfiguj Lawrence havo been seemed to Winchell hi future lickl the pretend % m m rat m vm m m u y . BEECHAM’SPILLS A r m i m i i t Y l m a i W e n . "Wank ftMbsaftSss” k t m M fox* 9 b CNMOitfl* l i t AM . deep ini thinks tl has beoif late, wll old and] He if been a | fallen eveninp 'IVineheJ has m>t| botwer le:nne<1 frank,; 1
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