Evening Star Newspaper, April 19, 1884, Page 3

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inston study! turn by ex tr f tas small antcow iné with an ordinary: ¢ al im the te do portion of th iubreidery, ah Wien you “l you Ww lene T on the who is it. His d It was hinte the autumn riultt 1 their ott nut it when ain builting of t It tollows, of cours } are not ail Gtiakes to which the anether of our Broadway. pip imperative. owed thorey ener Car a good as. is principle that 1 the pre an im s te twirl rto the retere most New York lawyers ed more © Tn cw has the tight wire pips companies, one of hi bing the str: sreround viaduct all the better.” —E_E TE EVENING FROM ait 2 xew Che upon th ck, and been had it re ne othe Hesat w ‘ n he took hi: Geh’s kaw hie ty before, Prof, who stood it clients the over- is the equal of our own or two words of f whet tht ni be scelle conip th his tr * prices wstally ady * for the scores of of modern | At} sewer, | u ie. | . there is With one or the open immense a bill has ‘hand. tele- nd within two years, fd to the growing con one company digs r wire purpose et at them at any time can Le run by electri deal better tian a block of ice, be- r.and because there is no melt- upany’s machines are the same in re used to make fee in your city, nt experiment is to be made Mr. | is Inade him so many ; STAR: on frozen as hy ot the ee sthat the cost the same purpe to the bute! whil and priv sot ike to hay Jn the kK. uking this work be- ar. The syotem at thro a mil », but is iy and Which formerly walk in the jon of street ste orhoods up to: idly, and the. president of tie com- . With no littleshow of reason, that ten years the barning of coal it for open tires, will be ashbar of sic he exten! tion: the s do all the e¢ lese tronbl with furnace and | building of the Prodi eral of the new offic same work can be done In the great new Xchange, and in sev- lings, the cookin steam. and in on ants —that of street of of the larg sTRiws. Lord, th storie: » 6,000 lectures wit wwe the last one Frida lecturer, who in the last thirty , having resolved He is. # that the chamber of horr ork show is Is who do not know mieful th olne to seo, and the police to close up this department of n Musee. which institution, by the way, ing now of mishaps in his ch and ‘h has neces- quent le $10,000, how- bring ina protit pilt having sent it one ni | emy of Design es on the walls te, but amu wot the ¢ (all their own works on tl jeeting the better work of youn: Ing it in dark corners. this week The exhibition int is fe nd with ns inputting and either re= men or hang- soe = | Letter frem Reckville, 2) THE ROADS cOVRT EXPENSES— MINOR ITEMS, | Cormspon | April 18. During the past severe winter the farmers have found great difficulty in traveling the pel t imypa Sa tion wa t Falls, Th mer P to furnish the neee ask the commissioners to for break wong the ry stone, noney to, un farmers. livi upplemented phers. It is 000 are spent ute patch up tl is mn coun at from 5 y year in try ‘This plan is ¢ V county Ine of property, and of tit is county, i Baltimore on sare now in course urs of the e "the couyty comm Rawlins, one of the num over 50 years of age, is as active full of business as any man half his Spencer C. Jones, clerk to the court of appeals, has recently purchased a lot in the west end ot town the Wallace heirs, and has proposed aptist: church cong i to erect a ps ity stoners. see Secret. She lad no wexlth of flowing tresse: Sie heel ari She had no soul. And in her cheek w stirred ne wi iouned ba Shi But vet i hesrts of allanen, hed ore offers tna scout andl boe, trom short 1 Fatne Ca speak. nd tall men, as her dower? ietly; “Mureard Lewpoon. Shin Disexses. thiy for May relative frequene y and country, 6 of persoas thus nun: ppears to be ine av cases of skin disease occur in ne poor, while there i mnmodation fo: mortality y York of lat uths from : er hundred of deaths there were 572 deaths or alittle over bro per hundred that ten years the propertion of deaths from cancer had near! doubled, one death out of every filty being fre this ar disea In 1850 there were 6 deaths srom cancer, or 2.06 per cent of all deaths in this city; in this’ latter year cancer actually caused more deaths than’ scarlet fever, this . With 618 deaths from mortality tables sfrom cancer in this city, or ail During these fourteen ed of cancer In New York suffering from cancer are wel- tal; in most Institutions they vfused, and nowhere in this cer, from ail ¢ from cane tio S43 perse Patients to make a A arte ie ure cancer cases grouped together with Br ey ite most a view of studying the disease a8 to its nature sd and cure.” re Great Success in the Taffy Line. From the Somerville Journal, He was late, and he was not altogether as he ought to have been. He saw by the light in the window that she was waiting for him, and he trembled, well knowing that he merited severe rebuke. As he entered the room she began: “This is a nice t ae My dear,” he interrupted, “you can’t tell what I w hic—thinking of just now. kather what you reminded me of asicamein. The lanp on the table and you sitting close to it. You and the iump reminded me of. the philo- sophy of which Matthew Arnold Is the 'postle— you and the lamp—see!”” 0, T don't see. This is a nice ——” Well—hic—Tll show you. Matthew Arnold the ‘postle of sweetness and light. Well, you and the lamp_ fill tle bill—sweetness and light. The lamp is the llit and you are the sweet- ness.” You foolish fellow, “ovlypt are you standing you‘oi! with your coat.” id she, with a smile, nere for? Let me help ense scale, all the Washington is now | in| More, has change name stops of the buildines is | church, and Rey. J. B. English entered the pas- ix in bed from overwork and / heck for | is | s rd of health, | suce | Rockies is er D. ©€., SATUR RELIG! DA Johnsen. noon the ri eof confirr t Sunday F Lutheran church, re Dr. Domer, of St. Paul's ceived SL members into the ehureh » by ce marion, 1 by i: ism and re now 50 comm aging to the church, — Bishop Perry, of Towa, d his recent | ation of a portion of the Episcopal dioe of Maryland, whieh inchides the T }oumbi: ie 40 visitations, d Jowment of the Cook academy at y., has been raised ber of Congre: 1 now a Baptist minister, conducting a series of meetings at Louisville. —The Asquith-street Baptist church, Balti- name to Grace Baptist torate April Ist. Tne first session of a “New Testament Insti- | will be held at Granville, 0., from Jul th to Aucust Lith, There will be ments of instruction, ‘yland has and teachers and 23) | ottie and Is 1 terri- pula- Bh, torles of the Union. tion in Sunday schools for District of Columbia, 1 — Bishop Hurst, of the M.E. church, in ad- ing aclass of young men admitted to the : the Newark conference recently, xl temperance fully and fre » ereated the temperance ule the truth dow organization and secular work to oth s —Among the passengers on the steamer Cel- tic for New York from London Thursday, were the Rey. Mr. Young, secretary of the Wesleyan conferen I missionary to They will attend the general confere C ofthe Methodist Episcopal chureh at Philadelphia, to be held in May. | —The Berean Baptist chureh, New York, | Rev. Edward Judson, D. D., pastor, has a French mission under the charge of Rev. Chas. | Habrial, a German Bible class, the Home ta Hamilton, and a wood and coal y Any 1 of its s | the Sund: | work any e percentaze of Maryland is dr rd. er Of tae church or regular attendant lay at the coal yard. | —Aminister has been collecting facts as to the leagth of pastorates and the terms of ‘stated supplies” in the Conzregational churches of this country. He finds that of the whole number of mini: in 1883, 2.9 per cent had been sett He ex- pr vastor~ much snit to recover New Haven pol ninent, Her coun! $1,000 from the for wlexed false sserted t the pudant was actu- st, and that ie public squares was not a But the jury returne nto memori:lize the ce in favor of an extension of now limited to three years, | made in favor of it by | inisters, but the older | were Uby the old order, fear wchange would work more harm than ood. | The People’s Baptist ehuareh of New York, of formenty of Co- re. is now, in consequence of. street house, without a home, f this building it gath- of ¢ has sale of tie during th the Cal ed hi 28d street church. -— Noting Pittsburg, Pa house tor sixty di one of the for disturbing worship in chureh The Christian Advo- | those roush boys and sigsling | ¢ places disturb our worship” to | 5 Hing with | . y postulate ‘ately, once publicly, then turn the dis- over to the law.” : Sees ay Ladder, n The Manhattan, which the main range of the a great railway ladder. I do not propose to. describe It—a whole article by Itself would be needed for that. At its foot | you are six thousand feet above the sea level; at | its summit you 3 et on either | side weather-beaten riy four thou- above yc If you will ¢ once pr turber Emest Ingersoll, Marshall Pas head. | vrd down upon the floor (only ainst its making any ssed loops) y the track | upward, | ent the wiv up to the head of the deep | nd skirt the ontermost rim of the re are no opt the je by the Ie train int indentatic Hands. sem Th devious turni: cent of 217 feet to the mile ht line on the profile from the Ari is tothe sumniit of the p ‘omichi an loo out of the win- wh remain bat intervening links are in ble, and you ‘onder how you are to attain those vely higher levels. From one spot the western slope six of these tracks are se once down the opening made by a which the road crosses and recrosses. This side is a kaleidoscope of far-reaching views, chang- ing with each moment, tor your headliztit turns | to every point of the compass in its doublings, | and while you admire the sky-kissed heights above, you may turn and tremble at the awful depths Just below. It is a rallway In midair. n a dear little glove, So daintily scented and free, ‘That I've sent It away to mny love, Will a mitten come back to me? ge I've placed within— ing She surely must see; ‘Will she find the words sweet that I wrote, Or send back a mitten to me? ‘To-nizht I will follow the glove, ‘Toknow what my fate may be; Shall I kiss the hand that it nt Or bring back a iitten with me? —Lye. Ss tesla Oa sae Fond of Balict Girls. From a Berlin Letter. . When alone, that is to say when the empress is not at home, Emperor William lixes to have guests at his private table, and then the conver- sation runs very freely, often, so it is said, with a piquant French flavor about it that keeps “the table in a roar.” Sometimes the emperor accepts the invitation of one of the grand seigneurs of the empire who are in Berlin during the season, and to these dinners all those ladies of society are Invited whom the emperor likes best, and it is here that the azed monarch seems to revive the traditions of the galiantry of oldtimes. The emperor likes the theater, particulariy the opera, where he can enjoy the ballet, of which he Is yery fond. He always visits the green room between the acts to converse with the artists, It has not infrequently happened that the emperor has taken a seat on a wooden bench and has been surrounded by premieres and coryphees and like characters. all of whom laugh and chatter with their august visitor in a way that would shock an English lord chamber- Jain out of all his conservative senses. oo ‘The sem!-officialy papers of Berlin deny that Herr Yon Etsendecker has Y,*APRIL 19, itehead, formeriy a | inmonth | ices, or any person having a child in y ycl, may apply for a few hours’ | the | | same, ditteri | the old woorthree | 2 MOIAVIAN EASTER, ting Scenes and Ceremo: it buy to ther the trial here ai adjoinin whe bi Saston Vat that hour. h before fer in b of deat, in sorrow for the The of the seryice is akin to. th: a it is 1 instru being given by an of trombe Death is re nes in addit se trom toil iu None shoul : It is founded on the Savi 1 upon the We At the funeral s ervice, after the indo compl the coffin was borne to the nee of the burial cround, where it was hal | fur alew moments and. the tuted by a har- monious burst of pathetic imphant strains from the tromb: choir. Then it was borne to another graveyard at a distance fiom the chureh, | THE OLD RURIAT. GROUND. | This incident, however, had brought us to the | old burial ground, which was to be the scene of the Easter morning servic | Moravian fathers of Bethi of their descendants. onto theor and where the hem sleep, It is imposing in its grand simplicity, and in the marked neatn | of the grounds. There no ornamentat | whatever, beyond what is_given by stately ave- All the mounds are of q are of the same length, ht tor all ages and conditions. ad flat, raised but about six or ave the general leve ng rounded oi as newly m: nds have bevelled are moulded in formity In ail n | flat le ar also lying bosom of so to The inserip- of the simplest. “being confined mainly to the name, date of birth and death and the condition in Ife of the person whose re- maias arc Ther eno “lots” or = | ces for individual persons or famnill s t to the last p ceding, and each is numbered in consecut order—the men and boy children in one long parallelogram, and the women and «irl children in another. The humblest and the loftlest lie side by side. already said, nothi tiful and grand simplicity of this burlal place Its teachin In all its parts Is, that death levels all human distinctlons— neither rank. nor wealth, nor pride, nor: power having place above the plainest_ member of the human f: Many hundreds of the Moravian community and con- m are buried bere, beginning about the those of converted Indians and their families. ANNOUNGING A MORAVIAN DEATH. Every death that nappens among the members of the Moravian congregation in Bethlehem is anuounced from the belfry ot the chureh by the trombone and trumpet choir. The dirges then played (or “tunes” are, called after the form of sp second denoting the si of the di Widowed or si Se8 OF de- as we underste two. There - denoti t the folloy T the second pi eof one or other ld, By these vy sof the dirge. ded from the bell-tower of the chureh, the people ot the town usually under- stand just deceased, i departed hath tts own sweet token, 1 to love Ones In that trumpet tone.” bers of the were about two thou At about half nes, cornets and open belfry ast three o'clock th trumpets choir et thered in morning, apie but vari mony, With strains this, rollins in m the h ts of the soft waves over the town fi the beliry and in the perf | night cannot be described in words. It must rd to be thoroughly understood. It qualled by no tmusical effect with- in the experience of the writer. This over, the trumpet choi tour of the principal streets, playing the samestrains at dis tant point. could hear the summons. ‘Then the Moravian population arose, earl fared prior to the serviceat Then mis of people converging towards mall quarters, Gathered in rvice began as the clock toid five. ‘The bishop, minis- ion rising, the celebration ith words that told with electric the ehui the qua ter and the was,opened J. tll hat, v4e Thowh ast Durst t hor in de: within the eluren. At t it was adjoureed to th ¢ the co ation pre vibing the ser- i understood wroun vice poi Ther het choir: on four ofa ves, the choirs in one e natural es of the 4 the avenues. The usually ed in point of time as to bring the sion just at sunrise. It was soon this oceasion. Beyond the living and landscape picture Wwe have tried to paint was South Bethlehem, with its never-ceasing railway activities and its furnace fires that never go out. Beyohd this again was the — graceful and noble outline of the Lehigh moun- tains, swathed in the blue mist of the early morning, with here and there a tint reflected from the rosy clouds. Then the first rays of the rising sun burst throuzh, and then egain pealed out the joyous words, “The Lord is risen.” And then the triumphant greeting of the score of trumpets from the choir, and then the hymn, “The graves of all hts saints Christ blest, And softening every bed: Where should the sing members rest But with the dying i . . . “Then let the last loud trumpet sound, And bid our kindred rise; Awake, ye nations under ground, ‘Ye saints, ascend the skies.” No one can be more sensible than the writer how inadequate is this attempt to describe what isin its very nature and essence indescribable. All he can expect is that he has presented some- thing to be filled out by the imagination of the reader as to the grandly simple, beautiful and impressive way in which the Moravians of Beth- iehem salute the Resurrection morning. The Morrison Idea Spreading. From the Chicazo Herald. “How much are you going to tax me to-day, conductor?” inquired a passenger who hadcome aboard at Mendota without a ticket. “Where are you going’ “Galesburg.” ‘Two-forty.” “That's too high, boss; you chaps on this road tax a feller a good dea! more’n they do on the Central.” “Two-forty, please.” The money was paid and quietly transferred to the conductor's pocket, but no memorandum was made in the conductor's report book. “Did you notice that he is a Morrison man?” inguired a sly-looking passenger, as the ticket- taker passed on, “No; what makes you think so? en recalled, and continue to cast aspersions upon Mr, Sargent. “Why, he seems to believe in taxes for rey- Lenue only.” the old ehureh. | na Which all the townspeople | on the congregation —words of devout ex- | | ployes without cost to the play 1884-DOURBLE | pestnite SH¥or WHT aA Po ith many | | can exceed the beau- | | some of the earliest mounds being | who it is that is | | pound st | with the dampne SHEET. GUN, Compressed Air Flinging Projcetites | from Fort Hamilion to Fort Wads- worth, is owned by HL D. Torped ° part etary Liner witnessed by € Weir, Lig previous test, sent a AITOWS WIth 500 poand : is short un, at vss the air pr yards Of the target at w0 dex shot, with the same went five These fi possiple acct not been fired often enough site data tor accurate ‘The projectile is | new, the propelling fi new, and the gun | i are ‘to be learned | by experience: but the fact that t-pound shot can be sent across the Narrows with a pop- gun opens a wide fleld of possibilities whea the | use of increased air pressure and improved pro- jectiles is taken into consideration. | The advantazes claimed for the new gun, and now partly demonstrated, are simply etupen- | cous. In the first place. the ammunition is | much cheaper than powder, In forts and on yard ship the steam power to compress air is easily available, and for field work the com- ean be transported in flasks. The y. and need not be cleaned. | + Is no smeke to reveal the location of the gun to the enemy, 50 th hed batteries thay Ve planted with ir There is no quore noise than is made by ene puif of a start- ing locomotive. The propelling force can be lneasured as accaretelyas a ange can measure, and the force of the at: tion does nut vary of the weathe: The gun costs only about or much as other yuns of its ran; built in almost any machine shop. The Dela- inater fron works, which built the one used yes- | terday, could turn out one like it every day in | the year. In an emergency the entire coast | could be studded with such guns ina few wee} The propelling torce used yesterday was only ebout one-fiftieth of the explosive force of gnn- | powder. But the gun can be adapted to an air pressure of 2,000 pounds to the square inch. The projectile is a torpedo in the air, much | more dangerous than a torpedo in the water, | use it can be sent more accurately and | more swiftly The next dynamite air gun to be tried will a six-inch bore, and will throw a dynamite shot welghing 12 pounds. Sneha shell, it is ealen- lated, would destroy any chip afloat and dis- | mantie any fort. Xpepiments thus far have been made with @ smooth bore, but later ‘on a rifle bore may be used. © Already some at- tempt has been made to rifle the feather ot the | projectile so 4s to secure accuracy of aim. It is hot so necessary for the projectile to penctrate | the object as with an ordinary shot, because it is the explosion of the dynamite, and not the ussion of the projectile, that does tie exe- jon. The new gun looks very much like a telescope. | In the vicinity of the experiments yesterday there w pany of the oid-tashloned big Dahl- | n-bore guns mounted in the tort. | st in the appearance of the two guns as striking as that between the Monitor and an old-fashioned frigate. PROGRESS ADE EN LAWN ‘TENNIS. | ie | Important Changes in the Game, “twentieth as and can be vy York Tribune, said a prom E ing goods a day ortwoago, “that we shall have such a sea: yn tennis aswe have not seems to have takena | er hold in this country than any aes | | fo multiferm that the can be zratified. fy on heary w e rackets in use are iter a pri ee and prine lity ounces, They are. smi rounded, and nearly 5 and, with large faces and broad 1 question is still unsettled. balls were awn Tennis as: has been Last year opted by the United states | ciation. This year the matter | to # conmitt: it is pro- | own balts, | not binding them to a particular make. One! disadvantage of the covered ball is its tendency cnglish maker has patented a! felted ball which can never become There is a novelty in markers. The West End uses dry marble dust inftead of whitewash, so that no possible injury can be | done by it to the most carefully kept lawn. i st popular costume for men is plain white dannel shint, trousers and jacket. Some of the more athletic prefer a white w knitted guernsey, which adapts itseli movement of the player and pres which can catch the admitted on ail 1 that has been going on at the armories and pri- | vate clubs has produced a marked al im- | provement. es} | “Ye | = much more ekness of Judement mons the | | Nis style is peet 2, baton tie + line player, tah bound wad drivin his retu rly every ba both se: s. ie turt was kept in excellent and was aid out in courts and main- yuchout the season by the park em | A Dreadful Calamity. From the Burlinston Hawkeye. A What, escaping from its keepers, was walk- ing down the street, and occasionally in a feeble way with the Human Be jostied by, when it met a lonely It, surrounded by a Newmarket. ” said the What, “‘tevah’s ? Twousalis bag like a sallah's, “Alas!” replied the heart-broken It. “Dwead- fal, isn't it? ¥’ see, they came home new lewst night, don't y’ know, and my valet, he pulled them on the tongs to stwetch them, and he's made perfect bags of them, don't y'know? An’ I just want to die, deah boy, pon’ honah, I do, Dow. And shedding a tear as large as a pea, the un- happy It was drowned inits briny deptlis. She Must Have Loot it. From the San Francisco Post. The other morning a sad looking citizen walked into the office of Wells, Fargo’s ex- press and began solemuly doing vpin apack- agea battered looking silver dollar. Having accomplished thie, he passed the enclosure over to the clerk and said: “I found this dollar on Market street last night and I wish you'd address it to Adelina Patti, New York.” “Think she lost it, eh?” “Think?” said theman ina og aed voice. “Why, of course. So far as I can learn it’s the only dollar left in San Francisco, and, of course, it must have been dropj by her. Send it along, please, and you'll have to collect the charges at the other end. I haven't gota cent.” And there wasn’t a man in the house but was as dry as the citizen who walked off to keep an engagement with the bankruptey commis- sioner. mingling Tue INFORMATION arrives trom Paris that al- paca Is being introduced by some of the leading dressmakers as a novelty in dresses, but the novelty alone is its sole attraction, as its dura- bility and utility are not to be compared with any of the pure wool productions of foreign looms. Still, for a light, cool, dust-slhedding costume, it is very good, and, when tastefully trimmed, as the French know how, there is an air of Quaker simplicity. associated with Pa- | risian coquetry, that renders a costume of this character quite ciarming. ) Odd Vests from... rs BI PN?r r Itsy HENNING, THE CL a9 SEVENTH STERET, ana if he} or to ein b Tar Miser § gM TTI OH ee di em neo Toa mw" PM MW The place, par excell tects, STYLISH SUIT OF SPRING OVERCOAT, and st a price fully one-third lower than any other store iu the city ofers A good Line of Spring Owrveats from $7.00 up A splendid line of Business Suits from... 6.50 up Afall « est Fabri 12.00 up A Acomplete lin: - 5.00 up 200 up 125 up 95 up An exc line of Pants from Full line of Sinwleand Donble 1 nel Stats, sor Frovks, i G. ALK, Buttons sted Flan we Set of THE MISVIT STC CORNER TENTH AND F STREETS, ae Very Norceanre ‘ The diffe Land bad Clo: very B ¢, bat in no rospect is it more observable than in style finish. ‘The something superior, said an exp. rienoed b in thegarmenta sold by GEORGE SPKANSY, Which at once recommends them to men of taste. ‘This tmpartial riuark is confirmed every day by these whohave an opportunity t - pare the Clothing sold by GEORGE SPRANSE with goods found elsewti rv. There is a certain artistic cut and completeness: about every article, which shows how carefully it has been constructed. Then coms the prices, which are eunrantecd to be as low as ity. for instance, ane now selling twostylesof pauts tor 4, hi y arent bare: A the two stiades: cf suits in 4-button © vck for $16.60, cannot be equalled only at GLORGE SP apis For A Goon. Sevicrapie STYLISH ol SUIT OF CLOTHES GO To THE LONDON AND LIV! cox POOL CLOTHING CO, NEK SEVENTH AND G STRFETS. . worth heviot Suit, in seven diderent patterna, ped tn the city. Heviot Suit is as ec das my $12 suit you pares well with any @15 suit you cau buy. Cur $12 Cossit: can Luy, Suit is as cood as any $18 sait you Cur $10 Frock Suit is fully worth # We sell you a goed Indico Blue Plana S) AG. A.B. Suit at $10. at 7.80, We have a large line of 4-Intte Suits, all slades, at very low , n Corkscrew Cutaway: HL Line of Boys? and Children's Site, from We haves full from $1.25 up, « REMEMBER THE LONDON AND LIVERPOOL CLOTHING CO, CORNER SEVENTH AND G STREETS plo : | Great Bancarss IN FIND BOOTS AND SHOrs. ine stock of aw tae Aid But dud tos PAIR, 183 We be Flaving purcha: i 2 theen 4.00 4 B, Card Dwi ‘They arean¢ thisaty te dient val and look at th: fine Slovs an every hh, and cheaper than en epreialty of Ch: nd invite ty low as 00: of Ladie s au Our stock worthy of at satisfact ry we choerf ca than, A call ts sulivited at SINSHPIVER & 1 aps. NOW READY. THE VAST NUMEIR OF NEW AND PANDSOME PATTERNS INCLUDE ALL THE MOST AFYROVED IDEAS AND MANY -EXCLUSIVE ONES. STYLE, FIT and PERFECTION OF WoRKMANSHIP CANNOT BE SURPASSED ar rie BEST GRADES OF CUSTOM-MADE GARMENTS, Having made mcre then our accustomed efforts, anl are therefore fully prepared to welcome Luyera, ‘39, 8. E, Conxzp Szverra anp D SraceTs, mhdd-om

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