Evening Star Newspaper, January 16, 1889, Page 7

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al x mh | ae > A Sf THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D. C.. WEDNESDAY JANUARY 16, 1889 ? TO PROLONG LIFE. TOWARD THE SOUTH POLE. GENERAL JACKSON'S VALET. WHY BOOKS ARE CHEAP. AUCTION SALES. Brain Wear and Ravages in the Human | The Proposed Exploration of the Ant- | Touching Reminiscences of His Kind The Photo-Engraving Process and Hi FUTORE DAYS. ____ Family. arctic Sea and Its Great Difficulties. Master by the Faithful Old Servant. It Has Affected Book Making. BAKING y cement heme — mye From the British Medical Journal. From the London Daily News. A correspondent of a southern paper thus } From the Indianapolis News, Ar RE pores FRONTING OLE ORE: How to proiong human life isa question of | Tt appears to be probable that Professor Neu-| describes arvisit to “The Hermitage’ once the |. The cheapness of books is a source of con- POWDER WTR A st Personal interest to every man, and the duty | mary, of the Hamburg marine observatory, | home of Gen. Andrew Jackson, near Nashville: | tinued comment. One cannot get used to see- Sta EP gd BEARER TRENT ot of making an attempt to do so is one that | will succeed in getting a south polar expedition | | was shown around, he says, by an old negro | ing volumes which once cost from a dollar and . fais in foottor Ue preminy, at 4 aan Particularly rests with the medical profession. | organized. It might have been supposed that | servant, Alfred by name, who is eighty-six | half to five dollars now selling at froma ABSOLUTELY PURE roved by two ‘houses, When an individual has attained to full de- ee greater measure of success wash years of age, the sole survivor of the old Jack- pamragivd ih Books once canes hs; 207 ote coscan - velopment and sound health—say at forty—the | tended similar adventures in the arctic regions | son household. He is white-headed, very lame, | Vainly ing eyes are coming ie - 1__ THOMAS K WAGGAMAX, AgeL__ szpectancy of life may be twenty-five or thirty | the most ardent advocate of such schemes | and feeble, Dai posemos remarkablomemory | Penge of those of limited means, and there are It is a scientific fact that rags toge ae BAKING apr BROS. Aectioncem. Years; for the individual there are greatrisks,but | would have doubted the wisdom of exposing | and talks in the most affectionate manner of his | Constan' itions to list of cheap books, POW: i ut ure. It is undoubted] e > with the aggregate of mankind such questions | human lives and treasure to the risk of antare- | old master. “Me and Maus Andrew was born | One wonders how they can be sold at a profit. gon is absol nes os : P di fy ieee wrt OF may be caleulated with business-like accuracy. | tic seas. All the best authorities are agreed | in them two cabins you see right over yondo,” | Of course the lack of copyright is undetstood.| purest and most reliable Baking Powder offered to W THowbsos s There are two great factors which concern the | that the difficulties to be encountered in the | he said to me. pointing to a couple of old | With no author to pay the publisher is rid of » the public. ON EIraER 7 prolongation of a human life—the inheritance, | south are much greater than in the north, and rickety log cabins a few yards back of the | Great expense, but even that cannot entirely P HENRY A. MOTT, M.D., Ph. D., EXTEND NUR eT 24 ae and the conditions which make up a life history | the hideous stories which gained currency | hermitage “and when I dies de las member | 8ccount for it. A bookseller saya that the re- i tes Gov't ist. Pace of the individual. The inheritance of long- | after the return of the last arctic expedition | of de Jackson family is gone.” The cabins | tailer makes only about two cents on twenty Late United States Gov’t Chemis* Under and by virtue of the vity from one or both parents is a powerful | might well have sickened the boldest of this | were used by Gen. Jackson and his slaves be- | cent editions, and five cents on those selling a factor, and one that carries great weight with | generation sufficiently to deter them from any | fore the hermitage was built. Alfred was Gen. | at thirty-five cents, The books are poor; AUCTION §S ALES. life insurance offices. This is a more im- | assault upon the stronghold of King Winter in | Jackson's last body servant, and accompanied | bound, and printed on adulterated paper, an’ a portant factor than an infancy free of weak- | the sout In comparing the ulties of | him to Washington at the time of his inaugura- | are far from models of mechanical neatness, TO-MORROW, ness provided that the infantile ailments be | arctic and antarctic adventure, Sir Wyville | tion. He says it required three weeks to make | while some are full of vicious typographical | roms DOWLING, Auctionees’ ~~ ] 7, UNGAXSON pane” u temporary conditions of de- | Thompson says: e the ‘trip in the old family coach. The old ser- | errors. Somes rnceagapbeapsnne= tee i n. or conditions incident to the | ‘We can only anticipate disasters, multiplied | vant tells of many interesting events that took | | But, recently a method of reprinting books S\ SALE OF VALUABLE IMPROVED USTEE'S SALE OF VALUABLE UNIMPROV! es of development only. The late Em-| a hundredfold, should the south pole ever be- | place at the hermitage. He has the liveliest | has been adopted by which an exact fac simile | §NU,UNIMPROVED REAL Pac Te OTR SEAL ESTATE O'% EOURTEEN TS. STREET ithorit Ww 4 peror William, and many other public men | come a goal of rivalry smong nations.” For | recollections of Gen. Lafayette’s visit, and says | of the finest editions can be made without the ‘me vested in and under the EST of great age and useful life, illustrate that | various reasons the great lone land under the | that a great barbecue, in celebration of the | work of type-setting. It is the well known, but WwW. Woods, Mf, Tecord in irtue of a deed of November 1} & feeble youth may be followed by a robust | southern cross is more difficult of access than | event, was spread in the front yard, the tables | not well understood, ees the unders Wilk, om | deoct the lead serie ct ther Dench? Gaol and prolonged life. Even conditions of infan- | the north. It is much colder there than in the | extending from the house to the front gate. | By the addition of bichromate of pot XTEENTH Dat OF JANU. | coho ee request o' secured thereby, 1 1 to gel- if the party tile marasmus may be followed by subsequent | arctic circle. There seems to be no such warm | In the center of the table was a cheese weigh- | atine, the gelatine, ordinarily soluble in pa eo O'CLOCK, in front of the | sell at public auction in front of the premises, Tf good development, as in the caso of Sir Isaac | currents as are to be found inthe north—such, | ing 400 pounds, and whole oxen, sheep and | is made insoluble upon exposure to the chemi- | Prager sab ict 37 tee ae fronting on the north | Peed, Re HALF-PAST FOUR O'CLOCK FAL Newton. We now proceed to speak of average | for instance, as the Labradore current, or that | pigs were roasted by the score. All of the | cal action of — The negative of a pho- | side of Water between fist and 229 strects fol ning real eatete in the county of Waa people, for ‘a perfect man” can hardly be said | round the south coast of Spitzbergen. Such | Be people in the south were present. Al- | tograph, as is well known, is the exact opposite be eet weg AP iD pruare toes, a trict of Columbia, to wit: that tract or parcel o! to exist; we shall consider average people, | emanations from the torrid regionsof the earth | fred saidthat his father, George, was Gen, | of the photograph itself, and allows the passage | osei ck in tantot te land al ny ~ hh —~4 = ty the point of unton especially as we sve them in town life, and the | do much to mitigate the rigors of the northern | Jackson's driver and his Tost trusted servant. | of light through the lines which are reproduced | S43" Boxid7, to 8 Shirt foot alley improved bys | thres Gwenty ewer tents three and terete fot, cod my r : A . > > a three, twenty-two, twenty-three and twenty-four, ‘with special conditions we desire to note are the | seas at certain points, and bring about the | His account of his old master’s death is very | in the photograph while the other parts are | three-story irame dwelling wi buildin rts of lots four to twenty-one inclusive, except lots | the ‘ a habits, diet and the wear of life. There is no | most striking variations of temperature, break- | pathdtic. opaque. A photograph of a printed page is | $204 brick stable on rear of Te veing Nov 1367 Bveand ten), and twenty adjoining lots, all being for: | Sio%, Bi bortantne, containing doubt as to the importance of the habits of | ing up the ice at certain seasons and opening} ~The foneral was mighty sick,” he says, | taken, the gelatine is spread upon a smooth sur- || ON THE SAME DAY AT FOUR O'CLOCK in front | to be sold ‘as per plat, which caus be secu at thee mae pores. Sans Se pane has life affecting longevity; temperance in all | the way to navigation far beyond points other- | “and early one morning the doctor sent me to | face, as , and carefully covered by the neg- | of the x oops pt mh pa Ee! ¢ “ November "Tess. things. in activity and in restraint, im regu- | wise attainable. Nashville to got six bottles of gin. When I got | ative and exposed to the sunlight. ‘Thus only | feet on the west side of; Vermont avenue between N | yeutnin aqoat fasente iitaace, i PG, BA EWC | SNd and aleo.a private larity in morning rising and in work, as well as| Any enterprise of this kind will, of course, | home they said old marster was dying, and all | those lines of the gelatine corresponding to the stroetand Towa circlc, being No. 1316 Vermontavenue by the Cire annum, payable semi-annually, and to be secured | oubrmed by the Circuit, Co in resting end in sleeping; uniform industry is | be pushed ou during the summer months—dur- | the negroes crowded into the house to see him | letters on the page are made insoluble. The | northwest fi $ Gy'deed of trust on they eR deposit of $100 will Sof tend — aa condntive to health as rity in diet. | ing January, Febroary and the early part of | and tell him good-bye. ‘The doctor told them | surface of the gelatine plate is washed with | qtr of sale: One-third in cash ine Pec t | be required on each parcel on the day of sale. if the | Poty. as is rej Sees oneal Socmtinces et = he | by Win. K. Woodward. Thencquisition of regularity Hy rate Breer March, that is. But even in the height of sum- | that they must all git out, but the general he | water and is all dissolved except tho letters, | dateof sale fer witch notes tule see ee tee sete prereset be end th ae eaeh | Ry deed diated. 3a , is f sum t x day of sale the property will be resold at the risk a You sees due to carly training, and in this way a wisely | mer the temperature in the antarctic regions is | riz up and says, ‘Let em stay; I wants to see | Which stand out in sharp lines. The plate | 18¢8 sold shail be given, with interest at six per cen- | cost of defaulting party after five days public notice District ‘of Columbia. M directed school discipline probably does much | always below the freezing point of sea water, | "em." My fathor was sitting om the bed holdise | can be printed from directly, or, as is generally | tncing ang recording to boat pirchnen es eke aie: | (auch Fesale in some newspaper publisled in Wash- | Prenat of Coates. Surests to form a sound and steadily acting nerve sys- | and Sitter tempestuous winds and fogs and | de general's head on a pillow. De general then | the case, an electrotype plate is made from it. | posit ot e100 ‘will be required on the unimproved | jal4-d&ds” C. M. ARMSTRONG, Trustee. a OS third, ra the tem, such as give the man a power of resisting | blinding snow storms are all but incessaut. No | says,-‘George, let my head down—I’ll rest | The work can be done at about one-fourth the | Piece and $250 each on the iar i paid sn cash as tue improved property. Ii \HANCERY SALE VALI RACT OF | two years: for the deferred adverse influences ‘and prolonging» physical | arctic explorer has ever gone beyond the | easier,’ and these wore the last words he over | cost of type setting. Several pages can be set | attorsritta hemln mun he pet ee | CHANTRY BE eOGh Ne bratiiee. Ge | been: for.ibe deformed pax health. From the period of infancy upward a | bounds of vegetation. At least lichens and sea- | said, ‘When de pillar was taken out and his | at once, according to the capacity of the cam- | the defaulting purchaser after five days’ notice in| — COLUMBIA. FRO) OX PINEY (BRANCH | per aunuri from day of sale. the interest sound and well-knit brain has much to do with | weed have been found wherever northern navi- | head straightened out hho closed his eyes and | era. ‘The Encyclopedia Brittanica. which, from SOs Besravener publiahed tn the iy of Wacmingtom. | tetas deren Sourt of the | trust untinfuclory tous on the property sca. or the permanence of a healthy constitution. The | gators heve penetrated, but in the awful soli- | died witnout a struggle.” its extent and complicity, has defied the ty; e- eS : e relation of diet to longevity has often been dis- | tude of the south Sir James Ross found not the | _ It will be temembered that General Jackson | setting book-stealers, has been reprinted in te~ THE SALE OF RESIDENCE No. 1316 VER- cussed; we canonly say hers that the diet should | slightost trace of vegetable life, either on the fought duel with a man for making some | way. The process is very interesting and the | Hont,avenus 1s june raiiably, postponed, Uae To. | et AT tis TREMTY PETE DA Oe Te of aie ave not yt, be adapted, in quality and in kind, to the work | land or in the sea. yet he never came within | scandalous use of his wife’s name. The old | general public is heavily the gainer, but when | order of Executor. UARY, A. D/1SS9, at HALF-PAST TH O'CLOCK | at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser, of the individ: hile such articles as alcohol, } 700 miles of the south pole. The magnetic pole { servant says he fairly adored his wife, and in | one reflects that books which it takes a lifetime it THOMAS DOWLING, Auctioneer. aa Offer for male, st public suction. on the pre; | such notice as they may deem proper. tobacco and tea. if used at all, should be em-| has been approached within 150 miles, and it | substantiation he led me to the tomb where | study to produce and small fortunes to publish WEEES & 00, Auctioneers, an e, of the partion to” aaid couse,” Office 15033 Penn. ave., ible that important scientific results | the remains of the general and his wife rest. | can at a little expense be reprinted by piratical 7 Louisiana ISAAC N. JACKSON ‘Trustees, re District of Columbia, passed in equity cause No. | cash, st the option ef the porehaser. 10451, Moses et al. 82,500 will be required when bid is accepted. ferme of sale are not complied with in ton, days aknown Helrs of Lizzie NM SE ployed in moderation by those who wish for a | seems possi which said Ligzie M. Be he stable constitution and prolonged life. Passing | might be obtained by covermg that further | The graves were cut in a bed of solid masonry, | publishers, the method seems little short of Op. City Post-Office. | in and to the fo _Je15-d&ds Cor. 13th stand Ohiomve.) over such important consideration, as being | distance; but even this ts Joabtfal. unt & wieae canopy, supported by stone | counterfeiting. One thing, however, interferes. GRAEPAL AQCORTMENT OF, ECRUITURE. OF | , Derinning af o stone tn the south 7T MOS. E WAGGAMAN, Real Estate Auctioneer, familiar to most members of the vrofession, we Se ges ay, Pa RIS. pillars. ‘There,” said Alfred, pointing to a | A full-sized copy of a book cannot be repro- PIANO, SEWING MACHINES, BED-KOOM AND | with said road north ESN degrees TRUSTEE’S SALE OF VALUABLE LOT, IMPROV come to the great question of the causes of Couldn’t Find the Air Cushion. slab over Mrs. Jackson's grave, “read what's | duced without imperfections resembling those PARLOR SETS AND SUT aN G, Stone's, thence north 4:35 d eas BY TWOSTORY, FRAME HOUSE, Not nd wear in life—tbe outcome of the frictions of | From the Chicago Herald. on that stone—it was writ by de general his- | of worn type. Reduced copies only are perfect. |B Oe See ee aD ee ea | eines conte Aoi dene ean aS. TWELFTH STREET NORTHWEST. life which all must meet with, more or less. | It was one afternoon during the later years | solf.” The inscription, cut in old-fashioned | The finest engravings can, of course, be repro-| Leaves" DAMAGED Goobs, weat lino of 7th street road, thence with said roed | BY virtueof 9 deed of trust, duly recorded tn ‘The various factors at work, especially in a | of Wilbur F. Storey’s life that A.8. Trude, then | letters, with some few words misspelled, and | duced by the same process, and by ‘additional| © WARE, So, FROM FIRE. AT A\ sputh 734 decrees west 505.56 feat to C. G. Stoneelot, | Ho: Pi, tole Peet ak a of the land recone? town life, make impressions on the brain which | ¢teorney for his tved tory |™any letters omitted and recut above’ the esses paintings or scenes from nature can| #ALESROOMS, THURSDAY, J to the ue of said Nichole’ land, thence with anid line | Purty thereby secured. I will el, et rani wacom lead to futigue and premature wear. The y Zor is paper, received @ peremptory | words where wanting, is as follows: e placed on plates better than those of the | —’ 5 ay a _ TLE, | BOD ie west 194 fect to the beginning, con- | £vB4 of the premiace, on SATURDAY. JANUAW strong-brained individual may not be hurt | telephone message from the editor to “come | " «Hore lie the remains of Mrs. Rachel Jack- | most expert engraver. Pee bth BEkKEEAD GAER’ LOGAE: | Wiping 5:21 "seresof land. and improved hy a frame | MINETEENTH, | 168, at 1A wt. constaad impressions drag tuausted by such | over stonce.” This could not be disregarded, | son, wife of PresidentJackson, who died De-| | A bookseller of long oxperienco| in the city |” (STOCKS. sy JANUARY SEVENTEENTH, a7 | sboredescribed land and pardy are 3 wih the arenes SivO mae be constant impressions from withoui, and a | and the lawyer hurried over to the newspaper | cember 22, 1928, aged sixty-one years. Her | says e for good editions rath SDA, JA\ AT | EMoses. but only so much of wuld brick a orm cal of whic wi second generation under such infuences is| ofice, Mr, Storey was out of temper. Hosid | face was fair, her person pleasing, Ler temper | than the cheap Kind is increasing, - Although | HALE £AsT ONE QCLOGK P.M. wowill sel within | wil he*sya'saGe Sutuaged tise ae akee ieee | at une of aa, belmane in ther outa ‘= by * “1 a 9th and D street: oS 6, 12 and 18 months, for which notes of purchaser, likely to suffer, through loss of tone and | thata man had put an air cushion of some sort | *miable and her heart kind; she delighted in | there is little profit in selling cheap books it is | “W.ejeton Koome, 9th and D streste nw. ; Pry Ay from day of wale interest from £ £ H y to 2 half of an incumbrance of 84, a vitality, in cell structures rather than in actual | tader the cease, ilding, and now in- | Félieving the wants of her fellow creatures, | really helpful in cultivating a tasteforreading. | 3 shares Real Estate Titie Ins. Co. stock. with from June 1, 1888. pC He Flea ft; stature or measurement. City life necessarily | sisted upou pay for stor declared thathe would | aud cultivated that divine pleasure by the most | The copyright editions of the best Americas | Dabares Grest Fale Ice Ge stock: = rermastoe, €1,000 géeh, Ualance, 1 ene and te | EivarctaerSt if meu sit not Snpliel wth Produces a rapid and unceasing series | take itout. “MF. Story said he did not want to | liberal and unpretending methods. To the | authors sell very well in this city. When asked 130'shares * Fire Ina. Co. stock. Five his notes for the deferred. payments, avcured ty | 10 days frota ‘sale: the property will be ela St riak of impressions. and calls for constant | pay for the air cushion, as Mr. Patterson haa | Poor she was a benefactor, to the rich an ex-| Concerning the taste for reading in Indiana- | 32 shares Graphophone Co. stock. Tetention of the title to the property, until paid; or | S20. fue St sivas ee exertion. The laws of sanitation and cere-| {1a him it was no good, and be did. not, care | ample and to the wretched a comforter. Her | polis, as shown by the demand for ‘books, he | 2p shares Shellabaryer Car Go. wlock. ot ahead SAM. CROSS, Truster, bral hygiene should, then, be carefully | to walk ap and down stairs, so he asked Mr. | Piety went hand in hand with her benevolence, | said it cannot be Lapis altogether by this. | 25 shares in Ins. Co. shock. ‘A piat of the property can be seeti until the day of | _THOS. E. WAGGAMAN, Auctioneer. —_ studied. It is very desirable to have what | Trude to stop any attempt to interfere with | andshe thanked her Creator for being permit- | There are a few rich people in the city who| 10 shares of Columbia Natiohal Bank Stock. sale'at the oftee of Bushnell’ & Carus, Ne 1008 ¥ | Ty UNCANBON BROS., Auctioneers, = juietnoss is possible during brain work, and | the elevator. Mr. Trude was ut loss what | ted to do good; a being so gentle and yet so | can buy large libraries, but the public gener- | 23abarps Panorama stock. Se Sees, nak oS Se pomeeee Sea "8 SALE OF HORSES, CARRIAGES the necessity for proper ventilation as 4 means | to do for a moment. He went down to see Mr. | Virtuous, slander might wound, but could not | allyare good readers, who get their intel- DUNCANSON BROS., 8250 down at time of sale. aves’ OV et ee of maintaining mental energy is well known. | Patterson, and they secured the assistance | dishonor. Even death, when he tore her from | lectual food from the bublic library. it Auctionsers, EUGENE CARUSI, Trustee. of adecree of the Supreme Court of the It might lessen brain wear in many offices if "9 a rork 3 By virtue " ” j- | the arms of her husband, could but transport ae aa UNCANSON BROS., Auctioneers. . #86 Louisiana avenue northwest. | District of Columbia, passed in equity, in No. electric lighting were substituted for gas il- | ° ae Pgs omen man, whom = - Mmombmaakctia Three New York Notabilities. D es — WALTER B. WILLIAMS & CO.. Aucts. jall-dtda. | 1171, we will sell at public auction on SA I tion. Good d i " ee ee oe eereeee ane Sm renee 8 bs, ied,” | From the Epoch. ENTIRE STOCK OF GENTS FURNT! iCANSON BROS., Auctioneers. 5. mination. Good digestion is essential tocon- | high enough to allow them to go under it.| ‘Yes, I well remember when she died, mn P : 3 SISTING OF SHIRTS, COLLARS, CUFFS, = OC! tinued work with good lasting power. Late | Mr Trude argued that if they could take out | Uncle Alfred continued, after I had read the Nobody in New York is better known, either WEAR, UNDERWEAR, HOSIERY, SUSPEND! RS, | TRUSTEES SALE OF “THE SUNDAY HERALD” | Oleott & Co., in Chain House alley, between 13th rising and a still more hurried luncheon and | the ai i Abe: i imperishable epitaph. “The big carriage was | in or out of society, than Mrs. John Sherwood.| AND GENEKAL ASSORTMENT OF GENTS NEWSPAPER, PRESSES, TYPE, &0. pa and | the air cushion and put it aside until the pat- "1 pitap! ig re Ys Sherwi yer al property abd partrership” effects of the rush back to work, followed, at the conclusion | entee called for it he-could not interfere with | ll hitched up, the trunks strapped on behind, | Her manners are ascharming as her recep-| On THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY SEVEN. | .2Y Yitture of twocertain deeds of trust, duly re- | Rrm of Olcott & Go. consisting of xix horses, five of the day, bya heavy meal when the man is| the running of the elevator. Well, he and | the driver in’ his place, and everything was | 4 - TRENTH, 1889, AT TEN O'CLOCK, A. M.. we wil | $25g GTi Pevely in Liber S31, folio 356 and Liber | riages, three buswiés, one surray. two sleyha, & wearied, often tend to exhaustion, as much as |}. ; - ready to start for Washiny All at once the | ons, which are the rendezvous of talent and | Si'wituia our ‘alesroom the above stock of “Gent's | £320 fou0 158 ct 20a... 0 ‘sell on FRIDAY, | Harness, blankets, whine, robes, livery costs, ‘ee. a Patterson groped around at the bottom of the ly ‘at once ; 5 trict of Columbia, I, as trustee, will sell on FRIDA the unavoidable pressure of business. A most | shaft in rch of the air cushion, and then | mistress was taken sick. The general was in a | faihion. She is given to reading for charity, re, tw h we invite, Sttention. pros. | TWENTY. RY, rational refreshment after heavy brain work is | they finally realized that the “air cushion” | big hurry, and the horses were kept hitched | She is also an authority on points of etiquette, | 3" | sth strest necshwesk, ths pecsaeal ae fo partake of light refreshment and then rest | was only a name, and that the patent con- | all night and the next day. That day she died | and has written innumerable essays on deport. | /JYHOMAS DOWLING, Auctioneer. fects mentioned Y 7 a im schedule “I. N. B,.” No. 1, and for half an hour before dinner; thas the power | gj » ti the i e and late in the afternoon was buried. The | ment. has seen m th STENTS OF G! vee schedule “I. N. B.,” attached to said deeds of trust and of digestion and social, enjoyment are sevooncd | fisted of the tight ft of the car in the shaft, so ent. She has seen much of the world, and ENTIRE CONTENTS OF GROCERY PSTABLISH- aan ; | further particulars inquire of ‘the ui IFTH DAY OF JANUARY, A. D. 1889, | 2" ~ sapected OCK FP. M.. on the premises, No. 409 | Pole ihctnyoralen Ob the Premises on any Li BROW 23 44g wt f ~ < ROC ISH- | Dartly named as follows, a more fall description beim | yay4-a “ . that the compressed air beneath it would ease | eneral was most heart-broken. After the | has known and still knows many people worth 0. FOURTEENTH STREET, | Piven at time of sole. One Deubletrtindee tee | eS eae to the man. "Probably the ehict means of pre- | sudden All Tiek wakehe ends sotks ant grave was filled he walked to. willow tree and | knowing. She dresses in « tyle altogether her | CORNER OF 8 STREET NORTHWEST, Printing Pre = ith, bet € vhs Y fo F[PHOMAS DOWLING, Auctioneer. ife is by a carcfal training, both rheseel ca | nd the air cushion, and Mr. Storey was angry | Cut off four switches, and stuck one at each | own, and she has one of the most musical of | om THURSDAY, JARCSAT SEVENTEENTH, 1880, | Je2! Rollers and Koller Mouids 1 1500 | TRU: SALE OF V PROVED AND + : : i 2 : ro. 4 , JANUARY SEVENTEEN Vertical Steam vat to USTERS’ SALE OF VALUABLE It Tite is by 0 carctal irsining, both physical and | at being charged with something he had not | Corner around the grave. Then he said all was | voices. Her daughter-in-law sculptures like a | commarine st TEN OCLDER & oy ot ee pounds of Nouparicl, Minion, Avate, and Pica: Type | CNIMPROCED. REAL ESTATE OM THE Gon, mental. before he enters upon the struggle and got. over, got in the carriage and says, ‘George, | professional. Fourteenth and 8 streets northwest, I will sell for cash | Seventy-five touts of Display Type, ome Electro Head NEK OF ELEVENTH AND I STREETS Ni - wear of business, One meansof increasing the ——+oe-—___—- drive me to Washington as fas as de hosses can | Mrs, Paran Stevens may be best described as | ™°FyNGy Sitere GOODS ee pig ge ge gS TH AND ELEVENTH S13 chances of longevity is by training the child A Bad Year for Plumbers. go. ‘The four switches to which Alfred re-| the McAllister of her sex. She is tall, stout, CANNED Gi twelve Composing Stan dases thereunto 7 wisely. Many a premature breakdown of C S. WES" SHOW.CASES, CIGARS belonging, three Display pinets, two Comnpos- and by virtue of certain deeds of res ferred are now four immense willow trees, istingui i i i health is due to that want of preliminary exer- ipsps one prane a 8a pure ids | manner, bu like Kaisha the “Mikado ® se ne - ies, | Sixty years old. The tomb is under the shade | manner, but like Katisha in the “Mikado” 7m mes, ome Fro! Press. one Galley Rack.one Emp- | corded, rosppetively. im Liver 101 cise which would not be neglected by the| | “Could you give s poor man few pennies, | of thcte tress, It is like many of tho big south. | here cf hie Good a rhe he D SPiC Ghe Water Cooler, Nx Stoves, teh Deke ‘and ‘Tether | folio 80 of the land records’ athlete without disaster. ma‘am, to keep his wife and seven small chil- | ern tombs. ‘The stone covering “Old Hickory’ regardless of consequences, Her house is the TFOKM, AND COUNTER, twelve Chairs, one Book Case, one Iron Safe, one Letter | bia, the undersigned trustec 1s — — dren from starving?” remains was originally balanced to a pivot, and | haven of the traveling nobility of all countries, | SQFT ER AMLL COUNTERS, | Pg ng ge caret ag Titled Milliners. “No, Inever—Why! It's Mr. Faucet, our | could be swung open to allow visitors a look at | while her “Sunday evenings” are oneof the in| ALAS HORSE Wado: AND Epes and aivo the good will of stiduewspaper: with the ex: | aT FOUR O'CLOCK PM. the follows Correspondence of the Louisville Courier-Journal. old plumber, isn’t it? What has brought you | the coffin. Some medical students made an un- | stitutions of New York. She has lately lost the 5 IOMAS DOWLING, Glusive right and privilege of printing and publishing | situate in the Distric Apropos of bonnets, I am told that Lady | 4 Piper in tis, Sh* 7°" successful attempt once to steal the body, and | services of a French maid and a casket of dia. | —!25-ats eed PO are eg Po ee pe ae Stay Gordon. who went in for millinery, has con-} Qh’ it’s the want of blizzards, ma’am. | *fter that the grave was filled with sand and | monds, and she has also lately announced her ‘Waltzes 8B. WILLIAMS & CO., Auctioneers. started in 1866, and has been in active operation | Davidson's subdivision of lots in square three hun- tinued to make a deal of money. She was the | None of my customers have had a single pipe | Covered over with soliq masonry. Around the | intention of “throwing a bomb” into society at ART EXHIBITION Since that time, being still published, and one of the | E ‘also lot ‘lettered ‘i daughter of a famous Dublin distiller, and so | burst this winter. If they had I'd been living | tomb are a number of graves of the relatives | large. Her daughter is married to one of the ee es te a eee + 4 ry pto the d jean lots being improved by > ogee y and friends of the ex-President, The little | Anglesey Pagets, and the Prince of Wales is AND Splendid opportunity to purchase live end snrcerafal ren being ‘premises L007 and 100 L street inherited a bit of the mercantile instinct; | ' Plenty, ma'am. graveyard is in one corner of the family | godfather of her grandson. gargs eee tele ae ne een | eee — when the Scotch tenants didn’t come to the ams ees garden, and I was shown flower beds laid out| One of the best known members of the AA eee neat: fhe'ire Promissory notes secured Uy a Prior deed of Fe ey 3 fore promptly with their rents my lady made 2 . and rose and fruit trees planted by the general's | Jeunesse doree, of New York, is Mr. “Ted” ‘THE WELL-KNOWN ARTIST, Terms: One-half cash; balance in six and twelve | of the premises, the west thirt up her mind that she intended to have a well- | F70™ the Chicago Tribune. own hands. Kelly. He is a small, curly-headed, ‘spunky, months, notes to bear interest at 6 per cent per annum, | inches by a depth of weventy-five (75 af ilied parse, and so she began to sell bounets | _L00g-baired Customer (tobarber)—“Is thero | “Tasked ‘Alfred what kind of a slave-owner | Rev: ,2ue if & small, curly-headed, spunky, | tpcaaing many choice wiht willbe om exibition | m4, to” be, atintactoruy, indorsed, and. secured ta | (2 in square uree hundred abd foriy thee (43). and hats. She had the reputation of dressing | ‘ny way to shorten a man’s hair without using | Gen. Jackson was. He said he was the kindest | with a pretty smile and a millionaire father, Tuesday and Wednesday. January Lot and 16th. at | of the purchaser. A deposit of 8500 required at time | and two years, for which the notes of the purchaser oF extremely weil herself, and that was of worth | the shears or clipper?” in the world and was greatly loved by all his | He is fond of pleasant company and good liv- | Our art, stlesroom. corner, Lt —— of rale. Conveyancing. Scat purchaser's cost Terma | purchasers must be qiven. brering uuterext from the in a business venture; her bonnets were| Barber—Yes, sir. I've done thatfor several | Besroes, So much has been told of Old | ing, and is continually inventing new beverages AT PUBLIC SA\ to be fully complied with {n ten days, otherwise the | day of sale, and secured by deed of t all imported from Paris, and her gentlemen since the election. Tae ale & Hickory’s iron will and wild (pilcbapiladl that I . r Py trustee reserves the right to resell at the rick and cost <a. sold, orallcash at the and new dishes, the latest of which is a sym- | THURSDAY AND FRIDAY E: GS, JANUARY | of the defaulting purchaser, after five days’ public | A deposit of 8100 hats were all lish round ones, : 7 ed the old man if Gen. Jackson ever swore | phony of oyste: bs id little-neck cl SEVENTEENTH AND EIGHT, 'H, AT notice of such resale in soiue Rewspaper published in | tiine of sale If the term F | vow about a year ago, perhaps, that you | ed the ” i y of oyster, crabs and little-neck clams. - tLe Slate | days the trustee ; She positively refused to give credit, and | wouldn’ i any. “Not a word.” he promptly replied. | He has horses and do d rh 7:30 O'CLOCK. Washington, D.C. | eed lage the = reserve ; > ouldn’t have it cut till Clev: r | gs and grooms without »._ | and cost of the defaulting purchaser. All somseauently found ler best customers among | Prosident againg™ ae" *™ *e°%0d | “Wien he was mad or vexed he would rau his | number, and he keepw' steam yacht, He and | yTeannowncement that thee ar he productions ot | itd” JOSHUA Pere | ite and reognting et purchaser econ Se tov gpier gs —— class, who so dearly love a Customer—‘Er—yes.” Ferelhentiry ae long, a a ase ‘By | his are smart people. Worse can . HARRISON JOHNSON, REA i, ROTATE, EDW a STELLWAG: i=. lord, and who were charmed to pay out their _“That’s a . a the Eternal God!’ and when he did that you eee WALTER B. WILLIAMS & CO., 5 " Ss’ on porest, cl —— old for « bonnet they thought my lads’ hand | yoq." st SME Team singe it f0r Yaynst just know that everybody had to’ git A Cat in an Organ. _sal2-6t _Auetioneeis._ | BEIGKD FINE BUILDING LOT-ADJOINING. "| _yat-anae SE DEMIOK ® MoGU IRE Tease, w, touched. Lady Gordon used her own |” Customer (relieved’ “Then I wish 1q | #bout.” HE JUMPED OUT JUST AS THE RECTOR WAS IN | QALE OF STOCK BY VIRTUE OF COLLATERAL “ name, which was wise. Whe! chensie | «i Srey nen] wish you would | "Tn the whole south there is probably not S NOTES. aeea inte the canes hen Lady Mackenzie | singe off about six inches. I may bee durn | nore interesting place o aon : : THE MIDDLE OF THE BENEDICTION, “By virtus of two certain collateral notes, dated re- | offer for sale, in front of th AL. . he millinery business she called her- | fool, but I'm a man of some conscience.” rsh ay 1S Pisce Or. & point of equal A Syracuse, N. Y., special to the New York | spectively October 5 a1 mber 5, 1888, one for LOTS 4 AND 5 = ——————+ self Mme. Something, and has, I hardly think, ’ peti acearghessen 2 historic interest, and it is to be regretted that | wig thoes “bane $250 and the other fr #275, both beariug’ fronting 66 feet on * ya depth of 99 feet ME. BROOKE TELLS ALL THE EVENTS OF been as successful as her rival in trade. She es “The Hermitage” is so rapidly going to decay | World says: There has been a mystery about will sell on THURSDAY, SEV Stnchee Ondo Hart of aatg tote Going improves Oy | MO iter 22 Suniness soutdontial Ladierson aiken a Ser seey pamet ted cada cepa A Royal Slide. andruin. the large pipe organ at St. Paul's cathedral PE IANUARY, L880 at HALE-PASE | iw) and lance bck stable, 20320, the balance of the | Hemen 00 cents each.” 408 Let, between 4th 3, and : “Ht i From Forest and Stream. eee for aweek. Whenever H.R. Fuller, the or- Mis ccisieanl secured te aatnenen, | aa Oe impre i — bonnets, and says, with asmile: “It is quite - oH Ir 8 northwest, tlie collateral secured by said notes, | lots being wuimy . ~ ee aa the fashion nowaday to be in trade.” Every-| I have forgotten details, but the gist of it A Hoodoo and a Scarf Pin. anist, touched the keys, weird noises were eke RENE YT aaa —— Cin Se mmmetiote vicinity of cae | E per ‘CLAY, YoNDERroILy cure c ag body kuows that the Princess de Sagan lets out | was that during one of those periods of deep | MISFORTUNE THAT FOLLOWS A BEAUTIFUL PIECE eagle eqrgy easereentl traztnt tino ha en fg per phony © | tural departments, convenient to strect-car ines and | Sjqp°ezang Aewrologer and Spiritual, Med a peer = a Bae and — it is | winter snow in New Hampshire, when, as many OF JEWELRY—SOME OF ITS VICTIMS. me os = x Feces eee romeeeay , No. 346, for 100 shares stock in same gy eS ilenbniin 2 sini © pate yet Recovers lost TY fon and New York. 1) °P*%® Paris, Lon- | of us can attest, there sometimes come some | Fm the New are obscrving my scarf pin,” saa | of the benediction ‘when a large, wild-look- | “I Gertiicate, No, 563, for 25 sbares stock in same aly a tabs Sea by net ck Pastas | Warriagea, Bginun separsied ts ter, Gives a hours of rain and sleet and then a freeze, leav- | 1 oyqios eae tio pin, ing maltese cat made a flying leap over the | °°"P8¥ ate wo. 570, for 25 shares stock in same or ail cash at option of Plrchaser, convey | ag Be disar pointed ye A Boston Huckster. ing a crust of glare ice over everything strong | “Brooklyn jeweler whom I happened to meet | head of the organist and landed near W. yeas Fequircdat tine of sale, Tertge’ to be complied cen | ofotbers, Judge not all alike, as the Weems the Boston Gicka enough to hold up an ox team, some young |*“*¥ oF two ago. “Members of the trade | J. West, a member of the choir, fastening Be in 10 days. otherwise the right ‘reserved te, resell at | Yipoe,the most skeptical. Strangers DUNC. “Strawberrias! Strawberries! Nice, fresh | fellows conceived ‘the idea of having some | don't often wear conspicuous jewelry. As a its claws in his knee. Before the eat could stramberries!” cried a street huckster from his | Gossting extraordinary. They dragged from a | rule, in fact, jewelers wear no jewelry at all. | Ke reused tt was half way down, the side aisle, Up went windows, doors flew open and eager | youd the house. ‘They mounted the sled in high | "The pin was certainly’ striking one, Tt waa | 22480 Fushing up the main aisle straight for Women’s faces appeared everywhere, attracted | spirits and “let her go,” intending to bring w z Je Dr. Lockwood. The worthy rector lost his ‘amet the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser after 5 | Ouiy genuine clairvoyait in this city, as he succeeds days’ public advertisement in solve newspaper pub- | he eee a a ctines lished in Washington, D. C. Ge Ghttinen Boo, hited oy Jal2dadn“DUNCANSON BROS. Auctioneers | $3: Nametlock of lait, date of birdy Open Sundays from 1 0 5 pan. d2y-tolfe* 421 Oth st nw. CAL OF BRICK HO! NORTH WE: RY SEVEN- LOCK, we will sell fi ; |large and consisted of abed of sapphires, | DF. 1 ti le ; is, R ; e RNOWS AS = Wir Youn MiWhot that? Strawberries” cred one |e tmeeursanlstom which they. had started, | pera and Fabien, surrounded bya border of | Pas! tt te praret ow he caught sightof the | o¢ryia uiinoncs ata itt nmidegue, | Can MEAL ae Sets | Dow ‘Tarn Ene at? Strawberries!” cried one | So great was the weight of the sled and its load | diamonds. Of course I expressed a desire to | “! ; ‘ southwest corner of said equar ting thongs ” ‘ON, D. C. woman as the cart drew near. and so slippery the surface that they attained a | know its history. : a5 did not pause, but rushed between the feet of | southwest ee oust LB foods tence south RE hoor mea virtue of authority in us vested by the last will andi ty Ne, Madam,” said the huckster | terrific speed ina few moments, and not only | “Not long before the burning of the Brook- | *he,¢xcited chorus boys. A few seconds later | thence ‘w fost to the place of beginning, tm | $29 city of Washington, Distt of Usitestie cake | edree res ee cape, ee es Aas “Iwas about to say when you inter- | dashed through the dooryard, butelcan through | Iyn theater,” said. the Jeweliony twee fe Prag nga aad eave ioe aig tk Peni Pog dinty i fd KT te “ s 1 h a rally located opposite the Pension ne Court of the if required have rupted me, that nice, fresh strawberries are | an open barn and down'a long slope beyond, | stranger to me, came into my store in Brook- terrupted service could be resumed. An in. | Sticeand near the Patent and Post-oflice buildings, Columbia. passed in cquity couse Ko. | Ginssss ae wil ed not ou the market at this time of the year, but | finally bringing up in a meadow many rods | lyn and ordered a scarf pin made after this de. iF ee u and the saleis peremptory. se —- , 3 | 4 : -third c Frederick B. McGuire and othe1 complainants and vere. if zou are in need of any nice, fresh fish, I | away, not, however, without a remarkable ad-| seription, I told him any price, a pretty high | Yetsstion showed that the cat had made her | “fers, One-third cas falance in eran later | 4. Crk McGuire and oters are defeulante the un- | "lilustrated catalogue containing have here some fine ones which I am eelling-”” | venvure en route. one, for the jewels would be expensive. Bat | the amaller “tucker.” The nocd ac | px from day of sale, and payable setat-aucualigy and | dersieoed will offer at public auction ou THUESDAY, a reel caplosion hug “Ke another Mercantile | | There happened at this time to be an_old | he agreed, paid me a deposit and left. I took | {Re,,smaller “trackers.” ‘The ecclestical au- | fo 0 wcured by decd of traston the property mld-or | He FWENTS-FOCRTH DAY OF JANU the followtag: Clocing aeteis but it was only a window | white horse standing in the barn and quietly | the man for a gambler who had just played in | therities have made every effort to capture the | all cash, ut option of purchaser. A deponit of #300 | LOU OCLOCKE Mon the preininen, the followihg. 215-3 _3. ¥. LEWENBERG, M.D. Manager. closing suddenly. munching hag: “Quick as a flash the ting good luck; but I afterward learned from a de-|°& but without success, Chitaer's post. Terns to be cong ed with in ton dave, | Paroey of evoand known and daecrived spon the growed | ————————— = cod sled knocked his legs from under him and | tective that he was a professional swindler, and | Beall Rose otherwise right reserved to St the risk and cos nd being Oris re te UR $7. 98, AND 910 SUITS BEAT Rebuked by a Minister’s Wife. landed him on the sled, half, killing the -as-| no doubt intended to'get that pin without pay- | pratt, Dresses for Chicago Rosebuds. See ee seer terranes rubleea a | square numbered tows hundred snd fftg-acven (agen Orreraiered are Sxb iivenroor THE DANGER OF GOSSIPING IX A STREET-caR | tonished and helpless boys, and carrying them | ing anything more than the deposit. Pi ae ies Washington, D. C. Abstracts shown at sale, fronting fifty-two (52) feet four and ohe-half (43s) | Ten "BE EG ote. AROUT PEOPLE YOU DON'T NOW. all to the foot of the hill. Nor was this end of Tusce i2 » neawrstet being sold th: tbe: shops aban DUNCANSON BROS... | clunty-scven (157) fect ten and one-half (10% imeuesto From the Philadelphia News. it. Up that hill on the icy crust no horse rosa aednensr-apd this season for the ball dresses of debutantes | _Ja12 = a | SOEUR 7 tcot alley, and tmproved ba large our-sta “But he never called for the pin. He was ™ a ~you alley, and improved by a It was in a streetcar. Three ladies were | Could come, and for nearly a week he had to brick dwelling, wi which is a pleasing change from the everlast- . with commodious back - ii HHANCERY SALE OF VALU. E IMPROVED toget vement engaged in conversation, Their subject was | ¥¢ Supported on hay carried to the meadow by | burned to death in the Brooklyn theater fire. | ing illusion skirts and whito silk or satin | QUANG ESS ane oO? VALUABLE, IMPR pa = church matters and church fa th | the boys. From the very first it seemed as though a | bod in which their fresh and palpitating | ,BY virtue ofa decree of the Supreme Court of the | the same beloncing or in an: % 1 people. Among aad eae strange and tragic fatality was associated with | loveliness is incased for most of ‘thy sociel | Diszict of Columbia, “passed in cause No. 11224 | “Terms: One-third cash, in equal the latter was the wife of the pastor of ¢ Beery Cap range - - c ‘al | Equity, wherein Christopher O. McKenney et al. are | in ove and two years, notes to be given for said balance . pastor of one o: A Four-Footed Thief. this trinket. I put itin the show case, and it | functions of their first winter. The stuff ix | complainants, and Robert V. McKenney etal. are’ de. or deferred payment bearing 6 the leading Methodist congregations in the was not long before a sporting man saw it and | called rainbow tulle, and is being sold in great | 12 wil} oder Soe eale at public suction in front city. The ladies said a good many things | Paris Special to London Telegraph. bought it on the spot. He was murdered | quantities. It is the ordinary white illusion, | {°%Su Nya Tae Or PANG ALE lee ieee sbout her, some flattering and others decidedly | A ‘“dog-thief” is one of the latest of Parisian | three months later in’ a brawl. in | dune wce threads in ‘rainbow colors | at 4 o'clock p. m., the following described parce otherwise: some things that were true and | no ; a rue qneer things and curiosities. Last week a| Chicago. A few weeks after that a|drawn through it at intervals of about an | fealestate and the improvements thereunt Smt to be trace For ea ne ing %0 | vig Newfoundland dog went into a large shop | WFetched-looking woman entered my place and | eighth of un iech. A brightblae thread, wrod, | fie ss aie Hy of Wasbinucon and District of Cola purchaser after Bve ipers plied their vocation, and, as the in. | store near the Bastile, and, after having | $fered this very pin for sale. "She “TRabued | 2 fellow. a lilac, and a green ono, then there is | #:ravarenaubersa #4, bertiaie for te sume on | in some newefabr published inthe ik Texest ‘arcee, 20 did the pitch of thee voices, | “prospected around” for some time, selected « | the man who had been killed. She had hap. | augue macy amd th aeons Tie tous ag: | Berek tid squire. thence south, 15 nS FREDEHICK B anqumer, Ail the ‘ime s lady sat opposite them in the | bundle of ‘shooting-jackets, seized thom be- Pened into my place by the merest chance. I tion is, of course, the usual white silk skirt, over | B66 fo th street amd pi : Dowel “= quietly ws shed them. Wh erceae tthe | tween his teeth and made off with them. The | bought the pin back and put it in the show-| which’ are several layers of tulle, and there Pernbeved SFE jall-deds Ellicott City, Ma. the pastor's wife referred to and the others ex- | Hue,Snd cry was raised, and the spectacle pre- case again, Next time I sold it to a dra; are three ballet skirts of the rainbow illusion, Nats. point fistant TER B. WILLIAMS & 00., 22 Rue Dreset, Paris. 7 sented by the hunt was of the most animated | The day after he bought it he made a mistake | The bodice is of white silt fore satin al aad FOUGERA Premed a desire to see her, the. silent watcher | Charactey. Half the staff of thie sore ee | in mixing a prescription and caused the death maeny vaske up with iba bodice tenance tones {hence south 16 10-100 feet, thence TROND BASEMENT BRICK be roar | B £00. SeinESs males A After amnile the car reached ithe panied by hundred oro, all boys and of a mother and her baby. ‘The druggiat’s | one of the rainbow threads in color, and have GE1G0 Toot to sald Lith stave ELEVENTH STREET "NOK tor 30 NORTH Ot. M. He * 7 several lice! |, pursue = ness je was rev erty. . It boon I 4 2x04 4 arone, but before starting toward the door laid | Ioiner uultil he was brought to poy. ine ben | He brought the pin to me and I ought it back | to the dark, pals girls to whens the te atte es Be TN Sotho BER ck eae Ne her hand on the arm of one of the three who | dle was, duly ‘and the dog. waa | again. moxe it went into the showease, tion debutante costume the land records of the ‘of Columbia, and Poor, Foolish Men. sosenel Sandler soln em ond, with « eal marched off to the police station, preparat I was getting to it by this time. often been the case that reaueet 02 Pacey supaee thereby, we will 9 , ape die ro _ comm Zeit his a. to and Probably permanent fix- TT WAS “‘KLEPTOMANIA.” been Er ~ me. ere und. am. I bi bee tradeemen | «T didn't have long to wait for the next ad- humor to leave the car without tating aa | had complained that the dog had already been rg - d their way for preda! the a. in of ra am the lady you have been talking about, | rum eel thd anlnal i Now, let me give you s litte steuihit cnn paeenpeenn ao [pce ob ie: to ji 3 i i Antoine. ‘The next time i 5 7 so loudly, for some one might hear yeu tie 'agins” of the Faubourg 8 the tray I set before her. While my back was turned the fatal jewel got its fine work in, as would not it en es as hugely as Ihave. Good Embalmed by the Air. usual, ape gee it, the The lady left the car and the faces of the | From the St. Paul Pioneer Press. ik : : ‘ture of astonishment and other passengers smiled. “There,” said a neighbor, pointing to a vil- lage carpenter, “there is a man who has done than any other person who ever lived in - He cannot Yeo mac in’ publ and he a does not try. He is not worth $2,000, and it is ‘the very little ‘he can put down on subscription always to watch sick neighbor and look after his affairs for him. I ve he and Le his wife keep house Bho Kaela bad ae oe ee that they be able to send little bouquets to wept en Ap hge e friends and invalids. He finds time fort peg eles Aral ant word to every child he meets, and ef had i # nit Be Frey fi if i Ft i i a it li a

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