Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, December 3, 1898, Page 7

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Half Sick ali Well 1 Many persons have their good day and their bad day. Others are about half sick all the time. They have headache, backache, The Class in Civies, “Now, Tommy,” said the teacher in civies, “what are the duties of a police commissioner ?” “Why,” said Tommy, who had stud- ied politics under a Tammany admin- istration, “a police commissioner's chief duty is to collect commissions from the police.”’—Harper's Bazar. Confession of a Millionaire. A millionaire confessed the secret of his success in two words—hard work. He put in the best part of his life | gaining dollars and losing health, and now he is putting in the other half spending dollars to get it back. Noth- ing equals Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters ! and are restless and nervous. Food does not taste good, and the digestion is poor; the skin is dry and sallow and disfigured with pimples or eruptions; sleep brings no rest and work is a burden. What is the cause‘Jf all thisP Impure blood. Ps And the remedy? fe | for restoring health. dyspepsia and indigestion. Silk from Spiders’ Webs. pose. | and helped back to condition a {| while another will take his place the bobbin. PATENTS. Northwestern Inventors. Murdick Cameron, u | Minn., fabric turfing machine; Will | J. Fletcher, St. Paul, Minn., fri cluteh pull eo, Minn., drill brace. Merwin, Lothrop B Jobnson, neys, 910 Poneer Press Buildin YG ar Peul, A country parson went to see ble parish in Long- It clears out the channels g and, if, possible, to through which poisons are | comfort him some little fnder heavy carried from the body. When | trouble which had befallen. The pas- all impurities gre removed from alone, | de! It gets at the starting point—the stomach—and cureg It would appear from all acounts that M. Chacot’s enterprise of the man- ufacture of spiders’ web silk, is to be pursued oma large scale, a factory in is having been taken for the pur- Here the spiders will be kept and worked at regular hours, and when | one of them is used up, he will be fed ain, List of Patents Issued Last Week to Minneapolis, Ole Granum, Montevid- Patent Attor- t. Pee A Comprehension of Providence, a hum- tor found the homely old man in the He said many = of the excellence of its remedy. the blood nature takes right hold and completes the cure. If there is constipation, take \ Ayer’s Pills. They awaken the sy action of the liver; they biliousness, cur Write fo our Doctor. We have the exclusivo services of ne most eminent physicians in d States. Write freely all the ars in your case. You will re- ompt reply, without cost. Address, DR. J. ©. AYER, Lowell, Mass. Vow. heart love and duty strove for stery, and duty won. nan shall wed me,” she ex- vith suffused eyes and. quiv- ¢ lips, “who does not promise me t is ever president of the he will use influence battleships christened with \ \ SS as the ernon rdor of his passion hesitated not a mo- he cried, and fell upon Record. ymise!” ch his knees. w College Course, Reuben doing at college, sked a neighbor “Splendid,” replied Uncle Si. “He’s 1 studyin’ Scoteh, and’ they do say 1” Scotch? “Yes. They call it by the name of | Golf down to college. He addr the other day at Golf, an’ . NOL Harper’s Bazar. was in it, Glass Product of Indiana. ana possesses hal fof the window | of the na-/} -third of the nd a fourth of the flint! nd stands first among | the seventeen glass-producing states of | the Union. THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and 4simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the Catirornia Fie Syrup Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the Catirornia Fig Syrup Co. | only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par- ties. The high standing of the CaLi- FORNIA Fig Sykup Co. with the medi- eal profession, and the satisfaction ch the genuine Syrup of Figs has en to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty It is ar in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and | vels without irritating or weaken- ing them, and it does not gri . In order to get its please remember the name of the Company — CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. | SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. LOUISVILLE, Kv. NEW YORK, N.Y. | and said we must learn to take iction humbly, as appointed to Providence, ’ said the good old man, who was imperfectly instructed in theolo- gy, “that’s right enough, that is; but, somehow, that there old providence fhave been after me all along, but I reckon there’s one above as’ll put a stopper on he if he go too far.” Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, asthe damage they will do is tenfold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made {n Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney &Co. Testimonialsfree. Sold by Druggists, price 75c per bottle. ‘Hall's Family Pills are the best. Short and to the Point. A few years ago, in one of the south- ern towns of New York State, a man died who had not lived a very good life. His family insisted that a ser- mon be preached at the funeral, how- ever, and all due respect paid to the dead snan’s memory. No minister in town would officiate, all were seem- ingly engaged. However, a retired el- der, rich and kind-hearted, agreed to attend. The house was filled with neighbors, all rough and mostly igno- rant. A short prayer was offered and a hymn sung. Then the elder, folding his hands in front of him, began: “My if this man was a bad man, I said too much; if a good man, I said enough. Let us pra Smokeless Powder. As the recent war demonstrated the great superiority of smokeless powder, manufacturers are placing it on the market for the use of sportsmen. The Laflin & Rand Powder Co., Chicago, Ill., are foremost in the field and are giving a supply of shells loaded with this powder free to dealers in order to have their customers give it a trial, Write them today for particulars. Real Superiority. It is the first duty of every woman to recognize the mutual bond of uzi- versal womanhood. Let her ask her- self whether she would like to hear ‘herself or her sister spoken of as a shop girl or a factory girl or a servant girl, if necessity had compelled her for a time to be employed in any one of the ways indicated. If she would shrink from it a little, then she is a Ift- tle inhuman when she puts her un- known human sisters who are so com- pelled, into a class by themselves, feel- ing herself to be somewhat their su- perior. She is really the superior per- on m on FARM AND GARDEN. MATTERS OF INTEREST TO AGRICULTURISTS. Some Up-to-Date Hints About Cal- tivation of the Soil and Yields Thereof—Horticulture, Viticulture and Floriculture. Orchards in Hard Places. In an address before the Wisconsin State Horticultural Society, Geo. J. Kellogg said in part: In recommending the best plan most likely to succeed on low situations and poor orchard soil, I would go back to the foundation and plant four seeds of the most hardy apple or crab known, such as Duchess and Hibernal or Vir- ginia crab, plant these in a well pre- pared spot where the future orchard tree is to stand, protect by a bit of fence board on the southwest side, and so staked and cultivated that a good growth may be secured; the first fall remove all but two of the most vigor- ous seedlings, bank up for winter and if the size is sufficient to carry a cion, the following spring graft two inches below the crown with Duchess, Hiber- nal, Charlamoff and Virginia crab for those kinds less hardy, If the seedlings are too small at one year then contin- ue the growth another season and graft at two years. The advantage of grafting the seed- ling without transplanting is to get the benefit of the whole root and in no other way can the full benefit be ob- tained; grafting two inches below ground will insure the rooting of the scion; using Virginia crab as a stock upon which at two to three feet to graft, or bud in the limbs, varieties which are less hardy. Such varieties as Duchess, Hibernal, Glass Green and a few others may be grafted at the ground. The grafts should be shaded by a bit of board till large enough to be protected by the lath shield. Graft two seedlings, then remove one later on. Second plan. Set two root grafts of short roots and long scions where the future orchard tree is to stand; protect the same as before; take up the weak- est if both grafts grow; always prune the growing tree when the bud can be removed with the thumb; have one cen- tral trunk and side branches at right angles six to twelve inches apart; stimulate the tree to early growth but do not cultivate after July, or cause more than a moderate growth of wood each year. After trees come to bearing do not let them overbear, or starve to death; a tree should be fed in propor- tion to its fruitage. Most old orchards are starved to death. The best fertil- izer for fruit is hard wood ashes sowed broadcast at the rate of 100 bushels per acre annually. I would recommend for hard places only Duchess, Hibernal, Glass Green, Charlamoff, McMahon, Wealthy, Repka Malenka, Longfield and Patton’s Greening of apples, and all but the first four top worked on Vir- ginia crab. Whitney, Virginia, Martha and Sweet Russet for crabs. Apple seed must be planted fresh from the apple in the fall, or if dry, soaked till it is plump, then frozen, mixed with sand and planted in spring. The San Jose Scale. We fear our readers may become tired of seeing this heading in the’ va- rious farm papers, but we assure them there is reason for a frequent mention of this pest. We know that some men that have orchard stock to sell are trying to belittle the danger, but the danger exists in spite of their efforts to lull the country into a fancied secur- ity. The state entomologist of Califor- nia says that without doubt the San Jose scale is the greatest pest that has ever menaced the orchards of this country. In California it has become so prevalent that it is no longer consid- ered possible to eradicate it. The cnly thing left to do is to fight it in every or- chard and try to grow fruit in spite of it. Spraying has only the effect of keeping down the generations of young ones when they make their appearance on the orchard trees in large numbers. But in the forests where the scale has got a foothold no spraying that will be effective can be done. This should stimulate the horticulturists east of the Rocky mountains to do what they can to prevent the spread of the scale, knowing as we do that once the pest is among our wild trees it will be im- state penetrating in its nature. This is —_ = found in carbon bisulphide, which may cS is be had at any drug store. The vapor It has been said of this substance is very poisonous and will destroy all insect life with which it comes in contact. This ma- terial is also very explosive when brought in contact with fire. Keeping these two points in mind it may be handled with perfect safety. In ap- plying the material it is well to keep in mind the fact that it is\very vola- tile and quickly passes into vapor, which diffuses itself throughout the en- tire mass of grain, and as the vapor is heavier than air it will have a ten- dency to settle. But in order to in- that few are entirely The treatment @ravates the trouble. are “a nation of dyspeptics” and it is true of the digestive tract, Stomach and Bowel trouble, or Constipation. with cathartic medicines too often & NATION of Americans that they Free from disorders Indigestion, Dyspepsia, of these diseases sure perfect results it is best to intro- duce the material well down toward the middle of the mass of grain by means ‘of a gaspipe with a screen over the lower end, which will prevent the wheat filling the pipe, and through which the poison may be poured: The pipe is then withdrawn. One pound of the bisulphide is sufficient for fifty bushels of grain. One application will be sufficient unless*the grain is to be kept over winter, when a second appli- cation may be necessary. The ma- terial does no harm to the grain in any way, as the poisonous fumes all pass away as soon @& brought in con- tact with the air outside—James Troop, Horticulturist. The German Farmer. John E, Kehl, the United States con- sul at Stettin, Germany, says that the American farmer enjoys great advan- tages over the German farmer in the way of modern labor-saving machin- THE LOGICAL TREATMENT is the use oF a remedy that will build up the system, thereby enabling the various organs to act as Nature intended they should. Such a remedy is Found in Dr Willams Pink Pills for Pale People > Here is the proof. In Detroit there are few soldiers more popular and efficient than Max R. Davies, first sergeant of Co. B. His home is at 416 Third Avenue. For four years he was a bookkeeper with the wholesale drug house of Farrand, Williams & Clark, and he says: “I have charged up many thousand orders for Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, but never knew their worth uutil I used them for the cure of chronic dyspepsia. For two years I suffered and doctored for that aggravating trouble but could only be helped temporarily. “I think dyspepsia is one of the most stubborn of ailments, and there is scarcely a clerk or office man but what is more or less a victim. Some days I could eat anything, while at other times I would be starving. ‘Those distressed pains would force me to quit work. I have tried many treatments and remedies but they would help only for a time. A friend induced me to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, and after tak- ing a few doses I found much relief and after using several boxes I was cured. I know these pills will cure dyspepsia of its worst form and I am pleased to recommend them.”—Detroit (Mich.) Jourual. = ery, larger tracts of land, ete. As an offset to this, the German farms in a The genuine package always bears the full name» oe intensive way, and generally At all druggists, or sent postpaid on Feceipt of price,50° produces full crops. These facts, how- r box ee Willi i ever, would not enable them to fight ber bor, Dy the De. williams Medicine Co, Sehenectady.N.V., against depression if they did not re- ceive state aid and had not quite a perfect system of co-operation, At —— — — a — Z many of the old universities, such as Origin of the Cocktail. } Johnny's Mistake. Berlin, Gottengen, Leipsic, Halle, Mu- It is asserted that a certain Col. Car-' Mother—Now, Johnny and Ted, Mr. nich, etc., there have been founded ag- | ter, not of Cartersville, but cf Culpep- , Blank is coming to dinner to-day, ané ricultural colleges, and in all other} per Court House, Va., belongs the hon-| I want you both to behave very nicely, colleges there are chairs of agricul- | or of inventing the cocktail, and thisis’ Johnny—Mr. Blank, mother? Is that ture, ‘with professors to lecture on the | how it all happened: Near Culpepper | him with the queer eye? subject, thus disseminating a valuable | Court House there used to stand ar! Mother (anxiously)—Yes. But, what- amount of practical scientific knowl- | old inn, built to imitate the famous| ever you do, don’t make any allusion edge. roadhouses of England, and bearing | to it, for he is very sensitive. Now, = “Co-operation,” “ the storied sign of “Cock and Bottle.” | don’t forget. ihe tone Cee ea The former word in the old vernacular, Both boys—All right, mother; we'll ‘luere are co-operative credit banks, stood for the tap. The point is that i be on our very best. co-operative dairies, co-operative steam the man who got the last drink and the; (Dinner Table)—Mr. Blank has ad- lows, and thi # Bi ti i muddy portion of the tap, wa: id to | dressed Johnny several times and re- Powe: cre is co-operation in|! nave received the “cockta Col. | ceived no answer, until his mother in- drainage and irrigation. As a rule,| Carter was once subjected to this iz-} terposes with: the farms are devoid of small under- dignity, and threw the stuff upon the} “Johnny, how can you be so rude? growth, stumps, stones, creeping vines, | floor. “Heahaftah,” he said, “I'l drink | Don’t you hear Mr. Blank speaking to = etc. Timber is equally well cared for. | cocktails of ma own concoction, sah.” i you?” In draining and. irrigating, the farmers | And, starting to “clean out the shop,” Johnny—Oh, were you speaking to are experts. At present a perplexing | he dashed together bitters, sugar, bits | me, sir? I thought you was looking at question is how to stop or check the | of lemon peel and Holland gin. Great , our Teddy ?—Spare Moments. exodus of labor to the cities, where | tks from little acorns grow. and this | aa Ss wages are higher. The salaries paid | WS the genesis of the cocktail. | és New Cure for Nervousness. + farm laborers vary, but average 35 i Re a | A-new cure for nervousness has been . | Suggested to erican s s fro: aor cents per day (50 cents during har-| «yoy know,” said the man who’ ame at ‘epaaa ain ounergre - “sg vest), with the use of a small house, i Uehawatd rail agente ple Dut; terrible malady, 4 ’ | writes things for a living, “there's a and by a Chinese student of naticnal patch of ground (about one-half acre), | bell rings on the typewriter when you and racial characteristies. The wan and the privilege of using the imple- | get to the end of the line, to warn the | who has faormulated the new nerve ments for cultivation of same. Single | operator that the end has be‘n reached | specific says that he believes its adop- men who board with their employer] and he must stop and take a fresh | tion will cure the worst case of nery- are paid considerably less. The Ger- | start. I have no bell in my brain, but | ous headache. He believes the extire man government is endeavoring, both | I have something there that tells me! absence of nervousness which cha:ac- —_—s by legislation and education, to enable | With no less certainty when I have | terizes the Mongolian race to result the farmer to compete with his rivals, | done my stint, and it is time for me to; simply from the centuries of practice stop for the day. And I sometimes} which his countrymen have given to Varieties of Wheat. wonder if the gentle reader dozsn’t | the simple cure. The Pennsylvania station has been wut sage bond pee bell ought to ring/ And this is the cure: testing wheats for more than ten years, | “@*ler-”—New York Sun. Shiga bier seiaiues pres and oe ee you will never be conscious of porses- Sena Tee pasted: fOr gtene Ideas and Fostage Stamps. sing nerves,” says the savant from the a Ideas, persistence and postage stamps, Flowery Kingdom. —* For the varieties tested eight years | one woman told the members of the RS : the average yield of the first five is as] New York Federated Women's Clubs, H Beer-Drinking Nations, follows: Reliable, 32.70; Fulcaster, | point the road to success in literature | Great Britain leads in per capita 32.10; Ontario Wonder, 31.19; Wyan-|for her sex. Practical words, these, beer-drinking, consuming 1, 200,000,000 dotte Red, 30.66, and Dietz Longberry | and deserving of remembrance by | gallons a year, or thirty gallons to Red, 30.64, For those tested four years, | those who repine because their genius | each person. Germany is second, with the yield of the first three is as fol- | '8 not econ py editors. aaah | 1,400,000,000 gallons, which is twenty- jews: Pes AT: » | ence and postage stamps are valuable | seven gallons to each inhabitant. We Square Head, 2127 and The Post "n125, Tee roe dea eo be aiid well to stipu- | average only fifteen gallons apiece. — % late for “ideas” to begin with. BC ATES It will be noted that the order of yield Identified, for 1897 varies considerably from that Danger in Potassium. Mr. Bainbridge—Daughter, who is. of all the years in which the varieties A singular accident has been re-! this Richard Waddington Grimes IL j were tested, proving that the results | ported from a chemical factory, where | hear you talking about so much? \ obtained from a single year’s trial, is | @ Workman’s clothes became saturated Miss Bainbridge—He’s the little Dick not an accurate test of the value of a| With dust from the grinding of chlo-| Grimes you used to know, papa. He } variety but that it should be continued | T@te of potassium. A spark from the | writes poetry now. through at least two or three years in werkman’s pipe fell on the clothes, 2A EEE LE Sas =e | when the entire suit flashed into flame, It was down with the rain and up order that the test be of any material producing fatal results. value, with the parade. Drowning Codling Moths. Wormy apples may be prevented by placing barrels half filled with water in the orchard just as the trees are about to open their blossoms. The moths, which fly between sunset and 10 p. m., can be captured easily by suspending over the water in the bar- Catarrh TOO COOD TO BE FREE! But send 25c and we wil; mail you a trial treatment of “5 Drops.” Cured Nervous Prostration, Rheumatism, —4 and Stomach Trouble, ; W possible of extinction. Every should take energetic measures to pro- tect its borders. We raise troops and spend millions to keep out foreign in- vaders when they come in the form of men. Why not spend money as freely when it is necessary to repel an insect son who has accepted her work, and is doing it faithfully,( whatever it is. This designating others by their casu- al employment prevents one from mak- ing real distinctions, from knowing persons as persons. A false standard is set up in the minds of those who classify and of those who are classi-| jnyasion? fied. e Sage ear The Grain Weevil. a 40: jetween. “Clandia could have married that A bulletin sent out from the Indiana experiment station says: Numerous inquiries have recently come to the experiment station concerning a ‘small insect which is described as doing great damage to the wheat in gran- aries. With one exception no speci- bashful rich man if it hadn’t been for his sister.” “What did she have to do with it?” “Why, she did the courting, and she kept changing her mind.” Soon Ready. Enthusiastie Amateur—Oh, mamma, there’s such a picturesque old bond! I want a snap shot at hi Tuffffold Knott (noticir mera was pointed in it till I run me finge miss. The but from the descriptions given it is very evident that the insect is one of the grain weevils which commonly in- fest wheat stored in bins. One of the most common of these little beetles is Calandria granaria, a “small, dark reddish snout beetle, which deposits its eggs upon the grain. These eggs soon hatch into small, footless larvae, that eat out the substance of the kernels, and become full-grown in a few weeks. They then change to pupae and scon after again transform t the irection)— | rough me ahead.— « whiskers, Go s your trunk s your grippe. nger than fiction, ' MEN AT WORK OR ON PLEASURE BENT ST. JACOBS OIL are always subject to some ‘to adult beetles. There are several ‘broods each seasop, so they may be found at almost any time during the summer and autumn. While there are several species of these grain weevils, the same remedy will do for all, As these insects penetrate all through the entire bulk of grain, it is necesiary to apply some substance that is equally ACCIDENTAL HURT PHYSICAL STRAIN, is a good friend in such times of need ; it cures surely. mens have accompanied the letters, | rel a lighted lantern. They are then attracted by the light and eventually find themselves in the water; 10 lan- terns to 40 trees is ample. I tried this plan and succeeded beyond question. Last season I omitted to do it, and got caught with the worm again. This season I do not propose to be caught, so am getting ready my barrels and Janterns. My contention is that the moth is captured before she has de- posited her eggs in the eXpanded blooms.—American Gardening, Farm Buildings Too Far Apart.—We see quite frequently houses and barns located quite a distance apart, so far indeed that it requires several minutes’ time to go from one to the other. If house and barn are only 100 feet too far apart, and we make but three trips back and forth each day, in a week’s time we have traveled about an extra mile and in twenty years will have gone a thousand miles out of our way, or farther than necessary. We would think it a hard task indeed if com- pelled to start out once even in twenty years and walk a thousand miles with- out any compensation therefor.—hx, Dried Blood as Stock Food.—The Massachusetts Ploughman says that dried blood is rapidly gaining favor with western experimenters as a food for catile, sheep and hogs. It is mixed with meal and baked in cakes and fed in this way. A very little of the blood is sufficient. This has not as yet come into general use among farmers, who} have so far only used the dried blood — © FF) as a fertilizer. (TRADE MARK.} MOTHER AND 3 DAUGHTERS CURED BY ‘‘5-DROPS.” Swanson Rheumatic Cure Co., Chicago, July 25, ’98. ~—rwT. PARE I think “5 DROPS” is the best medicine in the world; it has done me so much good. Before using “5 DROPS” I could hardly lie in bed long enough to go to sleep. I would have to get up and walk around, or sit up in bed. don’t know what was the matter with me, but I was suffering all through me and my body was so tender that re of the time I could hardly lie on the softest bed. As it has benefitted me so much have recommended it tomy raves Three of my daughters have sent to you for “6 DROPS;” also two of my lady friends. One of my daughters was suffering terribly with her stomach, and was all bloated up until she molgned 174 pounds, but after she took ‘5 DROPS” her weight came down to 146 pounds—her normal weight—and she is all pas again. She t! there never was such modicine made. I myself think itis splendid. MRS. M. A. MATTINGLY, Collbran, Col. Mr. Ira Sargent, Dunbar (Neb.), also writes under date July 25, '98, that he is cured of Rheumatism, Stomach Trouble and Catarrh, “I want to write you in regard to my case of STOMACH TROUBLE and RHEUMATISM. I commenced one year ago to take ‘5 DROPS’ and I can tell you to-day that though I am 75 YEARS OLD and past, I feel like a new person. I don’t want to be without ‘5 DROPS.’ ‘5 DROPS’ has the ponisect being the best medicine on the market. It has cured a bad case of CATARRH ere and has another almost cured, Please accept my thanks for the favors I have re- ceived at your hands, IRA SARGENT,” If you have not sufficient confidence, after reading these letters to rerid for three large botties for $2.50 which will surely cure you, then send for a $1.00 bottle, whict, contains cnough medicine tomore an eatisfy you of its wonderful curative: 03. » 66 5 DROPS”? cx This wonderful curative gives almost lostane soviet sation Permanent cure for Rheumatism, Sciatica. Neuralgia, Dys~ Picidaches, Heart Weakness, Voothachs. Earache, Group, be Grivne, Malt Sees Nambnes:, Bronchitis, and kindred diseases. . so i mal 66 79 is the name and dose. Large bottle (300 doses) $1.00, prepaid by 5 DROPS” nailor express; three bottles 82.50. Sola Dtip bytes ead. out agents. AGENTS APPOINTED IN NEW TERRITORY, WRITE TO-DAY. SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO., 167 Dearborn St., Chicago, Il. “IF AT FIRST YOU DON’T SUCCEED,” TRY APOLIO Tuth country in. Minnesota. ‘Tne best location and cneapest land in the country. Maps and Circulars f Address, eee EOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner, St. Paul, Minn

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