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About The Norfolk weekly news-journal. (Norfolk, Neb.) 1900-19?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1902)
THE NORFOLK NEWS : FRIDAY , OCTOBER 21 , 1002. 1 The Rood times of 1002 , when a fnt liojr brought $ 20 , will long bo remem bered. I The aster , wo find , Is subject to more Insect pests than nny ( lower , which wo try to grow. Clean gralnflelds arc almost Impossi ble where there Is neither rotation of crops nor sheep. The largest and handsomest apple grown Is the Wolf River , and It Is nt the same time the moat worthless. ' We note that one of the reclaimed lake beds In a western state Is afford ing the finest kind of duck shooting this fall. ' The easiest way to keep a good hired girl In the farm home Is to get a good looking hired man. We know that this plan works. : There Is quite a risk In holding hogs ' nt this season of the year , and Just as .soon as they are flt for market It Is best to let them go. Wo sometimes think that a man's reputation suffers almost as much to be known as small , mean and stingy as to be rated as dishonest. The pansy bed has been a delight all summer , the cool , moist season having contributed to the very best develop ment of this favorite flower. I Q ' A cornfield Infected with both pocket gophers and wild morning glories is lu a bad fix , and the sooner such a field la .turned into pasture the better. ft ' The canna roots should now be taken up and set on the floor of the cellar. .Let them dry out , and they will be all ready for planting next spring. The geraniums which have bloomed in the garden this summer may b taken up , potted and if well cut bacV . will afford a lot of bloom all winter. 1 A clover sod Is an Ideal preparation for almost any sort of crop. There should bo at least twenty acres of such land available each year on every qua * ' ter section farm. ' If the hogs of the northwest manage to get away with all the soft corn there Is In the fields this year and noS get the cholera , it will be a piece oi .rare good fortune. Twenty thousand Americana hav invaded the Canadian northwest this season and have cither bought or homcstcadcd a vast tract of the fertile laud of that region. Great Britain Imports yearly nearly $100,000,000 of butter , and Denmark furnishes seven-tenths of it and makes it largely out of dairy rations imported .from America. This ought to be stopped. The Hibernal apple Is every way as poor as It looks to be. The most that can bo said in Its favor is that it is BO hardy that it will probably do fairly .well where other apples cannot be .grown. They say that a goose will live to be 'Seventy years old , though Just why this bird should be so long lived it is hard to see when the more useful hen lays and cackles herself out inside of four or five years. I Where we live , while the second crop of clover was unusually fine and full of bloom , there is hardly any seed set , con tinuous wet and cold weather during the blooming season having kept the bumblebees from working. More money Is made from the Ben Davis apple than from any other vari ety. It is red for one thing , grows large and keeps well. It holds its own as a market apple in spite of the fact that the quality is of the poorest ' "We came across a properly fed rape- field the other day. It was full of seemingly bare stalks of rape a foot or nioro high , these covered with little buds and shoots , tender and toothsome , iwhlch the hogs nipped with eagerness. It seems queer that a man will work hard on a farm for thirty years to accumulate a little property and then fall an easy victim to some shell game fakir whom he knows nothing -about. More men of sixty need guard ians than have them. i It has been demonstrated the past season that the soil of Cuba will pro duce the much wanted sea Island cot ton In the greatest perfection , n staple three and a half Inches In length being grown. This fact makes any laud .which . will grow this kind ot cotton worth over $100 per acre , People are being compelled to study simplicity In the matter of living whether they wish so to live or not. It Is getting to be Impossible to secure the help In the homo which Is absolute ly Indispensable to the putting on of any stylo. Much Is being written of the agricul tural possibilities of Alaska , but If farming Is ever carried on there there will have to bo a different rule for the hired man us to his hours of work. From sunup to sundown would mean about twenty-four hours up there. There Is a good deal In the papora about ginseng and the great profits connected with growing this plant. It Is , however , a very Infant Industry , oa there uru less than twenty-five neros of ginseng all told In this country , half of which Is found In two counties In the state of New York. The Increasing use of machinery on the farm has of course Increased the number of accidents happening to the men who operate It , but after all wo have noted that more men have been killed this year by sliding off from loads of hay and grain on to pitchforks than In any other way. It Is no small thing In his favor that the farmer never has to sell his produce on tick or keep book accounts or dun or sue people. He just expects and gets the cash for all he has to sell , while the merchant has to charge things and carry a line of credit which often amounts to as much us his capital stock. The traveling public will have to reckon with the automobile as n horse scarer all over the country. These ma chines are going to come Into general use and before five years will bo so re duced In price that common people who can afford to keep a horse will have them. The average horse Is very much afraid of them. The * buffalo grass and the blue Joint grass , the two principal native grasses of the western prairies , have never , so far as we know , been successfully propagated from seed upon land which has been under cultivation. Like other wild things , they shun civilization and disappear with the Indian , buffalo , coy ote and rattlesnake. The localities where the biggest crops of corn were raised during the late census year , taking an average yield for a whole county , were two counties in Illinois , three in Indiana and one In Pennsylvania , the average yield for the flvo counties being over fifty-two bushels per acre , TIpton county , Ind. , leading with 53.7 bushels per acre. Best beefsteak is quoted at 4-1 cents a pound In the city of Berlin , the same liluxl which Is obtainable in this coun try for 23 cents. Other meats arc also scarce and high priced. It seems queer that for the benefit of the few stock raisers In that country the government should see flt to bar out the cheap meat products of this and other coun tries. Nineteen hundred and two has been n sort of freak season. Wo have noted more abnormal growths among fruits , grains and vegetables than we over did before. Potatoes appeared in large nodules on the vines , corn grew unusu ally tall and set from two to four ears on a stalk , cabbage and celery have gone to seed the first season , while strawberries and raspberries set a second end crop of fruit. A farmer friend of ours after thirty years spent in peace and quiet on his farm , having retired to live in town , thought he would take an active Inter est In politics this fall and so came up as a candidate for an olllce. lie tells us that while he knew there was a good deal of meanness In men he still had no Idea of the depth of their total depravity until ho got into politics. He says he can hardly now trust his best friends. There are two things about which nothing bad is ever said the brome grass and alfalfa. The former Is of al most inestimable value to all that large territory where timothy and the clovers will not do well for lack of suf ficient moisture , while alfalfa Is prov ing the redeemer of a principality of heretofore worthless lands In the west. No fact la better proved than this where grass can be made to grow there will follow all other good things in an agricultural way. One of the best farm tenants wo have como across Is a1 Swede with a large family. He has worked the same farm for thirteen years and has al ways made money for his landlord and for himself , while the farm Is In a more productive state than ever be fore. This landlord Is wise enough to treat his tenant liberally , furnishing him good stock and seed and such a share of the crop and farm income that his tenant can prosper. The dairy and chickens kept on this place alone con stitute a pretty good income. The government can sometimes in terfere with the common business of the people to their great advantage. In Franco the government assumes to reg ulate the breeding of the horse , and none save sires registered by the gov ernment is used. The result la that all the world goes to Franco for Its fine draft sires. The Danish govern ment takes a hand In the creamery business of that country and by com pelling the scientific education of the dairymen and butter makera and In spection of the product monopolizes the English market To some extent Amer ican enterprise la accomplishing here what legal and governmental Interfer ence la accomplishing there , but as yet not In nearly so cfllcicnt a manner. II01V Iin HOT A STAltT. Ten yours ago ho wan n common In- borer living In a Hinall wostoru town. Ho had a wife and four children , and , us hln labor WUH of the unskilled rL ho rarely rocolvod moro than $ l.f > ( ) per day. Deducting his lout time , his iivor- age earnings were not over $100 per year. It la ousy to BOO that with nurh a Hinall Income he would have but little loft after tmroly supporting himself and family. He had the honorable am bition to do Homothlng bettor ; but , beIng - Ing without capital to make a Htart , It seemed to be n hopoloas cam * . Finally ho hit on thla plan : Ho rented flvo acrea of good land near his home at $ il per aero. Ho hired a man to plow and drag It , then ho planted one aero of onions , one acre of cabbage , unu IUTO of potatoes , one aero of popcorn , half an aero of turnips and half an aero of melons and cucumhors. Ankle from what ho paid out to have some horse cultivation of the crop ho , wltli. his wlfo and children , took care of those crops. Now hero la the result : Thm > hundred bushels of onions at TO cents , $210 ; cabbage crop , ifSO ; potatoes , $ r > 0 ; popcorn , ? l.r > ; turnips , $20 ; melons and cucumbers , $00 ; a total of $105 , or as much , deducting what he paid out foi rout and help , as ho had over earned In a year when working for others by the day. In addition he had all his family wanted to use of the crops grown , and the entire crop was grown and disposed of Inside of flvo months , leaving him seven months to work out as ho had always done. Of course ho could have done bettor If ho had had his own loam and tools. The case Is cited Just to show what a man can do who has absolutely nothing but his hands to work with. It proved a get ting out of the woods , a stop In ad vance for him , ' and others may do the same thing , perhaps not quite so well , perhaps hotter. A 1VET SUMMER'S COMPENSATIONS. Willie crop losses wore severe and almost total In valley locations during the past ittiinmor by reason of the un usual floods all through the west and northwest territory , the compensations of a wet season are not to bo over looked. Throughout all the region no drenched flvo previous years of short rainfall ruined the water powers , mode brooks of the rivers , dried up the springs , exhausted the subsoil mois ture , converted lake beds Into corn- Uolds , killed the trees both In grove and orchard and ruined the pastures. The downfall of thirty-six Inches of water and in many localities much more during the months of May , Juno , July and August has wrought out a marvelous transformation. The rivers are once more bunk full , every spring n-spoutlng , the earth saturated to a depth of ten foot or more , the lake bed cornfield Is converted Into n lake once more , all tree life has made a phenom enal growth , and pastures have been knee deep , us in Juno , all summer. It is all In line with nature'sway } of bal ancing things up , and all will feel bet tor to think on the blessings brought by the rains rather than on the losses they may have entailed. DEAUTY AXI ) UTILITY. We have growing on the lawn a Wealthy apple tree which Is very at tractive and symmetrical in appear ance , and , looking ut it , wo arc im pressed with the fact that we might of ten sot out valuable fruit trees for or nament and shade in place of the other kinds which boar no fruit. There is no handsomer lawn tree than the cherry if properly cared for , with Its thick and glossy follago , profuse bloom and rare red fruit. Wo lately passed by the town residence of a man who had set a row of r.pple trees In front of his home outside the sidewalk , and they were producing lots of nice apples for him and the public as well. Where util ity can bo practically combined with beauty it should always bo done. THE GUAVEIj ROAD. Wherever u piece of graded highway on the black prairie soils of the coun try has been graveled a very practical object lesson has been given of the value of this method of making a good road out of a dirt road. We think that two applications of the gravel are much better for the road than where the whole amount la put on at once , the flrst coat of four inches to be al lowed to Incorporate with the muck soil and form a good foundation for a later coat of about four or six Inches more gravel. Thus built , supposing the roadbed is properly drained , such a road will last indefinitely , with only a scant repairing from year to year. GRASS IHIVniNO TWINE. The new kind of binding twine made from the wire grass of the northern peat boga Is giving excellent satisfac tion , the grain raisers of the Dakotas preferring It to twine made of sisal or nmnllu , while It Is much cheaper In price. - Thus are the most seemingly worthless lands of the territory named made to become of great value. We once owned a farm upon which there was one of these wire grass peat boga and often used to wonder what on earth It could ever be used for. Wo have found out. WHAT HE HAS TO I1UY. The man who lives and works In town has to buy hay , corn , oats , poul try , eggs , milk , cream , butter , meat , vegetables , fruits , flour , meal , fuel and a host of other things which enter Into the dally living of n family , while a man on a farm can produce all these things named and have them of the very best The town mun flnda that a salary looks like 30 cents when he baa bought all these necessaries of llvlug. Rapid Progress Made Toward Resumption of Mining ; , COAL DIGGERS ARE UU8Y AQAIN. Owing to Dad Condition of Machinery There Is Some Delay In Starting Breakers Some Fall to Get DacU Their Old Places. WIIkoHlmrro. Pa. , Oct. 23. Hapld progress Is being made by all the coal companies In the anthracite region to ward a general resumption of conl minim ; . The Hiisponslnn olllelally oniloil at 7 o'clock thla morning , but the quantity of coal that will ho mined thla week will not be grout. It la not hollovod 25 per cent of the normal production will ho reached until some tlmo next week. There are a number of mines that will not bo In condition for operation for several montliH and there aru others that will not bo r udy > for the nion under two or three wookn. In a great number of colllorlos there will have to ho much timbering denote to prevent "BquoozoB. " The nearly nix months' . Idleness Imn In many In- HtunccB rusted breaker machinery , which may CIUIBO sumo delay In atari- Ing. Notwithstanding the many draw backs , however , the company olllelula are confident that there will ho plenty of coal for distribution before real cold weather seta In. Thousands of men of cvory claaa made application for work. There wore many disappointments , however , principally among the engineers and pumpmen. They want tholr old posi tions back , and In many casca they failed. It Is the opinion of the workers that the superintendents will find a way to re-employ all of thorn. The union men say the companies will got rid of all Incompetent men hired during the suspension , because when the col- llorlos begin working full tlmo , the nonunion men will not ho ahlo to fill tholr places properly One of the developments of the day was the great number of mon who have been employed throughout the fltrlko who loft tholr plaros and re turned to tholr homes. Hundreds worn paid off by the several coal companies In thla valley and the same la true of the other regions. Among thoao wcro clerks who will return to the ofllcca of the real companies ; men who were employed In other occupations and wcro thrown out of work on account of the strike ; mon who were strikers , but went back to work , and some coal and Iron policemen. It Is expected more of those men will null work In the course of the next few days. They are disliked by the unionists and It is probable the relations between them will not be Improved once they get working aldo by side In the mines. Celebrations In honor of the ending of the strike were continued In many towns of the Wyoming valley. President Mitchell Is now engaged in preparing the minors' side of Clio case for presentation to the arbitra tion commission. He will appear be fore the tribunal and will have with him a number of assistants. Mr. Mitchell had nothing to say regarding the situation , hut it Is evident from his manner that ho Is quite satisfies with the progress of ovonts. The troops In this region have not yet received orders to leave for home and none la expected now until after the collieries are well started. There has boon no trouble In this region be yond a few fights , the result of pay-day among nonunion men. Nonunion Miners Badly Beaten. Scranton , Pa. , Oct. 23. Three Ital ians who have been working at the Ijpdge washcry of the Lackawanna company during the strike wcro set upon by a mob who were returning from work last night and given a bed beating. Two of them were rescued by the city police and taken to the hospital. Joseph Braun got away from -the crowd before the police ar rived and ran to Bellovue. Four men set upon him again and after beating him Into Insensibility threw him over a fence Into the yard of a dwelling , where he was found In a pool of blood His Injuries , while serious , will not provo fatal. Men Must Slrjn Contract. Shenandoah , Pa. , Oct. 23. The men who reported for work at the Vulcan colliery were told that they would have to report at the company's store and sign a contract before being rein stated. A few of them signed the pa per as requested , but many of them refused to sign and returned homo. Su perintendent Jones said : "Wo simply ask the men to sign an agreement to the effect that they will not Interfere In any way with nonunion mea or with the men now at work. " Glass Workers Strike. Washington , Pa. , Oct. 23. Nearly 3,000 men employed at the two plants of the Hazel and Atlas Olass compa nies went out on a strike last evening ns a result of the refusal of the offi cials to recognize the glass workers' union. The plants were closed. William C. Spangler Dead. Lawrence , Kan. , Oct. 23. William C. Spangler , acting chancellor of the University of Kansas In 18S9 and 1S90 and again from 1000 to 1902 , died yes terday of consumption. Ho had been la falling health for many months. Football Player Injured. Iowa City , Oct. 23. In a game on the Iowa field yesterday , White , the Blmpson college left halfback , broke his collarbone , Ha will play no man this season. DOZEN MAY DE DEAD. . Ffvo Lose Lives In Fire and Seven Others Unaccounted For. | Chlear.o. Out. 2II. Four of the Hvo bodies tuknn to the inorKiio frcm the lire In the phuit of the ( llucone Hugur Hollaing company have boon Identi fied. They are : Otto Trapp , Kdwanl Htoluko , Andrew Wonollm , Jonoph Barry. It , Is almont certain that several tnoro bodies are lying In the riilnn , but the boat , of the debris has prevented - vented dromon from nmldnu any aout oh ami the exact number la not Known. Seventeen time checks have not boon returned to the superintend * out , but live of the men holding the missing chocks wore aoon near the ruins tlurlni ; the day A switchman declares that he saw four men slide down a wutor pipe , and It Is known that ono man fcimpml Into the river ami made his escape. This diminishes the list to twelve , granting that all the holders of the missing cheeks were killed with the exception of the men who have been anon. HOTEL FIRE IS FATAL. One Dead and Two Dying ao Result of Camp McKlnney Blaze. Camp MeKlmioy. II. a , Oct. 23. Ono woman Is dead , two men fatally Injured , anothed woman severely hurt and four othnra severely burned by flro , which destroy * d the hotel at Fairview - view at II o'clock Ihla morning. The ( load : Miss Smith , school teacher. The Injured : MutthluH , John Allen , engineer ; Mrs. Matthias , wlfo of the munugor ; Dr. Whtto , John LOVP. ilrugKlat ; two , whoso nninua are not known. The llro Blurted In the banomont ot the building , which was a llirce-story frame structure. Meaner Information obtainable makes It apparent that the fatally In jured jumped from the third story. The local supply of remedies waa ex- Initiated anil appeals for surgical and nursing acalstanco were made to Greenwood. Mrs. Schley Seriously III. Austin , Tox. , Oct. 23. Admiral Schley's departure for Sun Antonio baa boon postponed owing to the con tinued Illness of Mrs. Schloy , who wont to a hotel Immediately upon the arrlvul of the party. When she loft the oust , Mrs. Schloy was threatened with pneumonia and she Is still too weak to participate In any of the fes tivities attending upon her husband's welcome. The admiral received un en thusiastic reception here and was given a banquet last night Missouri Pythlans Elect Officers. St. Joseph , Oct. 23. The grand lodge of the Knights of Pythias of Missouri elected the following ofncorn after ono of the moat Interesting con tests In the history of the order : 13. O. Hames of St. Louis , grand chan cellor ; George C. Crowthor of St. Jo seph , grand vlco chancellor ; W. D. Settles of Fayotto , grand prelate ; John M. Smith of Sprlngllcld , grand master of cxcheouor : John H. Holmes of St. Louis , grand keeper ot recordo uud Heal. Coach Lakln May Lose Foot. St. Jofiopli. Oct. 23. Coach Lakln of the Ensworth medics Is In the hos pital in this city , suffering with brok en bones of his right foot , which may result in amputation. The foot was Injured In a football game last Satur day with the St. Mary's college eleven and Lakln neglected to procure proper medical attention. Ilia homo Is In Buffalo. Ho came to St. Joseph a month ago to coach the medics. Leroy Gets Decision Over Rooney. St. Joseph , Mo. , Oct. 23. Spike Leroy - roy received the decision over Peter Tloonoy of Omaha bore last night after fifteen rounds of milling. Rooney was the aggressor up to the twelfth round , when Leroy'a left Jaba to the wind and Jaw wore him down. The deci sion of Referee Fitzgerald was not wholly satisfactory to the spectators , many of whom thought ho should at least have had a draw. Cashier Is Under Arrest. Snn Francisco , Oct. 23. Robert Zatamea , a young man who Is under nrrost hero on telegraphic Instruc tions from the east , is wanted for the alleged embezzlement of about $10,000 from E. Cardlza , the New York rep resentative of the European house of R. Fabian & Co , Zatamea had been employed by Cardlza for several years and recently was promoted to the po sition of cashier. TELEGRAMS TERSELY TOLD. Former President Hauser of Switz erland died at Borne Wednesday as the result of a paralytic stroke. Frank Morris , the novelist , was op erated upon at San Francisco Wednes day for appendicitis. The operation was very successful. The trustees of the University of Chicago , by a vote Of 13 to 3 , decided In favor of segregation of the sexes In the "Junior" colleges. Captain Salck of the Hamburg- American steamship Valcsca , the chief engineer and four seamen have been drowned at Wlllemstad , Curacoa. Fire Wednesday night destroyed the greater part of the business section of Mass City , Mich. , on the Copper Range road , entailing a loss of J50- 000. Hector A. Holmes , who is said to have taken out the flrst patent on the making of twine binders , died Wednes day night in Chicago , at the ago of Eoventy-three years. George Burrus , the soldier sta tion at Fort McPherson , who was ar rested at Atlanta as George B. Tay lor , one of the murderers ot the Meeks family in Sullivan county , Missouri , ban boon ra'emH f'otn pit * -"lY. White Ribboners Finish Their Labors at Portland. ABSTINENCE IN THE SCHOOLS. Resolutions Are Adopted Fzvorlnrj Use of Text Books on the Sub ject Illinois Is Awarded tlia Prize Membership Banner. Portland , Me. , Oct. 23. With thn hymn , "God lie With You Till Wo Moot Attain , " and the benediction , tlici Kreiil convention of the National Woman's ( Jlirlntlu.ii Temperance union cuiiio to mi end lant night The moot , lug pluco for next year bus not been decided , but the belief Is general that It will be In uomo city ot the mlddlo West. The convention bognn last Friday and every moment of the | "ograrn tlmo was full of lntero.it ItoportH were made from ovnry part of ho IliiliI and pioinlnont workers for the cause were heard. The general hessloini were held In the Jefferson tlieat.-r , hut all the churches throw wl. ! . > their doors for overflow meetings , u whlc It there were u great number. Mrs L M. N. StovetiB waa ro-elocto.l prost dont. II WUB votoil to Bond n l.'ttor to President Roosevelt thanking him for his assistance In the arbitral lun ot the coal strike. The Milwaukee , Fort Worth. Sioux Falls ami Louisville unions oiuh asked that the convention bo hold In Us city next your. Hun Francisco and St Louis unked for the convention In lt)01 ) nnd Now Orleans and Portland Oro. , for 1805. The prize mombornlilp bnnn r , given by Frances Wllliml , was awuidcd la Illinois. MlBB Wlllard's native ! state. The following resolution wui adopt oil : "That wo ntnnd conunlit > d to the principle of compulsory H'lentlftc tomporuneo Instruction for a'l pupl'3 In all public schools of thla country Wn urge our organization everywhere to work for good , well graded text hooka on this subject and to oppoHo hooka that fall to tench total ubatln- once an revealed by modern s liuco " SUFFRAGISTS HURT IN A PANIC. Three Women Injured on Lait Regis tration Day In Denver. Denver , Oct. 23. Three women were more or leas seriously Injured during a rush of suffraglsta In thn county clerk's office on the last day of registration. The oHlco was crowded od with heelers of both par'"i. ! The panic waa 'caused by an ul'ereatloii between Alderman Patton ami Billy Green , a vote border. Blows were ex changed , utter which the alderman waa chased'through the crowd by Grooii , who flourished a big pistol. Mra. RIl/u Kellogg , a cripple who had boon Induced to leave homo to rogla tor , wua trodden under foot and had to he taken home'In an ambUnec. : Lake Mohonk Indian Cor.fsrrncc. Mohonk Lake , N. Y. , Oct. Ii : Tlia twentieth annual Lnko Mu . .mli In dlan conference opened hec : yoator day. Samuel J. Barrows , s-c rotary of the Now York Prison ai > < lutlon , wan elected president. Uls'.u p Potter of Now York made the op"i'icj ' ml dress. General Whlttlcsey i"sl u pa per , reviewing the work of t'i Indian bureau for the present year , it waa shown by tills report that th' > Indian aorvlco cost $700,000 less than last year. Of the amount exp ° n ; ii , ss per cent had been for st''ool pur poses. In the matter of ed-.i itlon , It was shown there arc 28,61 i Indians attending schools , an Incrcaao of 1,000 over the year 1901. Meet Nextln Cleveland. New London , Conn. , Oct. .3. The annual business meeting of the Amer ican Missionary association was held yesterday and considerable business was transacted. It was reported that one annual mooting for all the Congre gational Missionary societies had not been Jointly arranged , nor any plan for one magazine for all societies , also that It had been found e 1 edlent to have but ono treasurer for the three societies , with headquarters In Now York. A program waa submitted and accepted providing for a limltol mem bership and a responsible voting mem bership of the association The next annual convention will be held In Cleveland. May Never Solve M > : tery. Washington , Oct. 23. At tor hover ing between life and death s'nro last December , Mrs. Ada Gilbert Dennis , the victim of one of the most mysteri ous assaults In the history of the Dis trict of Columbia , died at the Garflold hospital yesterday. With nor death the last hope of the soluti : i of the mystery has disappeared. 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