HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1890-05-30, Page 7-FOt AND ABOUT THE LADIES.
Thin
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result, they practically train and sway
their children as they will ; for when
there ie entire- syznpathy between two per -
wine, the stronger one is neoesitrily the
iVforce with both.—Sundayrc:,IVes.
loomiaftworyiloirio•••••••"
Which ,Every Woman Ought
-to Know.
.HINTS FOR HOUSEKEEPERS,
Frills, Fashions, Fancies, Foibles and
Setiaiestintageteteeteeee, .
1
HeAr TO BECOME HANDSOME.
Superfluous flesh troubles the minds of
many persona in addition to its physical
hard eneomeness. How many women do we
`'Ir" -*daily meet who would give all they have
and stop at no inconvenience or sacrifice
could they by doing reduce themselves
to the .lines of grace and beauty. The
Duchess of Marlborough, who lately re-
turned to this country, has amazed those
former American friends who knew her as
greatly to her discomfort, not to say mor-
tifieation. Now she is as pretty and lithe
a figure as one could hope to see.
How did she work the transformation?
WeliliCoording tb an investigator, who has
given the world the benefit of his or her
investigations through the medium of the
New York World, she offered an adipose
specialist a1fat fee to take her in training,
and pledged herself to carry out minutely
his commands. Here are some of them :
Not a morsel of bread, cakes, rolls or
pastry.
Neeetnea_Qaffea,_nhoeolatsor_aweet-wine,
No potatoes, peas, rice, parrots, turnips,
macaroni, cheese, butter, cream, custard,
jellies or eweete.
Not a drop of ioe-water.
No warm teethe.
No flannel, and only enough clothing to
keep from taking cold.
No bedroom heat.
Not a drop of any liquid food at meals.
In place of bread she had fruit, a section
of aAale or orengei some freeh grapes, her.iiiesfferries -or-stewed -frait-heing-tui6d
when? ordinarily one craves a bit of bread
or a swallow of water. Her diet was
limited tqtwo meals a day—breakfaet at
10 and dinner at 7—with the following bill
of fare to select from : Rare, lean meats,
game and poultry, soft-boiled eggs, . sea
foods toast, lettuce, spinach,' celery,
°name fruits.
Sleadiasa_b_alLaiegailt---wat
The Frizzy Bang Has Gone.
An entirely new style of hairdressing is
threatened, says a faehion writer. In
Paris the frizzy bang has meekly subsided
to give the Javanoise bead dreesee a
°hence. Fashion appears to have gone
daft on those peculiar ornaments, and the
great jewelers of the Rue de le. Paix have
been ordbred to reset diamond e of more
..,eeeeinetestreareAeaeieesteaeata teedeeeete _
of -those -fiat metal ornaments. At the
o,pere a few weeks ago a dazzling light in
socilei,y appeared with her hair
dreeeed perfectly flat to her head, on one
side, right over the ear,
anoarnment as
large and as fiat as an individuallutter
plate, composed of diamonds and pearls,
and medallions as large as an Englieh
penny, of the same gems, going 'round to
the other ear, formai the forehead -jtiit at
the line of the heir.
A YounPrincess' Taste.
The young princesses of Wales take after
old point laoe, and a long tulle veil caught
with orange bloesome. The bouquet was
of white roses.
Fashionable Fancies.
The fashionable fad at preeent ie for an-
tiquities
A. band of ribbon tied with a bow aroand,
the wrist is a new !nation.
Some of the flowereeeen on the new bon-
nets are an impassibility in nature.
The tailor-made jacket and vestall lame
has started in to be very fashionable.
In light summer silks any one can see
with half an eye that stripes will prevail.
favor, the most popular designe being
flo were -
About the only nautical feature of the
albatross tea gowns is the name of the
material.
Orchid jewelry is the latest novelty,
and has oreated an immediate and decided
sensation.
It is a peculiarity of the bonnets this
season that the smallest are said to be the
most expensive.
Masculine fashions are adopted by the
4 II • • • •n _thin
''I''Crettattee,d"'
Straw hats and bonnete are already seen.
There axe already women who will get
ahead of the beaeon.
Among the handsomest of the fans now
exhibited for eale are those of natural col-
ored ostrioh feathers.
Ornamental hairpins now include bees
and butterflies of the very natural looking
kind that come only from Paris.
There is a bewildering variety in sash
ribbonthis season and they are wide euough
to come -up under the wearersarms. -
In the Scotch tartan dress. goods, the
incenspioStone patterns are herd -by
the dressmakers to be the most elegant.
Old-fashioned silver pocketbooks in the
form of a shell, suola as oar grandmothers
used to carry, have come back again.
The country house must now be fur-
nished as near as possible in the India
style, which is as useful ae it is cool and
ornamental.
Mousquetaire gloves oome in all the new
and beautiful shades; and the cities with the
greatest number of buttons -teen quitike-SET—
There are -many so-called Easter novel-
ties .in leather goods, including the new
leather chatelaine with leather ornaments.
Special gime jars or vases are now made
to hold violets. They are mounted in silver
and are beautiful enough to -find a place on
some table in the drawing -room.
Why 1900 Will Not be a Leap Tear
The question is often asked, " Will the
year 1900 WA1p yr ?" It will not.
When Jahus Caesar revised the calendar
he appointed an extra day every four years,
and his calendar lasted until A. D. 1582.
Now the ordinary year is 11 minutes and
11 seconds short of being 365 days iu
length, so that thee isn't really a fail
'sized extra day to be added to February
every four years. CE133ar didn't know thia,
or didn't care about it, and for 1,600 years
we kept borrowing from the future, until
in 1582 we'd borrowed ten days. Pope
Gregory KILL started to correct this. He
ordered Ootober 5th, 1582, to be called
October 15th, and to square things, ordered
that oenturial years should not, as a rale,
be leap years.
But it leap year is omitted regularly
each hundredth year, we pay back nearly a
day too much; so Pope Gregory- further
ordered that -every oenturial year which
could be divided by 400 should be a leap
year after all. So tve borrow eleven
minutes each year from the future ; more
than pay our borrowings back by omitting
three leap years in three centuries and
finally square matters by having a loop
year in the fourth centurial year. This
arrangement io so exact that we borrow
more than we pay back to tbe extent of
only ono day in 3,866 years. Sixteen 131m-
dred was a leap year, 2,000 will b•4, hut
1,900 will not be. • Any Csntarial y-ar
can be dividnd by 4a0 will be a leap
"-Hartford Times.
rem and in their liking for tailor-made
gowns of tweed and cloth for day wear.
Navy-blue seems a favorite color with
them, perhaps out of compliment to their
sailor brother. Redfern is building two
neat dresses for the Princesses Victoria
and Mand. They are of gray -blue tweed,
interlined with threads of navy-blue. The
skirts are very simple, depending for style
on the way they are hung and arranged.
Above the hem three narrow bands of
navy-blue olothare stitched on. The coat -
like bodices open OR vests of navy-blue
cloth. Alto ether the gowns are quiet and
nno merge in -The extreme, and yet are
neat, trim, and very good style.—London
Star.
Fixing the Hair.
There was never more freedom shown in
the arrangement of the hair than to -day.
More attention is paid to the contour of
the head and face, and there ie less anxiety
to copy a set style. The two styles most
prevalent for everyday wear are the full
graceful coil of braids, whiohnovers the
baokof the head_ from—the—crown to the
nape of the neck, and the long Englieh
chatelaine of braids which hangs low at
the back of the neck. The front hair is
generally dressed in a very slight, light
bang, curved up a little at the sides, and a'
curl is sometimes carelessly arranged in
the centre, where the face will bear it. In
the evening the hair is worn very, high, in
all loo
,..d..—New York
pro.......mwmommisommormemor
EX PENSIVIC WAD8.'
-What /Kinds andnantitles of Food Uncle
San's Indians Eat.
Uncle Sam's bill for Indian supplies is
penally a large one, but, unlike the pension
charge, it does not increase as the numbers
dependent upon it diminish. Among the
articles for whioh the department are now
negotiating are the following : About 900,-
000 pounds bacon, 34,000,000 poundB beef
on the hoof, 1,000,000 pounds net beef,
270;000 pounds beans, 63,000 pounds
batting powder, 500,000 pomade corn, 480,-
000 pounds coffee, 8,500,000 Rounds flog
bread, 65,000 pounds hominy, 30,000
pounds lard; 700 bat:rale =see pert-, 17,003
pounds oatmeal, 450,000 pounds (sets. 125.-
000 pounds rice, 9,000 poande tea, 340,000
pounds salt, 280,00a pounds soap,: 920,000
pounds sugar and 70;000 pounds wheat.
Also blankets, woolen and cotton geode
(eonsisting in part of ticking, 13,000 yards;
standard calico, 106,099 yeactee drilling,
14,000 yards ; duck, free from all sizing,
28,000 yards ; denims, 15,000 yards ; ging.
ham, 330,000 yards; Kentucky jeans, 11,-
000 yards ; oheviot, 17,000 yards ; brown
•
drinkevery day, with lemon juice in it to
take away the flat taste. Cold water wag
denied her, and ales, frappes, champagne
and claret strictly forbidden. She was
even forced to forego the luxury of bath-
ing in w'tter, in place of • which she had
sponge and vapor bathe. - Every few days
she took a fast, allowing the system to
consume the adipose theme. While no
limit was put upon the pleasure of driving
or riding, etas was asked to select the
roughest, rockiest roads, and to walk from
five to ten miles a day in the open air.
This practice of self-denial the Dttohese
of Marlborough has persisted in for the
. last two years, and to -day she is perhaps
the handsomest woman of her ago in New
York society. She weighs about 140
pounds, her eyes are bright, her complexion
is 'ae clear and smooth as a school girl's ;•
She has. the .carriage of a cadet and the
health of a child of nature.
... Suggestion for Wives.
Here is a new wrinkle with regard to
roasted duck that some.good wife, fond and
foolish end out of faehion enough to care
about pleasing her husband, may enjoy
serving up to him some night when he
comes home a little more perplexed and
annoyed with business' than. usual. Take
the duck, whieh-has been roasted in the
' ordinary way with S5g09,nci union' dressing,
score it deeply with the carving knife,
Scatter into the furrows so formed salt and
. white or black peppe'r„ and pour over it a
glass or two of Burgundy warmed, not
hea-ted, so that it will .not chill the duck.
Baste the bird with the wine a few mom-
ents, cover it up, and let the -seasoning
seek well in, and when it ie served to your
lord and master it will be as much of a
revelation to him as was the far-famed pie
of -" four end twenty blackbirds," which
' was sat before the king. When this last
..1.•,;:f. ruers-1 is still lingeriag in his mouth,
re.eaae2 11f,, indt.ect worth living, then ask
ilii for y4.,ur new ep:iog 'uonnet or tell
hini that, 1.,:.0. mai is oui, or that "maru,w, '..
i,., ‘:,,iii,ng f...r a nice on visit .or that you
mo!. LI3 e.,.41 L4,:isi. 1)(4,31,-,,, ti,ed see how 13 ,
,,,,7i1! rn ..!:.; .1.1ic r...,1;.:01" Tinge' tincl't
iftl*i•t I
L u:1,y '<Iv, 1,1 F,/, i'. ' el,%ti of aarr.1.,4
At
out h iii:0,i4-iv.ii nod sapp., icg your W.hlarJ,
. rrI•4'. I.: e ••ndy ti-i'.g 1.,, e •l .,: ,, perfect
r., ) i.ill, (soli i.:i..4 neoll r• ,,,t aw.
..iiis X 41.1;" t4 tr, ,
I'll -e, lady .{:•-(14,-,. n-,.1 •• ,u..., (.13i, the henrt
-if !:•,,..,ry 1.:,1i1,:. ;,, mirin,H, 4,1;,, ttLi,.iis fiptt
- i.),to i•-n,,te.o. ,,, •,..,J L.,',J ' ,1$
Tribune.
To Decorate the Hone°.
Here is the advice of a decorator in
making over a house: Have your library
dark and rich, your dining -room bright in
coloring and your sleeping rootris as near
white or ouetard as possible, draping the
windows with lawn, . banishing carpets or
upholstered furniture. If the rooms are
very high a deep frieze will lower them,
end paper on the ceiling will also bring
them down. There are few floors that can-
not be rubbed, polished and filled in fir or
hardwood effe,cts. The cost of wood carpet
can be saved in doctor's fees. The cool,
clean, bright, colonial effect is to be pre.
ferred above every other period for -the
drawing room or, parlor. It costa moey,
to be sure, to appoint a house, but taste
goes a very long way.
4,
• A Bleach for the Hands.
There is an oldfashioned preparation
which our grandmothers made for whiten.
ing the hands; says the New York Tribune.
Two- , cakes of old-time brown Windsor,
Soap, a wineglass of t German cologne
and a wineglass .of lemon juice
added. In a day or two • the liquid
became incorporated with the soap 83 that
the mixture could bo molded into a cake.
Though -old,"'thie is an admirable prepara-
tion or bleach for removing stains from
the bands.
'the Cut of French Underwear.
The greatest simplicity prevaile in the
cut of all ?renoh undergarments. Any at-
tempt at elaboration of trimming or cut is
considered in the very worst taste.
Obc.misee are low and, eleevelese, with a
simple band around the neck ; they ate
'daintily trimmed with a deep fall of lace,
or laoo and iesertion, meeting a full front
finished with lace and insertion to the
waist line.
Girls' Schools.
In Paris there are five' professional
sebools for girls. These have a-courge
instruction embracing modern languages,
eoreestio economy, • industrisil designing,
and fitting garments, and accounts,
equipped with a kitchen and
f n-iaking corsets, feathers and
e a
i. -r st t );a srtioles of trade. Girls are
1.;Iricied ibt 14 years of\age and remain
see f.t.ir years.
Royal Wedding Dress.
rbe+ Engross of Austria h3. caused 3or
oftrit ;_; dress to be pritup and . made into
oet of vestments for th Chnr.th of St,
to,hew, ,in Pesth. The dress was'of
i311:i• brocade with silver threads, embroid-
o ull 'over with kautiful, gailands of
-s in silver. Her bridal ' wreath en-
anlembroidered picture of the vie -
winch is 4lo be hung up in the Loretto
kapcd of •tne same ohurch, which the
inpress selects for her devotioue,
vestmen,..s will be mad for tile servido itt
nor of the Virgin Mary in Alky.
Rio Is a rerfeet o:raze.
There Gael -us to be a oraZo for red this
ring, and this lurid hue is observable in
ay branches of my lady's toilet. Rod
oto and jackets of •box cloth are wiry
shionable for walking or 'driving, red
oaks are. worn ovrr evening gowns to ball
opera.. I HEM a girl on Twcnty•third
•
o u he E.ne,1;ne•-4sI•••,
H4tirp.1 L•5•••
or f,,til.wifte,
e;lc ad•-•
1,(r r:.ornhi-, p!'5.1.! A
'Nye e.'(1 .i • !t
tilt, ,;..,
hat,to k3t.4, 10)0 is 3; • • ,
‘470 11101y !'rrr. ,t141•,^•• I •• •t
t 1H ' .,d gi:oy
• :Eau., .41.
brit Lif, 4:q d'),' 9 • •4 71y.,•! it. hilly
nod i.',o. t, • r4 32/
f;rte 114; „ ; f.hc :Art' 11.1
4 (g 1113 fy1,4 t "110111. 00
'if IA53 4.0 „Ln.The fa
1;.•11:833 1,,,c1' yl•teh isel
-
3 x . • 4,C14• !,at the or
rent the other incri.ing in a way gowo
th brihn real lfearld's
co York Letter.
'foxy ilio Brides Dressed,.
Licit) are the cocturnes of four brides • at .‘
slaioaable vattlitiogo eelatday.
A flow !" of white cot led silk- and d nAh•
se and a tolic Caught wi•h
rite', of or:1,, go Wien:A:ft% • The bouquet
s of White l'OnS and villetS.•
A gown of whitu broande and t lace,
d tubi veil hold' hy a half w,.alb of
angio blc..1...;j1us. The bouquet was of s3.ti10
ans.
A gown of. witite satin adorred with
ther ,and v..11 caujit
th 1•ootht-r'5 Lat. 'lite
t wit sof wjtte violets and ocolit.4
A gown of white eatirihrocade aud rare
• •, 10. Ji b.r.,.1331.4)
t.rf.; ;, 1.0.1.
r,;4 •%,..
prrl 331 V.(4.11,1i •••hrld•
1•)' IY j)“I 3) who aro
pr • 1 ..... 1 ..;.1 for thiir e
..! 5., ,!•• ...Oats of their
,151„,,.3 i, ,.• 5,45 )1i ..s; readier to eo
• 4. 5. )i•Phi,45e at • eailedtte-tetking ,00
• •1.531, pari in their children's sur -
es 05 cejoyrnente of linowledge-attain-
-ee' readier to make good, RS fitr ata ,they an
can, all loosen to' thor children than to or
grieve with their children over those lessee. in
And what a ;oss of power to those parents
se parents is this hick of Eympit4ly with
their children TS8 chiLiren. There are;
however, t,nrents aho sympathize with
theitAthililten itt ali thinge ; aad, as a
14 35 close
toti'AeS
wi
fet,
NV1
ho
•11,Torro,
sinatestaaasanasaaraseasaciastigt
,000 yards; hickory shirting, 15,000
yards; calico shirting, 7,000 yards ; wineey,
2,000 yards); olothing, groceries, notions,
hardware, medical supplies, school books,
etc., anda long list of miscellaneous arti-
cles, such as harness, ploughe, rakes, forks,
etc., and for about 860 waggons required
for the service.
The British Museum Open at Night.
Thirty years have elapsed since a select
committee of the House of Gommone
-recommended that -the British museum
should beepenei to the paikAlte_betweenethee
7 an p.m. Throughout three
deoades official passivity has successfully
withstood innumerable effort° on behalf of
the people" to bring about this desirable
innovation. At length, however, those in
high places who emulate the conservatism
of Mrs. Partington, and tiling as tightly to
the " rest -and -be -thankful " policy as that
reactionary old lady did to her ocean
spurning broom, have been compelled to
comply with one moiety °lathe erecom
mendatFon pat :frward by the Parlia-
mentary committee of March,.1860. To
the other --namely that the National cia1-
lery should also be thrown open thrice a
week until 10 p.m.—they. will, in all proba-
bility, reluotantly accede thirty years
hence.—Galignani's Messenger.
Juvenile Murderers Guillotined.
---ig-arrfeittitritMilla ion s cause recen y
'by the execution in front of the gate of ..La
Roquette of two. juvenile murderers, aged
respectively 17 and 21. The had strangled
an elderly concierge in broad daylight in
the Rue Bonaparte, with a view to robbing
her—President Carnot was dissuaded from
sparing their lives, with a view to dispel a
current but deep-rooted impression among
the youth of the dangerous classes that it
is unlawful to guillotine "infants.", The
one hardship in their case was that fifty-
nine days were allowed to elapse between
their sentence and execution, and the delay
eaconraged them to hope for a commuta-
tion of their punishment. They met their
fate tosith courage.—Cor. London Telegraph:
Initiating His Superiors.
Little Gamin Flaanterag—Say, Granny,
how much is dem apples?
Dear Old Apple Woman—Oh, go 'way
wid yea; sure it's not a penny yea have at
all, at all !
Little Gamin Fiaunterag--Well, haven't
I got der right ter go oat shoppin', all der
same ?
lic Jacet.
Hailstone—One last request..
Reporter—What's that ?
Hailstone—Please 'don't say I was. as big,'
as a hen's egg, .
The Reverses Of War. •
"itt times of peace.," said the Major, "
• o m ary lis.
ot ilit b'a
"
'• rd. in 4'1/1'104 (..f war ?
es. " 134:1•.4 c;,ane to me. That's
1, how 1 1331 i.7.ty
•
!Don't ToY With Your lily
Many people aro trouhled ••• h
eyes and try all sort of ',wish:
is onoof the rout vadaah!e o.•
body. Unfortunately for ;:arele,4
it in also fine of the most di,lica
not pay to trifle with it'. The
treat itching is to un a 001 •
water wash every f e ileum
no good, go to a phyiici n •
specialty of eye diseaSS,
Journal.
•
lrema'is Doctor in t.' rZiir •
t f • ' 1:114r.3 4; •,,r t'; • c,",31id
ti;• -nu 1)4;1.1i44 5,4 0,011 in a
,
- - riw•Iterr•;, eteivels at; 4..bieh the
• ' r.1 31 .1, 0 ,crtiavbcrry is the attraction
' . e • ;
•" ' ' , :5,, ,- 5, ,„ ;. ; , ,, r of men who Can
... . 4 „ ,,, ....• ,.,„ _ 1 ..: ,,t Na %.vh3 can put
h
, , 554 :5: i,, t ',,reo /ides .,8
o ; , - a e • d : , • , a ' •
; (
. •
A STORY OR THE DAT.
Something About the Famous Mrstatile
hiaY^Pole rrected hi 1061.
The custom of raising May -poles on that
first day a May originated probably bt-
the thirteenth or fourteenth century. rik
was quite *general in Great Britian and
other European countries for seven&
hundred years, but after the advent a
Puritanism it died out almost completely..
The most renowned London May -pole. and
the one longest in existence, was that put
up in the Strand immediately after the
restoration. The Parliament of 1644
ion ityijozu
and enforced the decree bypenaletery,
penalties". When the ties, again
gave way to their May -day jollity,
in 1661, they determined to plant
the tallest of these poles they could find in
the most conepiouous part of the Strand.
They brought it in triumph, with drumit
beating, flags flying, and mneio
from Scotland Yelrel in the opening ot
Little Dinry Lane, opposite the Somerset
'Mime, where they erected it. The lano.
was afterward known _ps " Bfityliale.
Alley." " That stately , cedar erected in
author. " was ooneidered as' a type cd
' golden days ' about to return with the
Stuarts." It was raised by seamen, ex-
pressly sent for the purpose by the Dake of
York, and was decorated with three gilt
crowns and other ornaments. In 1713 it
was surmounted by a globe, with a long'
streamer beneath it. Four years later this
famed pole, having become decayed,waa
-
taken down and sold to Sir Immo Newton,
who used it ae a support for a telescope.
Wonderful Mechanism.
T.tag Jinkktangland—d0Ornaire-110W-0430
finely balanced that a clerk, by preseing
knob under his deek, can olose the outer
doors instantly, and they cannot be opened
again except by epeoial process. This is
done to prevent the daring and ingenious
unemployed of the grate metropolis trona
robbing thie famous institution. The bul-
lion departments of this and other great
Englieh banking establishments are nightly
submerged in several feet of water by the
action nf_machinery,__In Borne, of the Lon-
don banks the bullion departments are
connected with the manager's sleeping -
rooms, and an entrance cannot be effeoted
without setting off an alarm near that
person's head. If a dishonest official, dur-
ing either day or night, should take even
ate much as one from a pile of a thousand
sovereigns the whole pile would inetantly
sink and a pool of water take its plaee let-
eig-every Foram in the establielrLent
know of the theft.—Exchange.
Jim Was There,
The two sons of an eastern merchant
stated for India: Some months afterwards
the father received this telegram : " Jim's
dead." In reply he cabled : " Ship oorpee."
In due time a large box arrived whioh was
found to contain the body of an enormous
Bengal tiger. The Parent again cabled :
" Mistake made ; tiger in box." To which
his surviving son replied : " All right ; Jim
inside tiger."
Mashers' Shirts.
'Young Paris mashers are now said to
wear colored shirts—pink, bine or red—in
the evening. They are, displayed with the
regular low cut evening waistcoats, and to,
heighten the contrast they are fastened by
large jet etude. The demand far such shirts
is already so great that they cannot be
made fast enough. -The young Prince of
Naples introduced the fashion.
Would Never Do.
" Your refercences are very satisfactory,
but I cannot engage you."
" May I inquire why not, madam ?" asked
the would-be butler.
"Your hair is red and my dining -room
decorated in robin's egg bine."
George Francis Train has not shaken the
hand of a man or woman for fourteen
yeers.
aremeaceeereeesseeeeeeeeeeseemeeseesaceaeseraessesea
ina ea N. L: 22. 90.
Maniacra Paper and particulars of society Fru
ou Chat pays 3 00 at marriage.
Lclarobs The Web', York, Pa.
Excited messenger — Mrs. ',... • • -.,.- .4,
C01210 41LliCk ! A man bo.,' 2.11, . . r ••• • • . . 4
tts 10)32 as I've got on my nt ., • r ., .
Female doctor ---Ail riOt. • 5 . • 1 4
roof of his licnse amrei.3 klurcl..... ,... '' ' .
have done TIp iny Iv i .'. L, t iii s . • e e -.
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more bccomiog t3 4ty cu]3j'ex'"' , 4 • •
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