THE TOPEKA DAILY STATE JOURNAL SATURDAY EVENING- MARCH 22,1913- IS Wben a Man Marries. The International Sunday School Les son for March 23 Is "Isaac and Ke bekah," Gen. 24. (BT WILLIAM T. KLLIS.) When the Bagdad railway, which is bow -building, has got all the way to Babylon, we may be sure that passen gers from Europe will show more in terest in the stop at Haran and Re bekah's Well, which is there, than in many of the ruined cities of antiquity passed on the way. About Rebekah's Well lingers the spirit of the eternal romance. It has a touch of the hu man that means more to people than the vast movements of ancient em pires. The guide-books will give more apace to Rebekah's Well than to the tomb of Sennacherib. For the beauti ful idyl of Rebekah is dear to the heart of all who read. This twenty-fourth chapter of Gen esis, which is one of the most intrin sically beautiful and interesting stories in the Bible, does not deal with fable or fiction. Every line of it attests its human reality. In some form or oth er it is being lived over again tn every part of the world. Older than the Well which the traveler through Meso potamia still may see, is the sentiment which it represents: the quest of a life for its complement. Since the race began, Rebekahs have been going to wells, and about the other humdrum daily tasks, dreaming beautiful dreams of a pos sible lover from out of the west. There i a bit of moral in passing in the fact that it was while about. her day's du ties, and not when arrayed in festal finery or displaying "company man ners." that Rebekah commended her self to the representative of Isaac, seeking a wife. Nobody knows around what corner fate awaits. At the most unexpected time and place there may be the meeting which determines all of one's future. How One Woman Got a Husband. The best things in life come by in direction. The person who goes moon ing through the days, longing for a lover, is likely to fail of the search and to become a pitiable, and silly creature. They who go straight on in life's highway, busy about the usul duties, taking time for the great dreams, find that life's richest bless ings are met by the way. Neither happiness nor husbands come for the (seeking. Rebekah, like uncounted millions of young women before and since, was doing her share of the fam ily work by filling the water jars at the village well. How manv times I have seen the young women of Mesopotamia. and 'other parts of the Near East, on this , ... ; i : .... -well, chatting llilliy nil"!-' - Bociablv as they travelled, or as they gathered waiting one another's turn. It is no light task, this carrying of a huge water jar on the head or shoulder. The eastern woman is train ed to bear burdens. Rebekah went blithely of an even ing to the well outside Haran. The dav did not seem different from other dais. She little dreamed, when she put the emptv water jar on her head, that destiny was sitting on the well curb waiting for her. The wayfarer who wanted drink was not different from other travellers whom she had often obligingly served. She com mended herself to Eleizer. who had been commissioned to find a .wife for Isaac, because of her quick helpful nes and wholesome good nature. He saw that this ready and efficient wo man was the verv wife for his master. Going WIfe-Htinting. Let us not cry shame upon Isaac that he did not do his own wooing. Aside from the fact that he was not that sort of man, being of a temper that lets other people do for him, it was the usage of the land and the time a usage which still persists in the same region for marriages to be arranged by intermediaries. The shadchans" of the East side of New York are still engaged in the same business. The wife for Isaac was of his father's providing. We may be sure that he would accept whatever was given to him, for he was a nega tive character, whom somebody has called a "a valley between two hills," a mere link between Abraham and Jacob. When Abraham was dying he. com missioned his servant to find a wife of his own people for his son Isaac. The long years, and the wisdom that comes from quiet communion wnu , God had taught Abraham that wise ; marriages are rnaue wnum w and within one's own racial group. He would not thwart the plans of God by mixing the blood of the chosen people with the heathen of Canaan. That way always comes trouble. The persistence of the children of Abra ham in pure Jewish strain through out the centuries since is one of the marvels of time. The truth thus ear lv taught by Abraham has been well learned by his descenaams. back to the southland. She had the quality of decision which many a man since has wished for her sisters. She knew her mind; she knew her hours; she had the courage to turn her back on the past, for the mysterious future to which she had heard the call. Religion and Eugenics. Some old fogies used to wail a great deal in public about the modern young people's societies, because they said they were just "matchmaking or ganizations." They complained that young men and young women met each other in Christian Endeavor and marriages resulted. As if there were any better or nobler way to meet a sharer of one's whole life, than in the work of the church and in allegiance to God! The big problem of eugen ics which is looming large upon the social horizon, will scarcely be solved in the legal and scientific way that some scientists plan. The normal, un artificial form of eugenics is for pure men and pure women, whose lives are given in service' to God, to find each other and to pledge their mutual faith within the comprehensive Christian covenant. The two most important hours in a person's life are his first conscious meeting with God in personal relation shio and his first conscious meeting with the life that is to be his soul's comrade through the rest of time. Even- as Eleizer prayed for the success oi nis matrimonial mission, so young men and young women should pray for the guidance-of God in this great est choice upon which the future of the nation and the world depends. Any light and frivolous and uncon sidered notion' of marriage is not only contrary to a realization of one's obli gations to the world, but also con trary to the spirit of the Scriptures. God planned from the beginning that man and woman should become one in His fear and in the service of man kind. It is not unreasonable to be lieve that they who have wiTfuily re jected marriage will be held account able in God's time of reckoning. There are thousands of men and women who. from shortsightedness, cow ardice or selfishness, have turned their backs upon the wedded life. In so doing they have repudiated God's pro gram. The world progresses according to the old Persian legend of the juftak. This is a bird with one wing, but the male has a wing on one side and a hook on the ottjer; and the female has a wing on the opposite side, and a ring to match the hook; and when the two were linked together they could fly, and only then. The Bride's Homecoming. This old story is suggestive of hu man nature. Isaac was a quiet, stay-at-home, negative character, fond of meauaung in the garden in the cool of the evening. He could easily be imposed upon. He dug wells and other people crowded him away from them. Even Rebekah. when he grew old, deceived him in the matter of the inheritance for her favorite son, Jacob, she molded Isaac to her purposes. i We may not be hard on Rebekah, j as we see her journeying with caravan i of ten camels, led by Eleizer, and hav- ! "B oniy ner nurse with her as a re minder of her old home. She was a helpmeet for Isaac. The promised line might have suffered shipwreck had it not been for her positive char acter, she made up, like a good wife, what Isaac lacked. If she had more than her share of aggressiveness, it was because he had less than the portion that was expected of a man. The two together, complementing each other, carried out God's idea for so ciety. Every marriage is a matter of grav est interest to the world, for it is at the marriage altar that the future of the race is determined. That is why at every wedding, there should be three parties, the man, the woman, and God. A Wife or a Mission? Knowing somewhat of human na ture, and feminine nature at that, the canny servant Eleizer raised a ques tion with his dying master. What if none of the daughters of Abraham's kindred up in Mesopotamia, hhuuiu be willing to make the long journey south to the land of promise? Should . Isaac return to Mesopouiinia: me answer was clear; the family mission came before the wife. Isaac's work in the world was to carry out the covenant of his father with Jehovah, and to possess the land of promise. If the wife would not share that lot with him, then she should not be his wife. The divine call and commis sion take precedence of all human re lationships. The problem is an ever-recurring one. What if a woman will not marry a man because she has decid ed not to be a minister's wife, or not to go to the foreign mission field? There is but one course open. It is as clear as Scripture. She may stay behind, but the man must go. No woman is fit to be wife who will not share her husband's life, going wherever his call leads him. In a remote village along the In land Sea of Japan, I one time ran across one of the common tragedies: The man was in the employ of a great American corporation. He had been promoted to a position of re sponsibility. His feet were on the ladder and mounting upward. But his wife petulantly and childishly said that she would not live in Japan. Either the home had to be wrecked or the man's future had to be sacri ficed, all for a woman's whim. One proof of Rebekah's foreordi nation to be the wife of Isaac was her prompt readiness to go with the mes ajastfers. without a day's delay, straight The Life Triumphant. Terse Comments for March 23, "Vital Living: The Lesson of Easter." II Cor. 4:8-18. (BY WILLIAM T. ELLIS.) Yesterday our friend was here; to day he is not here. Where is he now The mystery of death has intervened. Faith assures us that all is well with him: but still a host of unanswered questions throng us. Is he still him self? How conscious is he now of this world and of us who are left behind? Has his personality passed over the great gulf with him? Shall we again mm, iu me peculiar relationship of personal friendship? These are - - v ii i ii itiiiji, and unsolved by reason. The only snail ui ugnt mat snmes upon the im mortality of the soul streams from the open grave of the risen Christ. Were it not for the light of His resur rection, all would be dark. The full truth of the life beyond the grave is known only to those who have passed through the straight gate called death. We dare not lend our selves to idle speculation concerning it. But this we know, that life here and now may be enriched and en larged and made glorious by the power of the risen Christ. His resur rection was not merely for use in eternity. The triumphant experience of the resurrection life .was meant for every one who could say, with the apostle, "I have been crucified with Christ; nevertheless I live; yet not I. but Christ liveth in me; and that life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me." They who live as if life were a noble, conquering, joyous possession are a constant Easter message to an ever-widening circle. We call death the great divider, whereas, really and finally, it is the great uniter. All love knit souls, severed here on earth, are at last brought together in the life to which death is but the portal. Florence Earle Coates beautifully expresses the thought: "Reproach not Death, nor charge to him. in wonder, ' The lives that he doth separate awhile. But think how many hearts that ache, asunder. Death pitying Death doth Join and reconcile!" The proof that a ferson is saved is less his getting to heaven for we who remain on earth can know noth ing about that than his living an emancipated life amid his present circumstances. I have seen folks, church members at that, who may get to heaven, but who have not been 1 saved for this world of today. Their souls are starved and joyless; they are - slaves to petty cares ; their eyes are never lifted up to the heavenlies; they know nothing of the hilarity of life, full, bubbling and overflowing, such as is the sure portion of those whom Christ has delivered from bondage. If religion is anything at all vital it is a pret-ent experience. The great argument for full and abundant life is not that death draws on apace, but that Christ lives and shares his conquering life with his friends. A happy, helpful, holy life is the best testimony that a Chris tian can bear to his Master. Arise. O. Soul, this Easter Day! The Lord is risen! Forget the tomb of yesterday; The Lord is risen! And thou from bondage art set free. Thou sharest in his victory, The life eternal is for thee. The Lord is risen! ' Sarah Louise Arnold. Professor William James did the world great service by his essay wherein he showed, by the analogy of the 'runner's power to get his "second wind," that every one of us has unsus pected reserves of life which ordinarily are unused. His summons was to larger and more vital living: to the life more abundant, physical, mental,, social ami spiritual. Science echoes the message of the Master, "I am come that ye may have life, and that ye may have, it more abundantly." They multiply life who live in other lives. The art of sympathy and co operation. Of giving self to others and sharing others' selves, is Christ's own secret of vital living. We are too stupid about death. We will not learn How it is wages paid to those who earn. How it' is the gift for which on earth we yearn. To be set free from bondage to the flesh; How it is turning seed-corn into grain, .' - . j How it is winning heaven's eternal gain. How it means freedom evermore from pain. How it untangles every mortal mesh. We are so selfish about death. We count our grief Far more than we consider their re lief Whom the great Reaper gathers in the sheaf, ' No more to know the seasons' constant change; And we forget that it meant only life. Life with all joy, peace, rest, and glory rife. The victory won, and. ended all the strife. And : heaven no longer far away or strange. Their Lent is over, and their Easter - won. Waiting till over paradise the sun Shall" rise in majesty, and life begun Shall grow in glory as the perfect day Moves on. to hold its endless, deathless sway. Bishop W. C. Doane, In The Outlook When we live for the same things for which Christ lived we are sharers of His largeness of life. The yardstick for the measuring of a vital life is not in the world's hands. The best lives are often the obscurest: the "life hid with Christ in God." Pub licity has its uses, but it never has been, and never can be, a true measure of the value of a life. Moreover, it carries ever the insidious temptation to make the plaudits of men, rather than the approval of God, the test of success. The apostolic ambition was to be "well pleasing unto Him." The life that satisfies God needs no other reward. Here is a grat mystery. The theo logians have never been able to ex pound it, but myriads of. unlettered saints have experienced it: namely, that newness of life is "in Christ," lived by his imparted power. "Vic tory over the soul's downward drift, over innate littleness and sordidness, over earth's tug and pull, are some vrn, mvsterinuslv elven to those whose lives are in the keeping of the risen Christ. Some anonymous lines in "As sociation Men" convey this Easter thought: -"Up from the grave of a baffling life. Jesus, I rise; Jesus, I rise. Into the joy of victorious strife, Jesus, I rise with Thee, TTp from my weakness into Thy might, Up from my blindness into Thy sight. Up through the mist, and on to the height, Jesus, I rise with Thee. "Up from the tomb of unreasoning dread. Jesus, I rise; Jesus, I rise. Into the fullness of life from the dead, Jesus, I rise with Thee. -Up from the trifling program of time. Up from the wreckage of things that were mine. Up to that heavenly vision of Thine, Jesus, I rise with Thee." gels and ministers of His most pater nal love. Robertson. There are moments when, what ever be the attitude of the body, the soul is on its knees. Victor Hugo. BROOKLYN TABERNACLE. A PECULIAR MARRIAGE. j ed, asserts that the Mount Marian of j 2 Chronicles 3:1. is identical with the j mountain in the land of Marian refer- f ai4 "I .... Q4-4 T V. In. cu iu ill urcucoia h&.c. nuc illov xu stance it is said that the Lord appear ed to David, and in the second instance it is the place where Abraham is said to have offered his son Isaac as a sacrifice to the Lord. The design of God in commanding the sacrifice of Isaac was to institute a most vivid type of the one great sacrifice of Christ; Abraham typifying God and Isaac our Lord Jesus. How appropri ate, then, that Abraham should be di rected to the very spot on which the Temple afterward stood and in the vi- Genesis 24: 58-67 March 23. "In all thy ways acknowledge Him, and he shall direct thy paths." , Proverbs .!:(;. When Abraham was one . hundred and forty years old, Sarah had been ' cinity of which the cross was erected dead three years, and Isaac was forty. It may be that Jesus was crucified in Then Abraham directed Eliezer, his exactly in the same place where Isaac steward, to go with ten camels to the 2.000 vears before had been tvDically neighborhood where Abraham was sacrificed. The tradition of the Jewish born and where Nahor still lived. . noonle nd the. universal heliff of There Eliezer was to find a suitable bride for Isaac. The story is toil with beautiful sim plicity. The characters described are neither savages, nor covsins of mon kys. as evolutionists would have us think. Only recently have Bible Stu dents learned that this unique pro cedure -was evidently arranged to il lustrate a great spiritual design in pro ctss of accomplishment lor more than eighteen centuries. The type fits well to its antitype. Abraham typified the Heavenly Fa ther; Isaac, the Lord Jesus; and Elie zer the Holy Spirit. In due time, the Father sent the Holy Spirit to gather the elect Crmp?ny which will con stitute the Bride, the Lamb's Wife. As Abraham did not take a wife for Christiandom, on such a point as this, are likely to be right. This sacred and hallowed place is now In the pos session of the Mohammedans. Q. Who is the first person men tioned in the Bible as wearing a ring? (Cleo.) Answer. In ancient times it was the custom to indicate a special and marked degree of favor by placing- a ring upon the finger of the one to ward whom the esteem and honor was manifested. When the ring contained a signet, then it became a mark or symbol of authority. Thus we read of Joseph being honored by Pharaoh, king of Egypt, after he had inter preted the king's dream: "And the thing was good in the eyes of Pharaoh, his son from amongst the heathen, so i and in the eyes of all his servants. God did not select the Bride of Christ ! from among the heathen. As Eliezer ! went to Abraham's relatives, believers in God, so the Holy Spirit was sent only to believers, to select from these the Church. The Bride class originally was Jew ish. The Jews were in fellowship with God under their Law Covenant, and to them alone the Holy Spirit went. Later, the Gentiles were permitted to hettr the Gospel, in order that such as responded might join the Bride class when they fully consecrated them selves to God. Rebecca at the Well. Eliezer, loyal to his commission, sought earnestly the proper person, that Isaac might have a suitable help mate. When he came to the city of Nahor, he found Nahor's granddaugh ter Rebecca at the well, caring for the sheep. Those called to joint-heirship with Christ are usually found giving God's people refreshment from the Bi ble and its "water of life." First Rebecca was tested as to will ingness to give the water. Here she manifested a spirit of. service, indic ative of the meekness and humility necessary for the Bride of Christ. Then Eliezer gave her jewels, symbolic of spiritual blessings. Eliezer was re ceived into the house. Rebecca's friends, representing the Household of Faith, rejoiceH with her. Eliezer then explained that Abraham was very rich, that Isaac was his heir, and that he himself had come 'to find a bride for his master's son. He be lieved Rebecca to be the Lord's choice for Isaac. Rebecca was then asked whether she would go with Eliezer. Her prompt answer was, "I will go." It meant something for Rebecca to leave her father's house and all with which she was familiar; and so it means considerable for those who ac cept the call to become the Bride of Christ. Only whole-hearted love for the And Pharaoh said unto his servants, Can we find such an one as this (verse 33), a man in whom is the spirit of God? And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, Forasmuch as God hath showed thee I all this, there is none So discreet and T. 1 A3 IIIVI 1. , I. . II I' U LI ... . my house, and according unto thy word shall all my people be ruled: only in the throne will I be greater than thou. And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, See, I have set thee over all the land, of Egypt. And Pharaoh took off his ring from his hand and put it upon Joseph's hand, and arrayed him in vestures of fine linen, and put a gold chain about his neck." Genesis 41:37-42. Q. What man was so shocked by the wrong doing of others that he plucked out his hair? (Esau.) Answer. The Jewish people had been in captivity to, Babylon for the space of seventy years, at the end of which time, in the first year of Cyrus, a proclamation had gone' forth to the effect that all of the Jews who desired to return to their own land were at liberty to do so. Acting upon this proclamation, there were 42,360 Israelites who returned to the land of Palestine. Among these was Ezra, the favorite Scribe and Priest, who accomplished the work, of reorganiza-j tion ofter the people had become set tled in the land. When he came to the work of reorganizing the priesthood he found that the members of the Levitical or priestly tribe had inter married with the peoples of the sur rounding countries, a thing which had been expressly prohibited in the law which Moses had given to them. Upon hearing this, Ezra was overcome with grief as he himself said, "And when I heard this thing, I rent my garment and my mantle, and plucked off the hair of my bead and of my beard, and sat down astonished." rEzra 9:3. The orthodox Jews to this ' day object to any of their DeoDle i ntprmarrvinr 1 wiin ouier races, ana sometimes mani Lord and well-grounded faith in the f(.st their grief and sorrow in the Ze SEVEX SEXTEXCE SERMON'S. The most wasted of all days is that on which one has not laughed. Cham fort. r- As one lamp lights another, nor grows less, so nobleness enkindleth nobleness. Lowell. 4i 4i Stand upright, speak thy thought, declare The truth thou hast, that all may share; v" Be bold, proclaim' it everywhere They only live who dare. Anon. Four things a man must learn to do If he would make his record true; To think without confusion clearly, To love his fellow-men sincerely. To act from honest motives purely. To trust in God and Heaven securely. Van Dyke. If we cannot live so as to be happy, let us at least live so as to deserve happiness. Fichte. . " Possibly Want and Woe will be seen hereafter, when this world -of Appear ance shall have passed away, to have been, not evils, but God s blessed an- great and precious promises' will carry them through to the journey's end. Rebecca types only those who will finally make their calling and election sure, and become members of "the Bride, the Lamb's Wife." Revelation 21:9,10. More Jewels for Rebecca. Then Eliezer gave Rebecca more jew els. So the Bride class receive an early and a later blessing. The graces of the Holy Spirit faith, fortitude, knowledge, hope, joy. love enhance their beauty of character. Finally the camels brought Rebecca to her journey's end. The Bride class leave their father Adam's house after they accept the invitation to go to Christ. Through trials and difficulties, they travel down the centuries of this Gospel Age. The camels which bore Rebecca to Isaac's home-well represent the Holy Scriptures, by which the faith ful are borne along on their journey. As Eliezer brought Rebecca safe to the end of their journey to Isaac at Lahai-roi, so the Holy Spirit will guide the Church to the presence, parousia, of Christ. Following the custom of the time, Rebecca put on her veil and alighted from the camel to meet Isaac. So the Scriptures tell us that the Church must pass beyond the Veil be fore she will be fully received by the antitypical Isaac. Rebecca's maidens typify the conse crated class now following the Bride class, but not fully living up to their privileges. The blessing pronounced up on Rebecca, "Be thou the mother of thousands of millions," represents the future of the Church. For as the Re deemer will, during His Millennial reign, become the Father, or Life-giver, to thousands with His own precious blood, so the Church will become the mother, or caretaker, to assist them to perfection. EYERYBQDnjBLE BOX. Q. What people borrowed garments of their enemies? (Manetho.) Answer The children of Israel had dwelt in the Land of Egypt for 216 years, and during a large part of this time had been in a condition of serf dom. The Egyptians had placed heavy b urdens upon them, and caused them all sorts and conditions of hardships and sufferings. The wealth of Egypt had been created almost wholly by the Israelites, and when the time came when they, in the Lord's providence, were leaving the land of Egypt to journey toward a land which the Lord had promised to give them, they "bor rowed" (requested) of the Egyptians gold, and silver, and raiment. The ; Egyptians complied with the request. The most of these precious materials i were afterwards used in the construe- j tion of the Tabernacle of the Wilder ness, xne jews today are acquiring the gold and silver and raiment of the larger "Egypt," the world in general, and are preparing to journey towards the land of promise, which for many long centuries has been in the hands of the Gentiles, and by right it be longs to the Jews, and will shortly be given to them. The pawn-shops, second-hand stores and banking in stitutions are favorite methods with the Jewish people of "borrowing" from the Gentiles, their "gold, silver and raiment!" 'Q. Name two important events which had taken place on the moun tain which was the site of Solomon's Temple? (Quiz.) Answer1 A tradition which first ap pears in a definite shape in Josephus. and is now almost universally accept- way in which Ezra inriirateri r-ir when some go contrary to the old law arrangements. Lessons S3 Bible Study. Memory Verse Acts 23:11 and 37. I and II Timothy, and Titus. 1. What are the courses of informa tion for Paul's life beyond the Roman imprisonment ? 2. From his. letters what were his plans if acquitted? Philemon 23; Phil 2:24. 3. What other tour had he planned for years? Rom. 15:24-28. 4. What places did he revisit? I Tim. 1:1-3, 2 Tim. 4:13,20. . p rom wnat point does he write I Timothy? I Tim. 1:3. 6. What Is the general character of the letter? 7. What are its general contents? I Tim. 3:9. 8. Where did Paul probably go from Macedonia? I Tim. 1:3; 3:14. 9. Then where? Titus 1:5. 10. What does he do while in Ephesus? Titus 1:4; 3:12. 11. Who was Titus? Gal. 2:1-3, Acts 15:1,2; 2 Cor. 12:18. Where did Paul probably go from Ephesus? Titus 3:12. 13. Where was he when arrested the second time? 2 Tim. 4:13,14; I Tim. 1:20: Acts 19:33. 14. Whom was he especially anxious to see? 2 Tim. 1:3,4; 4:9-21. 15. How did he try to get Timothy's presence? 16. Where was Timothy? 1 Tim. 13. 17. What was the threefold purposee of II Timothy? 18. What was Paul's condition at this time? 19. In spite of all his trouble what is the general tone of the letter? 2 Tim. 1:12; 2:19; 4:6-8; 16-18. 20. What do we learn of his trial from the letter? 21. What was the moral condition of Rome at this time? 22. Did. Timothy come to him? Heb. 13:23. 23. Who else was specially kind to him? 2 Tim. 1:16-18. 24. When did Paul suffer martyrdom? 25. Where did the execution take place? 26. Nam some of Paul's principles? 27. Read Paul's farewell. 2 Tim. 4:1-9. MRS. C. F. MENNINGER. THE DREAMS AHEAD. What would we do in this world of ours, Were it not for the dreams ahead? For thorns are mixed with the blooming flowers, No matter which path we tread. And each of us has his golden goal. Stretching far into the years; And ever he climbs with a hopeful soul, With alternate smiles and tears. That dream ahead is what holds him up Trough storms of a ceaseless fight; When his lips are pressed to the worm wood's cup, And clouds shut out the light. To some it's a dream of high estate. To some it's a dream of wealth; To some it's a dream of a truce with Fate, In a constant search for health. To some it's a dream of home and wife. To some it's a crown above: The dreams ahead are what makes each lire The dreams and faith and love! I Edwin Carlise Lltaey. Capitol Building and Loan Association Will Loan on Real Estate Repayable Monthly Call for information. 534 Kansas Ave. Are you . If1 "4 . .: mrope iltis Outnmer ? Go abroad! 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