Daily News, Franklin, Johnson County, 14 September 1889 — Page 8

REALM OF THE MARVELLOUS.

A VISIONARY I)WEl WITH 1'RKTEnXATURAI. PE NET 1 AT ION,

Not

80 WittE as haroun

Four

Of

haps,

,ia^W?sh\'our future

tiV''\Y'y—er-~a~ye-«,

111

Aleppo, Per­

But

a

Clairvoyant

of

Wondrous

power.

weeks ago a young German of

prepossessing address located at Xo. 216 North Fifth street, coming here from Frankfort, and advertised himself as car pable of "recording the future," and of imparting valuable information to persons involved in l^mess perplexities, As a matter of 9°?^* mg judiciously invested pnnte^s inl^ the voting clairvoyant was soon doing a MS taring. When he tat cao.e it was his intention to remain only two weeks, bat at the expiration of Jthat time his reputation had

just

begun toje thor­

oughly noised abroad, and he deter mineu to stay a few weeks longer. Having heard of the marvellous feats of mind-reading performed by this disciple of the ancient mvsti«K a representative of the Nkws sought his house last evening, half expecting to find Home extraordinary being who drank ambrosia and perepired ichor. On the contrary, Prof. Almeda—tbat tune-teller's name~-was dw:overed to be a young German of alout the same apfxirance and characteristics as an crdi-

read?" said he,in

accents that plainly disclosed his na-

replied the scrib-

Tlie professor glided into an adjoining room anil the reporter, wondering in his soul just what was likely to occur, mer Hmnlcally followed. In this room a Hinall table sat immediately

fron.

f*

the only window. A chair was on ^tner nide of the table and in one of them the professor sat himself down. The reporter dropped into the other like an automaton. Hie professor reached out and cloned the window-shutters. The room was now in semi-darkness—the known darkness which is seen in theaters wiii-n a water effect is to be produced with a dusty carpet.—and the reporter, feeling a chill creep through his veins, east about for skeletons with phosphorescent eyes and strained his ears listening for weird noises. But all was quiet. "Shall 1 tell"—the reporter started— "you all, good and bad?' "Yes, tell me all," answered the scribe, with a ghastly attempt to smile. "Some people would be worried it

1

should tell them what misfortune they

misfortune, let me know it,"

and the reporter lirmly expected to be told in the clairvoyants next breath that he would die before pay dav. "1

have

two ways of telling, said the

professor, "one is by going into a trance —In which state I tell all 1 see—and the other is by so far-retaining consciousness as to know enough to withhold what is dark 111 one's future." "Withhold nothing," and the reporter had to pump to get his breatn. lie thought something awful was pending.

Here the clairvoyant-a regularsoninambular clairvoyant, of the old school, lie is—drew from his jKcket a voluminous handkerchief and hid his face. \v ith his left hand he rubbed his brow gently for some minutes. Suddenly a quiver ran through his muscular frame. Again and again this occurred. It seemed as if the man were engaged in some laborious effort that required the full measure of his strength, both physical and mental. This phenomena was apparent for oossibiy fifteen minutes. 'I hen the clairvoyant's breathing lecame regular and deep and the convulsion of the muscles ceased. There was a brief calm, and the visionary spoke. His voice was low and wounded* like the voice of a sleeper.

What he said is of 110 interest to the public—it was a reporter's past and future. He gave his attention to the past, then to the present and lastly to the future. He spoke as one who divined his information from a far-away vision—a vision at times distinct and at times obscure—and consequently his speech was now fluent, now hesitating. Sometimes moments elapsed during which he uttered never a word. Professor Almeda is a clairvoyant of extraordinary ability.

RttAL ErTATt 8ALK6.

Sarah J. Fuller has purchased from Sheriff Weeks the property known as Maver's House, on the northwest corner of First ami Ohio streets, as the result of a suit in which she was the plaintiff. The consideration was $2,483.70. Ihe property has 145) feet frontage on Hrst street, and 141 feet on Ohio street The tiropertv is one of the land marks of the West Side.

Sarah K. O'Bovle et. al. have sold to Jacob Sehlotterliack T2 feet front on Ninth street, at the southeast corner of Ninth and Chestnut streets, for $5»,000. The lot is HO feet deep. The price was $117 per front foot.

Opsmiho or TMK no«»AW.

The State Board of Trustees of the Normal school were in session yesterday and j»ai«ed on bills of contractor*. The school will open on Thursday of next week and while everything will uot lie in readiness students will lie amimnod«ted without inconvenience.. The board met last evening and apjomted committee to arrange for a public inception to be given at the btiikmig in the next two weeks, at which some01 the state'slmost prominent educators will be piwenU

WILL at l»LAeso BtroRC

tnt Gaamo Juav.

Frank llanisch yet remains to be examined in the inquest of Alexander Smith, Yesterday Green's testimony was heard, and, although the was conducted publicly, Coroner llyde said he thought it best to withhold the written evidence befeff® the eottrt of i»quirv. The evidence will be submitted to tlie grand jury on Monday when they convene and they will take action according to their juilgments

8m** a* Doo.

l**t Wetinefiday Mr. and Mrs, Hendricks received a letter from Mm, Kppin^ housen, at ^iensville, stating tliat their daughter, Misa Maytae Hendrtcfcs, had b*»n bitten by a Ux?* dog while playing with him, Ttie wound waa iwunful as to necessitate her going to bei She ts exited home soon.

The funeral of 1/mls Sapera, wbo witted suicide was wmlacted by Habbi Mtwig. of lndiana|»oi».

THE CHEAP CLERK.

Once there was a man. He was a clerk a bank at $45 a month. His name was John Smith. At a directors'meeting one iay, after the discounts had been passed opon and the portly directors were laboriously getting up to go, the president, who had the ablest and most expansive rest of any of them stopped them. "By the way," he remarked, "I have a note from John Smith, one of our young men,yon know—some of you know him— but I guess

I

mttst have lost

it.

Anyhow,he

wants his salary raised. Says the business of the bank is four times what it used to be and his work has increased accordingly. Says with increase in the amount of money handled comes increase in the strain on his integrity. Seems to think he ought to be paid for not robbing us. Besides, he says he can scarcely keep his family on his salary. I suppose "in answer it without calling another board meeting," he concluded, facetiously. .. "Tell him he oughtn't to have such a big family," suggested one. "Quote the law against embezzlement to him," said another, and so on, as they buttoned their overcoats ahd went about their business.

By-and-by John Smith got a note like this, signed by the president and written oh thfc note paper of the bank, bearing the imposing array of directors names in neat engraving at the head of it:

a3lR.

JOHN SMITH—DEAR SIR: In an­

swer to yours of even date, I am instructed by the board of directors to say that they cannot agree with your view of the case. It is true that your work has largely increased with the growth of the bank under its present able management, but it is no more than you are able to do, and no more than we can find others to do for the same salary we now pay you. The other phase of the matter you present—that we should pay you for the moral wear and tear incident to resisting temptation to steal, sis well as for the physical and mental work you do —has no weight. Otir relations, however pleasant personally, are purely a business a/fair on both sides. We pay you so much money for so much work. Your honesty is presumed. If you should prove dishonest we would discharge you and the law would send you to prison. "With your family affairs we have nothing to do, but I may suggest to you that careful economy in small household expenditures will result in an annual saving which will perhaps surprise you. Without referring especially to you—for 1 never endeavored to pry into your private affaire, nor inquired how you lived—I may say that, in my opioion, the prevailing tendency of young people nowadays is to live too high instead of being careful to lay up something for a rainy day. Yours truly, etc.

The directors had been in session long the next day when John Smith opened the door, handed in a slip of paper, and walked back to his desk. There was silence for a minute, then a clatter of moving chairs in the board-room, and then the door opened and two or three voices called: "Smith!" &s.V I "In a moment," answered Smith, cheerfully laying a blotter between the leaves of the book he had been writing in, and carefully tucking the pen behind his ear, as though he were making his toilet. "Whatdo you mean by this? they demanded, when he appeared in the directors' room, "telling us there is ^only $9,847.80 of available cash, and suggebting that we get some for the counter." "It is so," responded Smith, "and I thought yon ought to know it before the money is all checked out. The bank oughtn't to have to close its doors in the middle of the day." "But according to your statement of yesterday and your showing of to-day business there ought to be $259,648. Where is the quarter of a million We were just discussing an investment for it "IVe invested it myself," responded Smith, coolly, "in a safe place—$250,000 of it. The other 20 cents I took for street-car money. 1 took a quarter of a million away with me last evening."

You what?" "1 stole it, in plain English, when I got this response to my note to the president I—but really, I must renew my suggestion about the advisability of getting some cash on the counter. You are very short and you ought to attend to it at once."

Two of the directors drew their checks on other banks and sent them out, although the signatures were very shakey, and then, quite at his ease, Mr. Smith leaned up against tlie carved mantelpiece, read the president a note refusing his request for an increase, and went on: "When I got this not® it set me to thinking whether, as our relations were purely business affair, I couldn't do better than go on as I had been doing. There was $250,000 in convenient shape that I could get my hands on. 1 might have skipped to Canada with it, but I don't like the climate. I took the money away and concealed it—" pausing for a moment and smiling down into their eager faces—"in a place known only to myself. 1 shall give myself up, and as our relations, in the language of the president, have been personally pleasant," I wiH save you the expense of a trial by pleading guilty. *The maximum sentence for my offense under the lawa of this State, fa ten years in the penitentiary. With the commutation off for good behavior, that will be about eight an a half years, It will be dull, but I shall not be idle. I have never had leisure to cultivate the gtwarn of the mind. I have a taste for musfc. I will cultivate it I will book myself up in the polite sciences. I will learn a modem language or two. lam 81 ymmoH now, withs. cultivated mind and comfortabte fortune of $350,003 awaiting me. I can afford to go aw*y, to travel in foreign countries and enjoy life. OfoaamlwailoaetheiBletert oii my $350,000 while I am in prison, but if 1 were to live on air and go nata*! and •ave ell my salary I wouldn't have onefiftieth as much at theageof 46. On the Whole 1 think have m|dea£oed iqpe«

Don^t you?* jfesi ..

The opinions of the directors were not very coherent just at t^is moment. They tnade arious appeals to him, on the confidence they had had in him/on the good jame he bore, on the dishonor he would ,ncur, etc., but he responded that all these had not helped hiia to an increase salary, and relentlessly quoted the ouiguage of the president's note to him, that "their relations were purely a business affair on both sides."

Finally he said: "Our relations have been personally pleasant,' and I have no unconquerable leedre to spend the next eight and oneoalf years in jail. I will make you a proposition. If you will sign a bond not to prosecute me, and publish in the daily jiapers a set of resolutions setting forth that, whereas, your valued and trusted ,-mployee. John Smith, by the receipt of 4 legacy from a deceased relative has oeen relieved of the necessity of further jervice, resolved, that you part with him with extreme regret, etc.—if you do this 1 will bring back $125,000, and content myself with the other $125,000. The interest will make up a good part of the loss to me."

It was hard to give up $125,000 and litch to it a set of resolutions complinenting the thief, but it was a choice jetween getting half the loaf or nothing. Was the satisfaction of sending him to prison for eight and one-half years worth $15,000 a year to them They figured on and agreed that, it wasn't. They accepted the proposition, drew up the bond uid signed it "You can get the resolutions in shape jy to-morrow," he said, and have them •eady when I bring the money. It »rould scarcely be delicate for me to be aresent when they are adopted?"

Couldn't you bring it to-day, Mr. 3mith?" asked the president in a perspiation. V, "No I haven't the time to go after it The work at my desk keeps me busy un,il the hour for closing the bank. \ou will have to trust in me until to-morrow md, as by signing this bond you have committed yourself to the compounding a el on I I an us is a purely business affair."

They were all on hand early next day, Smith, the cashier said (not without ,ome surprise at hearing the president nquire for him as "Mr." Smith) lia«l gone jut to lunch. He was asked for halt a lozen times before he came. Every few ninutes the door of the director'# room ,vould open, a perspiring face would be hrust out, and Smith would be inquired or. Then the face would be withdrawn, md tlie directors would fall to discussing .vhetlier, after all, Smith hadn't taken heir bonds and given them the slip.

At the stroke of 12 the door pencd md Smith walked in. He picked up the .esolutions, read them with approval, md, Avith a "Thank you, gentlemen, this handsome," he handed a package to ,he president, saying:

Here is your money." Then he took his former stand by the nantelpiece and watched their cugur aces as they-bent over to count it. A urndred crisp $1,000 bills—then iome of it in smaller denoniinajons— (25,000, more yet—ami th -a to their unazement, another hundred $1,000 bills. "Why, it's all here—you've brought it ill back

I never meant to steal it," said Smith, :ooUy. "I made you believe I did merely convince you that you were c'on.luct•ng your bank on the wrong principle, keeping a man on a starvation salary with a fortune within his grasp. I wanted to make you understand that .here is something more in the relations jetween the bank and its trusted employees than cold„business. I suppose you have 110 furtlu use for me. 1 am .•eadv to turn over my books as soon as you name mv successor. He will find diem all right. Good day."

He walked back to his desk. Pretty joon they called him in again, and the president made a little speech. He said che lesson had been an unpleasant one, but they were disposed to take it in the ipirit in which it was given. Perhaps tie was right. They had no desire to punish him, but—and here he hesitated And stammered a little—they were also unwilling, that is to say, they had no deiire to keep a financier of his capacity in the humble place in which he had hitherto been employed. Therefore one of their number, Mr. Wilkins, who was the agent of an insurance company at a salary of $4,000 a year had decided to resign that position, and would have Mr. Smith appointed his successor. Meanwhile. Mr. Smith could take a vacation of two weeks. Jf *A Battlefield Trwit.

We are in danger of something winte than the Libby prison speculation, says the Atlanta Constitution. It is now proposed by a speculative northerner to purchase all the battlefields of tlie late war, fence them in, and show them to visitors at twenty-five cents a head.

It will strike those who are acquainted with tlie situation that the great American showman will have a big job on his hands when he comes to the cluster or bouquet of battlefields around Atlanta. Our old red hillsides have good cause to be redder than any other hills that ever trembled through the thunderous storm of ar. Nowhere on American soil can there be found a spot that was ever so pounded and mangled and harried And scorched as this Mime spite city of ours, All over the world there are men now living whose proudest boast is to*ay that they were through our forty days' babtfeflfr* of Are. or were in one of the many battle* fought under our city's walla^

We are not yet ready to sell our bloodstained fields of glory to tlie glib strangers whose only interest in them Is to coin money oat of them. If we can do nothing better,let us level the grim fortand frowning ramparts, and fill op the silent trenches once so full of beroic life. Let us cover the scars of war with tlie blooming industries of peace! ..

41

Do you «?v«r go hunting?*

toXo.

bat

my wife does.11 "Your wife?" "Yas." -What for** *Oh. for burglars, or fire, jr paregoric, or trouble, or my saiaiy it's alwav» hard to teil in advance*"*—

Washington Capital.

SHE SWALLOWED A PIN.

PAINFUL RESULTS OF ONE OF WOMEN'S BAD HABITS.

Dancers of Carrying Ptns In the Month* Broken Keedles Left Where Crawling fMMwm Caa Pick Them Up Several

Serious Cases Belated. Women have one bad habit at least, which lywmn fixed and ineradica ble—that of holding pins and needles in their mouths. He who hue even a fair idea of the inner structure of the body must fiel a cold chill running down his back whenever he sees this habit indulged, for he can appreciate the possible consequence if one of these bits of brass or steel happens to pass from under the control of the tongue and enters the passage to the stomach or the windpipe.

As a rule, when that mishap occurs, the pin or needle is swallowed, but no small number of cases are on record where they have passed into the windpipe and eventually fallen to the bronchial tubes. Such an accident as that is, of course, always very serious, and doubly so if its occurrence is not immediately recognized, and the means of relief applied withoat delay. One would naturally suppose that severe symptoms must at onco be excited when a foreign body passes into the windpipe. Such is not the case, however. Often the immediate distress caused is comparatively trifling, and soon largely if not entirely disappears. The period of relief is usually not long, for the pin or needle, or whatever it is, sets up more or lees irritation, of which cough, etc., give evidence. While the same lies loosely in the air passage its removal by the mouth is often possible. Sut when imbedded in the tissues such operation does not promise we).], and it is frequently necessary to open the windpipe—in other words to perform tracheotomy—and even then success is by no means always assured.

Probably where pins are swallowed, in the majority of cases they make their way out of the system through the intestinal canal. But that is rarely the case, if not exceptional, where needles are swallowed. The instances on record where needles and pins have been swallowed, and years after have made their way through the different tissues to the surface of the body, and to the most unlikely parts of it, are almost numberless. Some recently reported have unusual interest. One c^ise occurred in the practice of Dr. ITivie. The patient, 20 years old, had been suffering for many weeks from pain in the region of the heart, attended with violent palpitation upon "inking any considerable exertion. Not a moment passed, unless he was asleep, that he was not tormented with an indescribably oppressed feeling about the chest In making an examination cf the chest after the clothing had been removed the doctor discovered a small hardened elevation over the heart. It was not visible when looking at the chest, but it could readily be felt with the finger or the flat surface of the band pressed gently upon it and moved upward and downward. A small incision was made over the point in question and through that was drawn out an ordinary sewing needle an inch and one-half in length.

All the unpleasant symptoms very soon subsided and in a week or two the patient was wdll. The doctor assumed that, from the location of the needle and the attending symptoms, it had been for a time in the very substance of the heart. In another instance a girl 1? years old visited a physician and informed him that she thought there was a needle in her arm, for she was sure she felt it She described its position—one end just under the skin and the other deep in the muscles near the bone. She said she had never run a needle into her arm, or in any other part of her body. Considering that, the case to the doctor seemed one of vivid Imagination. He, however, made a careful examination, and at last became satisfied that there was some foreign body in the arm, and, more than probably, such a one as the girl suspected. After making an incision betook out a needle two inches long. The point was broken off and the whole needle inclosed in a capsule. It proved that it lay as the girl had described, and one end—the point—was near the bone. Subsequently the mother of the patient testified that when her child was 5 years old she swallowed a needle. The same evidently passed down between the muscles of the neck and the shoulder and down the arm. It lay igjkbout the middle of it when removed.

BABIES AND BROKEN NEEDLES. The physician in this case reports two others of equal interest, one that of a man who had a needle journeying around his body for seven years. One day, in taking bis coat Off, he felt a sharp pain in his arm. On making an examination he found that at last the needle bad come to the surface and, protruding through the skin of his arm, had caught in the lining of his coat sleeve. The other case was of no lass interest It was that of a young woman 18 years of age. One day, while taking a dancing lesson and waltzing, she was suddenly attacked with a most excruciating pain in the lower part of the abdomen on one side. She at once became unconscious, and her appearance was such as to terrify all around her.

As soon as she could be removed to her home a physician was called. After an examination he was convinced that under the place whore she felt the pain there was some foreign body. He eventually operated and drew out of the abdomen a portion of a needle measuring 1% inches in length. In this case the patient had no knowledge of ever having swallowed anything like a pin or needle, and was positive no needle had ever entered any part of her body. But in all probability the one removed had been swallowed years bafore. In this connection it is well to speak of another tod habit which many women have, that of leaving pieces of needles lying around. A needle breaks, and, the work table or the window sill being nearer at hand than the stove, the pieces are put there, the intention being, of coarse, to remove them later, and so dispose of them that they can do no harm. But such good intentions are not always carried out, and often the dangerous fragments fall upon the floor.

Once there it Is generally along time hefore they are picked up, for they are scarcely disturbed by an ordinary sweeping. Babies drawing tfaemsedves over the Hoar doubtless often furnish a resting place for them. One physician tells of a baby, fat and healthy, which suddenly, while sliding acrxw the floor, toak on a sudden fit of crying and for several day* cried and fretted. The mother, one of the none too patient sort, administered frequent spankings but finally, as that treatment proved teeflkadoos, she called in a doo tor and be removed a full No. 7 needle from the very point which the mother had bean vigorously upplying bear hand to. A broken needle In the foot or hand is generally an ng^y alfair, as every one who has experienced the misfortune eta testify. Such cases gorgeous are anything but partial to, for the removal is rarely, if ever, eairy, and as a role tain coesiderabie time. Considering, therefore, how many accidents have oocurred from them and how assy It Is for them to occur, it is tobe hoped that women win in i—i" pins and needles, while and wsafal and weemiogly innocent, as» ys* capahle uf doing a great deal of harm. Thaw rescribed ought to help Sham to app[infarf^ Hurt ftrrtt. —fVyforffli

What He Was Going to Do. He was driving an old gray mare to a Duckboard, and in a voice high pitched tnd cracked he offered to give me a lift into Rhinebeck. After we had jogged ilong for a quarter of a mile he suddenly uquired: "What's this 'ere thing in the papers ibout the Elixir?" 'I know nothing except what I have read." 'They say it sots an old man back thirty years with one dose." "Yea, they tell wonderful stories." ^2 "I ain't much given to sich yarns," he continued, as his bowback humped over a little more and his chin took on a quiver, "but Fm going to see what there in itn "Are you going to try it?"

Sartin. I hitched up sorter quickly this morning and I told the old woman I was goirv to town after an apple parer. shall drive right straight to the doctor's id ad os "Well, it may rejuvenate you." "I'm kinder expectin' it will. Got to think in' of it last night and couldn't go to sleep. I'm 73 years old and if this thing should put me back to 40 it would take a yoke of oxen to hold me. I've got it all planned out.

a

What?" "What I'd do when I got home. My ion Bill has sorter been runnin" things to suit hisself for the last three or four years. Thinks I've got too old to even know how to sell a sheepskin to a tin peddler. If that elixir works on me I'll astonish Bill Joslyn afore the sun goes down. I'll tumble him into the burdocks a way to open his eyes. Whoop! I'm feel in' a heap better already!"

That's good," was all 1 could think of to say in reply. "And say!" he contiuued, as lie astonished tlie old mare with a sharp cut, fur the last ten yeai-s the old woman hat been callin' me grandpa and trying to make out that I orter sot in the corner and let her handle the reins. She's my second you know, and only 50, and she feels mighty peart. Lands, but you orter be there when I walk in on her this evenin' and tell her to step down off the platform! Woof! but I feel like a steer in a corn field!" "Well, I hope you won't be disappointed." "Thank ye, I don't believe I shall be. I feel it in my bones that I am goin' to be took right back to 1855. Say! There's another thing I'm goin' to do if that elixir elixis 011 me." "Yes?" "I've got a son-in-law named Peter Shoecraft. Pete beat me out of four hogs last year. Along about sun down to-night I'll walk in on Pete as he is milking the cows, and if I don't pelt the stuffin' out of him then my name ain't Absolom Joslyn! Whoop! Durn my hickory shirt if I'm a day over 60 years old this very minit, and I bet I kin lift half a ton.

Arthur Wadley—Wouldn't you like to join in a little game of pokah at my cabin tonight

Blud Meserve—What's th' ante?" Arthur Wadley—Five cents. Blud Meserve—Say, young feller, I aever insulted a deck of cyards yet, an' 1 ain't goin' ter begin now!—fPuck.

Itturice Barrymore as a FrofesHional Jehu By the by, I heard a good story on Maurice Barrymore last night, who is to be the leading man of the Madison Square theater this year^says aNew York letter co tlie Philadelphia Times. He is spending the summer at Long Branch. One lay he was driving down Ocean avenue, Pressed for comfort rather than style. His trap and horse were of the most domestic order. Two well-dressed ladies standing on the corner took him for one jf the many jehus looking for customers from the Ocean house to the West end. rhey hailed him,

MHey.

driver* are you doing down the

oeach?" 'x*." "Certainly, ladies step right in," said Mr. Barrymore, who is always fond of a joke.

They promptly complied, and Mr. Barrymore drove off. Their conversation was as free before him as it would have oeen before any of the countrymen who make a living carrying customers along the beach. Just before .reaching the [lowland house one of the^iadies tapped him on the shoulder with her parasol And said: "Please let us out at this house, sir."

Mr. Barrymore drove up to the hotel ^iterance as directed. The two ladies flighted* One of them took out her purse and said:

How much do we owe you, sir "Oh, nothing at all," said the actor, lonchalnUy "this is my private car*iage."

The ladks looked rather Abashed, and Apologized for calling him. Finally one 'A them said: i?ou will kindly give us your name, that we may know to whom we are injebt^i for thi« coortsey "With pleasure," aaid the actor, with a merry twinkle in his eye "my name is Maurice Barrymore.

The ladies make a break for tba parlor, «d Mr. Barrymore drove away enjoyng tike joke, ......

XHda't »«r« to G« Ottt.

"Hullo, Jack! Where do you keep rourseif nowaday*, or nighSs, rather? You used to be round with the boys #rery night I dont see you now at alL" "Ho, Tom my wife's motherwpaying as a lengthy visit *—[BostonCourier.

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