Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1939 — Page 12

4- A CLUB GIRLS “TO SUBMIT 1400

"ENTRIES AT FAIR &

650 Boys to Compete for

Prizes With Pigs, Lambs, Calves and Crops.

Homemade dresses, canned fruit and vegetables were to be brought to the State Fair Grounds this morning: in preparation for the 12th

annual exhibit of Marion County’s|}

4-H Clubs. : During the first few days of the

week members of boys and girls clubs are to bring their exhibits which will be judged. The public will be admitted to inspect the entries on Friday. ~ Girls are expected to submit 1400 various exhibits, according to Miss Janice Berlin, Marion County home demonstration agent. These will include clothing, food preparation, room improvement, canning and baking. They will be in the Educational Building.

Irwin to Be Judge

Judges for these entries incude home economics teachers and 4-H Club leaders. They are Mrs. Charles Sohl,. Ben Davis High School; Mrs. Virginia Updike, Speedway City; Mrs. Alice Harvey, New Augusta; Miss Louise Apple, Oaklandon and Castleton High Schools; Miss Harriett Morris, Law-, rence; Mrs. Vivienne Carter, Warren Central; Mrs. A. L. Lowdermilk, Franklin Township; Mrs. Morris Record, Valley Mills; Mrs. Thomas Ayton, R. R. 18; and Miss Virginia Blank, Morocco. Boys clubs entries of pigs, dairy calves, lambs, poultry and vegetables will be exhibited in the Hog Barn. C. J. Murphy, Marion County assistant agricultural agent, said he expected 650 boys to compete for ribbons and awards. The 10 outstand- - ing exhibitors will be awarded trips to the National Club Congress in ‘Chicago in December. R. F. Sproat, Wayne Township, is in charge of the vegetable exhibit which will be judged by A. A. Irwin, Marion County assistant agricultural agent.

Mooresville Breeder Engaged

W. E. Adamson, Decatur Township, is superintendent of the Pig Club department. E. J. Barker, Thorntown, international livestock judge and breeder of Berkshire hogs, will judge the expected 250 entries. Entries in the Dairy Calf Club division will be judged by Guy Daily, Jersey breeder from Mooresvile. Mr. Adamson is in charge of this class. The poultry exhibit will be directed by W. L. Mowrey, Warren Township. C. H. Cole, manager of the poultry farms at St. Marys-of-the-Woods School at Terre Haute, will judge the displays. The Wadley & Co. trophy will be awarded the Grand Champion pen. Eddie Brown, Hendricks County Shropshire breeder, is to judge the lamb club exhibit supervised by E. W. Brown, Franklin Township. The Marion County Agricultural and’ Horticultural Society, which was founded in 1836 and sponsored the first 4-H. Club County exhibit, will also show garden and farm products, needlecraft and baked goods.

REQUESTS BUS STOP REVISION FOR GARY

Times Special GARY, Ind., Aug. 7—Traffic Engineer Taylor Lewis has asked the Mayor's cabinet to approve, as a six months’ ‘experiment, a plan to have busses stop on the far side of intersections to load and- discharge passengers. The Traffic Commission and Safety Council are. studying the proposal. Mr. Lewis said the Gary Railways are - willing to try the plan where street cars do not operate. - Far side stops, Mr. Lewis explained, are a safety measure. Passengers are not tempted to cross in front of busses after alighting and other vehicles are not blocked from making turns at the crossing. The plan will facilitate busses making lefthand turns on crowded streets, he contended.

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GREET ASSOCIATION

| them when

‘much longer,’

'p.

Five Marion County Youths Meet Weekly to Test | Their Products.

By ROGER BUDROW When 11-year-old Paul Waggon-

er was| “just a little fellow,” he used to|perch himself on the kitchen cabinet and help his mother stir up cookies, cakes and pie dough. Now Paul and four other boys in his neighborhood comprise what is believed to be the only 4-H baking club composed just of boys, in Marion County. It all started when a boy friend of Paul's won first prize last year

ty Fair in competition agai scores of girls. Paul decided then and there that he would learn tq bake. He was soon joined by Harvey Clarkson, Carl Weidner, Norris Vaughn and Ted Tucker, neighbor boys living at Bridgeport, R.R.1 On Tuesday mornings they meet in Mrs. |Clarkson’s kitchen, read over ‘and| talk about the 4-H Club recipes, then go home and try them out.. This year they have made drop biscuits, loaf cake and bran, whole wheat and fruit muffins. Each Tuesday they take to the meeting whatever they have baked and Mrs. [Clarkson samples it and

Harvey Clarkson . , . Carl Weidner . .

with a baking exhibit at the Cours

discusses the whole thing.

SET ENDURANCE MARK IN PLANE

Moodys Fly for 14 Days and 7 Hours, Come Down in Flashing Storm.

SPRINGFIELD, Ill, Aug. 7 (U. P.).—Humphrey and Hunter Moody, young brother pilots, werz back to earth today after circling continuously over | Springfield airport for two weeks—a flight that added 125 hours 3 minutes to the world endurance record for light planes. The brothers took off July 23 at 3 p. m.: (Indianapolis Time). Last Tuesday at, 9:43 p. m. they equalled the old record of 218 hours and 43 minutes ang remained aloft “to make it tough” for anyone who might attempt to break their record.

During Gale

; aus They had| planned to try for the record for heavy planes but magneto trouble deprived their ship of reserve power and they landed last night during an electrical storm after 343 hours and 46 minutes in the air—a little more than 14 days 7 hours. The brothers are from Dalton City, Ill. unter, 25, has been flying since he was 14. Humphrey, 20, received his pilot's license only a few days before he started the flight. - About, 5000 persons greeted ey landed their 55horsepower onoplane “Miss Springfield.” . “We could | have gone on that Hunter said. “The lot of other things forced us to discontinue the flight. We're not ven tired.”

Statistics Are Given

Some statistics: They flew some 26,000 miles, a distance that| would have taken them around [the world had they followed the (equator; the plane \consumed about 1372 gallons of gaspline,. and they made approximately 100 contacts with a speeding truck from which they hauled up fuel and supplies with :

weather and

HOOSIER DROWNS AS

(GIRL GOES FOR HELP

WASHINGTON, Ind, Aug. 7 (U. — Ralph Canary, 25-year-old filling station attendant, drowned in a strip-mine pit about eight miles southeast of here while swimming yesterday. A girl companion told authorities she tried to save Mr. Canary, but that he struggled so fiercely she was

i i i

forced to break away from him and

go for help. Rescuers who came fromr a nearby store attempted to saves him.

DETECTIVES OF GARY WILL GET TRAINING

Times Special ' GARY, Ind, Aug. 7—A two weeks’ course in advanced police work for detectives only will be given here early next month as an addition to the basic police training course now sponsored by the FBI Police Chief William J. Linn has announced. The course will include training in ballistics, blood tests, conducting of raids, apprehension of fugi-

> tives, use of firearms and other |

ith his sister, Mary Kathryn .

> 03s Take the Cake in Home:Baking As Their 4-H Club Kneads the Dough

. “baking’s fun.” Paul Waggoner « + - has to mow lawn afterwards.

ating’s easy but cleaning up

is tough.

One time Harvey's aunt came to his house for supper and was

to eat some cake he had made. “I said she didn’t have to eat it if she didn't want to,” Harvey said. “But she ate it—and she liked it, too!” Harvey and his mother each made a cake several weeks ago for a Sunday School picnic. After a bit of sampling, Harvey's cake won out and was the one taken to the picnic. Mrs. Clarkson said she was glad] her son was interested in baking

promptly informed that she was|’

but said “It’s hard to get him to

Miss Indiana?

Times Special NEW ALBANY, Ind. Aug. 7— Miss Biilie Lee Wilburn, 16, has been named “Miss New Albany” to compete for the honor of being chosen “Miss Indiana” in the annual bathing beauty. contest at the Dunes Water Sports «Carnival at Michigan City next Friday. Thirty other Indiana cities are sending contestants.

‘TRICK RIFLE’ DEATH

PITTSBURGH, Aug. 7 (U. P.).— With a “trick” rifle lying’ across his knees, a middle-aged man was found shot to death today, slumped over the steering wheel of an expensive touring car which bore a New York State license. Officers were attempting to. determine whether the shooting was murder or suicide. The fatal bullet apparently came from the weapon found in the car. The stock of the 22 rifle had been removed and a “trick” trigger, three times as long as the ordinary firing device, was installed.

CAPEHART HAS ILLINOIS DATE Homer E. Capehart, Washington,

dress at a meeting of northern Illinois Republicans Aug. 17 at Lake DePue, Ill.

“DARK VICTORY” Belte Davis—Geo. Brent

“MOTHER CAREY'S CHICKENS”

PROBED BY POLICE

Ind. will deliver the principal ad-.

clean up the kitchen when he’s through.” Contributing to the family cookie jar doesn’t help the boys get out of mowing lawns, feeding chickens or hoeing gardens. “We just have to do those chores when the day’s baking is done,” they said. Paul wants to be a chef someday and another club member, between bites of a loaf cake, said he'd like to cook lunches for passengers on airliners . “At any rate,” one young baker said, “were all fixed for getting married. At least ‘we can cook!”

HOOVER GIVEN RADIO APOLOGY

Chicago University ‘Regrets’ Pearson’s Statement During Forum.

CHICAGO, Aug. 7 (U. P.)—An apology by the University of Chicago to former President Herbert Hoover today “cleared up” a statement made last week on the University’s round, table radio broadcast that Mr. Hoover has had men ‘buying up” Southern delegates to the 1940 Republican presidential convention. Drew Pearson, Washington columnist, made the statement July 30 during the University’s weekly radio discussion of public affairs. Mr. Hoover demanded a retraction Saturday in a telegram to Robert M. Hutchins, University president. Mr. Hutchins, recovering from a back injury at his Sullivan, Me, summer home, referred the demand to Frederic C. Woodward, University Vice president. During the round table broadcast yesterday an announcer read a

' |statement prepared by Mr. Wood-

ward expresing “regret” on the University’s behalf. “It was stated with reference to the next Republican National Convention that Mr. Hoover ‘has had men down in Louisiana and Mississippi buying up the delegations down there,’” Mr. Woodward said. “That statement should never have been made. We have ample assurance that it is absolutely untrue. “We not only wish to state our regret but our full confidence that Mr. Hoover’s public life stands out for high standards of probity, of political honesty and abhorrence

of political corruption.”

At Washington Mr. Pearson said he had not libeled Mr. Hoover “but on the contrary had paid tribute to his present political strength within the Republican Party.” “1 am sure, ” he said, “that no intelligent person would construe my remarks to mean that Mr. Hoover personally was buying up Southern delegates for the 1940 convention.

REV. H. A. NUOFFER RE-ELECTED LEADER

Times Special HAMMOND, Ind. Aug. 7-—The

Evangelical Lutheran Church pastor, has been re-elected district superintendent of English Lutheran churches in this area. The selection was made at the convention at Concordia College, River Forest, Ill. The Rev. Nuoffer's circuit will include all South Chicago churches and those as far east as La Porte, Ind.

"COME WHERE IT’S ALWAYS CooL!

“mickey Rooney! § “ANDY HARDY GETS SPRING FEVER"

: | moment reve

Rev. H. A. Nuoffer, Trinity English |

C.1.0. CONCEDED B.-M. VICTORY

Confirmation by Court and|

“Labor Board Necessary; Speed Production.

By LUDWELL DENNY Times Special Writeg

WASHINGTON, Aug. General Motors-C. 1. O. agreement is viewed here as a tentative victory

“for the C. I. O. It involves practical recognition of |:

C. 1. O. in some plants, and for the the company’s refusal to sign with either faction un-

whether-C. I. O. or A. F. of L. is the legal United Auto Workers Union and whether either is representative. But it is only a tentative victory because such C. I. O. “recognition” depends on court and Labor Board confirmation. ° With this concession the company bought peace from C. I. O. for the already delayed 1940 production season. General Motors, however, signed only after the Labor Board in the Chrysler-Briggs cases last week threw out the C. I. O. demand for employer-wide elections and ordered separate plant elections as desired

® by the A. F. of L.

Counts on Adjudication

General Motors assumes that in its anticipated elections the board will follow this new plant precedent —presumably with some plants going C. I. O. and some A. F. of L.

t | The board has not yet acted on

General Motors’ petition. That General Motors counts on Labor’ Board adjudication to control

|/the C. I. O.-A. F. of L. factional

warfare before its new truce with

E1C. I. O. runs out, is -indicated by

President Knudsen’s statement as

| follows:

“The recent action of the National

: {Labor Relations Board in ordering : |elections in certain plants in the

automobile industry should help the situation materially, provided the contending parties show respect for the rights of all employees and submit to the results of such elections, however they may turn out.”

C. I. 0. Makes Concessions

The agreement provides wage adjustments for some tool and die workers—though how many is in dispute. The union lost its demand for a general increase for tool and die workers and for a union label, but won on overtime. It is understood here that the C. I. O. agreed: 1. Not to make general production wage demands during the 1940 season; 2. Not to reopen parts of the general contract, but to treat it as a whole; subject to denunciation by either party; 3. Not to permit sitdowns, slowdowns, or other work interruptions.

NLRB to Conduct

Packard Election

WASHINGTON, Aug. 7 (U. PJ. —The National Labor Relations Board announced today that it would conduct a consent collective bargaining ployees of the Packard Motor Car Co., Detroit. Packard workers will choose between C. I. O. and A. F. of L. factions of the United Automobile Workers Union. This apparently will prevent the strike authorized ‘yesterday by the C. I. O. faction to win exclusive bargaining rights.

NLRB Faces New Test In Banking Dispute

WASHINGTON, Aug. 7 (U. P.).—

|A new Supreme Court battle over

the National Labor Relations Board’s interpretation of interstate commerce appeared certain today as the Board extended its claimed jurisdiction to employer-employee relations of approximately 16,000 banks. The NLRB ruled that the Bank of America National Trust & Savings Assocation California, San Francisco, had violated the Wagner Act, thus overruling the bank’s contentions that the act did not apply to it because it was not engaged in commerce and that it was specifically exenipted as an instrumentality of the Federal Government,

DIXIE DAVIS AND HOPE DARE MARRY

NYACK, N. Y, Aug. 7 (U. P)— Dixie Davis and Hope, Dare, figures in an underworld romance which brought prison to one and notoriety to the other, were married yesterday with detectives as witnesses. Davis, one time lawyer. for the powerful Dutch Schultz mob, and his bride, 'former Broadway showgirl, went into seclusion immediately after the ceremony: Davis, properly named Julius Richard Davis, was released from the Tombs recently after serving 126 days of a one year sentence imposed on felony indictments which

the Schultz policy racket.

ONLY TENTATIVE:

1. — The :

til the court or Labor Board decides|

election among em-

resulted from his association with |

‘COMEBACK’

expected new “comeback” in pictures when he opens at the "Ambassador today in “My Man Godfrey.” It's a horror-comedy bill with “Old Dark House” cofeaturing.

Sigrid Girls Weds Doctor

Marriage of Film Actress Attended by 400.

HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 7 (U. P).— Sigrid Gurie, film actress, and Dr. Laurence C. Spangard were at home today after their marriage yesterday in a garden ceremony at Pacific

Palisades. Four hundred guests stood on the balcony and in the patio of the groom’s. home to witness the wedding.

Cramer Backs

American Music|

Urging a greater appreciation of American musicians and music, Bomar Cramer welcomed more than 700 persons to-the third concert in the Symphony-at-Sundown series, held last night at the Rauh Memorial Library garden. Meanwhile 14,000 persons heard the last in a series of concerts last night being presented by the Indianapolis Concert Band at the Garfield Park Open Air Theater. The concert was featured by an accordion solo by Dick Herold.

22 GIRLS MATCH BEAUTY IN RACE

The semi-finals of the “Miss Indianapolis” contest will be held tonight at the Fountain Square Theater. Twenty-two girls chosen in elimination contests will compete for

the right to appear in the finals to

be held Wednesday night at the theater. “Miss” Indianapolis” will compete

for the title of “Miss Indiana” next|

week-end at Michigan City, Ind. “Miss Indiana” will be given a wip to Hollywood and a screen test.

KYSAR WILL PLAY OWN CREATIONS

Lewis Kysar. of Rushville, Ind, will include two of his own compositions in a piano program he will play on the Jordan Conservatory of Music's 101st broadcast on WFBM at 5:15 p. m. today. The works are titled, aromatically enough, “The Persistence of Gardenia.” Mr. Kysar, winner of three scholarships in last’ year’s Jordan-WFBM competitions, also will play works by Haydn, Stravinsky, Ravel and Navarro. = |

WHEN DOES IT START?

APOLLO

“Bachelor Mother,” with Ginger Rogers, Davie Niven and Charles ol urn, at 11. 1:50, 4:40, 7:30 and,

“Career,” with Edward Ellis, Anne Shirley, Alice Eden and John Archer. at 12:30, 3:20," 6:10 and 9.

CIRCLE

“Hotel for Women.” with Ann Sothern Linda Darnell, James Elliand Elsa Maxwell at 11, 1:50, £40, 7:30 and 10:20. “Frontier Marshal,” with Randolph Scott, Nancy Kelly, Cesar SOT and Binnie Barnes’ at 13:40, 3:30,

LOEW'S

“And " Hard Gets Spring Fe Fever,” Tih ickey tone Holden, Ceotlia Sarker Es Ann Rutherford at 11, 1:47, 4:34, 7:21 and

y All Come Out,” with Tom Neal and Rita Johnson at 12:32, 3:19, 6:06 and %: 53.

YT Ce I William Powell--Carols Lombard “MY MAN GODFREY”

Chas. Laugh! Boris Karloff “THE OLD DARK | HOUSE”

EW /5

ER STAMPEDE’

PANAMA PATROL” ats of Red Circle”’—News

7

‘William Powell ‘makes an un-

“Essence of Jade” and

|

John Barrymore May Yet Play Indianapolis in 'My Dear Children'

sign of its rousing itself.

reveille. So far, only one answer has come in. This is from Sam Stratton, press. representative for John Barrymore & Co. in “My Dear Children” at Chicago’s Selwyn Theater. Unfortunately, Mr. Stratton can give no forthright = and thumping statement of assurance about the play’s appearance. here. There has been talk of it, and there is a possibility. Meanwhile Mr. Stratton outlines the situation as follows:

definite bookings following Chicago, as the business here is building every week and at this rate Mr. Barrymore can stay here well into the new season. “The difficulty with playing Indianapolis is the fact that it is a three-day stand, and it will be hard to fill in the other three. We should have played Indianapolis at the time we played Columbus, but for some reason we‘ were booked through a string of onenighters. “We want to play the English and surely will if we can arrange bookings when the time comes.” And thus it stands today.

” # ” HE Playwrights’ Co.. which gave us “No Time for Comedy” last March, already has three

completed manuscripts for the coming season, plus others in various stages of completion. Scheduled for first production will be Sidney Howard's “Madam Will You Walk,” due to appear in October. Next is Maxwell Anderson’s “Key Largo,” with Paul Muni starred. Later on will come a second musical comedy by Mr. Anderson and Kurt Weill, the composer. This is the same team, you will recall, which collaborated on last season's successful “Knickerbocker Holiday.” Other plays by the company’s remaining members, Robert E. Sherwood, S. N. Behrman and

T seemed, the other day, that the local theater stirred in its sleep. Perhaps it was only imagination; certainly there

“So far we haven't made any

summer

However, in a burst of impatience, a few letters were dispatched from ‘this department by way of a timid.

Elmer Rice, are promised. And meanwhile we have the reasonable assurance that English’s be included on the road tour of Mr. Sherwood's “Abe Lincoln in Illinois,” with Raymond Mass in his original portrayal of title part. os 2 8 { R. RICE, who wrote the Playwrights’ only failure last season (though it was someth of an artistic triumph) plans return to the scene and style his famous hit, “Street Scene,” i this year’s new play. At least the forthcoming drama, already out-

a New York locale. » Se

James Daggett’s Ironton Play» house at Ironton, Mich., sends word ‘that the current week's attraction will be “Mrs. Moonlight,” open= ing Tuesday and running nightly through Friday, with a Thursday matinee. Prefacing this information, Egan Leck, the press agent, indulges himself in a brief essay on the joys of dropping into the theater, movie house or book store and encountering one of life’s delightful artistic surprises. Mr. Leck’s prolog certainly deserves ‘a little volume unto ite self, rather than being stuck in at the bottom of the column. But it will have to be enough to say that he considers “Mrs. Moon-= light” to be one of these afore-

prises.

ine, Mrs. Moonlight, has been granted the wish of youth and beauty throughout her lifetime. This is in 1880. The play takes

bloom of youth isn’t all it is cracked up to be—Hippa Hula to the contrary notwithstanding. Prominent in fhe cast are Gene Benedict, Rica Scott Titus .and

John Jennings.

HOLLYWOOD College

By PAUL HARRISON

Picture Nears Goal Line

Without Last-Minute Touchdown

lined, will have many scenes and

mentioned delightful, artistic sure | i I

The play assumes that its hero=

the audience up to 1926, proving, ° in the interim, that the perennial .

of a certain royal costume. “Rich silks it has to be, and rich furs also. I vant it trimmed in real stables and vermin.” Directing 4-year-old Carolyn Lee in a difficult scene, Edward Griffith said, “If you get it right this time, darling, I'll buy you an ice cream cone.” She replied; “No, thanks—it's too fattening.” In the nearly completed “Wine ter Carnival,” Walter Wanger has made a college picture which is not based on a last-minute touch-

fessor; contains no blue-jowled | actors pretending to be underamen and doesn’t even use a py-gulping sequence. ., . Right in the old" groove, though,

E. Brown and Martha Raye. In this one, the ball is swallowed by Miss Raye, who in turn is swallowed by Mr. Brown, who then gallops over for the winning score. Or something like that. #2 3 'n 3 HE movies may be alarmed about television, but they're plugging it with four pictures now in production. . . . Youll have a hard time recognizing Paul Muni in “We Are Not Alone.” He'll play it without trick makeup. . . . Metro people who have seen some of the 16 reels of ‘Gone With the Wind” say Clark Gable dominates the picture. Warnerites confide that Olivia de Havilland steals it, Selznick employees

OLLYWOOD, Aug. 7.—Short takes:

and pasty comp:exion as- the queen in “Elizabeth and Essex,” Bette Davis would win no “umph-girl” prizes, and these sacrifices to realism bother Director Michael Curtiz. “Bette is magnificent. She is perfect! But she has no Essex appeal!” Later he was telling a Wardrobe | man what he expected in the way

_down; has no absent-minded pro- °

is “$1000 a Touchdown,” with Joe .

. - J with her flaming red wig

“Soch acting!” he mourned.

claim it's a triumph for Vivien : i Leigh, who is in ‘almost every

DAVID NIVEN

BACHELOR

With Anne Shiriey—Edward Ellis Samuel S. Mifds—Janet Beecher-

81.80 D

DOUBLE Sal

FRONTIER Lar RAR

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THEATRES |

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|: “LUCKY NIGHT”

_W. Baxter _JBETURN O OF CISCO KID”

BITTER HELD OVER!

Claudette Colbert—James Stewart

“It's a Wonderful World”

Irene Dunne—Charles Ruggles “Invitation to Happiness”

Irene Dunne—Fred ‘MacMurray “INVITATION TO HAPPINESS” Shirley Ross Gene Kru & Orchestra Bob Hope “SOME LIKE IT HOT” =

. Grant “ONLY ANGELS HAVE WING © Rienard 1 Dix —MAN OF CONQUEST

--Wash, A N. Jersey Davis Paramount ™® tei ti George Brent “DAR CTORY” . Jackie Cooper “GANGSTER’S BOY”

WEST SIDE

SOUTH SIDE

Aa NTAINS GIRLS

22

MISS INDIANAPOLIS Contest

Final Contest Wed. Night —Now on the Screen—

22 BEAUTIFUL

(1) Chester Morris, “BLIND

NORTH SIDE

LAX eY CETERA

FREE PARKING Henry Fonda

i WOMEN | IN THE WIND”

=| CINEMA p IIs, Lov

“LUCKY NIGHT” ‘Walter Pidgeon “SOCIELY LAWYER”

34TH AND ILLINOIS “INVITATION TO HAPPINESS” Bob Hope “SOME LIKE IT HOT”

. Belmont snd Wash. BELMONT Irene Dunne “INVITATION 10 BAPE ried a M ME A CRIMINAL” CoE WADE ax, All Uongisiones - J. Mich, Honey ‘Fonda

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