Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 17, Number 2, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 27 March 1895 — Page 2

THE NAPPAXEE NEWS. BY G. N. MURRAY. 'NAPPANEK IN/MANA ' < r ■— The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC. A combination' of all the window pl ass interests of the country under the name of the National Association ’ of Window Glass Manufacturers was formed at Pittsburgh with a capital of $25,000,000. One suicide a day during the present year, seventy-eight in all, is the record for Chicago. Bex and Allen Pringle and James Britton had a hostile meefing near Kewaunee, Miss. The brothers were killed and Britton fatally wounded. Daniel Dawson, Robert Tlolman and James Holman, negrpes suspected of barn-burning, were lynched by a mob at Tyler, Ala. Cuiustian science healers at Dayton, 0., were arrested charged with having death of a child by neglect. Indictments were returned against ten police officials of New York xity and they were under heavy bonds. Tile Pioneer lumber mills, Baldwin refrigerator works and Vermont RollerShade company shops were burned at Burlington, Vt., the loss being $300,000. Tiie explosion of a sawmill boiler near Eight-Mile Creek, Tex., killed six persons and maimed as many more. Alfred D. Tinsley, rejected by the senate, was again appointed postmaster at Sioux Falls, S. 1). Cabinet officials believe that the United States should protect Venezuela from oppression by foreign countries. John Gargus and his wife, of'Buffalo Island. Ark., were killed while asleep by robbers, their baby lying between them being uninjured. It was reported that Secretary Gresham had demanded the recall of L. A. Thurston, the Hawaiian minister at Washington. Thurston is charged with undiplomatic conduct. The Michigan senate passed a bill prohibiting publishers from mailing their publications to subscribers after subscriptions have expired. Sabins Main and Miss Sarah J. Simpson were married at l*Jiillippi, W, Ya., after a courtship of thirty-two years. The United States authorities decided to take a firm stand against interference in Venezuela.. Mrs. Mart E. Lj:ase declined the populist nomination for mayor of Wichita, Kan. Reliable reports are that the peaches are all killed in Indiana, but that the Email fruits are not affected to any serious extent. "Three children of a laborer named Charles Ross, all under 3 years old, were burned to death at Springfield, Mo. They were left in the house while the parents went visiting, and a lamp exploded. Between twenty-five and fifty men were killed by aq explosion in. the Rocky Mountain Coal and Iron- company’s mine at Red Canyon, Wyo. A cyclone in Georgia did great damage.at Augusta and Columbus. Tiie grand jury investigating the levee riots at New Orleans returned indictments for murder against twentyeight men. t The Commercial bank of Moscpw, Idaho, closed its doors with liabilities of $67,000. Mrs. Ballington Booth, of the Salvation Army, performed the marriage ceremony for two members of the army at Cincinnati, O. Harriet Talley was hanged by a mob near Petersburg, Tenn. She was suspected of burning the dwelling of Baylor Marshall. - Fire destroyed a stable in San Francisco and eighteen valuable horses were cremated. A vestibule train on the Southern railway was wrecked near Jackson, Ga., by vandals and Fireman Roberts was fatally injured. Because of a quarrel Arthur Speyd shot and killed his betrothed, Annie Frisch, at Celina, 0., and then killed himself. - A terrific simoon, filling the air with sancß swept over the country near Denison, Tex. Houses were unroofed, trees blown down and a great deal of damage done. In p. collision between freight trains near Hinckley, ill.. Engineer Spencer and Fireman Williams were killed. The first bank with a woman president ever organized in the United States closed its doors at Genoa, Neb. Burglars entered the residence of Andrew Shorb, a farmer living near Columbus City, Ind., and robbed him of $5,000 in gold and SSOO in greenbacks. The Western Transfer & implement company’s warehouse and storehouse and elevator of Hubbard & Gere's linseed oil mill were burned at Sioux City, la., causing an aggregate loss of $400,000. Further advices say that sixty persons perished in the mine disaster at Red Canyon, Wyo., of which fifty-one were married and nine young men and boys. Flames that started in Kern's coffin factory in NOw Orleans destroyed property valued at $250,000. - Daniel Summers (white) and Isaac Allen (colored) killed each other in a duel near Carthage, Miss. • The secretary of the treasury appointed William Martin Aiken, of Cincinnati, 0., supervising architect of the treasury, vice O'Rourke, resigned. The president appointed William M. Bpringer, of Illinois, and C. B. Kilgore, of Texas, to be United States judges for the territory of Oklahoma. A forest fire that had burned over twenty-five acres of valuable timber was still raging within 2 miles of EggHarbor City, N. J. Members of the Yale-Cornell gew/ will go to England to com pete fopfcne grand clr C' ”'_recup at July.

The Johnson county savings bank at Warrensburg, Mo., closed its doors. A decision at Findlay, 0., makes the proprietor of a case and the owner of the premises liable for money lost at poker in the cafe* The Women’s club of Michigan have organized the Michigan Federation of Women’s clubs and elected Miss Clara Avery, of Detroit, president. Belief was gaining ground in Wash* ingtqrf that the supreme court would declare the income tax law unconstitutional. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United {States during the week ended on the 22d aggregated $952,491,395, against $898,639,277 the previous week. The increase, compared with the corresponding week in 1894, was 13.8. Twenty-nine buildings in the business portion of Bayou Sara, La., were burned. The residence of P. Dollard at Chapleau, Ont., was burned and three of his children were cremated in an upper room. There were 278 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 22d, against 266 the >week previous and 244 in the corresponding time in 1894. Jim Morrison, a notorious murderer and counterfeiter in Alabama, was killed while resisting arrest near Toadvine. Rev. Dr. W. M. B. Yonce, professor of ancient languages at Roanoke college, Virginia, dropped dead in a church at Salem. The Nebraska legislature passed a bill forbidding the sale of cigarettes in the state to any person under 21 years of ;rge Walter Baiik was hanged at Tahlequah, I. TANARUS., for the murder of Johnson Reese several years ago. Joseph Valsin (colored) was hanged at Natchitoches, La., for the murder of Maj. Anthony, also colored. E. F. Coffin, a San Antonio telegraph operator, inherits s2fsf)o,ol\o from an uncle who has died* in Brazil. North Dakota's university and normal school will close, owing to tlie fact that the governor reduced their appropriations. A bill appropriating $200,000 for the benefit of drought sufferers passed both houses of Nebraska's legislature. Three tramps who had started a fire in a tinner's charcoal stove were suffocated to death in a box car at Trinidad, Col. New York health officers discovered a man stricken with leprosy who had been living in a tenement for six years. Seven members of a German family in Toledo, 0., were seriously afflicted with trichinosis, caused by eating diseased sausage. Madison county, Ind., was being terrorized by lawless .men ay and farmers will employ bloodhounds to hunt them down. Dun's review of trade notesa stronger demand for money and other evidences of improvement in business. A bill was introduced in the Illinois house taxing bachelors $25 annually, the money to be used in building and sustaining an old maids’ home. Income tax returns were pouring into the office of the commissioner of internal revenue in Washington at a rapid rate. Miss Piijiebe Couzins, the woman’s rights lecturer, says she was betrothed to the late ex-Senator fair in Chicago in 1893.

Tiie finest counterfeit quarter dollar ever made was detected at the United States subtreasury in Baltimore. It is of the series of 1893, and is composed largely of silver. Only the most adroit expert can detect if from genuine coin. The Newport deposit bank of Perry county, Pa., closed its doors. The funerals of the sixty-one victims of the lied 'Bud mine disaster were held at Evanston, Wyo. Two members of a boating party at Philadelphia were'drowned iu the Delaware river by the capsizing of their boat. Four firemen lost their lives in a fire .that destroyed the St. James hotel in Denver. A' VALISE containing $730 was snatched from Leo Hale, a lumber dealer, while going from the bank to his office on a St. Louis street car. The packing houses of Heed Bros, at Annourdale. Ivan., were damaged sl,000,000 by fire. Judge Ricks, of Toledo, 0.. decided that a foreign-born woman who comes to’ the United States and marries a citizen of this country becomes a citizen of the United States. * Intimations were received that Jamaica would levy increased taxes on American imports because of the duty omsugar. Niblo’s garden, one of New York's most famous playhouses, closed its doors permanently. It was there that Patti,when a child of 8, made her debut. Over 1,000 rolling mill employes at Youngstown, 0., went on a strike because three puddlers were discharged. During a storm near Pine Hill, Ala., Mrs. Jephtha Williams and her son were killed by lightning and Mr. Williams was totally blinded. M. K. Sutton, a nonunion glassblower employed at Tarentum, Pa., was beaten to death by strikers armed with fence rails. A Florence & Cripple Creek train was held up by five , bandits near Victor, Col., who robbed passengers of valuables. Among the women who registered at “Wichita, Kan., to vote at the municipal' election was Mrs. Harriet Me Murray, aged 115 years. Two explosions, followed by fire.: completely wrecked the Empire theater in Chicago. * PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Ui:n. Adam Badeau, who was on the! staff of Hen.* Grant as military score- j tary and who afterwards served as secretary of the American legation in ' London, died at Ridgewood, N. i aged 04 years. James M. Heatherton, the founder; Jfnd' editor of the Plumbers .Trade •Journal, ore of the oldest trade papers in the country, died at his residence in ■ Ttrajklynr-Nr-Y. afted 54 years. 1

Mrs. Abbie M. Gannett, essayist, poet and author, one of the best known women in New England, died at Malden, Mass. Dr. Henry Coppee, president of the Lehigh university at Bethlehem, Pa., died suddenly of heart disease, aged 75 years. Mrs. Mary E. Harlan celebrated her 99th birthday at Montezuma, Ind. John Vaughan, probably jthe oldest man in Iventuck3 r , died near Big Hill, aged 104. Deacon Edward D. Boylston, the oldest editor in the state, poet, author and millionaire, died at Nashua, N. H. Ex-Lieut. Gov. Edmund Carnes, of Nebraska, died of pneumonia at Seward. He was elected to the office twice. Mrs. Christie Washington (colored), aged 116 years, died at Somerville, N. J. The eldest of her children is 89 years old. •Ex-Congressman RiciiardVaux,noted for his pbTanthrop}', died in Pliiladel- j phia of the grip, aged 78 years. Lycurgus Dalton, for five terms postmaster of the house of representa- 1 tives, died in Washington, aged 50 3’ears. FOREIGN. The wreck of the Spanish cruiser Reina Regenta was found near the Straits of Gibraltar. Not one of the 420 persons on board was saved. German manufacturers have formed a commission to invade America and fight for a larger share of trade. Dispatches from Quito state that the insurrection in Ecuador has been suppressed and the leaders arrested. A dynamite explosion on a ship at Oberwescl, Prussia, killed thirteen persons and injured many others. j Meredith & O'Brien, stock brokers at Montreal, failed for $100,000; Over 1,000 persons were killed in a battle at Lima, Peru. , Almost the entire business portion of the old town of Fort William, Man., was destroyed b3 r fire. Twenty-eight fishermen were lost during a storm on lake Kuennero\vy-in Pommerania. j England assured the United States that she did not desire to acquire any territory in settling with Nicaragua. Drought and locusts have caused widespread famine in eastern equatorial Africa. Villages have been depop- 1 ulated aid mission schools and churches have been closed. It was feared that the order restoring separate Catholic schools in Manitoba would result in a religious war/ Cuban insurgents enticed Spanish troops into ambush and indicted serious losses at Bayamo and Kll(?bre. In Toronto John Bell, prompted by jealousy, killed his mistress and cut his own throat with the same razor? , . ■ Germany's reichstag refused to congratulate Prince Bismarck on liis 80th birthday. Emperor William expressed great indignation. Negroes and Indians- fought a des- j perate battle near Naefemento, Mexico, ; and six of the former were killed/ The tug Velos was driven ashore on Trial island, B. C., during a gale and five men lost their lives. j Queen Victoria was suffering great- \ ly from rheumatism, which rendered I her almost helpless. Severe earthquake shocks were felt in ltal3 T near the Adriatic coast. Several persons were killed. A terrific storm swept Great Britain, killing man3 r persons and causing great damage to property. Li Hung Ciiang, , the Chinese peacf envo3% was shot in the face by a fa*natie while returning from a conference with the Japanese plenipotea* tiaries.

LATER. v The mutilated bodies of Mrs. Sam Butler (colored) and her 8-year-old son were found at Meridian, Miss. They were supposed to have.been murdered by the husband of the woman. Miss Fla via Brewster died near Freeport, 111., at the age of 100. Augustus S. Baker, said to be the oldest newspaper man in New Jersey, died at his home at Woodbury, aged 86 years. Severe wind storms swept over Ohio, Illinois and other towns. Dust stormsprevailed in lowa and Illinois. Government detectives were trying to discover parties guilty of producing dangerous counterfeit bills that appeared at OmaJia. Sknor de Lome was appointed Spanish minister to the United States to succeed Senor Muruaga. The long-established wholesale dry goods house of E. S. Jaffray & Cos. in New York went into the hands of receivers with liabilities of $2,500,000. Ihe town of Gilmanton, Wis., was nearly wiped out by fire. The Manitoba legislature rejected the order of the governor general to restore to Catholics their parochial schools. Mrs. John F. Core, of Marion, Pa., took her 2-year-old child to a well and dropped it in and the infant was drovyned. Honj A. N. Mosely, congressman from the Fourteenth Missouri district, and the youngest member of congress, was at Dexter to Miss Effie „Smith. The 150th anniversary of the foundation of the Second Parish Unitarian church was celebrated.*at Binghamton, Mass., in the meeting-house which was erected in 1742. A tornado visited Delaware, 0., and surrounding sections, unroofing houses, uprooting trees and demolishing^fonces. The Steel Edge Stamping and Iletinning company, of Millis, Mass., failed for $192,1)36. The report of the experts in Chicago who investigated the whisky trust accounts says that a discrepancy of sl,-*. 924,120 existed. The Trumbull county courthouse, located at Warren, <).. was gutt< >1 by fire. A report submitted to the con Mitutional convention at Salt Lake City Bays that no inhabitant of Utah Miall ever be molested in person or property on account of his or her mode >f religious worship, and polygamy or plural marriage is forever prohibited.

THE DEBS CASE. Arguments Begun In the United States Supreme Court. Wabhington, March 26.—The United States supreme court Monday began the hearing of argument in the case of Eugene V. Debs, president of the American Railway union, and others who participated with him in the Chicago strike of the sunmer of 1894 .The early proceedings in the case Monday developed that while the argument would be extended, the question at issue was not complex. Representing the government were Attorney General Olney, Edwin Walter, of Chicago, and Assistant Attorney General Whitney. The venerable L3'inan Trumbull, S. S. Gregory and Clarence S. Harrow appeared for the defendant Debs and his associates. Debs and his associates ask for a writ of habeas corpus relieving from the sentence of imprisonment passed upon them by Judge Woods, of the United States circuit court for the northern district of Illinois, in December last, on the charge of contempt in failing to obey the injunction of the court, requiring them to desist from interfering with the interstate transportation of the mails or passengers or freight, and also from preventing emplo3 r es of the railroads concerned from transacting flieir business. The fact was soon developed that the main contention of the petitioners would be that the original bill stated no case cognizable in chancery, and that therefore the injunction was void, and that the persons at whom it was aimed were not bound to observe it. In support of this* proposition tluw asserted that without statutory authority from congress the government could maintain no such bill, and that no such authority could be found, unless. it bp in the act of 1890,. known as the Sherman anti-trust act. Hut they, contended that this act was not applicable, or that if it was applicable that section 4 of it, authorizing such proceedings; was unconstitutional, because involving tile proceedings in chancery in such a case it deprived defendants on trial under a penal statute of the right of trial by jury;.contrary to the sixth amendment to the constitution.

Mr. Trumbull began with a general statement, covering an hour. Mr. Whitney followed on behalf of the government,-and a written brief was submitted by Mr. Walkei*, relating solely to the jurisdiction of the court, upholding the court in every particular. Tim argument was along the lines laid down I>3* Mr. Walker in Chicago last fall. The argument of Mr. Gregory was directed to an attack against the constitutionality oil the act upon which the -contempt proceedings were based. The attorney general covered pretty much the whole ground, touching the more important, points raised in detail, and then generalizing in a masterful way upon the whole question of the duty and the right ‘of the court to uphold the law and to do its full share to maintain the peace of the community by repressing lawlessness. Mr. Harrow's part in flic case is to amplify upon the points urged by his associates and to dwell with emphasis and pertinacity upon the personal liberty of citizens, and their right to be free men in the fullest sense erf the word, “responsible only for the direct consequences of their acts.” * Under the rulings of the court two days will be consumed in the full presentation of the arguments and another hour will be given for a grand round-up—a gathering of the odds and ends. The supreme court will adjourn for the summer some time in May. That will'give six weeks at least for the consideration of this important case if a decision is reached before the recess, and it is the general belief that such is the present purpose. f L OWES MILLIONS. Receivers Appointed for E. 8. Jaffray St Cos. in New York. New York, March 26. —The long established wholesale dr3 r goods house of E. S. J affray & Cos. on Monday went into the hands of receivers. The action was a friendly one aiid was brought about to avoid possible difficulties growing out of the winding up of the estate of E. S. J affray. The complaint in the action sets out the liabilities of the firm as $2,500,000, $1,000,000 for merchandise, $1,000,000 on obligations and the balance of $500,000 on notes.. The losses of the firm vfeeently, it states, on account of the depression in business have been over $500,000, and $750,000 have been withdrawn by the estate of E. S. Jaffray. The business done by the New York house generally amounts to from SB,000,000 to $10,000,000 a year. It employs about 300 men and has seventyfour traveling Salesmen. The firm was organized in 18t)9 by flobert Jaffray as a branch of the London honse. LOST BOTH LEGS. Terrible Accident Befall* an Iron Worker at Trenton, N. J. Trenton, N. J., March 26. —John Fee, 19 years old, had to have both his legs amputated Monday morning as the result of a terrible accident at the Trenton Iron company’s works Monday. Fee was handling a coil of red hot wire with a pair of tongs. He made a false move and the wire wound arqund his legs, burning them almost off. His suffering was terrible. He was removed to St. Francis hospital and the legs amputated. His condition is serious. • Reunion of t'oxfly's Army. Massillon, 0.. March 26. —The survivors of the invading arm3' that marched to Washington under Gen. Coxey a .year ago, had a reunion here Monday night. Carl Brown lectured lengtlrand made tlx 1 startling aunounCeihent that when the troops were in the heart of the Alleghenies the conspiracy was hatched for the capture of the newspaper correspondents and the execution of those most offensive to the, reincarnated reformers, lirown says that he held the destroying hand and the reporters were permitted to live.

STRONG NERVES

Depend npon pure, rich, red, nourishing, strength-giving blood. The nerve3 derive their sustenance from the blood and when they are weak it is because they do not receivo the nourishment needed. The true cure for nervousness will not bo found in opiate or sedative compounds. These only allay the symptoms. " ——

HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA

Removes the cause by purifying and enriching the blood, giving to it just those qualities which are demanded for the proper support of the nervbus system. Hundreds of women who once suffered from nervousness, write that they have taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla and nervousness has disappeared. This was because Hood’s Sarsaparilla purified their blood. Hrrkrl , c Dalle act harmoniously .-with 11UUU Hood’s Sarsaparimt* 25c. The Hot Springs of South Dakota. The following letter from Mr. W. M. Tyson, Commander of the Pennsylvania Soldier and Sailors’ Home at Erie, Pa., written on his return home, after a stay of some weeks at Hot Springs, South Dakota, indicates that the Springs are in a fair way to become one of the leading health resorts of the country: Erie, Pa., Feb. 28,1895. Col. Fred Evans, Prop., “Evans Hotel,’’ Hot Springs, S. D. Dear Sir: Among the many who have been benefited bv treatment at the Hot Springs, S. D., and have experienced courteous hospitality ut your hands, I claim the right to say a word in behalf of the Springs as a health resort, and cannot do better than to state the facts in m.y own case. I left Erie, Pa., about November 1, 1894, my friends at the time doubting whether I wqifid-ever recover my health. I arrived at Hot Springs so weak and disheartened that it required aid to leave the cars and reach the hotel. For the first two weeks I felt no improvement. Then I experienced a change, which continued until my departure, aiid returned to my homo very much stronger, and almost free from pain. I do not hesitate to sa>' to an3 T ono seeking relief from pain, and desiring rest, that Ldo not believe there is an> r place where ail invalid can go and find so many advantages, such as healing waters, pure air, grand mountain scenery and comfortable hotel accommodations, as Hot Springs, S. D. The elegant Evans Hotel is equipped with .every provision for •comfort, and ail -that goes to make one feel at home. lam so thoroughly convinced of tlio many advantages to be found at your location, that it is a pleasure for ino to recommend the Hot Springs to’ invalids, and to those seeking amusement as well as health. * Wishing you every success, and that Hot Springs nmy become better known and appreciated, lam Truly* 3'ours, • (Siurvd) w. M. Tyson. The Hot Springs of South Dakota are reached directly by tho, Burlington Route. To Teachers and Others. For the meeting of the National Educational Association at Denver, Colo., in July, next, the Western trunlf lines have named a rate of one standard fare, plus two.dollars for the round trip. Variable routes will bo permitted. Special side trips at reduced rates will,bo arranged for from Denver to all tho principal points of interest throughout Colorado, andthoso desiring to extend the trip to California, Oregon and Washington, will be accommodated at satisfactory rates. Teachers and others that desire, or intend attending this meeting or of making a western trip this summer, will find this their opportunity. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. raid railway (first-class in every respect) will run through cars Chicago to Denver. For full particulars, wfite to or call on Geo. H. Heaffokd, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Chicago, ill. The Last Two Excursions to tho South. April 2d and April 30th tickets will bo sold via C. & E. I. R. It. to various points in Alabama, Georgia, Kentuck\', Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Teunessee, and Virginia, and to points in Florida west of River Junction, at one faro for tho round trip. For tickets and information apply to your nearest ticket agent, to City Ticket Office C. & E. 1. R. R., 230 Clark St., Chicago, or to C. W. Humphrey. Nor. Pass. Agent C. & E. I. R. It., 170 E. Third St., St. Paul, Minti, ■*“‘A Cheap Trip South. Tickets will bo sold at one fare round trip to points in Tennessee, Kentucky, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Florida, on tho lino of the Louisville & Nashville, and Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railroads, on January 8, February 5, March 5, April 2 and 80, 1895. Ask your ticket agent about it, and if he cannot sell 3 r o.u excursion tickets write to C. P. Atmore General Passenger Agent, Louisville, Ky., Jackson Smith. D. P. A., Cincinnati, 0., or Geo. L. Cross, N. W. P. A., Chicago, 111.

S HEALS RUNNING ; CURES theT SERPENT’S STING V CONTAGIOUS BLOOD POISON 'ate yS sor S es ob a nd ulcers yield to its healing- powers. It removes the poison and builds up the system Valuable treatise on the disease and Its treatment mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta. Ga.

Weak Mothers and all women who are nursing babies, derive almost inconceivable benefits from the nourishing properties of Scott’s Emulsion This is the most nourishing food known to science. It enriches the mother’s milk and gives her strength. It also makes babies fat and gives more nourishment to growing children than all the rest of the food they eat. Scott’s Emulsion has been prescribed by physicians for twenty years for Eickets, Marasmus, Wasting Diseases of Children, Goughs, Golds, Weak Lungs, Emaciation and Consumption. Sendfor pamphlet on Scott*s Emulsion . FREE . Scott A Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists. 60 cents and sl.

“My wife suffered many years with yM rious troubles, severe headaches, debilityJ nervousness, indigestion and dyspepstyj She has been treated by different doS tors, and tried different remedies, butj Hood’s Sarsaparilla has done more for hen than anything else. We consider Hood’s Sarsaparilla a most Indispensable medlJ

cine for family use, and for all disorder® caused by torpid liver and impure blood, in fact it is a wonderful health restorer to the whole system. Hood’s Sarsaparilla proved itself in my wife’s case, and w® can faithfully recommend Its use In every! family.” Jacob Rommel, Morrison, Mo. I HaoH’c Pi|lc cure all liver ills, biUouil I IUUIi o Ullla n egßi headache. 25c. J

NEXT TIME SHpecO.

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m

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