Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 42, 28 March 1908 — Page 7

PAGE SLVKX. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT Wanted, For Sale, For Rent, Lost, Found, Miscellaneous, Lodge Notice, Cards of Thanks, Obituaries, etc.. S CENT A WORD. Situations Wanted, are Free. The Market Plsce of Richmond for buyer or seller. A trial will convince you that Palladium Classified Ads re result bringers. 7 INSERTIONS FOR THE PRICE OF 5.

TIIK KICJI3IOAD iALL.AIl L 11 AMD SL'.N-TEjLEGKAJI, SATLKDAV, 3IAUCII XX. 1908.

WANTED.

WANTED Situation by a middleaged woman with a child as housekeeper. Call or address JO.JS North J street. J2S-3t WANTED -Agents forKerotene. Incandescent Mantle Urap. Twelve times cheaper than gas. seven times cheaper than ordinary kerosene lamp. Continental Co., ,W5 Broadway, New York. iM-Sun-ilt WaRTEDF armers "aruf dairymen to see the Great Western Cream Separator. Seaney & Brown, 015 Main St. --t WANTEDAirkTnd3uT hoTs tu rTn g'an 1 furniture repairing. Holt house, 124 S. f.th. Phone 1201. 2-'Jt WANTED Girl for housework. Phone 1940. 11 S. 16th St. 27-2t V ANTEINursTrigt o d o bya n 'experienced nurse, 205 Main street. 26-3t WANTED Plafnsew'ingr Ol fveClements, Fountain City, Ind. 27-3t WANTED-FuTnished "room f address I. C. U., care Palladium. 27-3t WANTED Place " i n "the" country to keep house for widower; call 026 N. 13th street. 27-3t WANTED Work by hoy 14 years old. Call 323 S. 9th. 2tl-3t WAITED Wash ingTridlronihg to do" Call at 1'24 S. 2nd st. L'O-.'it WANTED See Morehead for professional vault cleaning. Phone 2177. 038 Butler street. 25-7t WANTEDflTbuya"lighttanr"bu 1 1 dog. Call phone .MOSC. 23-7t WANTED Two goodmen for "country work. Apply to Golding, Palladium office. 22-7t v ANTED Vou to ride a Reading Standard, holds the world's record. Sold by Brown &. Darnell, 10l2 Main St. 22-7t vANTt-L)-To clean and repair your wheels. Elmer Smith, 426 Main. Li-tf WANTED1 Men to Learn barber trade; will equip shop for you or

TODAY'S MARKFT QUOTATIONS

NEW YORK STOCK (By Correll and Thompson, New York, March 2S. Amalgamated Copper American Smelting Atchison II. & 0 H. R. T C. M. & St. P . New York Central Northern Pac Pennsylvania People's Gas Reading Southern Pacific Union Pacific U. S. Steel U. S. Steel pfd Great Northern BANK STATEMENT. Reserves less U. S. deposits, inc .$1,440,275 Reserves, Inc 2,364,075 Loans, Inc. 2.8S6.100 Specie, Inc. 3,220,100 Legals, inc 957,500 Deposits, inc 7,254,100 Circulation, dec 202,700 Chicago. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS (By Correll and Thompson. Brokers, Eaton. O.) Chicago, March 2$. Wheat. Open. High. Low. Close. May . . July .. Sept . . . .. r4t3 r4"s r3 03!s 8tV S'V-s S.l.j Si"! " Corn.

Open. High. Low. Close. May 6rtia tWi 04 ci4 July 4 4 r;is cv:. Sept 63Vi 63i-s 04 tC Oats. Open. High. Low. Close. May 54-Vs 5li ."s'Si July 4SiB 47V, 471, Sept SSL 3 37 Pork. Op"u. High. Low. Close. May .. .S13.1.S $IX2 $13.07 $13.17 July . . . 13.55 1 ."., 13.45 13.57 Lard. Open. Higo. Iiw. Close. May . . . $ 25 ? v $.22 July .. . S.45 S.47 S.42 S.45 Ribs. May .. . $7.1o .S7.1-J ?7.7 $7.10 July .. . 7.40 7.40 7.37 7.40

U. S. YARDS, CHICAGO. Chicago, Ills.. March 2S. Hogs, receipts 11,000. left over 2.996; 10c to 15c higher. Cattle 300. Sheep 4.000. Hogs Close. Light $5.50 fa $6.00 Mixed 5.55 fa 6.05 Heavy 5.55 fa; 6.00 Hough 5.55 fa 5.70 CHICAGO GRAIN RECEIPTS. Today. Last Wk. Last Y'r. Wheat 15 33 34 Cora ..... 231

furnish positions, few weeks completes, constant practice, careful instructions, tools given, Saturday wages, diplomas granted, write for catalogue. Moler Barber College. Cincinnati. O. tf

WANTED Your carpets, rags, upholstery, mattresses, etc.. to clean by our vacuum process. Richmond House Cleaning Co. Phone, Home 191G. Bell 395R. 22-tf FOR SALE. FOR SALE Richmond real estate a specialty. Merchandise stocks, fire insurance. Porterfield, Kelly Block, 8th Main. 7tf !OR SALE- Seed com at Richmond Roller mills, North 2nd street. Phone 11!. 21 -sat-mon-wcd-2 wks FOR SALE Organ, N. 13th. ood as new, 10? 2S-2t FOR SALE Good general purpose horse, single harness; two-seated automobile, bargain, 1117 S. E street. 2S-31 FO R S ALE F irs tc 1 a s s r no tj used only 2 months. Address 516 South 7th street. 2S-lt FOR SALE Lot south Mh street, 39x130; cheap if sold at once; call 109 South uth street. 2 .-7t FOR "SALE Fine line mirrors, all sizes. Low prices. Antique Furniture Co., 519 Main. 2S-3t FO 1 ft S ALE Si x horse po wer Fai r-banks-Morris gas engine. Good as new. M. C. Henley. 2S-7t FOR SALE 140 cement blocks, each 2 '4 feet long. Good for foundation walls. For sale cheap, 1901 Main. St. 2S-::t FOR SALE OR TRADE Any kind of a farm or city property. Can loan you money to buy with. Phone 21 ".. Dje and Price, Cor. Oth and Main. 27-7t FOR" SALE New e s tst y 1 e s Tn wall paper. Moormann's, 520 Main. FOR SALE Barber shop, half interQUOTATIONS. Brokers. Eaton, Oh io.) Open High 62 "4 62 "r4 73;4i 73 34 75 75,2 834 K3 47 U 4TU 119-v8 11958 99 99 127"s 12S5s 11758 1178 89 3i 107M, .... 7Gr;8 76:8 128 "4 1284 35 ts 35,8 99 99 124 124 Low 60 'z 7ivl 74i .46 118 98 127 116Va Close 604 7 lis 74 U 83 Is 4fi 119 98 1271 H6V2 SOU 754 1264 3 I la 08V2 1232 126-s 31ii 9X1,2 123 Oats 153 Estimates. Wheat, 2S. Corn, 333. Oats. 189. NORTHWEST RECEIPTS. Today. Last Wk. Last Yu. Minn . 203 300 275 Duluth, 57 73 201 LIVERPOOL. Wheat Close i-4 lower. Corn Close lg lower. Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Best heavies SsUiofif1 5. Good to choice 5.55.5, BEEF STEERS. Good to choice heifers .. 6.25 fa 6. Medium to good steers.. 6.35r 6, Choice to fancy yearlings 5.50fa" 6. BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heifers.... 4.75fa 5. Choice to fancy cows.... $4.25 fa 5. Good to choice heifers .. 4.25fa 4. VEAL CALVES. Good to choice 4.4x7 Fair to good 3.00 36. STOCK CATTLE. Good to h'vy fleshy feed'rs 5.00 fa 5 Fair to good, feeders 4.65 if 5, Good to choice stocK,ers 3.50 fa 4 Common to fair heifers .. 3.30& 4 SHEEP. Choice lambs 6.75 JT 7 Best yearlings 5.00 fa 6 Best sheep 4.30 fa? 5 t;.i 73 75 25 75 25 65 00 25 Richmond Grain Market. (Richmond Roller Mills) Wheat (per bu.) D5c Corn, (per bu.) 50c Oats, (per bu.) 47c Rye. (Pr bu.) 70c Bran, (per ton) $24.00 Middlings, (per ton) $2G.OO Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Whelan.) Timothy hay (baled) .... $12 to 13 Timothy Hay (loose) ...$10.00011.00 Clover hay (baled) $12.00 Clover Hay (loose) J3.0010.08

The Rise of Jimmie Johnson.

VIII JAMES JOHNSON, BENEDICT. Didn't have to ADVERTISE to get himself a Vvife Senior Partner Jenkins' daughter eoon was his for life, Jenkins then retiring, "Jones & Johnson" was the style ADVERTISED In papers and exploited all the while.

est. Ross Tyler, Cambridge City. 27-71 FO R SA LE One" lot of g(K)d secondhand lumber; cheap if sold at once. Call at 217 South 6th street. 27-2t FO R SALE R hod e I s 1 and" Red"egg s". 1201 S. J. Phono 1591. Geo. W. Harvey. 26-9 1 FOR SALE Good big team of mules, cheap. Also riding plow, new last year. Harry Thompson, Union Pike. 26-7t FO RTSA LE jFstr e"ce i ve d7 n e wl i in Tof 1JXS wheels, three standard makes. Mixed Hay 10.04) Straw, (per ton,) GXK) Corn (per bu.) 55 Oats (iter bu.) 47 to 50c Fodder (per ton) $7.00 Richmond. CATTLE. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) Best hogs, average 200 to 250 lbs $5.35 Good heavy packers $5.35 Common and rough $4. 50 fa $5.00 Steers, corn fed ' 4.50 fa 5.00 Heifers 3.75 fa? 4.25 Fat cows S.OOfa) 3.75 Bulls 3.25fa 3.50 Calves 6.50 7.00 Lambs 6.00 6.50 PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens, dressed, per lb . .Kic Old chickens, per lb., li'j to 15c Turkeys, per lb ISc Ducks, per lb 15c COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb 31c. Country butter, per lb., 20 to 25c Kggs, per doz 12 Richmond Seed Market. (Runge & Co.) Clover Seed (per bu) $11.00 Timothy (per bu.) $2.25 Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg, March L'. Cattle Receipt s light. Prime and extra .5.f.5N. Common and fair, S5.cn 3.75. Veal $3.00 fa" 7.25. Hogs Receipts. S loads. Prime and yorkers, StUiY0.30. Common and roughs, ?4.5Vfa5.' Pigs, S5.40fa 5.5. Sheep & lambs, receipts light, steady. Good to prime. S5.3ri7.io Fair to choice lambs, S5.5oifa7.50. Cincinnati Livestock Cincinnati, Mrch 2v Hogs Receipts, 67S; strong. Cattle Receipts, 201; steady. Butcher steers $5.30 fa? 5.60. fV'ea.1, $5.25 fa? 6.50. Sheep, steady. Lambs, steady. Toledo Grain. Toledo, March 28. Wheat, iH'.i; Corn. ''1.... Oats, 55. Clover seed. M3.35. Alsike. $12.-10. Rye, S2. East Buffalo Livestock. East Buffalo, March Cattle Receipts, '25 head; active. Veal and calves S5.0Vi7.75. Sheep and lambs Receipts. 0.4OO. Sheep $3.753J.23. Lambs, cull to choice, $5.25S.i. Hogs Receipts. 2,040. Mixe dand yorkers. $5.fiO5.65. Pigs, $4.4X5.5. Hearies and rouk-$40fi? '5.45.

not. made by the trust. Call and get prices. We can please you. Full line tires and supplies. Brown and Darnell, lo22 Main St. 22-7t FOR SA LE - 1 1 o t pi a t es. furniture, etc. Bowen & Co.. 112! Main st. 2I-7t

FOR SALE House, 7 rooms, modern, 450 South 14th St. 25-7t FO RS A LE A 1 1 k i m 1 s sewing'-machine needles, oils and repairs. R. M. Laeey, 530 Main street. 25-7t FOR SALE Roof "and bridge""painT guaranteed five years. Retail at wholesale price. Clendenin & Co.. LINES IH DEADLOCK Question of Reduced Convention Rates Is Causing Much Trouble. PENNSYLVANIA IS OPPOSED Chicago, March 28. Central Passenger Association lines are still in a deadlock on the question of reduced rates for conventions and various other meetings, including those of the Grand Army of the Republic at Toledo and the National Educational Association at Toledo. The proposition requires a two-thirds vote which so far it has been impossible to gain in its favor. The Pennsylvania is opposed to granting the same rates in effect prior to the enactment of two-cent fare laws. The Grand Army veterans may therefore fail in their effort to get a rate of one cent a mile, which they have had for many years. AMERICAN BANKERS MEET NEXT MAY Sessions Will Be Held in Lakewood, New Jersey. New York. March 'J.v The advisory committee of the American Bankers' association has selected Lakewood, N. J., as the place for holding the spring meeting of the council. The meeting will last two days, May 5th and ;th. and also May 7th. if necessary. On Monday. May 4th, the general committees of the association and the committees of the various sections will meet. The sections are expected to report to the council at this meeting. BRITISH SYNDICATE WANTS DIAMOND FIELD Rich One Discovered in State Of Guerrero. Mexico City, Mych 28. A diamond field has been discovered in the State of Guerrero for which an offer of $100,000 made by a British syndicate interested in South African mines, was refused. It is asserted that the , gems of value have been taken from : the new discovery and that the formation is identical with that of the : South African fields. 1 I. this concerns you. ra3 cavafuliy. U: ."IdwetTs irP Pvp&ia positively rnarati:eej to cor fad '.elation, eronsSpatton, lirk beaiiche, offensive breath, icaisria mots all meoc arista? from etonse.- roabla. Ga4d iltdsJ Flour aaa&es delicious baked stall. Kbaca.

257 Ft. Wayne ave. Both phones. mar 1 ".- m o iuV f r i -2 m o s t Urt SALE- - Some Big Four seed oats. Call on or address A. O. Haisley. Route 7. 22-7 1 FOlt'S A L E Year fi ng"s lT( Trt h o i n hull .1. B. Colvin. Route v. !(ix Ml. 21-7t r'OK SALE ir"head of hordes. Public auction. Saturday. March "JMh Taube's burn. 12". N. tuh Si. Ki-tt FOR SALE Ntw irtos wheels'and sundries. Elmer Smith, 12 Main. 15-tf

FOR RENT. FOR RENT Flat, five rooms ami bath, cellar, etc., stvam heat and water furnished; 3-.'2 North Mh. 2S-7t FOR RENT Furnished front room with modern conveniences. 3i N. 10th. 2Mf FOR RE.NT Furnished rooms for light housekeeping. 220 N. 12th St. 27tf FOR RENT Furnished room, heat and bath. 30 N. 12th. 27-7t FO R " R EST Fl ve" roomed " houst-S. 11th and .1 streets, with large garden. Call phone No. 1235. 27-3t FOR RENT Rooms; lodging or fighThonse keeping; cheap, 103 N. 17th St. 26-3t FOR RENT-four room modern house. Call' 325 S. flth st. 2V-at. FOR RENT-Business rooms and flats. Ft. Wayne Ave. See Alfords. 2i-tf. FOR RENT Furnished rooms 12th street. 720 N. 25-7t ?Toi47$i5. 12tf FOR RENT Houses Benj. F. Harris. FOR RENT Furnished rooms; also office rooms, with steam heat and bath, at The Grand, for gents only. m 3-4-tf NOTICE. NOTICE Mr. Switzer, of Cleveland, has taken charge of the upholstering and repair work at Billueimers THEATER MUSICIANS DESIRE HIGHER SCALE Managers Look Upon Demand As Prohibitive. New York. March Th? Musical Mutual Protective union of this city has notified the theatrical managers' association of Greater New York that a substantial raise in scale will be demanded at the beginning of the next theatrical year. The managers are said to look upon the demand as prohibitive, and consideration of the alien contract labor law has been a feature of their meetings. Every manager throughout the city except one. is a member of the association. The union has a membership of upward of 5,000. ORIENTAL FRUIT BATS, They Descend tpon Ore-hards Witk Devastating Fury. The bi? oriental fruit bats, or flyinc; foxes, so familiar in Indi.t, Ceylon and the Milayau region, feed on all sorts of soft fruita except acid on&s, such as oranges; are especially foud of flgs and guavas and are a destructive pest to orchards and gardens. In some parts of Java, for example, no delicate fruit can be raised except by protecting the trees with nets and fightins off the nightly forays of bands of kalonRS. They live and travel in rest companies, roostins by day on chosen trees, where they hang by one hind leg, each protected from the sun's glare" and from rain in the closely -wrapped mantle of its wings, and larpe branches frequently break under tbe weight. At sunset they fly away to their feeding grounds, scattering over a wide area. Where a fij? tree or banana thicket attracts a crowd the roughest fighting begins over coveted plunder, each one screaming, clawing, biting and struggling to seiie something and get away to a secure retreat to enjoy it. There he hangs by one foot, and, grasping the fruit he has secured in the claws and opposable thumb of the other, he hastily reduces it to lumps, with which he stuffs his cheek pouches until they become distended like those of a monkey. Later he chews and swallows this food at leisure. At dawn all return to their roosts and, says Tickell. "book themselves along the branches, scrambling about hand over hand with some speed, biting each other severely, striking out with the long clawe of the thumb, shrieking and cackling without intermission." No doubt theie squabbles are rendered more violent by the disgracefully dissipated habits in which the bats indulge during their nocturnal expeditions, for. according to Francis Day and other observers, "they often pas tbe night drinking the toddy from the chatties In the cocoanut trees, which results either In their returning home in the early morning la a state ot extreme and riotous intoxication or in being found the next day at the foot of the trees, sleeping off the effects of their midnight debauch." Ernest IngersoH'B "Li fa of Mammals."

s-hop. corner 4:h ar.d M:-iin streets. First class work is guaranteed. 27 7t

LOST. LOST Blue elastic lel' with rot-o gold buckles, front' ami back. Reward offered if left at this office. 2vlt LOST Between loth and 15th "on S. C. leather seat off a child's velocipede. Return to Hornaday's Hardware S'-o'v. 26tf MISCELLANEOUS. HAVE Yl"R CCRTAINS laundered at 512 North 16th street. Old Phone 422 W. 2vlt MIDDAY 66 9 7 . draft hor.se, 1S00 lbs. Make season at Robert's livery barn, 151s Main street. Good Pedigree. $12.00 insure colt. Fanneis please cair. 25-7t SHO E R E P A I R I NG .1 h n Sea man. 1502 Main. 25 7t GEO. M. Gl'YER General contractor, Carpenter, and builder. Job work. Screens and screen doors. Automatic phone 1356. 25-tf SPECIAL 1NDI CEMENTS offered on plumbing and wiring. Richmond Plumbing and Eleetric Co., 4ls Main street. Phone 1;. 21 7 1 HERBERT B. LOPER Dentist; rooni 16 Colonial Bldg., phone 1634. 25-30t NOTICE i -Misssr E."Conn has" opened dress making parlors. Room CI Colonial building. First class work, reasonable prices. 24-7t A. B. HARNED. first-class shoe repairing; North 10th and E sts. 23-7t VElTlCLES o7 all kinds repaired, painted. rubbPr tiring. New shop on alley, North 4th and A streets. 23-7t F I R E-1 ' ROO FS T EE L SA FE SLa t est models and secondhand. Low prices. Write or call Allen C. Harris, 47 U. B. Building. Dayton. O. 21-tf Hams, any kind or size 12c. lb7Bacon, lean and nice 12Vs and 15c. Shoulders and calas 9c lb. Everything In TO E TREAT! New Tariff Arrangement Is to Be Made Between France And United States. WILEY WILL NOT GO. Washington, March US. Recent developments here make it probable that the commission which is to go to Europe to negotiate the new tariff treaty with France will not include Dr. W. H. Wiley, of the bureau of chemistry. It is expected that instead of Dr. Wiley there will be appointed some one who will represent the bureau of animal industry rather than the bureau of chemistry. It is understood that the delegate has been selected but the name is not made public. Assistant Secretary Reynolds of the treasury department will be a second member. The third has not been positively chosen, according to last accounts, although it is reliably reported that the appointment has been offered to Chief North of the census bureau. TELEGRAPH LINES ACROSS THE DESERT French Possessions Connected. to Be Paris. March 2. The first step towards the realization of the long cherished scheme of connecting the French possessions in the north of I Africa, with those on the west coast j and in the center of tne continent will j shortly be effected. It is proposed ! to establish the telegraph across the 1 desert and the railway may follow I quickly. Among the Hottentots the women hold a better position than they do anywhere else in Africa. "The married woman." says one traveler, "reigns supreme mistress. Her husband coin not without her permission take a bite of meat or a drop of milk. Generally they rank much above the average of the negro races." London Globe. Th- HaarfR Of XJfte. Infaeti and children ore cocatantly needing a native. It is important to know what to gtva them. Their stomach aad boweia arc not atrooc eDcragrh for salt. puryaKva waters or cathartic pilis. powders or tttieta. Gte them a mild p!asant. gentle, laxative tonic like Dr. Cidweil'a Syrup F""p'n. which sells at tfca scall snra of 50 cents or fl at rag stores. It is ttt one great remedy for yon to have ha tba houe u give children when they od it. Notice Farmers

ARRANG

fresh meat; lowest prices, quality considered. Schwcgman'3 Moat Market, both ""ones. 5-2t VPHOLSTERIN'G. ' Re'rlrlnsrhn"Virri coverings. Russell, H South 7th. Phone 17J3. 6-30t Waking Co. l'ltmibing. Bicycled Motorcycles, 406 Main. Boih phones. 6-301 1 rane Thompson, general eleo trie contra. "tors and supplies. IS X. 5th. Phone 1950. 4-30C PROF. Kolline. for""a""sure cure"" for corns. 20 S. Sth. Phor. 4242. 17-3t Low price on lumber, lath and shingles. luck & HiU Co. 5-3('t

MONUMENTS AND MARKERS. Richmond Monument Co.. C. K. Bradbury. Mgr., ZZ North Sth StrU : PHYSICIAN. PHYSICIAN Dr. Emma Gardner, o. teopathic physician. 23 N. 10th St. Phone 1SS1. mar3 lnn FIRE INSURANCE. Richmond Insurance Agency, Hai.u N. Koll, Mgr., 716 Main. 14 if -- t FARM LANDS. Small places near city, J. Ed. Moore, over 6 N. 7th street. janS-Snv FINANCIAL. MONEY LOANED Low rates, tasr terms. Thompson's loan and real estate agency. Wide ptairs, 71t Main street. Bond's automata phone No. 2O0S. 1-wed-thnrs frl at f UNDERTAKERS. II. R. Downing & Son, 16 N. 8th st. 12sept6m(i LAUNDRY. We can help make you happy honestly wa cao. Richmond Stem Laundry. PRICES ON PRODUCTS RANGING IN BALANCE Next Two Months Determine Prices Generally. Kansas City. Mo., March 2. -Wheth. er prices for farm products are destined to go higher or lower, depends altogether on the next two monthB. With; normal weather, the growing crop will go into spring in excellent condition. This is its test month, for the plant 1 small and tender. The winter in th wheat belt has been exceedingly mild. If the green bug comes to the front, if there is a late frost, as was the can last year, there will be a fine bulge in wheat values; but not otherwise. LIABILITY BILL TO BE REPORTED Member of Judiciary Committee Gives Assurance. Washington, March 2S. On the authority of a member of the judiciar committee of the house of representatives, it is stated that an employers liability bill, meeting the constitutional requirements of the supreme court will be rejHirted to congress by thafi committee. RECORD BREAKING SHIPMENTS TO EUROPE Many Agricultural Implements Go There. New York, March 28. This season will see a record-breaking, shipment of agricultural implements to Europe. It is estimated, on the basis of present orders, that the total export will reach tons valued at $25,000,000 as compared with 1SO,"00 tons valued at $1S,0'K),000 for the corresponding period of last year. The Great Blood Purifier. For tal by Leo H. Fihe. T. F. McDonald an4 W. H. Sudhoff. "Doddo," 22721, the imported French Percheron Stallion, better known as the Clevenger horse, and "Prince Wilkes" will be at my Farm this eeason, 24 miles north of Richmond, on Middleboro Pike. The public is Invited to call and see them. A. H. Pyle. R. F. D. No. 4 Phone 5105-C

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