Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 240, 16 August 1913 — Page 10

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(Palladium Special) CENTER VILLE, Ind., Aug. 16. William Blue has been appointed town marshal to succeed George Moore, -who resigned recently. For some reason .this town has much difficulty in persuading a man to act as guardian of the peace very long at a time. Blue

is the fourth man to receive the appointment this year.

park,

the Liberty

water works have been The improvements con- j

Thursday: Mrs. Harrv NVl

and daughter. Mrs Will ivainu-ripht ' completed

Mrs. Eli Griffith of Connersville, Mr.' !f.ist Principally of entirely new sucand Mrs. Will Mount Mrs. Dan Card, ' tlnv. P'peS whlch connec.t the

yuiup a. very niiporiani pari

and daughter, Miss Lucy, Mrs. Frank Winterstein, Mrs. Frank Murray, Mrs. Eliza Mason Morris, Mrs. Will Stahl and daughter Miss Mary, Mrs. Cart-

MILTON

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MILTON, Ind., Aug. 16. Mrs. Henry Husey and Miss Hattie Izor were at Cambridge City yesterday. Mrs. Charles Hale is very 111. Mrs. Sam Hoshour is somewhat Improved. Will Ginrich of Chicago is home on a vacation. Miss Bessie Wlnsett, who has been the guest of her aunt, Miss Nora Campbell, returned to her home in Richmond Friday. Mrs. Mary Passmore was at Cambridge Friday. Mrs. F. M. Leverton and Miss Ruby Wright of Point Edwards, Canada, spent Friday in Lewisville. Charles Callaway was at Richmond Friday. R. P. Lindsay and son, attended the funeral of Samuel White at Hopewell Friends' church Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Newton and

ion have returned from a visit with relatives at Rossville. Mrs. E. P. Jones was in Richmond Thursday. Arlon DqII was at Richmond ThursSay. Misses Bertie Frazee and Carrie Michael were In Connersville Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Lute Lantz, Jr., were In Richmond Friday. Mrs. John Sapp was at Cambridge City Friday the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Harry Campbell. The last word received from Misses Ruby and Blanche Moore- stated that they were in Tacoma and from they rrould go to Seattle. The expect to lake a boat from "Seattle to Vancouver, ind then start for the east. Theo Voorhees of Richmond was lere yesterday.

Mrs. Harry Turner of Cambridge City, was the guest of Mrs. David Nurent Friday.

to gether with other

! auxiliaries, and the work has been ! done in a permanent and excellent

and Wlllitt, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shiss-; little shorl 0,ving Q the demands ler. Miss Bertha Walterman and Mrs. j made bv the hot weather. ConsumWill Taggart of Richmond, Mrs. Jos- ers shouM see tnat no waste is al. ephine Gard Ray, of Newcastle, Mr. , lowed. an dMrs. W. T. Matthews and family and Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Kimmel of j

Centerville, Mrs. Flora Clawson and family, Mrs. John Ohmit, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Whltely, Will Sweney Mrs. Grant Clark and daughter Miss Helen Miss Maude Allison of Cambridge City, Mr. and- Mrs. Harry Hollmeyer and daughter Miss Laveda, of Eaton; Mrs. Homer Dowell and children of Detroit, Michigan; Mrs. Monroe Bertsch and daughter of Alabama, Mrs. Val Curtis of Bentonville, Mrs. Mae Hern of Chicago, Mr. Byron Whltely, Charles Davis and son, L. P. Zeller, Edward Wilson an dson, Clark Faucett, Henry McMahan, Will Daniel and family, Robert Bryan and son, Mesdames Joseph Cause and son, Curtis Little, James Doddridge, Hettie Bennett and

daughter and granddaughter, Mrs. Adam Snyder and daughters, Misses Irene Crook, Lorene Hess, Blanche Coyne, Helen Coyne, Laura Rothefmel, Mae Keever, Alice and Pearl Napier,

Sarah Roberts, Lena Baker, Eleanor Ward, Agnes Ward, Serena Hoshour, Dorothy Hoshour, Ruth Leverton, Luella Dody, Luella Lantz, Lillian DuGranrut, Lora Beeson, Messrs. Walter Higham, Watson Faucett, Park Hess, Ralph' Moore, John T. Manlove, jr., Mrs. Horace Huddleston, Mrs. John Ingerman and family of Milton.

SOCIETY CHANGES ITS MEETING TIME

WOMAN COULD NOT WALK She Was So 111 Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.

(Palladium Special) CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Aug. 16. The Round Table Needle club met in regular session Thursday afternoon

at the home of Mrs. Richard Sommers. Delightful refreshments of ice cream cake, punch and candy were served. This club will meet but once a month Insteady of every two weeks, during the summer season. .

ALL-DAY MEETING

-The

(Palladium Special.) CENTERVILLE, Ind., Aug. 16

Rebekah lodge of this place will hold an all-day picnic at Jackson park, September 7.

I EAST GERMANTOWN EAST GERMANTOWN, Ind, Aug. 16. Jonas McCurdy of Oskaloosa, la, visited relatives here Wednesday. Miss Asenath Lanniger of Newcomerstown, O, is visiting Mrs. George Mulvane. Miss Lillian Wright of Indianapolis is the guest of Edith Bertsch. Mrs. Dan Van Buskirk entertained the Embroidery club Wednesday. Ralph Moore of Milton called on Helen Sharer Wednesday evening. Mrs. Isador Wilson of Spiceland, has been visiting Mrs. George Butler. M'.ss Edith Miller has returned from Indianapolis. Mrs. Frod Davis and daughter, Vergie are visiting Mrs. Mahlon Gethers. Mrs. Charles Close and son called on friends here Wednesday. Mrs. Lee Hartman was at Richmond Thursday.

Several from here attended the reunion at Jackson park. O. F. Jameson was called to Indianapolis Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Van Buskirk entertained at dinner, Mrs. Lydia Huddleston, Mrs. Emma Lynch and Mrs. William Van Buskirk. Ruth Palmer was at Richmond Wednesday. Roy Personette is working for Sourbeer and Rodenborg.

EATON, OHIO.

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Mrs. K. P. Diffc nderfer, daughter Carlyle, and Miss Pearl Thornburg wore shopping at Richmond yet-terday. W. H. Doney is transacting business at Greencastle today. Mrs. Calvin Cope is suffering considerably from a sprained ankle. Mr. Jacoby of Hamilton, Ohio, a former resident of this locality Is visiting friends here this week. Mr. Fred Cornell of Chicago is here for some days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Cornell. Miss Gertrude Graver is visiting Dan Hoover near New Lisbon and attending the New Castle Fair. Mrs. Mattie Stonecipher is expected home from Rushvile tonight where she

has been attending her daughter-in-

law In a serious illness. Miss Blanche Nichols of New YorK City and Mrs. Nancy Locke of Indianapolis are visiting Mrs. Mae Bodin and Dr. Study. Miss Harriet Ault is spending her vacation with her sister, Mrs. Dr. C. E. Cannady of New Castle. Harry Beard of Portland, Indiana, is with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Beard, for a few days. Mrs. Hart and children of Pittsburg, Pa, who have been visiting her sister, Mrs. Joseph Gavin at the home of W. A. Roth, returned to her home today. Mrgfi Lester Painter and three sons, who have been with Mrs. Kitty Stobaugh for some time left today for

their home in Dallas, Texas. Mrs. Charles Loeb has been visiting for some days near Lewisville. Mrs. Raymond Ferguson returned from her outing to Madison, Cincinnati and other points. Mr. Ferguson and two children remained for a more extended visit. Mrs. Henry Secrist and children of Indianapolis are visiting with Mrs. John Dyke. Mr. Clark Wissler and family are visiting his parents. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Wissler, on Capitol Hill. The former is j connected with the Museum of Nat-j ural History at New York City and is returning from his annual tour in the i

Interests of Indiana relics.

Money-making Secrets

W-H Farm Journal

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Pentwater, Mich. "A year apo I was rery weak and the doctor said I had a

serious displacement. I had backache aud bearing

down pains so bad

that I could not sit

in a chair or walk across the floor and I was in severe pain

all the time. I felt discouraged as I had taken everything I could think of and

was no better. I

egan taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegtable Compound and now I am strong ind healthy." Mrs. Alice Darling, i.F.D. No. 2, Box 77, Pentwater, Mich.

HOLLANSBURG

EATON, O.. Aug. 16. Mrs. Lon Disher and daughter, Miss Leon, of Lewisburg were guests of local relatives Friday and Saturday. C. F. White and Ray Simpson of Camden, were here Thursday. Miss Edith Frank of Portland. Ind, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Lowry. Miss Zfnobia Brumbaugh has returned from Jonesboro, Ark, where she has been teaching in the art department of the State university.

Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Brower of Xenia, O., are guests of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Jones.

Mrs. William H. Wysong spent th past wek with her sister, Mrs. William Matthews.

WILLIAMSBURG

WILLIAMSBURG. Ind, Aug. 16 Mrs. Opal Howard of Richmond and

I nazei uavis or leDanon, ind, are J here visiting friends and relatives. I Echo Woolley and Hazel Oler went to Elwood Friday to visit Mr. and Mrs. Carmon Sells. I Ed Starr and Will Blair attended the Newcastle fair Thursday. , Will Brown was in Richmond Thurs-, 1 day. ) Harlan Watkins of Winchester is ! visiting his grandfather, M. W. Wat- ,

kins. .

Little Mary Frances Clements proving slow-.

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is lm-

Sead WhatAnother Woman says: Peoria, 111. "I had such backaches hat I could hardly stand on my feet. I

rould feel like crying out lots of times, i at this place. Mrs. Browneller is a sis-

ind had such a heavy feeling m my right ! ter of Mrs. Aaron Clav.

HOLLANDSBURG. O, Aug. 16. Mr. and Mrs. N. T. Irelan spent Thursday in Palestine preparing a house for

their daughter and her husband Mr

and Mrs. Mearl

this winter. Mrs. Simpson will teach !

school in Palestine. Mrs. Grail Marshall will move to the Rebecca Tilson property soon. Her home has been in Bethel, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Howe Beetley and baby of Lynn, Ind, spent Thursday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. BeetIcy, burg. George Wolfal has been having their home entirely remodeled and report that it will be ready for occupancy by Sunday. Miss Emma Harrison has returned from Indianapolis where she attended fall millinery opening. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Browneller of Brownville, Penn, are spending a couple of weeks with relatives and friends

CENTERVILLE

CENTERVILLE, Ind.. Aug. 16 Mrs. j

Simpson to occupv 11(ue "HiKei emenauun ner pis-.

olis, Mrs. Will Commons of Columbus, I and her daughter Mrs. Belle Perfect j of Kansas City. j Mrs. Martha Cotter and daughter, j Mrs. Oscar Russell of Indianapolis, at- j

tended the Medearis family reunion Thursday at Jackson park.

FOUNTAIN CITY

FOUNTAIN CITY. Ind, Aug. 16 Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Clark have returned from a visit with relatives at Greenville' and Ansonia, O. , Mr. and Mrs E. T. Smith were at Indianapolis Thursday. They were

j guests of Mrs. bmith s sister, Mrs. : i Clyde Shipley. i

Tuesday at the Nathan Modlin.

home of her father,

I Mrs. T? ft Dirkinsnn n? T3i.-.Vrrtr.1

Mrs. Cora Mason of Richmond spent i is snen(,ir,, a f,v ,,ava .ith

ter, Mrs. C. E. Keever. j Air flnH Mrs Hirpi V? nr nrm T o

Ben Lantz and family of Indianapo- . , vv v ;

j Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kinnert of! j Richmond, visited their daughter, Mrs. j jO. M. Marine and family two days;

this week. !

lis are guests of local relatives.

ide. I had such terrible dull headaches ivery day and they would make me feel 0 drowsy and sleepy all the time, yet I ould cot sleep at night. "After I had taken Lydia E. Pinkham's regetable Compound a week I began to mprove. My backache was less and hat heavy feeling io my side went way. I continued to take the Comound and am cured. " You may publish this if you wish." -Miss Clara L. Gauwitz, R.R. No. 4, tox 62, Peoria, I1L Such letters prove the value of Lydia 1 Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for wnau's ills. Why don't you try it?

Mrs. Elizabeth Burgess of Palestine I

spent a couple of days this week visiting with her brother, Frank Mutchner. Wora Payne, wife and family left Friday morning for a visit with relatives and friends in Indianapolis.

j Browne's Orchestra met in regular j session Thursday night at the home of j A. E. Browne for practice. Among those present were Miss Ruby Down

ing. Messrs. O. A. Stanley and Harry Downing and Drs. Henner and Bishop. All of the young folks and some of the older ones as well, are planning to go to Benton Harbor, Michigan, next week.

with relatives at Fiat, led. Francis McMinn and family have returned from a visit at Winona. Miss Laura Bertsch and Miss Elizabeth Bertsch have returned from a visit with relatives in Ohio. Mesdames W. P. O'Neil, Will Cox and John Markley and children spent

I Friday with Mrs. Andrew Dunbar.

! The Chinese Eastern railway an- ' nually requires one hundred and sev

enty thousand feet of rirewood. seven hundred and fifty thousand sleepsrs. fifty thousand round logs and fifty thousand square logs and boards.

CHICHESTER S PILLS rv THE lH.Ki-.OSO BKA..B. jl t

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!-)! Ask jw DratttM fee ,

1'liU in K4 ud Vsid ofji;-,

bos. scud with Blua Rjratu

. a ol mr. nmj or ymm

prmnrlat- As. fmCHI-r IO:s-TEH IAJiSI KKVNU PlLLsA, si

yca.-9 snow a ss scsc sjTest Aiwar Rci jtt

PILES CURED AT HOME BY HEW ABSORPTION METHOD. If yon suffer trom bl?ed;Cg, itching, blind ' or preluding Piles, send rue your address. ' and I will tell you how to cure yourself at ; home by the new absorption treatment; and ! wjil also send seme cf ttis home treatment : free for trial, with references from your ; cwa locality if requested. Immediate reLei and permanent cere assured. Send no I sr.oc.ey, but tell others of this oer. Write today to Mrs. Li. Satsers, Box P, Nous ' Daxat-. lad. )

RICHMOND FEED STORE

Feed at Reasonable Prices. We sell the Famous Gilt Edge Flour. ! Alfalfa Seed for sale. I

1ZJARM JOURNAL ("cream, not skim milk") is the great little paper published for 36 years in Philadelphia by Wilmer Atkinson. It is taken and read by more families than any other farm paper in the WORLD. Its four million readers (known as " Our Folks ") are the most intelligent and prosperous country people that grow, and they always say the Farm journal helped to make them so. Their potatoes are larger, their milk tests higher, their hogs weigh more, their fruit brings higher prices, because they read the Farm Journal.

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Is this nth fnfrly ktlit "Ptultry Secrets" tells kio ! t tarry fwls, mnd tk e secrets fsr mere imftrUmt. j

Do you know Peter Tumbledown, the old fellow who won't take the Farm Journal ? Bjrhowinff how NOT to run a farm, Peter makes many prosperous. Nobody can go on reading the Farm Journal and being a Tumbledown too. Many have tried, but all have to quit one or the other. i

The Farm Journal is bright, brief, ' boiled down," practical, full of eumpdon, cheer and sunshine.

It is strong on housekeeping and home-making, a favorite with busy women, full of life and fun for boys and. ' 1 T . i 1 . 1 . 1 1 ... t . 1 '

gins, it sparKies wiiu wit, ana a nappy, sunny spirit. iTacucai as a plow, reaaaoie as a nora ucu ua pure, not a line of fraudulent or nasty advertising. All its advertisers are guaranteed trustworthy. - The Farm Journal gives more for the money and puts it in fewer words than any other farm paper.

32 to 80 pages monthly, illustrated. FIVE years (60 issues) for $1.00 only. Less than a cents a month.

io one-year, two-year or mree-year suDscnpuons la&en at any pnee.

The Farm Journal Booklets have sold by hundreds of thousands, and have made a sensation by revealing the SECRETS OP MONEY' MAKING in home industry. People alt over tie country are making money by their methods. POULTRY SECRETS is a collection of discoveries and methods of successful poultrymen. It gives Fetch's famous mating chart, the Curtiss method of getting one-half more pullets than cockerels, Boyer's method of insuring fertility, and priceless secrets of breeding, feeding, how to produce winter eggs, etc. HORSE SECRETS exposes all the methods of "bishoping,' "plugging," cocaine and gasoline doping, and other tricks of "gyps" and swindlers, and enables any one to tell an unsound burse. Gives many valuable training secrets. CORN SECRETS, the frreat NEW hand-book of Prof. Holden,"the "Corn King," shows how to grt tea to twenty bushels more per acre of corn, rich io protein and the beat stock-feeding elements. Pictures make every process plain. EGG SECRETS tells how a family of six can make hens turn its table scraps into a daily supply of fresh eggs. If yoa have a back-yard, get this booklet, learn how to use up every scrap of the kitchen waste, and live (setter at less coat. THE "BUTTER BOOK' tells how seven cows were made to produce half a ton of butter each yer year. (140 pounds is the average). An eye-opener. Get it. weed out your poor cows, and turn the good ones into record-breakers. STRAWBERRY SECRETS is a revelation of the discoveries and methods of L. J. Farmer, the famous eapert, in growing luscious tall strawberries almost until snow rues. How and when to plant, how to fertilize, bow to remove the blossoms, how to get three crops in two years, etc. GARDEN GOLD shows how to make your backyard supply fresh vegetables and fruit, bow to cut down your grocery bills, keen a better table, and get rash for your surplus. How to plant, cultivate, harvest and market. DUCK DOLLARS tells how the great Weber duckfarm near Boston makes everv year 50 cents each on -40.000 dnckli!ie5. Tells why ducks pay them better than chickens, and just HOW they do everything. TURKEY SECRETS discloses fully the methods of Horace Voe, the famous Rhode Island turkey-roan." who supplies the White House Thanksgiving turkeys. It tells how to mate, to set eggs, to hatch, to feed and care for the young, to prevent sickness, to fatten, and how to make a turkey-ranch PAV. The MILLION EGG-FARM gives the methods by which J. M. Foster made over SIS. 000 a year, mainly from eggs. All chicken-raisers should learn about the Rancocaa lnit." and how Foster FEEDS hens to produce auch quantities of eggs, especially in winter. DRESSMAKINQ SELF-TAUGHT shows how any intelligent woman can design and make her own clothes, in the height of fashion. The author has done it since she was a girl. She now has a successful dressmaking establishment and a school of dressmaking Illustrated with diagrams. SHALL I FARM? is a clear, impartial statement of both advantages and drawbacks of farming, to help those who have to decide this important question. It warns you of dangers, swindles, and mistakes, tella how to start, equipment needed, iU tost, chance of success, how to get government aid, etc Tktse booklets are 6x9 mckes, and prefusely illustrated. Farm Journal FOUR lull years. tiL Cn- tl AA with any one of taesa booklets . DOLU lOl ?1.W Tae Beaklsts an KOTsaM iis.islai sail with Farsi JeanaL t we to say WHICH booklet you man.

What Our Folks Say About F. J.

"I have had more help, encouragement and enjoyment out of It in one year than I did out al my other papers lu tast years," says C M. Persona. ; " It is a queer little paper. I have sometime) rsvd It through and thought I was don with ft, then pick n up agaia and find some bang new to interest me," say Alfred KrofB. "Farm Journal is like a bit of tunshine In our home. It is making a better class of people out of faratera- It was first sent me as a Christmas present, and I think it the choicest pieacat I ever received," says P. R. LeValley. "We have read vour dear little paper for nearly 40 years. Now we don't afva oa the farra any more, yet I still have a hankering for the old paper. I feel that I belong 10 the family, aa4 every page is as dear anu familiar as Ibe faces of old fricada, aaa Mrs. B. W. Edwards. "I fear I neglect my business to read It. I wish it could We in the hands of every farmer in Virginia," says W. S. CUaa. "I live in a town where the yard is only 15x18 feet, but I could not do without the Farm Journal, says Miss Sara Carpenter. 1 "I jret lots of books and papers, and put them aside for future reading. The only paper I seem to have ia say hands ali the time is Farm Journal. 1 can't ftntsA reading it. Cant voa make it !es interesting, so I caa have a t nance at any otaar papers? writes Joan Swatl. "If I am lonesome, down-hearted, or tired. I po to Farm Journal lor coenfort, next to the Bible," says Mabcv Dewitt. "Farm Journal has a cheerful vein running through It that snakes it a aplendld cure tor the "blues. A hea coming home tired in mtnd and bodv, I sit down and read H and it sia to gnre me new inspiration ior tile, wntca t. . Hahicrmaa. "We have a brother-in-law who loves a joke. We live in Greater New York, and consider oursetvee quite citified, so when he sent us the Farm Journal as a New Year's girt we nearly died laughing. 'How to raise horV we who only use bacon In glass arsl Mow to keep rows ciean' when we use condensed milk even for rice pnddn.g ! 'How to plant onions' when we never plant anything more fragrant than li.iaa of the valley. I accepted the gift with thanks, lor we are too we'4-bred to look a gift horse in the mouth, btxm my eve was raaglit by a beautiful rem. 1 began to read H. then when i wanted the Firm Journal found my husband deeply interested in an article. Thea my ol )r-4 son began to ask, 'Has the Farm Journal come vet f He la a jeweler, and hant much time for literature; but we and so snuch interest and uplilt in this fine paper that we appreciate oar New Year a gift more and more," writes Eila B. Bur k man. "I received 'Corn Secrets' and 'Poultry Secrets, and consider &em worth their weight ia gold, says VV. C. Newail. "What your E;rr Book tells wou'.d take a beginner years to learn," says Roy Cbaaey. "Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on duckraising,' says F. M. Wsmock. "If your other booklets contain as much valuable information as the Egr-Book. 1 world consider thesa cheap at double the pnee," says F. YY. Mansfield. "I think your Egr-Book is a wonder," says C F. Shirey. "The Farm Journal beats them a!I. Evry issue has reminders and ideas wonn a year's subscription," writes T. H. Potter. "One year ao I took another agricultural paper, and it took a whole column to teil what Farra Journal telle ia one paragraph," say N. M. Gladwin. "It ouht to be in every home where there is a chick, a child, a cow, a cherry, or a cucumber, says I. U. Bordaa.

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WILMER ATKINSON COM FA-NY. PUBLISHERS FARM JOURNAL.

WASHINGTON SQUARE. FHILAX-ELFHIA.

Special Combination Offer Rural subscribers of the Richmond Palladium. The Palladium to Rural Mail subscribers is 2.00 per year. If you subscribe now, new or renewal, we give you The Richmond Palladium for one year and The Farm Journal Four Years, with any one of the Farm Journal Booklets.

All For

If you are now taking the Farm Journal your Eubscription will be moved ahead for four full years. (If you name no Booklet, the Farm Journal will be sent for Five years.) To get both papers All out order herewith and send It to as, not to the Farm JoumaL

Richmond Palladium, Richmond, Ind. I accept your special offer. Please send me the PALLADIUM for one year and FARM JOURNAL Four years, with this booklet ALL FOR $25 My name Is Address Are yoa now taking the Farm Journal? (Write Tea" or "No.-)

S& BY DRLGGI5TS EiLRViidlaS ill & 13 N. 9th St. Phone 2196. j d

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