South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 278, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 28 September 1914 — Page 4
MONDAY, SinTITMMTO 28. 1911
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES.
SOUTH BEND
THE NEWS-TIMES POINTING COMPANY. fIC Wet Colfax Avenu. .South Bend. Indiana. ; -
Entered a.a ac-cond clafs matter at t he iv.stoff.ce at South Rend, Indian! IJV CARRIE It.
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soi Til ih:m. indiwa. DEMOCRATIC NATION L. FOU I. -s i:AI K r.niaii!.n r. :lteiv. fou ::uh iisTi::rr i:i:ri:i:sKNTATI VII IKnr . I', i : u !. i rt. MATE. fois si:ci:i:tak or state Homer mj: AFlUTOIt OF STATIC-Dale J. Cfittnbergnr. ri: ti:i:asfi:i:u or sT.Ti:-r?orge w. imtb-r. foi; m;ft. ithlic instkfction - rou .iltm;i: sipkkmi: cutkt-mos lb Liiry. FOll jrSTICi; tt APFFLLATK ctr;i;T--.iosi:ih a. u.vh. inMbTbk s. 1'ilJwell. Milton B. Iiott!. K.hsard YY. 1'elt mid Frank M. Powers. FOU CLFIUv OF SFl'KKMi: rojJHT J. Frvd Franrn. FOU ATTOUMIY (;i:M'UAL lib hard Ml'hurn. FOU STATU fiI-:ni.O(SIST Edward barret L i.i:gilativi:. FOU STATF. sr.NAToii --(Jnbriel R. Summer. FOU HTATI1 KRI'UKSKNTATIVK tieorg? V. Her-ier and ri:mb- A. Il.-'.rty. FOU JOINT UFI'UFSFNTATIVB l'eter A. Fullmer. DAUMIAItT'S PKlNTINC; BILL. Dep. Henry A. Barnhart. activities in congress are pbning him in the ranks of the foremost legislators of our t-ountry. When he resigned from the banking and currency committee several years ago, h was made chairman of the house committee on printing. Having left the newspaper business s recently that the odor f printer's ink was still on his clothing, he started to investigate the roat government print shop in Washington and he found conditions such that when he got through he went and took another look. He found conditions so slothful and sloven that with surh methods any private enterprise would have gone to Hie walls in three months. i!i did he stall to cry "corruption" and "graft"? Not on ; our life. He said nothing about it until he had formulated a bill which wouM remedy the entir" trouble, and by that time lu- was so busy that he li.nl no time to stop and tell the nation what a rrcat legislator he was. But instead, be went to the speaker of the house an.1 insisted that his propoe I legislation bo given early consideration. And now, the bill is almost through the house. When, in effect, the government experts say the Barnhart bill will save the taxpayers of this country over ts.'.o.non per year. Is it a good investment to have such a man on the j b in Washing- ) ton V tin: iaolittov or i.iuori:. While the spectator on the side lines can see little change in the relative positions of the allies and tJerman armies along the irregular battle line in France it cannot be otherwise than that there hae been physiological and psychological developments of vital importance. Two millions of men arrayed against each other in practically equal numbers, equipped wit 'a the most destructive engines of war known to modern military science and fighting almost continual!:., fiercely and at tim s desperately, must make progress. perhaps not measured in distance, but certainly in determining the ultimate result. This may bo safely assumed despite the . or.t radietory character of the reports coming from the opposing mu--s. Assumption must p!a a large part in clarifying tbe results so far obtained. This and that must be put together and a theory constructed which. though largely patchwork, provides a reasonable conclusion. Taking the reports of Sunday morning we are informed that the kaisers officials report progress in the capture of position in the vicinity of Verdun, with no change in the center and on tin western extremity. The French inform us that the enemy has attacked along the entire front, but has everywhere been repulsed, that the left wing is making progress and that in the Woevre region some ground has been gained. The opposing purposes are. on the part of the allies, to drive the iPerxi.ans from French soil and carry the war into Germany. .o fully engaging the ilerman fonts in the west that none can be sp.ireu to aid in repulsing the Kussian invasion in the east, ami on the part of the tJermans to force the allies to wear hemseles down attacking a position .vhivh is as nearly impregnable as it is possible tor a natural selection to i.e. All thees things hae their '.earing n the final settlement of the issues involved in the war. By a process of evolution, represented by human rather than natural forces a new I'uropean era is being worked out. What the nature of that era will be can be only surmised, but it undoubtedly will bring about changes scarcely dreamed ef before hostilities began. Till: COLOM1L KICKS Till-' 1)1)111. It wns Col. Theodora Boosevelt himself who put the harm in the harmony lln of the republicans to nominate hiir. for ire-blent ll. Hr kicked o' er the .lope in his Indianap
NEWS-TIMES
si:iti:miu:u us. ion TICKET. sr. jot:i'ii (ofnty. ror: surrufoi:' corur judgk ;vri; IV rd. FOU I'KuSECUTING ATTOUMIYCliester It. Montgomery FOU SIIHHlFr CLr.rle Il.-iller. I'OU AUDITOR -Arthur Wolf. FOU UIiroUDKU I'.ert F. Kljsz. FOU CLi:itK-tteurg Ua.ib. Fou TI!i:ASi;UF.K FrM W. Martin. rou ASM:.;S(U - John M. Trunx. FOU S?;ilVEYCr: Hendersor. MeClellan. Foil roiKJNrU-TliomiH J. Swautz. COMMA.vSIONnU.S - (Middle District), TLom.is Wiiliain; (Western I'Utrlct. J. W. Miller. COFNCILMFA tat-l.trgM-Neor. T. UlWy, Melville W. Mix and Frank Mayr, Jr. PORTAGE TOWNSHIP. FOU TUrSTi:r.--Gm A. Kllnler. FOU ASSESSOR Joseph Voorde. rou jisticis or the peace J. EhnT Peak and .Tuflvpli V. Wyplurynnkl. FOU CONSTAHLESKobert A. Beyrer uml Andrew Pitzkanltz. olis speech advocating the election of Albert J. Beveridge to the United States senate. At the end of a speech-making campaign covering half a dozen states in the Mississippi valley the colonel has found progressive prospects so far ahead of his most fanguine hopes that his previous conviction against any sort of amalgamation or compromise is vindicated. If the stand patters wish to vote for him for president in 1316 they will be given the privilege, but he will accept no nomination from them nor recognize them in any way unless they are ready to forsake their false gods und come clear across. It was that wise politician, John Moorman, who said some time ago in his newspaper, the Knox Republican, that the logical thing to do was to unite on Boosevelt. A few other republican editors in the state expressed the same opinion, but got little, if any, response, and of late there has been less of that kind of talk. The standpatters are so "sot" in their ways they seemed not to relish the suggestion. They can't quite g t over liH2. nor forget the trick the colonel served them. The republicans realize that if they do go over to the progressives they will he the "poor relations" at the feast and merely tolerated because they want to be there rather than being wanted there. The Roosevelt ego will be, as in the past, the dominating force in any movement with which he is connected, and that is a hitter, a very bitter do.?e which it would be necessary to swallow. (,cn making; rou profit. Upon one point the better opinion of mankind is rapidly coming to agree. Permanent peace in a world where rien are '.rail may be a dream of the future; but the making of great weapons of wholesale murder for private profit must be stopped. The lobbies of greedy gun-makers must cease to haunt the corridors of parliaments to foment international prejudices that their employers may ride to riches on wnes of manufactured hate. In the wars of the future the nations must make their own cannon. If people choose to kill each other let them arm to do it in their own gun foundries afttr full deliberation and a free poll. Do not let the growing load of armaments be saddled upon them by designing men working on the people's representatives with flattery, trickery and bribes. Humanity may never know how tragically it has been fooled by the agents of the gun trusts; but that it has been fended all men begin to see. Literally billions of treasure have been lured out of peaceful investment to make markets for our Carnegies, our Schwabs and our Krupps. If we can't put an end to war we can at hast check its exploitation. A TKST TO HI! WKLCOMLD. I'p in Wisconsin the triumphant standpatteis are resolved that the "Cniversity must be taken out of politics." That is That they say but it isn't at all wha. they mean. They meatt thut the university must sf.y in politics but fax or the reactionary side. Any school which teaches folks to thi k and which holds up the common good is in politics tremendously, for it recruits all the forces of progress. The only way it can be "taken out of politics" is to get its voice and hobble its limbs: and even then it remains "in politics" as an awful example. We're glad, though that Wisconsin's great university is to b tinkered by politicians. They have been making wry faces at it so long that now we yhall see how they would change its work. If they can improve it, everybody xill gain. If they mutilate it there xvill be an
inteirsting test of its hold upon the A do; rhnsing his tail Is a picture
of whdom compared with the reac-. ti'.nary who thinks that American I progress can be corked up. The inconvenience of adding Roman figues does not d iscoarage the perpetuation of names by posterity, i'.ut how much better it would be for for the names in some instances if permitted to perpetuate .themselves. It would be more convenient for Carranza and .Villa if the safety valve were removed from Vera Cruz, but I'ncle Sam thinks it prudent to maintain it, simply as a reminder that there are other interested parties. The isolation of all morons is advocated. A moron is a mental defective, for w-ho?e condition parentage is largely responsible. Isolation would relieve parents of the consequences of their own wrong:. It was William T. Stead who created the term "The United States of Europe." It is a felicitous expression which can do no more than embody the memory of a pipe dream. T. II. is playing a return engagement in the farce-comedy, "Progressive." It is a burlesque on the real drama now successfully running; in Washington. It is the irony of fate that in the midst of war wheat, the fundamental of the staple of life, has a hard struggle to keep its head up to the dollar mark. The peasants of France were kinder than they knew or intended when they concealed their live stock in thos stone quarries. The poor old Giants! Once they did mighty deeds, but the pigmies from Boston have bound them hand and foot. Mark Twain's remark that there is a lot of human nature in the world seems to be finding its exemplification. Hope burns eternal in the human heart, but that in the republican chest needs kindling. It is also the irony of fate that people who never ate Ben Davis apples slam them. The "buy-a-bale" movement is unlike the "carry-a-package" meander. isuch men as Kitchener find excuse for living only when there is war. Have you any idea now that we will ever have a millenium? V V 3" 1 vV L V vl xt r c v r WHAT THE PAPERS SAY JC t 5jC ? ifi JjC 5jc J,"C jc 5fC Iji jjc 2j( HFLPINO SOUTH AMKIUCA. A consular report from liio de Janeiro, which was published recently on this page, showed that Brazil was not in a sound financial condition. For this there were several reasons, such as the collapse of the coffee and rubber markets. But perhaps the strongest factor was the failure of Europe, at a critical moment, to make &uthcient loans, both to the Brazilian government and to private Brazilian business houses. As xve all knoxv, business these days is done chiefly on credit. This was the reason Brazil suiTered from the contraction of the European money market. Fundamentally, Brazil is prosperous, but the sudden withdraxval of the usual aids has caused stagnation. In his statement to the senate, isecy. Becitield called attention to this feature. "It would rather seem," he said, "that measures should be taken, if practicable, in our own country, to assist South America in her urgent financial need and to provide the ready direct course of exchange in dollars which she so much requires." Brazil is not the only South American, nation to feel the pinch. Others are affected In varying degrees. It xvould seem that the lirst problem which we have to solve in South and Central America his to do with banking more than xvith transportation. Goods can not be sobl unless there are adequate facilities for the exchange of credits. The determination of the National City bank of Nexv York to establish branches in at least three of the large c'outh American cities is a step in the right direction. But, influential as it is. the National City bank can not be expected to undertake the whole task of joining South and North America financially. It is true that many proposals, which appear rosy at first, pale on examination. When the European xvar came on, authorities, such as certain of the great London financial papers, xvere hasty in predicting that tremendous gain would accrue to the United States. We shall certainly gain, but right now xve are helping to pay the bills and our portion is by no means small. So, too, with the iouth American trade. Relations may be cordial, and the desire to exchange products may be present; shipping facilities may be perfect, yet without a financial system sound to the core the Pan-American trade can not develop. South America, just now, needs capital. It .needed it a year ago, when the weight of the Balkan Wars began to be felt in European money markets. Ioans can not be had in Europe noxv, nor may they be obtained possibly for years. Europe will need all its remaining capital for rehabilitation. If South America obtains its legitimate loans it will have to obtain them in the United States. Are xve ready for this, which is our share of the bargain? S'ecy. Bedfield is right xxlien he says that "only those who are prepared to take certain risks or to make actual investment of cupital in 1-atin America can hope for early material advantage from the present situation. Indianapolis News. STAYING ON THE JOB. "America is greater than any party. Parties will fare well enough without nursing if the men xvho make them up and the men who lead them forget ! them?elxes to serve a caus and set a sreat people forward on the path of liberty and peace." This is the spirit that breathes
TH
YrS3
COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.
OI K TABLOID CLASSICS No. 7. Aurora, the Coddos of Dawn. The rliirf distinction vilikii attaches to Aurora i. the origination of tho spectacle known a.- the oaun. 'iiii was her firt ami niot brilliant achlc intent, although the Aurora Boreaiis Is some show. Notwmiia!iu(iig the carlj triumphs of this one time gtddcs her lame hi modern times rests on the naming of Aurora, III., after her. Aurora was the daughter of Titan or of Pallas, they were not quite certain which, but the doubt hancirgr oer her paternity did not materially interfere with her success, as a scenic artists. The preeminent quality of her work, though never excelled in beauty, is its durability. The dawn i as perfot and as impressive today as it was the morning she; hung it iu the eastern sky, hut few voluntarily ever see it. Suns:, a much more gorgeous and less refined production, catches mo-t people. Of nil the pictures of Aurora wo like lest that drawn by Homer. He d(Ncribes her a wearing a Mowing veil, which she throws back to denote the dispersion of night, and as oiKMiing with her rosy lingers the gates of day. Can't you see her? THE policeman on the "island" guiding the traffic is no less a reproach to the laxvlessness of civilized man than the patrolman on his night beat, watching for predatory humans. He represents the propensity of mankind for violating the laxv. IF the kaiser chose to be frank about it he would maintain that this war is the only thing worth mentioning that xx'as not "made in Germany." THE trouble with those new guns Krupp has made for Germany, which are guaranteed to carry 15 miles, will b to induce the allies to remain that far away. aii iioimous or avaii. Hy John T. McCuteheon. (Copyrigh; :1914; by John T. McCutcheon.) AIX-LA-CIIAPELLE, Sept. 10. On the morning of Aug. 1'G, after buying somo underxvear, shirts, socks, and cigars, we left Binche for Maubeuge, where we xvere told a great battle was to occur. TUT"! d isMirh.mpfs nt thfi countv jail, cnronicled by ine esteemed inoune, seemed to have a soothing effect on Sheriff Hwanson. "I xvould lie down at night," he says, "fully dressed and unable to sleep until the knocking came." LFS MISEllABLES. I hax'e nothing against pianos. My hoxvl of protestation is not against music. In fact I love music. And I love piano music, that is good piano music. But I don't like piano music at 5 o'clock in the morning, be it good, bad or indifferent. I get in bed at 3 o'clock, after working all night. I get to sleep about 4. By 5 I am going pretty good. And then the piano starts. The world may have protested at the destruction of Lou vain; it may have stood aghast at the bombardment of Notre Dame cathedral at Bheims; the kaiser's heart may have bled for Louvain; mayhap the xvorld
Dont Fail To Register Oct. 5 Or You Cant Vote on Nov. 3
Do not fail to Oct. 5 is the this year. That register. last registration day xvill be a week from next Monday. Unless a man registers on that day be cannot vote in November. Bemember there is but one registration day. The fact that a voter registered txvo years ago does not entitle him to vote this year unless: he again registers. And to vote is a man's most solemn, important obligation. A voter xvho is not sick, or is not unavoidably absent from the county or is not quarantined, must make or cause to be made a written application for registration, xhich shall be signed by him and presented in person to the registration board in the precinct in which he resides on Oct. Any voter xvho is unavoidably absent from his county, or is siek or quarantined, may register in his precinct without appearing before the hoard of registration in person, by making a similar application to xvhat would be required of him if lie xvas applying in person, and in addition h- shall state in such application his whereabouts on the day of registration, or that he is sick, or is quarantined, as the case may be, and that thereby he is prevented from registering in person at the session of the board. Such application shall be throughout Pres. Wilson's letter to Congressman Doreinus, in xvhich he tells why he must decline to engage actively in the democratic campaign this year. It is the spirit of patriotic service, of service to the xvhole people, so strongly exemplified by the president throughout his official career. It is the spirit xvhirh declared that that party serves Itself best that serves the country best and xvhich forgets selfinterest in working for the common good. The president, in his own homely language, will "sluy on the job." Hia job. as he sees it, is to ttay in Washington and face the serious responsibilities thut the xvar abroad has placed upon those who have been chr.-.en by the American people to admiui-ter their government, to advance their prosperity and to preserve for them the blcs:nrs of peace. The nation has suddenly been confronted xvith r.ew problems, in xvhich questions of party have no place. Thesv problems must be met wisely, unselfishly and in all harmony, with full confidence that th people will justly appraise the work of their servants. "This is a time xvht-n America expects every man to do his duty without thought of profit or advantage to hirafelf." Here is a broad hint to tho.ee members of congress xvho have been too busy seeking reelection to attend to their public duties, xvho have been more solicitous for their own advantage than for the public welfare. The people xvill not forget to reward those of their representatives who stay with Wilson " on the Job" at Washington nor xvill they fail to remember those who have deserted their posts to advance their own interests. From
lULTING POT
J and the kaiser had cause for their individual actions. But if either had ever heard the piano in our district when its unskilled onerator commences work at 5 o'clock in the morning, all former protestations, standings aghast and heart blcedinfs xvould be but a mere "triffle." compared to their outbursts then. A piano is all right in its placo-with a u-ooJ operator. There max also be good places for a piano with a poor operator. But I hold a plana xvith a poor operator is entirely out of place at 5 o'clock in the morning right next to the ted room of a man who labors for his bread during the n:ght and xvho by virtue of his being born under an unlucky eonsyellatlon must needs retire rot earlier than 3 o'clock. I ask the xvorld is it right? Is it fair? Is it not a fit subject to be thrown before the department of justice? I Furthermoie. when the -unskilled laborer at r,ald piano boasts of only two selections in its repertoire, I. e., "I Love the. Ladles" and "This Is the Life," is my protein not just, I ask? Am I exaggerating? You dear editor of the Melting Pot have heard thesa txvo rags. Next to my bedroom they have passed tho rag rtate. they are mere snreds. Consequently the full realization of my torture must surety be impressed upon you. Can the nexv open muffler crdlnur.ee not be stretched a point to cover this case? If you only knew the hours of sleepless agony I have endured while these two pieces have been mutilated, torn and shredded until they lay bleeding, gasping, groveling for life! Oh, the hell of it all! J. AKE. NATURALLY, Mr. Carnegie would come to the defense of an old, inti- J mate like the kaiser, but are we to : understand that Wilhelm went away ; on a cruise and left the management of affairs to the office boy without , knowing that a game xvas scheduled?; New Sphere For Widows. (Lamar, Mo., Leader.) Mr. Itobberds has a predilection for widoxvs. and has told visitors that he cordially invites any lonely interested ladies to call and relieve the tedium of the dragging hours. i A. BCSTUM BEY thought he was going to bust these here United States but you didn't Bustum! i AS far a" heard from this country; Is the or'y one xvhich is preserving Its neutrality without regretting it. , A Very Simple Matter. j (Detroit News.) When cooking in a gas oven a basin of cold water should always be kept in the oven. j SAVE your old maps. Thc-y xvill be valuable in a year or two for com- j parison. j A Forecast. j Few people have given the matter serious thought but in viexv of the terrific loss of men in the European war an invasion of America is very probable and xve should be prepared to meet it. When the army of European widoxvs and suffragets come marching to our shores their song and their battle cry will be a Yankee Dudell do: OLD PItOBS. . i A flash of white, or black, or tan, I Dazzling the eyes of every man, With a silken swish thats heard afar She boards the waiting trolley car. C. N. F. ! signed and sxvorn to, and txvo freeholders residing in such precinct shall certify on the application blank that they xvere acquainted xvith the applicant, nd that he is the person he represents himself to be and that the facts stated in his application are true. Any registered voter of the precinct may then present the registration blank to the board. This nexv arrangement xtill be of much benefit to railxvay trainmen, traveling salesman and other. who are unable to be at home on registration day. Any man legally entitled to vote may register on Oct. f. although he may at the time be hundred: of miles away from home. All that is necessary is for some relatix-e or friend to obtain a registration blank and forward it to the absent one, he to till out the blank, have txvo registered oteis of his home precinct to certify that the facts stated in the application are true, and then present the application to the registration board on Oct. 5. The form of blank to be used by an absent voter is dfferent frm the form of blank used by a voter who registers in person. Any man who fails to register on Oct. 5 forfeits his right to vote at the November election. Don't forget that! J this time on it will pay every con- I I gressman to "stay on the job". Pros. ; j Wilson's letter is xvorth more to his party than speeches. X e w ; a thousand campaign krk News. TWENTY YEARS G0 Itemindei-s Prom the Columns of The Daily Time. Attorney Kurtz visited Elkhart over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Clement Studebaker. jr., are in Chicago. Mon?y Order Clerk Fogarty is back in the postoftice alter a sJicrt illness. Mrs. George Ilarrop and son are visiting in Paris, 111. Mrs. Ralph Kuss of Chicigo spent Sunday xvith her sister. Miss Katie Lie bilt. Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Clusnutwood entertained the Pottawattcmie club Saturdiy evening. Some purgatues contain such strong drugs that, xvhile they eaus? the bowels to move, injure the delicate linings of stomach and intestines. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea is not in that class. U is slightly laxatixe and at the same time healing and soothing. J5 cents. Coonley Drug Stor"-. Advt. INDIANAPOLIS. Rert Cutting, 19. xvho has been totally blind for four! years, has won distinction for himself! by reproducing in shorthand a speech made by Gov, Italston. '
conMin Michigan snn:irr
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ISl-S a Did $2.0 8 i i m t j WaSises Friday i sJf) JL. n vO 7 V V. ' j I rf E..3 V j; b r .J, ir1 ;' m..,.,.mmm . ... 1 , i . , , ,t j. njw m r r- .
You Can't Mom
to miss this opportunity of getting your house wired. We will furnish the necessary wiring FREE OF COST with every job of fixtures we supply. Every Jiome large or small should use Electricity for its Safety, Convenience and Economy,
OUR FLAT RATE
meets the conditions in the small home or store, making Electric the cheapest light for the small consumer. . The long evenings are here when you need more and better light. Our flat rate enables you to use the lights all you need without increasing your bill. ELECTRIC LIGHT is the best known LIGHT. ASK US ABOUT IT. Call on either phone, and our representative will call day or evening. Indiana & Michigan Electric Company 220-222 WESf COLFAX AVE. Bell 462. Home 5462.
wnen oie Lwmm
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After the long (Jay's xvork xvork in wood, leather, flint or stone dust dust that burns and chokes, you may demand and need a pure and nutritious beverage. Hoosier Cream, Tiger Export Beer, the drink of the temperate, will nourish and rest you. Brewerv Bottled. SOUTH BEND BREWIKG ASSOCIATION Servant to Lovers of Good Beer.
n 1 f) Pounds fi F3 cvU Sugar HlLf With Order of $1 or Over. GROCERY 325-327 S. MICHIGAN ST. Bell 3953. Home 2068. Why suffer with your stomach, kidneys and liver when Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea will make you well? If taken this month, keeps you well all the year. C3 cents. Tea or Tablets. Coonley Drug Store. Advt.
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and .tkithhsov noru:vAni. 14 1 I ( I t t ! ( i t f -3 99 . 1 1 A V n H :-! r3 KV A TV, "f Q We carry a rull i'ne of Koi.iks. Cameras and lupplir.t, the bir-t stock in northern Iudrar.a. F'.r.c developing ana printing prouirtly done, and at moderate nr'ces. All wotk guarnrte?d. South Bend Camera Co. With J. Ilurke & Cm.. Op'JeUns. 2C0 S. Michigan St. Hurvich Gash Grocery The Place to Savs Ffloney Gas lor Lighting and Cooking GAS COMPANY
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