South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 135, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 15 May 1922 — Page 6
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
MONDAY MORNING. MAY 15. 1022
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Evening Sunday j. m. s rnrnr.NPON, rutisobrr. fmt-r : Associated Pre United Press International News Service Th AM-MfM rr- i fi-!uJvIv entitled to the u for rrut i!.f!en of 11 re- d.j nt-l" rred!fd t It or not rthrwl credited In r.rnm? editnn of th'. Pr"f. !o th l.-wnl nw r-;i.lh-l hr!n. Tbl pot rpl to tt tfrernon r-1 it l'n rhni Mnln SIMV 2IM II. Hnr-h F.rhane.)
thum or sttsct.iption. CTT'r Srri'-e-Mornn s nr-l Sun luv. T -r wk ------ J.r,:n; and :mliy, fr wrk K:tbf with fcunday. r. r, jmt
f-.! a l Sur! it. rn rural rou?, en year - - - JjOO All ctl'T lj n:: F.r.frl at Suth Pr.d Pft Otfie aa Beond Claas Malt
en rvr.t i-i Onts f looo
MAY 15. 1922
SHAPE OF THE SOUL. Thh dr.iv. re hnv.' the fchape of the human f"ul. according o th mathematical theory of life. rn the i:irstrin theory: Hre in the ex
planation of the
.ZK 'Ira win?:
&
V.1 You live In a
ni
" i world of three di
i mentions length.
Ith and depth.
Your body is three-
dimensional. So i3
verything e!e in thl material world. In a form of higher mathematics knovn . hyperrom.etry, it I." proved that a fourth dimension ex'.5t. thouch no hu "in brain as yet has been ablo to pictura what i: l.ke. Plato de. -j ; I p: doners chained, In the door of a cave. o th'-y ceuld r.ct ach other. They did e their shadow.-, ca.t by the jun on the cavern nail. When a pri?or.er moved, his shadow moved correspondingly. Soon the prisoners began to believe that tho shadows were the real people. Since a .!i&iiow has no thlckn It ha? oaly two dimen5.or. l'-npth and width. The prisoner?, three-dimensional bodies, suffered under the. delusion that they were two-dimensional. Similarly, w may b four-dlmeruslonal, same h the two-dimer.Fional creature of moving pictures ?em real ami three-dimensional to U3. l'icture i world of two dimensions, fiat, like the urfac-p of this newspaper pajxe. I'eople in It would le liuo circles and squares. S.ippr;e a three-dimensional object, like your finger, fvivd through this two-dimensional world I ke poking jour fingt-r through the newspaper pa ere. The people of the f.vo-di menslonal world, unable to p.-e out into the third dimension, would ee only the eros-:-setIon of th; firmer or object that was Immediately in their plane or two-dimensional existence. As thf finT miverl through, the cross-section w otil 1 chan. Fimilirly. fay tlie mathematlclana, the body Is a four-dimensional soul passing through three-dlmen-fional space. Or. fhe body 5 like the cross-section. The entrance, n small form, la birth. The fouI. shaped like a pointed bullet, has a gradually lirper crosc-section a-s It I shoved forward, this xp:.:nin growth. The paiwiue througrh Is life, fiit i tietth. Iavir.cr behind the three-dimensional r material body, a port of rust. If you want another Installment, read about the ".Fourth IHmei-.ricn" In the library'.
iElT REVENUE I'rivate'y owned railroad companies ar warring for nw Tfenue, this tim from a source that Is c'il a::d Juf. No one who looks upon himself honet would deny tho railway magnates this r.ilit to f.M f tl:' mountaina of coin that daily f ill into tho coffoi: of the company. Mn who or.cf ro trio bfami of the slow tive;in fr-iarit IrHiri or th blind of the fast (A;iY5i continue to nn extent to travel from coast t coa't in tli-lr ilu't coverH berths. They cont:nue to Ii n r th trainman order tliem from their 1 !ice Lomath th or between the coache-s. And thrj continue to l-ave, only to continue to their :t?tir.ition on the next train that may happen along. And there are those amon? the traveling public who brave the chance of being: detected by the blue coated trainmen of the fa.t express or the f'.ow accommodation to ride to destination on the plush covered rat of the pisscnsfr or pullman coach. These are the ones upon whom the company officials have eel their eye m their huo.n war for revenue. In their last effort to collect fare from passengers who value the coin above hentsty and respect, orT.ciaLs of one of th largest railways in the country hae Introduced a new sjstem of checkinc papsengers. And while conductors seek In this way to eliminate from anions' the pasntens those who fk to travel dishonestly, detective, and trainmen continue to chaso from !tx cars t!iu.-e knishts of tli road who do r. t care to travel "de luxe." Hallway otTlciaV .t;mate that during the last year the company h lot thousands and thousand of dollars in permitting to continue on their journey those who have told the conductor that 'they purrendered their tickets immediately after boardin? the train, and those who have soucht to ride beyond the ticket de? tir.ation. In an effort to Increase the revenue th? company has installed a new sstem of hat checklr.se a tytem of double checking which w.'ll defeat any effort of "de luxe" passengers to ride gratis. And in the meantime railroad pu-sen-er ratts wiil continue unchanged.
BU1LD1.VG ME
Ovr near Iiporte, hidden among the woo.ie! hüls on the Lanka of Silver LfTe. is located a camp in which the Chicago üducational beard is building men men of tho type of the jcreat American after whom the camp wsls named, a camp in which that educational tody hope to ma'ke other Roosevelts. It is thre that Amertca'a youth :s trained to rsach th hicheeit standard of American citizenship. It is there that th best of cfflcer5 of the United States army ar.d picked hitrh 5chool professors sive to the beys assembled what years of traJnir.K and experience ha. ffiven them. It there that crack cthietic coaches teach youth the secrets of the track and f.e'. i. th diamond and pridlron and the vatcr, Instilling in America future men the love for the Kreat outdoors Proud mothers and fathers see with pride their tons tan coated ard beneath a happy smile that new Interest in freedom that Ls born within them. They eeo the boys rusjsed and alert, mixing recreation with French an 1 atsrebra, stri":ng every' mir,irte to reach that troal fet by Theodore IlooseTClt. . . It Is at Qimp Iioosvel that ever- youth strives te do hener to his country by attaining tlie hi?he."t degree cf morale, where every lad smiles with happiSftCS ct the wcrds ,f prais.- uttered by true American fithr and rr.othrs and by Major P. 1. Ba'.s. vft mo euccejrfu'.ly directed the camp 1 tt year. It is to that c&rap that every American youth
empire to go that h may realize from the teaching of the irreatt of Instructor. Camr Roosevelt is not restricted to members of any national patriotic orniJtatlon. It 1 open to every youth interested in reaching1 a ffOal et and won by him who held his country above all ee, by a man whose military eervic Is marked with success the same as were his years as president of his country, and as a father who r.ve his own In the irreat world conffict. ' Camp Rooi'evtdt will make .Americans. And who known but that from that little ramp, hidden there on a wonderful. level p!ain. may come a youth or youths who in after years may fill the same chair that was varated by Theodore Rooflvelt as he stepped from the prealdency?
AW YORK COLLEGE The fame in which the College of the City of New York finds Itself at it seventy-fifth anniversary Is one In which the city should rejoice with the college. ncglnnir.fr as th. Free Academy, which ve to the city many leaders In many fields of public service and private activity during tho first fifty years, it has crown into a college that In equipment end standards of work takes high rank amor.s tho municipal College of the world. Its constituency is local, ;nd therefore urban in character, but It perhaps is more widely reprecontatlve of the stocks that make up western civilization than any other American college. For that very reason It has a peculiar task and opportunity. Th graduate of this institution are. as they have often been called. "ons of the city." The tuition of the city has transformed thoso who have come from widely diverse lineage into loyal and devoted citizens. How wide the present reach of the college Is. Is intimated by the fact that, as Pres't Meies stated, recently. 19.323 students are now enrolled in all the departments of the college, 7,000 cf these coming for instruction by night. Yet in spite of Its splendid pat and even more rromislnjr future. Mayor Hylan has held out apainst granting the minimum Increases .prescribed by ftatute for the profe3ors and instructors In this institution. They are the only group of teachers whoee salaries have not been raised since 1907. Why they should be discriminated against Is not clear. The statute is an mandatory as that under which other teachers have had their increases. The dty should be ashamed to do less for these 200 who are serving it with fidelity and ability in an institution that has been called the "city's crown." O Every now and then a fellow bobs up with six or teven wives and the men who can't even keep one get disgusted with themselves. O After marryin.r a arood housekeeper the proper thing to do is give her a good house to keep.
TP , j l tj j--r a w mr-- -rr?Lr - ON' A FOOTNOTH OF MIITON'S. (Kansas City Star.) Diffidence is not a quality we associate with Milton, who seemed equal to all feats in versification. Yet we recently found this quaint footnote appended by him to one of his fragments, his poem on "The Passion." It runs thus: "This subject the author finding to be above the years he had, when he wrote it. and nothing satisfied with what was begun, left it unfinished." This confection may be variously interpreted. At first view It eeems to show Milton was a modest man. Plainly, he doubted hia powers when he wrote these words. He had attempted something he couldn't do to his own satisfaction. We warm to him at once. It is always pleasant to catch the jrreat unmasked and to find they have tho weaknesses and defects of our own kind. That Milton himself should confess that even a single subject was beyond his reach is enough to make him almost popular if circumstances vre generally knovn. We recommend his publishers to display tnat footnote moie ronsplcuoiusly hereafter. But, of course, the thins may be viewed from another side. It may be aid that the absence of any similar comment by Milron on any of hi other work goes to show that he was fully satisfied with it. lie did not leave "i'arartife Io."t" unlinisf.ed. although m.yiy readers might hold that thi-s poem might have been broken off almost anywhere, with or without explanation. Kven "The Passion." with which the author was "nothing satitsfled." he suffered to survive and it occupies nearly two pages as a fragment. Was Milton, after all. as dissatisfied with it as he says? He was. to be sure, enough dissatisfied to leave it unfinished, but not enough dissatisfied to destroy what ho had written. It make the footnote itself a bit of vanity. It now reads differently. It says, in effect, that vhile the poemsi3 not up to Milton's standard it's good enough for us. It bids us see what good ftuff Milton consider to be his wor.t. Kven on this worst construction, however. Miltern's example is one thftt has been too little followed. Most poets have written, or at least published, too much. A footnote like Milton's would Improve much of Wordsworth, much of Dyron. a i'feat deal of Whitman. Den Jenson expressed the wish that Shakespeare bad erased a thousand of his own lines. Readers will readily think of poets und authors they could wish had done the same. liven th:. comment seems to be above the years of we who write It. We are nothing satisfied with It and so leave unfinished much we might pay. But r.ote that, like Milton, we cannot bring ourself to ütstroy it. , o AKT. (an Franc :st-o New?.) Furcpean artits believe that the Fnited States is on the verse of a sreat art:stic awakening. "It would develop normally with culture." says William H. Fox. director of the Brooklyn Museum. "Indications are, it Is coming fast. As a reaction from the war, wide-snread intere.! in the best art works is rapidly developing. Attendance at the Metropolitan Museum of Art has doubled in the last fix years." This is both pood n?wi and bad. When a civilization dew-lops a great artlctlc culture, it is ripening to decay. Fear not. however. It'll be a lonsr time before statues and old paintings attract as big a crowd as Charlie Chaplin's custard pies. 0 SnUlNGTH. (Cleveland PresB.) An ir.?ane woman escapes from the asylum at Poughkeepie. N. Y. When captured, she has walked 4 0 miles in one day. Such spurts of energy are common among theInsane. It often requires half a dozen strong men to overpower a maniac and get him Into a padded cell. Take a sine man. a weaklinp, who cannot lift I'-O pounds. Five minutes later, if he suddenly fc-oes crazy, he can easily lift 50 0. Strength of muscle and power to accomplish are largely matters of confidence. Weakness is lack cf confidence, fear all In the Imagination. You are what you think you are. no more, only occasionally l?s.
I.rFX!ONS. Seattl Star.)
j The crp of dandelions Is phenomenally big this
year m most parte o: the country. Home brewers, gleefully filling their baskets, will chuckle that Nature In this Instance lines up against prohibition. Pack of this is an Interesting piece of vesetablevorid hioloiry. Th dandelion family last year discovered what amounted t" a rational campaign to exterminate it by robbing it of tl;e blossoms that play "?tork" in dandeliondom. So th" dmdehor.s, fighting back, produce an exceptionally big crop of flowers- Some may scoff at thr idea. Rut it :S sclent. fic fact a working of the instincts of self-preservation ar.d self-propagation. That's why it Is so hard to kill weeds.
XX.
Bill Armstrong
33 aTC
once, ward
I don't know wr.at tnat 1M-
the Three Times did on
!he
you can nijAMi: cijArknci: IXUOTT I OK THIS Ol'T- " IRILST.
In a outhem city there are two! I5ut mention my name to "cullud" baseball trams which aretiir-.v j" 'ho was a M. P. at Calais 100 per cent sincere rivals. The;a"-d watch him turn white. Calais felirur between them and the-;r r.u-i Huldiet I wru the Ore at White merous financial back era run dan-! Scourge cf Calais!
gerois'.y h!rh at times. At the occasion of th" final game of an im-; port ant srle. a tie ikp to that game, i f?reat difficulty was ex perienreri in j Turins an "empire" suitable to the.
Field of the. Cloth of Gold around
F;iWAKI Tim FOURTH.
high contracting parties. Finally a choice, had to be made, eo a wcasened little negro "spote" from a nelhborinsr city wan mutually decided upon. He was watched by a committee of citizens. :.0-r j from rach side, from the time h arrived until he donned his protective mask and piped: "Play Hall!" During th seventh inning, with the score a tie, the cullud Rabe Ruth of the vicinity ..ad one strike ariti two halls called on him. There wro two men on bases. The light brown demon of th mound flung up another which grooved it, but a trifle hl?h. "Two " started th little umpire. Rut that was as far as ha got. Th big blank slmreer whirled
around, holding: his bat as a weapon j of destruction and glaring down at j tne shrunken arbiter, bellowed: !
iwo WHAT?" In o, tremulous hlh voice the "empire" then finished what he started, only differently: "Too HIGH."
Which reminds m. dfar Wilbur. r.-si.- of Ye Iai; Moan, of that time you pushed the Silver Rea.ftM ar. l much bemudd'.M 'o!nne, Inf., U. S. A. otf the corner of thö polished mi-h-con- r.f M I'rcnch (siaminet and lauched yourself from attention through al-ease to atre.st at his efforts to untangle his spurs and aris to a position from which a duly commissioned and ordained 'ocifer can conscientiously converse AT a corporal, Q. M. C. HI .
I'm longin' fcr a cottage o th cory common kind. Where pretty fragrant roses round th little door are twined. A place thet's quaint an honaey. an without th' 7)n-.p an 5how
JO' mansions o th' veil-to-do in mil
lion dollar ro-i Thar I would "be contented jes' to live my who! life thru Where friendly noidin' hollyhocks air smilin h(wdedo. I've been in cosily houses where 1 had to step vith care Per feir I'd ratc'i th' varnish on th' costly floor or stair An tho it's awful jmrty an' as nice as nlee c'n be. I'd never fed as tho it were th' proper place fer me. I'd ruther have a simple little cottape built for two With smiiin' hollyhocks an' roses r. od din' howdedo-
Reflections of a
Bachelor Girl The average love afTalr begins with a kiss cf experiment, and ends with a s'.zh rf relief.
! M- n have a funny ! O'A n. A r owpu r. r h " r i i . . . . . . .
.'artend'-r Mulu-s to P ' 5 '.a. v. ,it-r. and a hatf to caught 1 f'r r.:'s own wife. Y-t
e ; ; v r
Th attitude of a man toward a
girl his char.ced from
a pia
dare from "Iet me klx you!" to "Make n:e klst you If you can!"
1 1 . '-ry
ai :o r.
i :v. ar,
:rd. ail thf.r n v. i tt. n i to cr -it; .:n
cr: ;!.t sr.'- . irr :- t r:- in :- ?1 - -: nil of thr- e p-rtab'.:
wants a woman
hlhe:
-ner lrtincts and
! V"i-.en a
Mcn. according to th modern
..r. pn..orny, are m-rriy a r:f - wir line." still, thrv nr the onlv thing ! rr to
a:te
r.are s.r.d h: another woman
m focA-- t them. -an waiu until f.ve years
irriac- to dis-'-rver that hi
. ... ...
rlirt with. .hr.'M with, fall
v.
In love with or marry-; and that's all they HAVi: to be. after all.
: f.:
It is always h!csom time In the heart of a woman who I? loved and always May :n the heart of a man Tvho is IX lovr.
; it is M :
j Pt'tty r. cloth ,s. ! or. and a new h-"u
l o-j can tei th
iO'Jserf n.n
should g"t a new hairdrc s
y cream.
e tr-th to a.11
ten
some of tho time; but nerer tell all the truth, to ONll man all of the time urm yov. "wt.h to bore Mm to death.
WYMÄ1
AX1 YOU CAN IiY THIS ONT AT THi: DOOR OF ART MacRONALI). WHO WON TIIM WAR! FJ)WARJ THi: FOURTH. Now about this bull shootin' L.ee Musket and hbs Cloth of Gold down Calais way. Cloth of Gold! It is to laught th ha.ha! The mud Is
twenty-nine kilos deep and they've!
never seen tho sun shine since the middle of the 14th century. Puddle. I've been up and down that Field of the Cloth of Gold nleht and day, tres sober an.l 1; grand intoxicat. Oh, la. la. into.vicat magnificue! I know. I've flirted with the bench lece-d bet pullers and tried to get fresh with thos'j husky barge tenders. Has
this old Ie Musket ever kissed the j
proprietor's wife at tho Rion D'Or in Guinea? Who was Marguerite engaged to when he was there? I've got one of Marie Rose's handkerchiefs yet. What does Ie Musket know of that dear Calais? Calais, oh la, la, la! Ah! as some lime-Juicer oueen remarked once upon a time, "And w'hen I am dead and opened jou will find Calais written on my heart." This Ree Musket, ha. ha! Did It over take six M. P. 'a and Fourteen Frog Gendarmes to persuade him to retire out of the harden of Eden in Calais? Did he ever throw the
l arkeep at Maxim's throu-h the I fr-nt window? I don't want to brag but j Did he ever co down to the Place , i des Armies on the water front and: lie'e up boocoo mem chores all made ; of ben2!ne and hair oil. and then go out and meet a big gold laced, jlng-j ling Rritish general and pay to him.! "Wot ho- Alfy, to your bed old ' dear, remember the chase starts nt j daybreak." I did once. And only
Wi; DON'T KNOW WHO ANT TIIK IHUNDFR IS lUNPOXSlRbr: ixm THIS om: BUT WE HAVJ1 OUR GRAVE SUSPICIONS. Luiville, May 14, 1322. My Dear Mr. A Just a line, or two of news fcr your most popular column. After landing here safe and sound about 3 P. M.. had to give Mr. Oliver and Royd a chance to look for "sure things." They spent all the nfternoon looking for said Information, coming in in tli.'.e to take me to dinner. Up to date nothing real but one tip Royd secured after much persuasion from the blond manicurist In the barber shop. Her expert advice vps to play "Deadlock" if it rained, and if It didn't to play it anyway. Think Mr. J. Oliver is under cover with something good, and if I find out In time will let you know in time for your Sunday edition. So far they are both behaving like real gentlemen and scnl best regards to all cf the home folks. Wo ;uo hoping the other South Rend folks join us. Sincerely yours, MORVICH.
P. S.pleasc.
-Don't use my
name T. O.
THIS IS whijri: WH get Tnu DICKENS AGAIN. Cordova Hotel. 17 0-- Madison Ave., Toledo. Ohio. South Pend News-Times, South Rend. Ind.: Gentlemen. Ploa?e enter a three months' subscription to the morning News-Times (daily and Sunday), and send same to me at above address, beginning immediately. I have ben in Toledo since the early part of February and have managed to worry along through a dreary existence without the tonic dispensed by Rill Armstrong, but find that life isn't worth living without th:s daily dose of the Tower of Rabj -lon hence th subscription. Yours very truly, ' FARls. DICKK.VS'.
" ' ' "'""' '
Extra
Fi
29c
me Aephyr
Special
Gingh
am
29c
ouu
3,300 yards of this Extra Fine Zephyr Ginsham have just arrived in a new assortment of good looking checks and plaids. This gingham is not to be confused with other goods you have seen at this price, and will creditably bear your comparison as to quality and design with other ginghams at 29c.
3CL
NMl-.-iH- la to
1
CHILD AN'I THi:
liOKS CAT. They are taking care of their nrlghbor'fi cat
And makln? a very cood job nf that. For the next-door lady was- e.v.lc -1 . away i
So what coulii tney no and wnat could they FayWhen she asked in her absence if they would seo
That her cat was fed as she ought be?
e that the neighbor's cat' all
right. They never could rest If thMr charge shoul l roam Ar.r perhaps le lost when t'ieir friend rr.mf.s honv:
See our window
come in to the play.
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday or
Wash Goods counters where it will te on dis-
to
j God Ion net! them
didn't say: 1 "Look after my baby away." I So tin y s-.ldoni worry ; fret i For 'f isn't ranked a?
j pet. ; Ar.d r.'-ver they trouble to count the ! cost ! Or wh it God will say if IPs child be ! lost.
i child, but He
while I'm I I i and seldom i
a neighbor':
Uli &
r i
-COME AND SEK Ul
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30; Saturdays till 9:00
Now th" cat is a pu?s that i? highly bred And on dainty food? must be daily fef;r She's a costly thing, as you may infer, - And th commit cats mustn't r'ay with her. .'fid not for the world would they
dare to let ! He no
Disaster come to their neighbor's cat. pet. j I'or soon will the neighbor be home i to find
Ile'. one of God's children, but what
of that.
the same as a neighbor's
d a y For fear that
away; Th very last thir.p: that they nicrht
true to their trust
wrath, but It
Thev fret nt nlrht and thev fret by lit' they've been
I I and kind. Miss TaM v may run i And th'-y fr-ar brr
! strikes me odd
n at They're rev r afraid of the wrath of i Goi.
Mom Tmtu
gJ- - 1G tiii" rrxsox
Toi(;ii. Ti-.e ndxanco i. f ijl prices due to
the strike will tr.oKe the cost ot
ly proiiib-
poirruv rou nn: pfofm:. Ye mustn't give up tryin' However hard the way. An' you'll be sent. As president. To Washington some day. There'; them has llve.1 their lifetime. Forpotten when they died. They stayed obscure , An' always poor Recause they never tried. Ye gotta keep on tryin': Some wise, ole feiler notes "A president Is Jest a pent That Kits the needful vote?." Go git a nomination An' some day you may be A settin' there In Harding'. chair In Washington. D. CYe mustn't rive up tryin'; Life aint no loafin' dreamy Jest u?e your brain
! An' you will gain
The popular esteem. He never "would fet dcrwn, Rut tried an' tried. An' fore he di- I He'd got hisse'.f a crown. If you Jet keep on tryin An' don't do nothin -lse. Although your name Ain't known to fame Like Mister Roosevelt's. You may rI: rich and famous Ry tellin other guys The way that Fate Make wise an' iJrc.it. The chaps that reallj- tries!
The Ger.o i conference wasn't much
of a success. rr.1 golf co.ir-e r ady next cne
town will have a in time for the
B 1
A Yellow Straw lint CompUMN Ihi.-i
Uajtlme (iuiup of Velloxi j Kardia Round in RIack s Satin. j
Yellow. ramring from the pale shades to golden dent do lion, re-
one ot tne masons mo;; i colors. When the color I? 1
! 1
i r4
j mains wanted
yellow, then, an 1 the material is, q
kasha, the costume smart, indeed. The yellow kasha frock above is j developed in citron shade and bound ! all ;. i ou: in black satin. Its collar- ! lees neoklir.e, lonsr B Ai: and tlig'at'.y : circular .-k-.r. ar- features which give ad ltd smartness. Citrcn-yellow straw form the hat. which is bound in "'.ack and trimmed in spike -like black feathers. . '
VERSE O' CHEER By Edgar L. Jone
JUST A COTTA Gil. Th' cir. ! o' home I'd like t' own 4s not a mansion rare With tape.nrics an' c-atly pictures h.irgin' ever'whero. I hain't u-'.onging fer a coc-tly -palace
j fer my own I With marble hall.'? an' hifalutin
fancy loo'
stone.
I only want a simple little cottage built for two Where -rod old - fashioned ho'.'.y
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I
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