Bloomington Courier, Bloomington, Monroe County, 23 July 1895 — Page 2

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CRAVENS BROa, Pub BLOOMINGTON, - INDIANA. The devil gets many a boy by getting his father first There is a good deal of laziness that goes by the name of sickness. Yale seems to have selected Harvard for its own special pudding until further notice. Memphis is dropping out of sight again. Why not hold another financiers' convention? The man who puts his money on the wrong horse is for the time one of the chief orators of the day. Kentucky's kind of politics is spectacular, but somewhat wearing in an age of nervous prostrations and paleyellow emotions. Until a woman foregoes the practice of wearing her necktie hindside before' she can never pass in society as a welldressed gentleman. It looks as if Uncle Anson, too, might have a presidential boom if he should succeed in pegging up his batting average a little higher. It will seem like old times for Lord Salisbury to be called to Windsor to receive his daily coddling from the admiring ruler of England. The Missouri antitrust law has been declared invalid which it is slowly becoming evident seems to have been about all antitrust laws were enacted for. A new girl arrived from the country in Chicago last week with a boy's suit and a revolver. She was arrested as a suspicious character, and is not as fresh as she was. As a rule illustrations can be made to appeal to the eye more forcibly than cold type. Many of the so-called "art illustrations" are rot and inferior to well-displayed and well-worded advertisements. While-Hetty Green is dodging the tax-payer to keep her $40,000,000 out of his way, her niece, Mrs. Babcock, of Fort Worth, Texas, is in destitute circumstances. Money-getting is not a family trait. Paris is the scene of a new literary venture called the Journal for Mothers-in-Law. The editor proposes to protect an abused class of women from the smart Alecks who were never able to secure a wile's mother. The outrageous liberties taken with the rights of the people by the average board of aldormea in the larger cities are occasions of frequent public protest. In Denver, however, they threa:-c-n to give the aldermen more rope. James Natt, who killed James 2ukes, at Union town. Pa., while on trial for the killing of his father, State Treasurer Nutt, has been sentenced to the penitentiary for fifteen years for shooting Mrs. Jesse Payton and Leonard Colnan at Atchison, Kan., last Feb.ia:ry. Jim was a bad nut. Mr. Russell Sage is a philosopher. In eyeaking of the verdict for damages re?ently rendered against him. he said: "This isn't an ideal world. We've got to take things just as we find them." The contention of counsel for the plaintiff was, that Mr. Sage took Laidlav just as he found him, and got behind him when the bomb exploded. Now that Mrs. Sheffer has failed to win her suit against the proprietors of a Chicago oyster-house for damages which she claims were due her for breach of faith and misplaced confidence in an oyster stew, the church socials may, with happy assurances of security, once more float the lonsly bivalve on the unruffled bosom of the limpid waters of the soup tureen. There is a complaint from th women because the soda-fountain keepers do not set up a free lunch. A glass of soda costs as much as a glass of beer, and the beer-drinker gets an appetizing free lunch thrown in. Thi3 discrimination in favor of the men is very annoying to the women, and they talk of boycotting every fountain in town unless they are treated differently. Of the new British Cabinet. Salisbury, Halsbtiry, Cross, Hicks-Beach, Balfour, Goschen, Hamilton, Ritchie. Cadogan, Chaplin, and Ashbourne were members of the last Salisbury Cabinet. The Marquis of Lansdowne takes the place of the Earl of Stanhope as Secretary of War; Joseph Chamberlain the piace of Lord Knutsford as Secretary to the Colonies; the Duke of Devonshire the place of iscount Cranbrook s Lord President of Council. It is the old Conservative Cabinet with a little more Union Liberal blood in ;r. . Chicago is in danger of losing it." whilom reputation as an easy divorce center. Judge Wiiides has denied separation to a couple who sought it because they found it inconvenient ta live together and the wife would not answer the husband's letters. It seems to be becoming necessary under the present judiciary of Cb.'cago to have reason for divorcement as an indispensable preliminary ta iecuring it. If the court will persist in the trend of Judge Windes, marriati will once more seem less a lcUny r.:l more an Institution.

AT CALESBURO. Preparations for the Great Summer Meeting on an Elaborate Scale. (Galesburg, 111., Correspondence.) All is work and business at the Galesburg Race Track these tine summer days. Recently C. W. Williams, the owner of the track, was heard to remark to Chas. Terbush while they were watching the shoeing of a promising brother to Falfe, that everything at the track was about a month ahead of time. By the first of June this year some good speed had been developed and several of the horses in trial heats had gone several notches below their marks. But the season has opened now and the trainers are off for the races. The work preparatory to the great summer meeting here is being pushed with all vigor. A- special advertising car, containing about ten men, wil start out in about ten days to bill the state. This car will carry 152,000 different kinds of advertising matter and it is expected that they will make a thorough job of it. This will be the largest crowd which ever assembled in this part of the state, which will gather in Galesburg about August 26th, and they will see the best trotting and pacing meeting ever held in the country. Over 1,000 horses have entered for the meeting, which is a remarkable showing. Then the prize money foots up to a grander total than that of any other race meeting in the country, while no other meeting can show so long a list of entries. This is proof of the fact that the horsemen know a good thing when they see it, and so they are all coming to Galesburg, the pretty college city of the west, for the great summer meeting to be held August 26th to September 7th inclusive. And then the owners of the fast ones want to capture more records and at Galesburg, over the only dead level track in the world, is the place to do this. Last year there was a scarcity of seats, but Mr. Williams promises that this shall not occur this year. Just previous to the Bicycle Meeting recently held there, additions were made to the grand-stand so that there are now about 5,000 seats in the stand. The judges stand will also be improved. Another story will be added to it for the press, which will be greatly appreciated by the boys. The management assures the people that as large a crowd as will come will be taken care of. The C. B. & Q. switch extends into the grounds so that those going and coming on their special trains, land right at the gate. The fine electric street car system runs right to the main gate and the track is only a short ride from the main part of the citv. Besides these two lines, there will be hacks and band wagons innumerable to -. onvey the crowd to and from the city A large hotel stands just across the svreet from the main gate, while scvera? boarding houses are close at hand. Thei in addition to the four commodious hotels in the city, many private houses will be thrown open to receive the guests. Underneath the grand-stand, .vther improvements will soon be begu i. After putting down a line floor, Mr. Williams will proceed to establish one of the best lunch counters in this r-art of the state. It will be equipped with all the latest ideas for serving the people so that a gdod lunch can be secured h' a short time. But what will there be in s-e at this meeting? For the two week, a program of 3S races has filled. Th-se range from the green two-year-olds down to the flyers of the 2.12 tret and ?:10 pace. In each of these races the exceptionally large purse of 2,100.00 is up and there wil be some lively scrarr.bling to get it. Then there wilt be a la- ge number of special attractions. Monroe Salisbury is booked here and will start many of his fine ones in the r ices. As the season opens, Mr. Williams is keeping his eyes witle open for the two minute goers and you want to watch them go when they strike the nice springy Galesburg track. A strong effort is being made to secure all the fast money winners of the reason. The Fall Meeting opens September Stth, the Monday after the great meeting closes, and this will be the time for the smaller fry. The races will continue eight weeks, so that horsemen can come here and win plenty of money without a shipment. There are 1S8 'races, ar.d it only costs $15.00 to start for $300-.00 purses. They begin with the two year old trots and paces and get down to the 2:0s class in both movements. The money in these will be divided, 50, 25. 15 and 10 per cent, of purses, while the entrance is only 5 per cent of purse, with an additional 5 per cent from all money winners. For two year olds, the heats will be best two in three; all others best three in five. The entries for the faii meeting close August 26th, and recoi ds made after noon of that day will be no bar. Not long since, Ferron, Domino and Nancy Conkling bad a nice little brush which was won by speedy Domino, with Ferron right at Domino's girth for the full mile. Domino has since gone a half in 1:07 and leads the Terbush string. Murrango, of the same crowd, went a mile in 2:30 at the last work out; Bell Pilot a mile in 2:24; and a fine yearling by Muscoute clipped off a quarter in 52. Only four of the Allerton family in the Williams string are now at work, and the fine black stallion "Ferron" is one of the worthiest. George Belmont by Belmont, 641, dam by Harold in the Mercer string shows good speed and will get a record this season of 2:30 or better and this is bis iirst season of training. There are a number of colts in he same string that show good promise. Frank Stickney will probably begin work at the track next week with Abel Muscovite 2i Vi and Harry L. a green trotter. Abel Muscovite is a two yea: old. and wont a trial in 2:24 last year. Joe Fifer. who went miles last year la 2:15, is again at work and takes quarters in M2 seconds. In Ed Trask's .string Dole is the pacemaker and can go a mile most any time in 2;12. Florisand is another good one. Geo. Mosher has a throe year old thorough-bred running (Illy by Hanover, which went three quarters in l:17'j with a weight of 121:. up. One of the new comers at the track is West o;" Kewanee, who has Mlv.nie A. and .)- rains. Lyman will soon be here from the same town with three head. Thctv are a large number of train ts who have engaged barn r in, and who unexpected to arrive within a few days. George Rodfb-ld, the owner of infamous pacing dog Sport, recently returned from ti;e Denver meeting where Bport made a great hit. It is said iltr he captured the crowd in groat style. Nevada is so sparsely settled iha; there are nearly two and on-half squarejyiies to each inhabitant. A-school teacher in Worlh County. Oa keeps his pupi's in order t y thivaitningly displaying a piste.'

THE LIGHTS ON MAES.

YERKES' TELESCOPE WILL TELL ABOUT THEM. If They Are Meant as Signals for the Inhabitants a Flash Will Ite Returned to tne Signalers A Wonderful Instrument. E ARE LIKELY during the coming summer to learn more about Mars than astronomers during all the history of their science have discovered up to the present time about that planet and its people. It required the 26-inch telescope of the United States Naval Observatory to discover the satellites of Mars. Then the Lick telescope, with its 36-inch glass, was built, and immediately the three strange signal lights on Mars were observed. Now the great 40-inch lens the hugest telescope glass over made which Alvan E. Clark has been working on for more than a year at Cambridge, Mass., for the Yerkes telescope, is completed and will soon be shipped to its destination. The big telescope at the Naval Observatory had been unable to bring out the signal lights of Mars, as the telescopes before that time had failed to note the satellites, and the Yerkes telescope will be so much bigger than the Lick, now the largest in the world, that astronomers are confident astonishing discoveries may be made as soon as it is set up. Who knows but that looking through the great 40-inch glass of this huge instrument, astronomers will be enabled to make out definitely the system of signals which the Martians are believed to be using in au effort to communicate with the inhabitants of Earth? Even the great canal system of Mars, as is now suspected by more than one, may turn out to be a gigantic semaphore. Upon the other hand, when these canals fill up with water and irrigate the land, which turns green and yields crops, as Flammarion has witnessed, the Yerkes telescope may show the process of cultivation, here noting where a field has been cut and there Mi 1 mv mix-Mi LEX 3 OF THE GREAT where a fire has ravaged. The strange lights in a triangle may no longer be mysterious and puzzling to astronomers, while the black dots and dashes on the white polar caps of the planer, may be deciphered. Railroads, water-works, ships and whole cities existing on the surface of Mars may come out under this huge telescope, the glass of which has just been photographed in the workshop of Clark. The latter, by the way, is the greatest builder of astronomical lenses the world has ever seen. It was he who made the Lick lens, and the Claries have been the foremost makers, of astronomical glasses for two generations. They have witnessed the steady growth of glasses to their present enormous size. Alvan E. Clark, aided by his father, constructed the 5-inch reflecting telescope which showed the satellites of Jupiter and the rings of Saturn. Then followed in succession from their workshops at Cambridge the 12-inch for the Vienna University, the 12-inch for Morrison, the ly2 for Wisconsin, the 1G for Warren Observatory, the 18 for the Northwestern University, the 20 for Denver, the 23 for Princeton, the 26 for Virginia with one of like size for the Naval Observatory, the 30 for Russia and the 36-inch for the Lick telescope. AH of these have now been eclipsed by the 40-inch lens for the Yerkes telescope. Even this may not reach the limit, for Mr. Clark believes that it can be expected if any millionaire will be liberal enough to give the order. And it requires a very rich man to build one of these enormous telescopes. The lens of the Yerkes telescope', now at Cambridge, when the glass came from Paris in the rour,h, and before a utroke of work had been done upon it to fashion it into its present delicate and beautiful shape, cost $40,000. Probably the grinding and polishing of the le:;s. which have been going on fcr two years, cost as much again, while several hundred thousand dollars were required lo furnish the grounds and buildings for the new observatory with its numerous instruments and the elaborate and enormous brass tube for tin1, great telescope, besides the endowment fund for the maintenance of the instiiuion. Some of (he most ac?o:r.pliaiied astronomers in America will lis attached to rnw observatory. The great crown glass now at Cinnbr'.dge is about ? inches thick in tinmiddle and Hi inches thick at t'i:outer edge. Like a great staring eye. it i.s placed a- the cud of a long, dark

tunnel, where the marvellously precise work of testing the purity of the glass and the perfection of focal range has been carried on. -The great lens, representing a fortune in itself, will have its own palace car, which will be specially chartered for the trip. It will be transported from the workshop of Mr. Clark and lifted on board with the utmost care. Mr. Clark and a body of his skilled workmen, besides several astronomers, will accompany the glass, keeping constant watch over it from one end of the journey to the other. Even in its palace car the great lens, which may shed more light upon the science of astronomy than all the telescopes that have ever been built, will not be left to itself upon the cushioned floor. It will be poised and balanced so as to receive as little jar as possible, and it will be turned from one position to another from time to time during the trip, thereby avoiding podarization of the molecules of glass from the motion of the train. The telescope for which this magnificent product of science and skill is intended was the gift of Charles T. Yerkes to the Chicago University, made at the time when the announcements of the startling observations of the Lick telescope on Mars were first exciting the scientific world. But it is now admitted on all hands that the Yerkes instrument, from the satisfactory tests that have been made and its greater size, will completely eclipse the Lick instrument in focal range and power, and the first result of its being turned on Mars when the planet is in opposition will be anxiously awaited.

THE BRIDE OBJECTED. She Insisted That the Word "Obey" Be Omitted from the Marriage Ceremony. A strong-minded-looking young woman and a resigned-looking man called at the city hall, New York, the other day, and asked to see the mayor. "I want to get married," she announced. A moment later they stood before Mayor Strong. The woman asked for the book containing the marriage ceremony and scanned it over until she came to the passage "Love, honor and obey." The bridegroom tugged at her dress and said: "Never mind, Pauline, now. You needn't do it anyhow when we are married." The bride ignored him, and said: "T Us? . j S?iJ- - YERKES TELESCOPE. "Mr. Mayor, 1 wish you would leave the word obey out when you marry ut:." "Well, well," said his honor, "is this the- new woman?" "No, t;ir; I'm not the new woman, but I believe in equality. That woyd 'obey' is a relic of barbarism. It comes from the time when women wore in bondage." The Mayor then left the word o-'.t. The pair save their names as Charier, j Sossinger and Pauline E. Becker, of Philadelphia. 'i'Uf linilroad Kidney. This complaint is now recognized by medical men. It is caused by au artificial stoppage of the pores of the skin. If any person will examine his hand after riding for two or three hours in a train and this is especially true if he 'be perspiring -he will find his hand is dirty. But a closer examination will show the existence of a fine grime, the particles of which, so soon as the perspiration ceases, act us minute corks stopping up the orifices of the pores. How deeply this grime works into thskin is shown by the fact that after a railroad trip one washes one's hands and face two or three times before they become c!aan. It is this grime which produces railroad kidney. Of course, it is not supposed that an ordinary healthy person will contract this disease in a trip of a day or two. But where a person is already a sufferer from chronic disease of the kidneys it is possible that a week on railroad trains would aggravate his malady to an appreciable extent. Ex. WHAT WOMEN ARE DOING. For thirty years t)i' empress of Austria has not had her portrait tnke:i. The Queensland government has decided that in future exhibitions to universities sun II open to women. Both the empress of ltusi:i mid the rluehess ICtiintiurtrh have in their p.is-i.-SS!"H a set of sahles whieh eOSt mi!Kider:'. lily over i'l,oii:i. The vtdw of John Brown ut sl.u eryday fame lives in a pretty hin in tieSierra Azure - m matains, about tii':. miles from San Francis -e. l.inisr a she has resided in i'bil.Hinl. 'ie princess u!' Wales lias never mas tered the English ai-eeut. "Ghannei." Til Instance, she iiron-.iiiii.-es "s!i;iunij!." In speaking et Airs. H irriet Mc-e.-her S?tiive the Hartford t'ouraui says: "'IV.e fcenrra! health of this famous woman is li-Uti' than it was on her hlrtbday las, year: ie.v appetite Is e-xc Ue:it, and he;rtrengih such that ntu- Is seen d lily during this beautiful June weather w;1 Iking with h"r attendant n For-s: street, where is sitv.atid her p!ea:;;i:i: huine."

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MICROBES OF ALCOHOLISM.

This Is b New Fad Which the Medical I'rcfesHlon May Adopt. "The funniest theory I ever heard regarding drunkenness as a disease," said Dr. Henry S. Trigg, the brilliant ex-chief of the Bureau of Contagious Diseases, who is making a special study of alcoholism in its varied and interesting, if not exactly plfeasant, phases, acute, chronic and otherwise, "is held by a gentleman who runs a somewhat celebrated retreat for socalled dipsomaniacs not far from the city of Hartford, Conn. This genius holds and he has been many years in the business that drunkennes is contagious, just like measles or typhoid fever. He believes that the disease can be communicated directly from one who is infected with it to one whose system is in a condition to receive the infection. According to his theory, a drunkard should be locked up, not alone for his own good, but because he is a constant menace to others when permitted to go at large. Sounds comical, does it not? Yet the good doctor can expound his theory by the hour, and bring excellent sounding reasons to his side of the question. As for me, I cannot quite accept the contagion theory, but I would not be surprised to wake up some day and find in my newspaper that some sciential has discovered the bacillus of alcoholism. I am strongly impressed with the idea, gained from my researches, that there is a microbe engendered by alcoholic drink." A FAMOUS WALL. Some Facts About It That Ought to Be Remembered. The entire history of China, like that of Egypt, is divided into dynasties. The great Chinese wall was begun by Che-hw,ang-te, first emperor of the Tsin dynasty, 240 B; C. It forms the northern boundary of China, and was built to prevent invasions from that direction. Every third man in the empire was required to give his help to build it, and it took five years to complete it. The wall is not solid, but consists of two thick walls, filled in with earth; every foot of the foundation, however, is of solid granite. It is lined with battlements and towers, and is so wide that six horsemen may easily ride abreast on its top. The towers are about one hundred yards apart, and there are steps here and there for persons to ascend. Recently, in a survey for a Chinese railroad, this stupendous barrier was measured; the measurement gave the height as eighteen feet, and the length as thirteen hundred miles. It goes over the mountains and plains, crosses rivers and traverses great marshes. It is estimated to contain enough material to girdle the earth with two wails, each two feet in thickness and seven feet in height. The Secret of C.himis. In a certain drawing room the other afternoon we were talking of some well-known superstitions and, among others, cf that secret room in the castle of Glarais. which. Sir Walter Scott tells us. is known only to the earl of Strath-ir.o::-e. his heir-appar-jnt, una one otter porson in whom the ear! may choose 10 con fide. One of our purty told u an tf.muainc story concerning this secret chamber of Glamis. Once, when stepping at the castle in autumn, a curious and indiscreet visitor took advantage of the host's absence to suggest a plan by which the whereabout-; of the hidden chamber should be revealed. The castle was full and it was: proposed that each guest should hasten to his or her room and hang his or ho? pillow our of the window, while one visitor was told to mark oft' such window ;is displayed no white signal. In the middle of carrying out this pretty plan the master of the castle returne.i unexpectedly and great was his wrath at this unseemly curiosity. Never had the owner of Glamis appeared in so towering a passion. The display of temper is hardly to be wondered at, for the Glamis secret is regarded with an extraordinary seriousness by the Strathmore family and when imparted tc the heir has been known to fill him with gloom hard to dispel. Sketch. l'latimim In IVm." Platinum was first obtained in Peru and has since been found in other localities, such as Canada, Oregon, the West Indies, Brazil, Columbia, Borneo, etc., but the chief supply of platinum ore comes from the Ural mountains, in Siberia. It was t'here discovered in beds of auriferous sands in 182:5, and has been worked by the Russian government since 182S. MEN TALKED ABOUT. Lord llnsebery, the English prembjr, is a groat student of the Bible. Julia Ward Howe says that Longfellow was a good deal of a dandy in hi youth. Edison's fundnoss fur electric scioncp is only surpassed by his admiration of children. Arthur Balfour, the leader of the conservative opposition In the house of cuninianp, is a bicycle rUh r. Cliarlo:; Dickens, the younger, lias succeeded the b'-te James Sime as a literary adviser to the house of Miicmlllan & Co. In London. William It. Moody, a son of the evangelist, who is in ch:j.rg of a department in Mount lieiTiion school, lias In. V'.-loped considerable aptitude as a public speaker. Kobert J. Cook, better known as (.'apt. "Bob" Cook, Yale's most erlet-i ,i ;;t boating expert, has consented to tak? charge of an eight to represent the university against. Oxr.rd and Oanieridgc. Sir Julian Pauneefoto, the T'.i-il.ish ambassador to Washington, l;a.--, s-t an excellent example to patrons o the fl:s--art::; in his treatment of the Kciilpto." Durtliar. This Krtist chiseled a. bus: of the minister and received for it. a ci.c: for twice the amount agreed up-.m.

NO PIE FOR HER.

The Spectacled Old Lady Had a Dinner That Surprised the Knowing Gamblers. The old lady entered a restaurant which, rightly or wrongly, is known as the resort of the gay and careless, says the New York World. She was typically countrified in appearance, her spectacles resting on the bridge of her nose, her hat being old-fashioned and her gait and general attitude those of one fresh from the little farmhouse. Without, however, any sign of halting confidence that was to be expected of a stranger to city ways, she sat down at the most conspicuous table in the room. A surlylooking short-card player, who, although it was six o'clock in the afternoon, was just getting his breakfast, stared at her with curiosity. Two dejected turf gamblers, prevented from attending the races on that day by bad luck on the day before, who were solacing themselves with strong waters and who hadn't spoken to each other for half an hour, observed her with slight smiles. "Well, now," said one, "that's a funny old girl to see in here. I remember seein' her kind in country towns when I was in the show business. I'll gamble on what she'll order. She'll have gooseberry pie and milk, and she'll eat the pie with her knife. They don't have no forks where she comes from." But the other would not bet. He said merely and not unkindly: "She doesn't seem to fit this place." They could not hear what she ordered, but they could see that there was nothing flippant in the attitude of the waiter who went to her. She ate with deliberation and then departed. One of the two unsuccessful patrons of the turf called the waiter and asked: "What did that old lady order?" "Why, less see," answered the waiter, "I think she had pigeon and pint of fizz. She's very fond of both." The gamblers looked surprised. "Who Is she?" asked one. "Why, don't you know her?" queried the waiter. "That's Mddle. Canlonl, the head dancer in this new burlesque at the Goodhouse theater." Tobacco Chewing Dos;. Supt. McAlvey has a little English mastiff pup, eight months old and weighing 135 pounds that has developed an abnormal appetite for tobacco. He acquired his taste for it by watching Amos chew no doubt, and he is never happier than when he is given a "chaw." He chews and spits like any other man and has never yet been sick. His tobacco habit is a very expensive j one and he will be given a treatment of No-to-bac in the hope of curing him. Crawfordsville Argus News. Donation far Triplets. Her majesty, the queen of England, recently bestowed a donation of 3 on a Mrs. Scott of Campbell street, South Shields, who recently gave birth to triplets. When you see the hands of a clock always right you may be sure that there isn't much wrong with the inside works. Is Your Blood Pure ; If not, it is important that you make it i pure at ouce with the great blood purifier, ! Hood's Sarsaparilla I Because with impure blood you are in ' constant dauger of serious illness. t ti j r: 1 1 rure habitual constipation. IrlOOCl S KlllS t'riwa.-. per box. OR. KIUMCR-S, The Great KIDNEY, LIVER & BLADDER CURE. JL Advice Pamphlet free. Dr, Kilmer & Co., Bingrhamton. N. Y. HIGHEST AWARD WORLD'S PAIR. THE BEST PREPARED SOLD EVERYWHERE. JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. Work for the STARK Nurseries'; OOtt PAY ! Write quick. New departure rilans. STARK BKO'S NurterieniOivliarUs (Jo., Louisiana, Mo. it Hock port, ill.

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