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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1926)
FOUR ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, THURSbAV, OCTOBER 2T, T925. ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW , ' 'aeued Daily Except 8undiy by Th Nawa-Revle-W Co.. Inc- "''The Associated Pros U exclusively entitled to the use for republl- Huon or mi news aispaicnea ereaitea to it or not otnerwisa oreuitea in , nil paper ana tu mi iduw newi puousneg Herein. All riffnui ! repuouear HVH us eveuiei uiaiiaiuuai uviffiv Mrs .eu raMtriflt b. -W. UAllit)- BERT 0. BATHS. -President and Manager .Secretary-Treasurer pritered aa second class matter May 17, 1820, at the poat office at - BoBebnrS, Oregon, under trie Act of March i, 1879. ., SUBSCRIPTION RATfcU Dally, per year, by mall - . Dally, six months, by mall . Daily, three months, by mall Dally, single month, by mall Uaily, by carrier, per month Weekly News-Review, by mall, per year -14.00 1.00 . 1.00 .60 - .W , 1.00 ROSEBURG, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1926. PEOPLE VS. POLITICIANS. "How can we smash the political machines?" This is a question that many voters ask. It is echoed by many politi- cians and newspapers. It is a somewhat difficult thing to define what a political machine is. Many voters are very in dignant about the riiigs and machines in the opposite party. But they are not so much concerned about those in their own organization. There is a feeling that the politicians as a class run the government too much in their own interest, and do. not consider the public interest much. So laws have fre- r tiuently been passed the purpose of which is to curb the pol- itipians and political machines, and to give the rank and file .of the people more influence over election results and legisla- : tion. But these laws do not commonly work as expected. The politicians have a way of adapting themselves to any laws that may be passed, and they can often get their aims about. ; as' well under the new laws as. they could under the old. As the politicians can not obtain office unless they please the people, they do in the long run about what they think the people want. So if there are faults in government, they are due primarily to the people rather than to the politicians. If - people everywhere would attend to their political duties and turn out to all primaries and elections, arid study politics enough, so they would vote intelligently, there would be very 'low's patience to how down the 1 little complaint of political machines. The politicians would a job year after year with- ... fitter molrlnn- Qliu ri rinranio hi a honH. have to conform to the demand? of a very intelligent public sentiment. They would compete to see which should prpvide government according to the most progressive, modern, and scientific ideas. .'.-. THE STICKER By Wlckes Wamboldt Recently I was In the office of a business man when a young: chap applied foe a position. , : . ' i Mow long have you lived In this town? asked the lousiness 'man, The applicant ' said he had lived were aooui iwu years. "WHO have you worked for?" was the next question. The applicant named one onv ployer after another. The business man plainly lost lntorest "Leave your name and address with my secretary, "he said, "and If I find I can use you, 1 11 lot you know." ; :. ' : ', As the yountf man closed the door behind him. the business man turned to mi and said, "He has held too many jobs. ' He doesn't stick. I want people who will stick." ' , ' . , The poorest testimonial that the lob seeker can produce Is a record of havink held too many jobs. A housewife Interviewing a girl who wants a place (is cook is imme diately filled with doubt If the ap plicant says that she has worked a month hero, and a month there, and a mdnth elsewhere, and a week in Ibis, place and that place and the other place. - Either such a girl Cannot deliver the goods or. she has the sole itch. ; ; - ' 4 The oerson who never Btnys Ioiie in one position Is the, ' perpetual apprentice: he never learns ! arty business; he never gets' to where he Is of Importance to any em ployer.-It takes from a year on to break ground in any job. The longer a fi'JIow holdn his job the hotter tho condition of his ground; the more valuable he becomes to those ho Is working for; the more they think of. him and the more thev Will do for him thkt Is. If he Is the right kind of fellow; If not. the longer be stays the loss they will thnik of him and the less they will do for him. Unquestionably it taxes a fel- BANKING ON THE FUTURE. ' As a measure not biily of what America has done, but of what it cxjiecty to do, (Julius' H.' Barnes, former president of trie Chamber of Cornmerije of tre United States, directs at- btiiibiim w uiq laifV uiui. uic.uitiiiiuuu mc uiDuiaiiuc wmi-mii- 'Ufa of America have entered into solemn contracts to redeem; by the distribution of. payments at; varying periods within the lifetime of men now jiving, the ienormous aggregate of $72,000,000,000. . . . . ' i. Whoh Abraham Lincoln Was a child," he said, "the Unit dd States possessed five million people, clustered closely along seaboards, with a great undeveloped territory, of vast potentiality, inland and yet untouched. ; When Abraham Lin coln was born, seventy-two billion dollars, the capital total of today's life insurance, would have bought more than half the total possessions of all the world. Fifty centuries Jof pro ductive effort of all races of mankind had succeeded in creat ing, in every form of wealth and value, hardly twice the face obligation of life insurance contracts of today. Life insur V once, itself a growth of barely more than a quarter of a cen tury, is evidence today in popular confidence by contracts, , the final redemption of which, in the United States alone, (Jfnial in aggregate value, the- whole World's savings of twenty centuries preceding." , ' o - The American Legion's legislative committee is oppos ) ing the ratification of the protocol which would prohibit gas ; warfare. The committed Remark that only two per cent of the gas casualties in tho World.war resulted fatally, while . i in the case of casualties from causes different from gas, there were fatal results in 24 per cent of the cases,, das warfare has been regarded as one of the most terrible phases .'of , war, but tho figures quoted above suggest that it is com paratively humane. But if the world has a decent amount of common sense, it will soon say that any form of warfare is , as utterly foolish and wasteful as it would bo for people to ' settle their quarrels by fighting in the streets instead of re sorting to the courts. ' Wu RipplingRhumGs'O SMALL BEGINNINGS. Largo oaks from little acorns grow, thev used to teach ins; -long ago, and as we lead our useful lives, discussing mat ters with our wives, wo often say, in language chaste, that imignty things on small are based. And some will say, thus Causing mirth, there are no trifling things on earth. A man ; named Reaumur spent his days pursuing wasps through! woodland ways. Wherever wasps had built a nest ho loomed, up, in his endless quest. And now and then men heard his '-, shriek, when angry wasps had stung his beak. He studied wasps with tireless zeal; to chase a Wasp he'd lose a meal;' ne let nis nouse ana garden slide, he wore old shoes with . strings untied, he let his cow stay in tho pound, to study ' wasps, the long year round. His neighbors viewed him with disdain; his conduct wasn t safe or sane. "To study bees," ti -j . i .11 .... . . ma grocer Suiu, woiiiu argue sense was m His head, for bees can make the wheels go round, when honey's worth six bits a pound." But Reaumur wrote a little tract in which he chronicled tho fact that wasps chew wood, with frantic zest, to build their funny paper nest. The wood pulp industry has grown from that small tract and that alone. The men of science read his words and figured, being wise old birds, that if cheap wasps could paper make from trees that grew in fen and brake, then men could beat them at their trade, and so an industry was made. The journal you are reading now,' the book that soothes your fevered brow, and nearly all the printed things that make you happier than kings, are possible because a man., at whom guys laughed, pursued the plan of chasing wasps instead of hees across the gaudy-sunlit leas. nut. mnklnr nnv nhrirAclahte head way. All the sdme tiie chap who does that Is thb one' who eventu ally wins out, Suddenly something develops for him. ' A promotion takes place; somebody steps out or up and he Is swept along. ' The other A day, I hoard of the case of a young nmb In Chicago, who tins boon with the large cor poration ever alnco he began to work, Sometime ago he developed a bronchial trouble, and bis physl elan'tbldi him lie would have to get but, of that clmate, ; , "Talis1 a iest for thirty days," sand the managor of the company, whoh1 he learned of the 'young mark's condition: "then we'll trans fer you to our Honolulu office. That ought to fix up. your pipes." So after the young man had had a mouth's rest the' company paid his way, and his wife's way,- to the Hawaiian Islands and gave him pleasant, easy work out there. would they, have done that for him It he hadn't been with them for a long tlmo? Would they have looked out for him that way if ho hadn't boon' the kiutl that would stick?,: - . ) . .V i those inside It was not. just the re lease of another "old timer" but the departure of a friend. Career Turbulent Debs began bis life's work as a railroad fireman in 1871. Bight years later his political career be gan when he served as city clerk of Terre Haute. In 1885 he was olectetl to the Indiana legislature. Five years before he had been chosen grand secretary and treas urer of the Brotherhood of Locomo tive Firemen and served until 1893, As president Of the American Rail way Union be directed and won a strike on the Great Northern rail way early In 1894, and In the same year while managing the strike of the western railroads, he was charged with conspiracy but was acquitted-. This was the first time his name was in court records as a defendant. He served his first jail sentence at Woodstock, III, where he was held for six months on a contempt of court charge for violation of an injunction. The ' American railway strike, which paralyzed traffic In the west, had been broken, howevon by the intervention of President Clove- land; who ordered federal troops to guard the trains. Roleased frdm jail. Debs urged the workers to Sell your shovel and buy a gun and announced he would consecrate his life to their emancipation. when the strike of railroad shop men threatened to paralyze trans portation in the summer of 1922, Debs was one of the first to issue a proclamation to the men, urging them to Btand fast and stand to gether, as the future of their fed eration was at stake. . s Debs was a firm believer in, the Bolshevik form of eovernment adopted in llussia and declared that the Soviet rule was the hope of the entire human race. AMERICA DOESN'T ' HEAD FREE TRADE WAIL IN EUROPE (AHOclatrtl I'rwa TiGUKd Wire.) WASHINGTON, Oct. 21. The American government Is preparing 1(1 publicly declare that H does Hot consider tho recent financier's man ifesto against world trado strlctidus as applying to tho United States. At the same time the government is expected to give support to the suggestion for a lovoimg of customs bari-ioi's among European nations, 'he nronouncoment IS to' bo mudo by Secretary Mellon who dis cussed - tho subject today with Prosldotit CoolltlKO. Tho secretary advised his chief that he considered tho manifesto sound -so far ns It applies to Europe, but thoro could bo no thought to lowering the American tariff. Colnoldout with tho White House conference It became known that tho American section of tho inter national chamber of commerce, composed of business mou who are members of tho chambor of com merce of tho United Statos, had prepared a tariff report saying that American business and American, labor had came lo tho "studied de cision" that Amorlcan living stand ards must bo protocted and that no action which will tend to low er them can bavo any than an un fortunnto offed." . Tho financiers' manifesto, recent ly made public in Now York, advo cated a leveling of International trade barrlors, but made specific reference to no Individual nation. It carried tho signatures of an Im posing International group of. bus iness men, Including J. P. Muignn. EUGENE V. DEBS TAKEN BY DEATH IN 70TH YEAR (Cnntlrir.ii from page 4.) onhn and his only comment on hi return was: "I have nothing lo take back; I did not ask them to release mo.' ' . j, , Debs' love for his fellowmen was strengthened while In the peniten tiary and his kindness to fellow prisoners was rewarded by the manner In which they greeted his departure. There Was no greeting from Atlanta for Dobs, the man. lis the gates of tho penltentlury rolled open, giving him his freedom, but for Debs, the prisoner, a thun dering roar of cheers arose from prison cells as he rodo away, ESCAPED PRISONER MAY HAVE STOLEN McLENDON AUTO - The automobile stolen from E. K. McLendon and wrecked at Harris- burg yesterday morning, was, al most completely destroyed, accord ing to word received by the owner, The car was seen travelling, across the Harrisburg bridge at a speed of about 60 miles and hour and it failed to negotiate thb turn at that speed and turned a double somer sault endwise, tearing the body in to several pieces, twisting- the frame and smashing up the running gear and motor. Those who saw Uie wreckage could not understand how the occupants escaped death. The car was evidently taken by a man who was given a "lift" by Mr. McLendon. It Is possible that the man was C. E. "Shorty" Ander son -who escaped from the county jail a few days ago, as he answers the description in a general way. - Mr. McLendon resides east of town hear Deer Creek,' and be cause of the harking of ,dbgs at, night- people In that vicinity be came suspicious that someone was lurking near the creek. -Tuesday evonlng as Mr. McLendon was leaving his home he was accosted by a man who asked for a ride to town. The . real estate dealer brought him In and , left ' the . car standing by the Douglus National. Bank. H. H. Stapleton, cashier at the bank, .saw a man get Into the car with a companion and drive it away, bis attention being drawn by the fact that the man was appar ently not familiar with the gear shift,. but ho thought nothing of the matter until the car was reported stolen. Later he gave a doscrlptiou of the man, which tallied perfectly with that of the man brought Into town by Mr. McLendon, and also with that of Anderson who pScapcd from jail Saturday. Anderson made his escape by shovlug a trus ty against the jailer and dashing through the cell door before the jailor could recover his balance. He ran Into the brush near Deer Creek and probably iuado his Way up the stream., Auderson had been ar rested for stealing -a car belonging to VornOn Shrum, hnvlng been captured at Grants Pass' and was being hold for the grand jury. Arundel, piano tuner. Phono 189-L. EPILEPTIC DROWNS IN SHALLOW POOL EUGENE, . Oro.. Oct. 21. The body of L. A. Winkle, employe of tno Ilooth-Kelly Lumber company nt ennip 31, near .Wendllng, was found lying face downward in five Inches of water In tho pump house near the camp yesterday noou. Ho nnu apparently been stricken with an epileptic fit and had been un- nblo to arise, according to Coroner w. w. lirnnstotter, who investigat ed. . Injuries sustained Tuesday after noon when he was hit on the head by a piece of timber flvincr from u mill saw proved fatal yesterday for M. A. lmvison. He died at the Pa cific Chrlstlon hospital, where he was taken following the accident. Ralph Crenshaw. 20, employe of the J. P. McCoy Lumber company of Goldson, was severely cut on tho left hip yesterday when he acci dentally backed Into a mill saw while carrying a piece of timber. 0 Orders takod (or fresh . erani lulce from the Overland vineyard. Leave containers at Rrnnd'n UnnA Stand. RUNAWAY BOYS FROM PORTLAND IN JAIL DR. NERBAS DENTIST Palnltss Extraction Gas When Desired Pyorrhea Cured Phone 43$ Masonic Bldg, George Pele. aged 15 years. 1012 Jessnp St.. Portland; Wilbur Harp er, lti. 1273 Simpson St.. Portland, and George Mlllett, 15, Second and Lombard Sts., Iteaverton, were picked up last night bv city offi cers and arc being held in the city Jail while word from the parents ,ui inn viiuiiirsmm ir nn np Rwntitin To i The boys are runaways from home 'and the notation on the police blot ter is to the effect that they were "powerfully hungry." Messages havo been sent tho parents of the boys and as soon as word is re ceived tho officers will arrango for i their return home. HINTS TO MOTHERS Every expectant mother ought to know that she need not lose her looks by having a baby,' that, in deed, the baby can add to her later attractiveness. 1 know any, num ber of homely young girls, whom I remember in their high school period, who have improved beyond recognition: since they grew up and married and began producing families. - . Two things are most Important to know. One is that tho hair must Havo a lot of care during the whole period before the baby ar rives 'and while It Is being nurs ed: that Is, during the time of great physical Strain. The scalp must be massaged a little each, day, and a good tonic should be used twice or three tlmeB a week. The body has less energy to ex pend than usual on such things as hair and teeth, therefore a dentist should be visited once every two months, instead of once. every six. The future child will benefit by this dental care, as well as the mother. ... , The complexion will take care of Itself. Indeed, at no other time Is the woman's skin as lovely. and transparently clear as during these months. But after the baby ar rives, particular care must be tak en to keep It in this perfect state If you eat too -much, or indulge in too ricft foods, as a reaction to the simple diet of Hew mother hood, the skin will turn sallow and break out in pimples. The figure must be watched af- ted : the i baby's birth; : For many months extra layers of tat will stay around the waistline. These can be worked off by exercise, and by wearing snugly fitting corsets for six to ten mouths afterwards. Fairly heavy rubber and silk or cotton webhing is best because it holds the waist and hips without restricting the body's activity, as a whaloboned corset would. ;t.TIWI.I.ITfcWtf.MM.WI.MliMMMMglBi Alice You will probably get a little, more nourishment from co coa, 'butler or plain oil than you will from massage with creams, when you are trying to fatten parts of the body. Creams are beBt for the face and throat because they have other ingredients beside oils, although the oil Is the nourishing portion bf the mixture. . Use the oil massage at night, just as you have been doing, and then cold water bathing in the morning to stimulate thb circu lation. Deep breathing is also helpful as it amounts to a form of exercise for all the muscles of the chest, ribs, back and bust share In It. . M. E. R. You should act upon the advice bf a doctor before Se lecting ' any kind of brace . to straighten the child's legs. At five years of age, the bones are very pliable, so there may be even a simpler method than a brace to correct the knock knees . It may even be done through a proper se lection of shoes. -, Tomorrow A Youthful Neck Wieienf Laura A.KipKmor PUTTING UP THE CRANBERRY TOMORROW'S MENU . Breakfast : V Peach Sauce ' v" ' Cereal Lamb Chops Toast . Coffee - Luncheon Baked Grapenuts Dish . , , . , Lettuce Salad Wholewheat Bread' Jam i .' Cocoa Cookies Dinner ' Celery Spanish Omelet 1 Baked Sweet Potatoes Creamed Cauliflower Steamed Cranberry Pudding , Hard Sauce Coffee At Thanksgiving time or before Harvest Home festivities, house keepers often write rne for sug gestions as to how to serve cran berries in a more original way than cranberry sauce or cranberry jelly. .Tills is the tlmo to prepare such sweetmeats, not at the "eleventh hour," when one Is'r-usU- ed planning a big dinner and making- pies and cakes. Try one of the following: , Cranberry Chutney: Clean and wash four quarts of cranberries, mash slightly with a potato mash er, and put them in a preserving kottlo with one tup of cold water. Bring to the boll and cook Slowly till soft, thou press through a wlde- moshed sieve. Return this sieve pulp to the kettle, and add to It one-half potthd , of largo seedless raisins, one-half pound of stoned dates, one ', teaspoon of ground cloves., one-half teasnoon of nil- splco and Six tablenpoons bt elder! vinegar. Boll the mixture onfe hour or till thick, then turn It: at once .Into hot glass Jars which have been sterilized by being boil edi empty; -in clear water for IB minutes. (After draining, keep hot. by wrapping in hot, wet towels. A hot mixture put into a cold jar of ten cracks the jar.) Seal airtight at once. - . Pickled Cranberries Make a sirup aS follows: Tie one tablespoon Of broken stick-cinnamon . and one teaspoon of whole cloves in a small bit of cheesecloth. Place this in the preserving kettle and add one quart of vinegar and four pounds of granulated sugar. ' When heat ed to boiling point, let continue to simmer for six minutes. Then add washed, drained cranberries to this hot sirups let them cook till so tender that they, can be pierced easily with a straw, and . turn them into hot sterilized glass jars. Cover with the hot spiced sirup (spice; bag now removed.) Seal airtight. It you wish .the Old-fashioned cranberry sauce with a slight va riation! try the following recipe: Cinnamon Cranberry Sauce: Wash one quart of cranberries and cook in two blips of boiling wnter five minutes; then stir in two cups of granulated sugar and let con tinue to simmer till the fruit- Is very tender and looses its shape. Now add one-half teaspoon of ground cinnamon and either turn it as it is into molds, or press throiigh a wlde-meshed sieve to eliminate skins before . molding. This kind of Sauce should be made the day before the festive dinner. Tomorrow Planninfl the Bath- room. Are Tom4 Clothes "Geared Up" to the Standards of Today? Our high-powered way of living makes new.demands tin a man's clothes. Through the crowded hours of busy days, good appearance is more important than ever before- and more difficult to maintain. ; , ; , r-( Hold your place in the race! Wear good looking clothes that stay good looking. Get one of our Adlef Collegian two-pants suits., With one pair of trousers always freshly pressed, they'll "Keep VoU Lbokirig Your Best."' ' " " " : Through a remarkable development in the clothing indus try the same policy of concentration which enabled au tomobile manufacturers to produce closed cars at open car prices we are ' able , to offer these Adler Collegian '. two-pajits suits at prices asked elsewhere for one-pair suits. ' of recognized quality I Backed by the' Adler reputation" : foE correct' Style, comfortable fit, and long wear., The Iat-:-est weaves .and patterns are now on display here. PBNGERsS BRoseburg's Newest, LIvest, Leading Men's and Young Men's Store. HMtMIMMM.MII1.TT.TrgTT I wianyM.nv V ft DietandHealth , Oy JLUIu Hunt Peter MJJ DO READ THIS, PLEASE! Please do not depend unon nor- sonal answers from me for condi tions that havo to have the Im mediate attention of a physician. And do not depend on tho column for such advice, for even though your questions can be nnswored in tho column and nnswered Imme diately, It, would bo at least four weeks bofore the answer can appear. My Diet and Health column is a syndicated feature, appenring all over the United States and Can. ada. It Is written and sent out from Now York. Thia moans that has to bo prepared threj or four woeks In advance. Tho col umn Creates great idterfesr wher. ever It appears, and tho combined malt from the difforont places is onormous. In order to he nbiu to handle I his and to be helpful to you, thorn are cortalu rules which we huv.i formulated which you must follow. Unless these rul6s are compltod with, your letters cannot receive any attentlou. irst: Address your letters to m in enre of this paper. They will be forwarded to my New York City office. Sign your namo Ss evidence of good faith. It will not he used In any way. (When 1 answer you In the column, I use ono initial.) Second: write legibly and with pen if your handwriting Is not clear, got somebody to writo for you: or use a typewriter. Do not write more than 200 words. Re momber the number of letters I get! Third: When you ask for ma terial which wo havo offered, you must enclose a large sized, Belf addressed, stamped envelope (s. a. s. e.) The address must includo your full tiame, street and num ber, city or town, and state. The booklet ou reducing and gaining is the only one for which you must inciuue ton cents In loose stamps. Do not send money -It is too easily lost in tho malls. (Only one book let can bo sent with each request.) Fourth:1 Do not ask for diag noses or for individual treatment. Do not ask questions that are not of general interest and answer able in the column. You' must see your personal physician for such information. Watch my daily ar ticles for something similar lo the questions you want discussed, and consider-yourself answered when you see them, whether your Ini tials are appended or not. I mint answer questions collectively In order to save time and space. Fifth: Allow at least three weeks to elapse before thinking your re quest for matorlal has gone astray or is not answered because you have not followed the rules. Allow a much longer period of time for an answer to appear in the column. If It can appear. Don't forget to enclose & fully self-addressed and stamned eh- i elope with your request for any material which we have offered (and tho ten cents In stamps It you ask for the booklet on reduc ing and gaining.) Unless these rules are obeyed, your letters cannot receive any at- Our Equipment Is :y J i : V v 'i Modern in Every Way With our equipment, which is modern in every way, we are able to give service that is appreciated. Nothing has been left out of our Funeral Home that can add comfort or convenience. The Slumber Rooms afford the privacy of one's, own home, making it pos sible for the family to be alone. We are able to take our service anywhere, for distance , makes little difference to us with our motor DOUGLAS FUNERAL HOME v Cor. Pine and Lane Sts. Phone 112 tcntlon. ' I feel like adding a last rule. It is this: Save some of your 1-00 words to continue telling me hi:w much you enjoy ihe column end hnw Much 1-nnefit your nn -deriv ing Irim it. Such a message is an Inspiration to me arid -.o tho rollovers and makes oitr work hap pier and therefore more ,iiprnl Tcmorrow Answers to Mothers.'- o , ." Rubber belting at Wharton Bros. jhev-ewWINTER .RED CROWN Eat barbecut sandwiches and live forever. Brand's Read Stand. My Dow rollowar'a: ' Whan Mndtn for material which w offr yo. pleas remember U nclon i iiimnd, lr-i1drted envelope bearing your run name at a w.rS"- Th PnPhlt on reduclnr and (raining- t tha only one tor which you must enclcee ten c-onta la atampa extra. Addreaa your liUteri tO lti In CAT f thle tinner. Vilr them hrUf - kl. ,, words, and type or write them leitlly with Inau Pleaee aim your name aa evidence ef a-oo faith we will not nee It In aay way. Remember It li rmpoealDia for ma to clavnoee for you or to anewer you personally. I ab preeiato Very nocn the beautiful letters- you send ma and re arret It la tm poi;U M irlTo yoa tndlTldeeJ aeXe. Tae aeeattons m ask will e aaeware U Solsma U looa. aa aowlela. If taey are iteaeJal btte? tm. fenet tka eeif-ZeTreM caret eaV Itraroma a i , ' ... .. 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