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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1919)
4. TOE 3IORXIXG OREG ONI AX. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1919. LEGION CMS FOR WIVES OF SUSPECTS Centralia Organization Pro vides for Families. HANSEN POSSE RECALLED man about SO years of age was found today a short distance off the high way, two mi lea north of here. The body was found by Judson Allen, a farmer living near by, whose curiosity had been .roused by blood in the road and who found the body up a steep hill where it would seem impossible a man with his throat cut could climb. The man had dragged his bed with, him for 100 yards or more and made preparations to lie down and bleed to death. Afterwards he dragged him self to a tree some distance away, fixed the rope and dropped to his knees to cause strangulation. The man had been seen in the city by Marshal Pitcher on Saturday and Sun day. He had a small amount of money on his person, but no means of identi- cation other than marks on his clotti ng showing it had been bought in California. Attorney Representing Imprisoned Men Files Motion for Change of Venue; Judge Abel Acts. JUDGE DMT TO SPEAK CKNTRALIA, Wash., Nov. 21. (Spe cial.) With a great-hearted magna nimity which does not lessen the grim determination to see justice takes its course in the prosecuiton of the I. W. W., Grant Hodge poHt "No. 17, American Legion, is caring for the wives and babies of two of the men charged with slaying their comrades in Centralia, Mrs. Bert Bland and 1 rs. John Lam be, whose husbands are seriously implicated In the murder of four ex-service men on Armistice day are the beneficiaries- The post is standing also between want and the destitute wife and father of Ben Casagranda, one of the veteran victims, and the family of John Haney. posseman, who was slain in an unfortunate encounter last Satur day between two bands of man hunters. Chnnge of Venur Asked. Through the filing of an affidavit of prejudice against Superior Judge W. A. Reynolds by attorney Ralph S. I'ierce. representing the ten men held in the Lewis county jail. Judge George r. Abel of Montesano was called to listen to the pleas today. A motion for change of venue was made, argu ment on which was set for next Fri day afternoon at Chehaiis. This will not serve to delay the trial, as C. E. Cunningham, special prosecutor re tained by the American Legion, does r.o.t expect to have all in readiness be fore December 10. Pleas of not guilty were entered by Britt Smith, O. C. Bland. Bert Faulk ner, Ray Becker, James Mclnerney. K liner Smith, Kugene Barnett, Mike Sheehan, Bert Bland and John Lambe. Loren Roberts was arraigned and will plead tomorrow. All posses searching for Ole Hansen have been called in, but the pursuit of the fugitive is far from abandoned and new developments are expected at iny time. Offers of financial assistance to Grant Hodge post, in the prosecution of the Armistice day murderers and the relief of bereaved families, are pouring into Centralia from every sec tion of the United States. At first there came messages of condolence from all directions, but there fol lowed a flood of inquiries and some contributions. Fnnd Is Needed. Money will be accepted, for there la need of a large fund to defray ex penses of the little post in the task which it has undertaken. In addition to the prosecution and relief work of the Centralia members of the legion this post has initiated a national cam- paiern tf push the I. W. W. to the wall and throw over the wall those of' alien birth. By telegraph and mail, American Legion posts all over the United States have been urged to purge the country of the vicious element re sponsible for the Centralia outrage The campaign will not be dropped with this initial request, but will be followed through in logical persist ence. Among the offers of aid received today was one from Henry Morgen t nau, former Uni ted States ambas sador to Turkey, who asked what amount the post needed to further the work begun, who was in charge of the fund and where money could be sent. Tn order that any possibilities of fraud would be forestalled, a general warning was issued today urging that contributions be sent only to the three Centralia banks, the Farmers' and Merchants', the First Guaranty ?nd the Central State, or. to J. E. Moran. finance officer of the local pest of the Legion. To handle all the details of the fund, including the correspondence and bookkeeping, Mrs. Kate Robin- sen, secretary of the Centralia Cham her of Commerce, was named at i meeting of the ways and means com mittee of the Legion, headed by Dr. Davis Livingstone, at noon today. She will be furnished & stenographer by the Legion. Letters were sent to all posts of the Legion in Washington, seeking financial support for the local post. EW YORK RED FCXD SEIZED HIBERNIANS MARTYRS' TVILIi OBSERVE AXX IVERSARY. Nl CilLS IS ASKED Centralia Post Holds First Meeting Since Attack. KRESKY FILLS VACANCY Resolution Calling on AH Loyal Americans to Enter Fight Greet ed With Round of Applause. president-general of the National So ciety of the Sons of the American Revolution. Mr. Jenks, who arrived yesterday on a tour of all states in the Interests of the patriotic organisation he beads. Is a guest at the Arlington club and will remain In Portland until tomorrow night- Yesterday he was entertained with a highway trip," In the company of Judge Wallace McCamant, presi- , dent of the Oregon cbapter, and was the guest of honor at a banquet given at the Arlington club last night. "The fact of membership in the I. W. W. should be sufficient to con vict its members of intent to destroy the government," continued Mr. Jenks. "The eyes of all Americans are on the state of Washington today, watching to see how she will handle her prob lem. "If Washington meets the Issue squarely, with the means at hand, If she uses her jails, scaffolds and out going ships, perhaps the Moses that's gong to guide us henceforth will come from that state," At luncheon -today Mr. Jenks will be the guest of the board of directors of the Oregon society. Tonight he will be tendered a reception and ban quet at the University club. Programme Arranged for Meeting in Hibernian Hall Tomorrow Night to Honor Irish. Following a time-honored custom, the Ancient Order, of Hibernians will observe the anniversary of the Man chester martyrs, Allen, Iarkin and O'Brien, with an appropriate pro- k f - - V ft ; s ,i l - 'X 4 V fZT I , ' It t Judc Peter H. D'Arcy, who will J Jud Peter H. D'Arcy, who will address Hibernian tomorrow night. gramme in tne .Hibernian nail tomor row night. Judge Peter H. D'Arcy of Salem will deliver the address and Thomas G- Ryan will be chairman. Following is the programme: Introductory remarks Chairman, Thom as O. Ryan: "Star-Spangled Banner" (Keys) audi ence, Miss Lucy Mary LilHs, accompanist. Bass solo "An Irish Song of Songs" (Sullivan), Arthur E. King. Violin nolo "HunKarlan Dance" (Bohm), Miss Prances Schniederjosl, Miss Eliza beth Weber, accompanist. Soprano solo "When Irish Eyes Are Smiling'" (Olcott-Ball), Miss Bertha Card ner. Miss Itryes Gardner, accompanist. Address Judge Peter H. D'Arcy. Contralto solo "Mo the Machree" (Ol-cott-Ball), Miss Velma MacMasters. Recitation "Erin's Flag'" (by Father Ryan, the poet-priest of the southland). John X. Walsh. Whistling solo Dave Fuller. Recitation "The Fighting Race" (Kelly. Burke and Shea) J. I. C. Clark), George Hennessy of the chapel car. The committee on arrangements Is : A. Cain, P. J-. Powers, T. H. Maguigan. Frank Alalion, M. J. Humane. Checks Totaling $100,000 Are In Hands of Officials. XEW YORK, Nov. 21. Checks totaling $100,000 donated to the com munist party of New York by some of the city's "parlor bolsheviki' are in the hands of Chief City Magistrate McAdoo, it was learned today. They were seized in the raids on radicals November 7 and S. and will be sub mit ted to the extraordinary grand jury investigating seditious activities here, it was announced. Checks amounting to $1100, payee not designated, made out by Mrs. Kose Pastor Stokes, are included. When the list of. contributors to the communist movement is made pub the people of New York will realize how far its ratifications extend. Dep uty Attorney-Oenewvl Berger said. "People in both social and religious circles, according to our discoveries. are bolsheviki to the bottom of their hearts," he added. PETITION jS RECALLED Students Misinformed as to Use of $100,000 State Fund. Students of a local business college, who recently signed a petition, as ex service men. for the employment of the remainder of the state fund of $100,000, for entertainment of service men, in providing school courses for ex-service men, have withdrawn their names from the document, declaring that they had not understood that the request would hamper the work of the soldiers' and sailors commission. with headquarters at Liberty temple. The signers of the petition, in sev eral instances, have said that they affixed their signatures before they thoroughly understood the document and that they have no wish to em barrass the work of the commission. Many of them have asked that their signatures be stricken from the peti tion. 'I would like to withdraw my name from the petition," wrote one of the signers, "now that I know what it covered. I am of the option that if the other students knew what they signed they would also be willing to withdraw their names. RED CROSS GETS $500 CENTRALIA, "Wash., Nov. 21. (Spe cial.) Unrelenting, nation-wide war fare against the I. w. W. by the American Legion and all loyal Amer icans is urged in a resolution intro duced at the first regular meeting of Grant Hodge Post No. 17. the Ameri can Legion, since the Armistice day atrocities in Centralia which resulted in the murder of four unarmed war veterans marching under the flag of th3 United States. J. E. Moran, finance officer of the Centralia post, introduced the reso lution at a meeting of the Legion at the Elks club last night. The round of applause which greeted it was not the exuberance of a sudden patriotic fervor but the grim, determined ap proval of a body of loyal Americans who had proved to the world the sani ty and cool jess of world-war veter ans in a crisis in which lynching fever ran high. V. was not the sort of approval which applauds and for gets, but the kind that backs up ap plause with action. Learlon Pledjce Aid. Co-operation was pledged the or ganization of the -oyal American League in Lewis county, which will take definite shape at a meeting to be held In Chehaiis tonight in which members of L. R. Fiscus post of Che haiis and Grant Hodge post of Cen tralia, the American Legion, will be prime movers. The new organization, for which organizers have been ap pointed in every county in Washing ton by Governor Hart, plans to back up the stand of tie Legion against the reds with financial and moral support of all loyal citizens. All em ployers will be urged to refuse work to any person who cannot show a pledge of loyalty demanded by the Loyal American League. J. E. Murray, commander of Loren Fiseus post, talked at length on the plans for the league, which is based on lines somewhat similar to Port land's Civilian Reserve, and spoke of federal and state plans for prosecu tion of the "wobblies." It is the in -1 tention of the state authorities, he said, to round up no more I. W. W.s for the present who are not wanted in connection with the Centralia mas sacre, coiicentrating efforts on their conviction and the test of the state criminal syndicalism act in the cases of some men already held, against whom Is the evidence only of the red membership cards in the I. W. W. H. E. Venness of the Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen spoke at length at last night's meeting, com paring the shots fired into the pa rade of ex-soldiers Armistice day with the opening fusillade at Lexing ton, heard round the world, asserting that history will show 50 years from now that the beginning of the war to rid the United states of the radical enemies of constituted government began at Centralia November 11, 1919. Former Mayor Speaks. AH loyal Americans are behind the American Legion in its fight against 1 he reds, declared H. W. Thompson, former mayor, a civil war veteran, who expressed great pleasure that the destinies of the country were so largely in the hands of as patriotic and loyal a group as the American Legicn was proving itself to be. T C- Rogers, mayor of Centralia, and John Saunders and W. W. Dick erson, councilmen, pledged the entire co-operation of civil forces to th American Legion in handling the local situation. Centralia police affairs still are un der complete control of the American Legion, a special committee from the local post, headed by Lieutenant Frank Van Gilder, directing all inves tigations of men arrested and organ izing the man-hunts. This committee was authorized to continue its activi ties until satisfied that the situation 1 no longer required Its assistance. With keen regret at the situation which placed him in the chair, A. S ICresky, former vice-commander, as sume. the post of commander of Grant Hodge post at installation cere monies last night; filling the vacancy caused by the death of Warran Grimm, former post leader, at the hands of the I. W. W. on Armistice day. William Scales, commander of the post, who was succeeded by Mr. Grimm on the Thursday prior to Ar mistice day at a regular election, called the meeting to order. Claude Oliver succeeded G. F- Sliff as adju tant and other officers installed were: J. E. Moran, finance officer; C. D. Cunningham, historian; and Leslie Hughes, chaplain. Alleged Statement Is Denied. CENTRALIA. Wash.. Nov! 21. (Special.) A telegram has been re ceived from the state commander of the American Legion in Montana by the local post of the legion in which the statement alleged to have been made by the commander of the Butte post, derogatory to the ex-soldiers who lost their lives here Armistice day, is denied. oco Of ooo o COOS PROBLEMS AIRED COrXTY BUSIXKSS MEN" GATH Ell AT B.VXQCKT. .Nominations Made for Directors of Association Lively Pro gramme Is Held. MARSHFIELD, Or. Nov. 21. (Spe cial.) -The Coos County Business men's association held its annual stockholders' meeting and banquet last nisrht at the Chandler hotel and there was an attendance of a majority of the membership. The gathering was full of interest and many topics of importance to the organization were aired in varied discussions. Arnons the speakers were A. R. Mer cer. Matt L. May, R. B. Haier, J. I Koontz; E. V. Mather, F. W. Bert ram. Tom Carey, N. N. Nieman, C. C. (Joinp. Carl Evertsen, Rev Father Mc- Devitt. Harry Gordon, Guy Warner, J. S. Lyons, E. P. Lewis, George Hazer, J. K. Montgomery, James Molony, M. D. Bromberger, W. N. Ekblad. The programme wa.s arranged by M. D. Bromberger anu W. N. Ekblad and was one of the best the associa tion has given in the seven years of its activities. Nominations were made as follows for the annual election directors, ten to be elected: J. S. Lyons, E. P. Lewis. C. M. Byler, Har ry Gordon, R. B. Hazer, W. H. Din dinger. "Warren Painter, F. W. Bert' ram. E. C. Mather, C. C. Going. V. N Ekblad. L. L. Thomas, Matt L. May, M. C. Maloney. J. C. Montgomery, M, I. Bromberger, Dan B. Keating. C. Powers, James Molony. WE GIVE 20 EXTRA 000 o o a&c Green Stamps Today RUBBER GOODS DEPT. o o o 2- quart Woodlark molded hot water bottle, one-year guarantee. Regular price $2.00. Special $1.49 S-quart Woodlark seamless fountain syringe, 5-foot tubing- and 3 pipes. One year guarantee. Regular price 52.00. Special$1.49 3- quart combination hot water bottle and fountain syringe. Regular price is $2.2o. Special $1.49 BRING THIS COUPON AND GET 20-EXTRA-20 rll'S. & H- Trading .rj(J St&mps on your 1 l fir- 1 .aaK nnr. J chase and double on th 1 n e e gooo on 11 rex iioor basement today November 22. a In Saturday. PERFUME DEPARTMENT Creme Oil Soap FREE One cake FREE, with purchase of 3 Cakes Creme Oil Soap for 25 (Demonstration today) Patent Medicines Vinol Hydroleine Pinoleum ., $1.00 ....$1.10 ....$1.00 Lister's Antiseptic Fluid... Christmas Greeting Cards Make a list of Friends yon wish to remember. Cards Cost So Little and Mean So Much Pick out your favorite cards while the selection is good. OTTl ENGRAVERS DO BUTTER WU11K NOW THAN WHEN THEY ARK TIRED OUT. Stationery Dept. Glycothymoline 2o0 Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin 45f Wampole's Ex. Cod Liver Oil. .90 Phosphayon $1.3o Houbigant's Ideal Ean De Toilette. . .$7.50 Houbigant's Quelques Fleur $8.90 Coty L'Origan Eau De Toilette $9.23 Ambre Royal Perfume, orig. bottle.. $2.90 Djer Kiss Talcum Powder... Djer Kiss Face Powder... 62 and $1.05 DJER KISS TOILET SET Face Powder, Talc Powder and Toilet Water QQ flfl in fancy box OO.UU DJER KISS TOILET SET Rouge, Per- fume. Face Powder and Talc Powder in fancy box S3.50 Oregon Blood Medicine. .$1.00 LADIES' SILK UMBRELLAS An Exclusive Showing of the Latest Styles and Shades. Prices to suit all $5.50 to $17.50 Swamp Root 50 Mothers Friend 90 Wine Cardui 90 Ayers Hair Vigor $1.10 Phillips' Milk Magnesia 45 Garfield Tea 23 BeU's Instant Hair Dye. .$1.00 Bromo Seltzer S5 CANDY SPECIALS FOR TODAY Fine Assorted Chocolates, per pound 49 Delicious Cream Mints, per pound 49 Krause's Jelly Beans, per pound 33 Mint and Molasses Chews, per pound 39 1-lb. box Vogan's Puritan Chocolates, per lb. .69 o o o o ooo SHOP EARLY START TODAY Woodard, Clarke & Co. Wood-Lark Building Alder at West Park DOLLS All Sizes All Kinds All Prices OOO o o ooo the cashier into the vault at the point of a revolver, and locked the door on him. The robber escaped on horseback. Woodmen to Meet in Morton. MORTON, Wash., cial.) The district Modern Woodman of Nov. 21. (Spe meetinfr of the America will be held in Morton on January 15, ac cording to the decision of the dele gates at the Centralia district meet ing. A big time is planned. Salem Suspects Exonerated. SALEM, Or., Nov. 21. (Special.) After a cross-examination lasting several hours officers who arrived here late last nipht from Centralia exonerated Edward Coffee and Walter Larson, arrested here on suspicion of being implicated in the Armistice day outrage, of all connection w'.th the affair. The prisoners convinced the Centralia officers that they left the Washington city early on the morning of November 11, and did not learn of the killing until they reached Portland that night. n 6-CENT RIDES 1MM1NEN Cost of Paving May Hit Pockets of Seattle Straphangers. SEATTLE, Wash.. Nov. 21. (Spe cial.) Six-cent etreet car fare in Seattle is imminent as a result of the action of the city council in voting, over the objections of Mayor C. B. Fitzgerald, and Thomas F. Murphine, superintendent of utilities, that re pairs and maintenance or street pav ing between the tracks of the munic ipal street railway lines, shall be paid for out of the revenue from the rail- If the council persists in its present stand, the mayor insists, it is only fair that some provision be made to increase the revenues. The council, however, went on record as favoring the policy of charging the cost of paving between the tracks in the resi dence districts, and any excess of pav ing costs in the business streets due to the presence of the street railway, to the revenues of the railway. . Hump NEW SHOW TODAY A Story of the Paris Apaches That Will Startle You and Thirll You Through and Through MARSHAL, CRITICISED, OUT Myrtle Point Official Quits as Re sult of Legion Complaint. MARSHFIELD, Or., Nov. 21. (Spe cial.) James Brown, city marshal at Myrtle Point tor many years, has re signed, as a result It is said, of criti cism from the Myrtle Point American Legion post, which went to the coun cil and asked for his dismissal be cause of alleged mistreatment of a member of the legion. Another American Legion act Is re ported from Coquille, where the post is declared to have adopted resolu tions censuring business men who on Armistice day failed to close their stores. SHRINERS PLAN BANQUET ; rants Pass Ceremonial Prepara I ions Made by Lodgemen. O RANTS PASS. Or., Nov. 21. (Spe cial.) Shriners of Hillah Temple, Ashland, are making elaborate prep arations for the ceremonial session to be held in Grants Pass Saturday. when Imperial Potentate W. Freeland Kendricks and members of the Im perial divan will be present. Special 'stunts' have been planned for the street parade and the peremonlaL Hamiuet will be served in the base ment of the J osephine county court house. A large class of candidates from ;iendale. Medford, Ashland. Klamath Falls. CS rants Pass and other points will be initiated. Drive by Legion Also Is Being Con- tinned in Portland. "With a plea for only enough money to continue to "carry on for the boys who served in the military forces of the United States and tneir lam- ilies, the American Red Cross is be ing well rewarded by hundreds of Portlanders who see in tms agency a means or paying pari oi ineir aeoi to the boys. As a result of the appeal sent out Wednesday by H. K. Witham. chap ter campaign manager, nearly dou has been turned in to Red Cross head quarters in the liberty temple. Tne drive is being continued under the ioint direction of the Portland chap ter of the Red Cross and Portland post of the American Legion. California Couple Wed. Mrs. May Peterson of Oakland. Cal., was married yesterday atternoon to Edward S. Shattuck of San Francisco at the First Baptist church. They will leave Portland this morning for trip up Puget Sound and as far east of the mountains as Spokane. Mr, Shattuck is a San Francisco con tractor and has just recently com pleted the Riverside dam some miles 1 east of Vale. Or. Mrs. Shattuck has been in Portland, registered at the Benson hotel during the last week waiting for Mr. Shattuck to come in from Riverside. They will make their future home in Riverside. Xejrro Charged With Shooting. UNIDENTIFIED MAN SUICIDE Tlxly rund Haiiging to Tree North of Coftie Grove. f-OTTAUK tlHOVT. Or.. Nov. 21. iSp'ial.) Hauviinc by a poorly itn proviseil noose whii'h hml slipped into r deep t:'ish previousiv cut in his thiya Uie b'.Ii cl au unidentified CHEHALTS, Wash.. Nov. 21. (Spe ciul.l J. W. Hamilton, the Centralia negro who some weeks ago shot A. E. ihepperd and Dewey Raymond of that city, today was charged in the Lewis county superior court with first-de gree assault. Following the shooting Hamilton fled to Bakersfield. Cal. whence was recently was extradited. XESISO RESIDENT IS BURIED Funeral of John Haney, Victim of Posse Clash, Impressive. CENTRALIA. Wash.. Nov. 21. (Spe cial.) As the final touch to one oi the sorrowful events oi tne Armistice day tragedy in Centralis, the body of John Haney, deputy game warden oi Thurston county, who was acciaentai- ly killed-by a member oi one or tne posses on the trail of I. W. W.s in the woods of the Hannaford valley, north of Centralia. last Saturday night, was laid to rest Thursday atternoon. ine funeral services were held from the Oddfellows' hall In Tenino, the home of Mr. Haney. The funeral was given a military aspect by the presence or 20 uni formed men on guard outside the hall, and men In umiorm aciea as pallbearers, two of them wearing the navaV umiorm. i-receaing me serv ice, Mrs. MacClellan Barto sang "One Sweetly Solemn Thought,- and Kev. H. w. Thompson, wno also aenvereo the funeral eulogy of the four ex- service men who were shot in Cen tralia, then read the funeral service of the dead man. He was followed by H. E. Veness of Portland, who gave the funeral eulogy, airs, tjarro then sang "Beautiful Isle of Some where." The services at the grave were simple. Mrs. Barto singing one verse of "Jesus, Savior, Pilot Me," and Rev. Mr. Thompson again delivered the committal service. The final touch to the service was the sounding of taps by a bugler. BANK ROBBER CAPTURED B. & II. Green Hoi man ITuel Co. Ad. stamps for cash. Main 353. A 3363 Ontlaw Who locked Cashier in Vault Is Shot by Pursuer. TREK A. Cal., Nov. 21. F. P. Davis, sought for the robbery of the Trinity county bank at W eaverville, Isovem ber 13. was captured today by a posse in the Blue Ridge near Sawyer's Bar, a remote western point in western Siskiyou county. 60 miles north of Weaverville. He was shot through the leg by one of his pursuers. The bank's loss was given as be tween 112,000 and J15.000. The rob ber entered the bank at noon, backed free aJrN nIy L 1 i;&iffi5t2srrzti- Jazz That Is Jazz THE ART HICKMAN RECORDS HERE AND ON SALE AT LAST! At Phonograph Headquarters, 3d fir. EUers Music Bdg. The famous St Francis Hotel (San Francisco) Or chestra has made some astonishingly faggedly jazzy, snappy, fascinating records. This is unquestionably the supreme achievement of any jazz orchestra of our country, created by Art Hick man, a native of northern California. Hear Them Today or Tonight . They're Simply Great! Price for the 8 selections (4 records) $3.40, or sold separately 85c each. Hear them in our splendid new daylight outside demonstration rooms. Eilers, Phono graph Dept., 3d Floor Eilers Music Buldg., Washington St. below Fifth. SEE THIS MACHINE COMPLETE WITH ALL ACCESSORIES. We will include these or any other records desired in our greatest rhe greatest Coming Wednesday "THREE BLACK EYES" WASHINGTON' TO BE EXAMPLE Head of Sons of American Revolu tion Tells of Effect of Shooting. -It is my belief that Centralia. Washington, always will live In American history as the stage upon which the curtain was raised on the real purpose of the I. "Vv. W.," de clares Chancellor U. Jenks of Chicago, the little one At the first sign of skin irritation a blotch or an itching, burning rash apply a little Resinol Ointment to the affected part, which first has been cleansed with Resinol Soap. Do hot neglect baby's skin, because it is easily irritated, and if neglected, obstinate trouble may persist in later life. Resinol Ointment is safe and harm less it was originated by a doctor, and has been used by doctors for many years. 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