Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / April 1, 1926, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOLUME XXXVII. * SENATE RACE HOLDS STAGE Justices of Supreme Court To Be Elected; Also Member of Corporation Commission CONGRESSMAN WEAVER W5LL HAVE OPPOSITION K&leigh, March 30.?With the Democratic primaries nine weeks away,the only major policical contest in sight for the 1920 off-year campaign is Bob Reynolds' opposition against Senator Lee S. Overman. - Contests are scheduled, however, for ene congressional seat and at least _ -miw superior cuun jucigesnips. On tho state ticket the Democrats will nominate in June, besides a senator, a chiof justice and three associate members of the suprece court and one member of the corporation commission. V The four members of the court.. Chief Justice Stacey and Associate Justices Adams, Clarkson and Broaden, will be nominated without oppo-i sition, it is believed. The corporation j I'oiuinission will offer Allen J. Maxwell without fear of opposition. The possibility was considered at one time of Mr. Maxwell's deficit outburst attracting a hostile candidate, but nothing has been said of it lately. fcVlix E. Alley's campaign for ZebuJon Weaver's seat in congress, 7>ow on in the tenth district, is tho .#nly congressional fight in prospect. ?r. Thomas L. Estop, of Alleghany county, recently announced as an '""independent" candidate against Congressman Doughton of the eighth district, but Dr. Estep's ' independence' apparently holds him off for lie November election. Anyway, he *h running on an anti-prohibition plat:karm and is not being taken very? erioutdy. The other congressmen, Warren, of the first district, Kerr of the second, Abernethy of the third, you of the fourth, Stedman of the Wflh, Lyon f the sixth. Hummer of Hie seventh and Bulwinkle of the ninth, have high hopes of renominadon without opposition. The tenth district contest is being patched closely by th state Demoy ratio lea 'ei>. The Republicans havs ^ ?\arn>d it in times gone by, and party chiefs arc eager to have nothing happsh that, may cause a split or dirsnt ^faction in the Democratic nuiks. The Raleigh district has developed '.he first active contest for a place on 1.he . upci ioi court bench, City Judge W. C Hams, of Raleigh, having already announced against Judge T. H. Calvert, while contests are considered certain for the places to which Judge Henry P. Lane pf the eventh judicial ditrict, and Judge Thad D. Bryson of the twentieth, have announced they will give up with the j expiration of their terms at the end j of the year. Their successors will be j nominated in the June primaries. j Judge Roniulous A. Nunn, appoint-! wr?- ed a few months ago by Governor; McLean to succeed -Judge Albion j Dunn, was threatened with opposi-j *ion shortly after he had taken his! seat; hut the latest word from the.} fifth district is to the effect that he j will not be opposed. Judge Nunn' srill stand for n term to which Judge \ J. L. Ijforton was elected in 1922 and which expires in 1930, Judge Horton having resigned to onter the private practice of law. Judge Dunn was' named to succeed him and after holding the position for less than a year resigned. In all, eleven superior court judg- i ships must he voted on this year, hut I there have as yet been no reports of j opposition to Judges Midycttes of the j third judicial district, Daniels of the I fourth, Stack of the thirteenth, Ogles- \ by of the fifteenth, Finley of the seventeenth, Schcnck cf the eighteenth, and McEiroy of the nineteenth. All of these stand for a full term of eight years. Judge Oglesby, v who was appointed by Goveanor Mc - Lean last year to succeed the latej Judge Ben F. Lung will come up fori election for the first time. Two solicitorsbip contests that I promise to attract more than local i attention are in the seventh district. 1 comprizing: Wake and Frnnklin coun-j *" aies, and in* the fifth districts, eoio-j prizing: Johnston, Wayne, Harnett j I.ee ar.d Chatham counties. In the seventh Solicitor W. F. Evans faces the opposition of former State Senator Leon S. Brassfield, who has the backing: hf the greater part of the Wake county bar -while in the fifth former State Senator Paul Grady, of Johnston, is seeking to unhorse Solicitor Clawson Williams, whose home county is Loe. The Evans-Brassfield fight promises to be particularly interesting. Mr. Evans went into office four years ago against the opposition of all the Raleigh lawyers save two. One ofi these two was Josiah William Bailey, j -who was then grooming himself for: _ the gubernatorial race and making! use of the Evans campaign for political thunder. This time Mr. Bailey is understood to be on the other side. *Mr. Evans, however, has added on a lawyer'supporter or two, so that he Mi ifejv f ATA An Independent Fam 1.50 Per Year BOONE STREET WORK IS PROGRESSING Work of Tapping Water Main* and Sewer Line* Likely Be Completed This Afternoon. Today the muddy condition of the streets of Boone has caused much comment. A car or two has been "stuck" in front of The Democrat office and some have been wont to cuss ,a bit. But now there comes glad tidings. Work is going steadily oti with the tapping of the water mains I and sewer lines, and we are informed ! that this afternoon Commissioner Hanes, of the Seventh Highway district, will be informed that the town is "out of the way"?that is, paving may be started. The local forces are to be commended for their tireless work in making way for the concrete, and Mayor D. J Cottrett deserves I praise especially for personally supervising the work without remunera-, tion. I Latest reports from Mr. Hanes are j j to the effect that the state is ready to rush the paving program through j just as soon as water aqd sewer con-I nections have bean completed. He j ' further states that only twenty-two' j days will'be required to build the i main street of the town. The grading will start at once, a i steam shovel having already arrived.' COVE CREEK HIGH SCHOOL CLOSING Commencement Will Be Hel4 April 9-1 if Dr HiVh?mith Will Deliver Address The annual commencement of the Cove Croek high school will be held April 9 to 11. On Friday night the graduating class will render a program. On Saturday morning the class day exercises and address by Dr. J. Henry Highsmith, state sup err visor of high schools. On Saturday i night the senior play, "The Lone' Star," will be presented, and on j Sunday afternoon the annual ser-i mon will be preached by Rev. G. T. Bond, pastor of the First Methodist church of Morgautoai. The Boone string: band will fur-1 nish music on Saturday night. An 1 admission fee of 85 cents will .?ba charged adults and 15 cents for the children, the proceeds to be used towards paying for the school piawo. A cordial invitation is extended to ^ the public to attend the annual exercises. NO DANGER IN NEW MEDICINAL BEER LAW Washington. March :>1?Calm in the face of the flurry caused by the word thai .75 per cent malt would be on sale shortly, prohibition officials today assured drys, disturbed by the announcement, that they need fear do breakdown in enforcement, and cautioned the drinking population not to regard the extract as a beverage. If the public attempts to use the Ionic as "beer," General Andrews, as s-u-wuit. aecreitiry oi tne treasury, said, it would be withdrawn instantly from the market. He explained that the manufacturers of tin- extract, which will contain 25 per cent solids, had accepted responsibility for legitimate distribution and that the policy of issuing permit? had been adopted "ater thorough consideration of the question." CHAMBER OF COMMERCE MEETING MONDAY NIGHT The Boone Chamber of Commerce will meet Monday night at the Critcher hotel at 7 o'clock instead of 8 as previously atmvounced. On account of Monday night being the opening night of the Evening Star Festival, the meeting will last for only one hour. There will be a general discussion of many subjects of importance to the town and county. There will also be vocal and instrumental music. The special building and loan program announced for this meeting is postponed until the first Monday night in May. WEATHER FORECAST Washineton-Marrh :i 1?? ~ ? olina: Friday increasing cloudiness, fresh to strong west grinds diminishing. has about evened up the odds, as it* were. The Evans opposition pulled the star boner four years ago when they asked the voters to oppose My. Evans because all the lawyers were against him. Solicitor Evans made the lawyer-opposition his battle-cry and called the people to arms against tjie bar which wanted to pick the man to appear on the other side in the | courtroom- He went over big in the I primary. He hopes to repeat this! time. . In addition to the state and district | offices^ the primaries must select the nominees for 50 seats in the state sciiafe, T20 seats in the house of rep^ reseji Natives and upwards of a thousand county offices. UGA ily Newspaper, Devoted to , WATAUGA COUNTY, NORTH CARC [STATE NEWS ! BRIEFL Y TOLD Happening! of |n'tere?t From All C Sections of North Carolina Briefly Told Mrs. Martha Dickson has been. ap-| pointed postmaster at Silas Creek, in I S Achn ' ' -**- vv?IIVjr. J i; i s Robert F. Blevins was on Tuesday confirmed by the United States sen- v ate as postmaster at Jefferson. The spring: term of Ashe county 0 superior court will convene at Jeffer- ^ son on Monday, April 6, with Judge ^ Henry P. Lane presiding. Warren T. Moguin, federal narcotic agent, was arrested in Winston- a Salem Tuesday morning on a charge 0 of larceny of three diamond rings, *1 [ valued at $150, from EJla Shouse, w | colored. Moguin was released on g $1,000 bond. A. Brady Medlin, deputy sheriff of i Cabarrus county and policeman of j ^ Concord, who shot a ul killed Mark j ^ 1 Simpson on Medlin's farm in Goosej w Creek township on the morning of! L March 25, was given a preliminary li hearing Monday morning and was la remnded to jail without bond. John E. Cameron, grand master of ci the Masons of North Carolina, died cl his home, Kose of Sharon, Kir.ston, ti early Sunday morning. He was 59 ti years of age And the head of a large i v< family. . Probably no roan in Ameri-j fi ca had hold so many Masonic honors | as did Mr. Cameron. Iol Secretary of Commerce Herbert' M Hoover has been invited by Senator} t? Dee S. Overman, on behalf of the 1>1 Salisbury Chamber of Commerce, to J ce be the principal speaker at the annual so banquet of the chamber on a date convenient to the secroatry between . April 10 and 15. 1 l'* Raujamin N. Duke, New York and! b? Durham philanthropist, has made an j pc unconditional gift of $10,000 to; jo Trinity Methodist Episcopal church I m in Durham, to be applied on tYia debtj of the handsome church building com-1 dieted a year or more ago at a coat! L(] of approximately $300,000. ^Investigation of the personal con-jpt duct of Police Chief Ferguson, of as Charlotte, which occupied the attxn-! C? tion of Public Safety Commissioner! pe Robinson for several days last week, culminated last. Friday in the suspension of Chief Ferguses . pending the j . result of the investigation of the en-' 111 tire police department by the city cf - ,w What is proclaimed a world's piano |jg pinyin endurance record, was estab- 110 lished in Winston-Salem Saturday nigh! at midnight when Prof. B. G. ^ Burt, of Jamestown, N. Y., took his hands from the ivories fpr the first | V. time in sixty hours. Several hundred ^ spectators were present when the * professor ended his long grind or. the p( pieno. bj True hills charging rrurilvr were ^ returned in Jones county superior' ^ court at Trenton Tuesday against Federal Prohibition Agent W. H. 1 Ashbum, of Siloam, K. E. Potter,- ^ Greene county deputy sheriff, and i *. Chief of Police C. F. MeDaniel. of Polioeksville. The men are charged | with killing Will Bryant, negro, in a j raid by the officers on December 22 ! in Jones county. j i The early nib riling Easter ceiebra-j tion at Winston-Salem next Sunday! . morning will mark the 172nd observ- ." ance of the custom in that section, the first service of the kind being held by the Moravian church in North ^ Carolina having taken place on Eas- ^ ter Sunday; 1754, six months after _ the arrival of the first band of Mo- c ravians from Pennsylvania. The ^ Easter sendee last year was attended by more than 30,000 people. : ^ W. C. Murphy, county superinten-! IK dent of public instruction for Bun- *combc county, was arrested Monday P4 afternoon and held under $25,000 . ^ bond upon complaint of Dr. N. A. Mandelos, who filed suit for $50,000 i.,); for elienation of his wife's affections,. alleging that Murphy dcbaunched j ^ and carnally knew her, using his ~ ^ office to attain that end while she! was a member of the teching staff of j in Johnson school. Murphy was taken ' into custody while at his desk in thei p Buncombe county courthouse. 1 v< Edgar Lowder, of Concord, was ^ instantly killed about midnight Suj^ w day night in an automobile collision c< with Bud Nichols, about three miles w j south of Albemarle, when the Ford ^ i runabout in which Lowder and his w wife were riding was struck by the K Ford touring car driven* by Nichols. a Lowder's head was crushed and death ? came instantly. Nichols was taken ; r1 into custody and is being held under; *; $3,000 bond. It is said that both ^ Nichols and another occupant of his ^ car,were under the influence of li- ? quor when the accident occurred. 7 ... . - , -m t i the Upbuilding of Nort >L1NA, THURSDAY, APRIL I, ?92 Ire, there, everywhere letferal News and Happenings From ail Over the World Condensed For tho Busy Reader United States Senator Richard P. ?r;?ai., 01 Kentucky, wan ur.animousy renominated by the Republican tate convention in session in Louisille Tuesday. After a four-hour battle behind losed doors, the senate Friday conirmed Thomas F. Woodlock, of New 'ork, as a member of the interstate ommerce commission Six persons were instantly killed t Corunna, Mich., late Saturday aftruoon when the automobile in which ley were riding was struck by a rest-bound passenger train on the rrand Trunk railroad. "If the church members and church oers of Johnson City would quit rinking liquor, the bootleggers ould starve to death," declared Rev. cwis M. Roper, Baptist minister in is sermon at Johnson City, Tenn., Sunday. Representative Stevenson, Demo- | *at, of South Carolina, who has! larged in the house that postal posi-; ons in his state had been sold, in- j oduced a bill iast Friday "to pre-1 ?ht purchase and gale of public of- : ce." Four of the six clerical delegates S '"the Baltimore Conference of the i ethodist Episcopal Church, South, \ < the general conference at Memiisr Tenn.j in May, will favor unifi-i, ition between the northern and I lUthern branches of that church. A spectacular fire which broke out ; the heart of the business district Augusta, Ga.. Tuesday night, was j ought under control after fire up-; iratuh had been summoned from ad-1 tiling towns. The damage is estiatod at $200,000./,v John Joseph Corbett. JG, paroled { mvict, was arrested in Chicago Fri- 1 ail(1 ail but $$00 of the $8;1,000 . Liberty bonds with which he disap-; mred in February while employed . ;; riycfjsen&cr by J. F. Ripple and jmpiihy, of Newark. N. J., is ex iced to PC recovered by the police. Seven negroes were killed and two] lite men and thirt&n negroes were jorcd late Tuesday when a train vrving employes of the Tennessee ?al, Iron and Railroad Company colled head-on with a locomotive near \ igewater Junction, twelve milesrth of Birmingham, Ala. Expenditure of $J00,000 by the j deral government toward establish- i am of a president's plaza at Nash-1 il?i, Tetin., for the erection there of! memorial in honor of Andrew Jack-! i>, Andrew Johnson and James K. j >T? was proposed Saturday in a bill! Representative Byrns. A similar j li was introduced in the senate by j -nator Tyson, of Tennessee. Luther Burbank, origin atoi of a; w horticulture, and the author of me striking new theories on the reafter, is slowly recovering from , persistent ilhiess brought about by j -rvous strain rising from the furore i ?ated by his recent statements on j e final destiny of men. Mr. Bur-! ink's home is at Santa Rosa, Calif. ; Preparations at Olso, Norway, for! e Amundsen-Ellsworth polar flight j May are nearaig completion. On ; hili just ouside Oslo a mooring mast j >ar).y 100 feet high has been erected r the airship "Norge," in which the , ight is to be made. The dirigible, j nstiucted in Italy, now is being in- j ected by Captain Amundsen, who; rived in Rome for that purpose last \ ridav. Lincoln Ellsworth, the merican explorer, who will accom-! my Amundsen, arrived from the: nitcd States some time ago. The; >lar expedition will be under the' orwegian flag. Charged with defrauding Florida j inks of $30,000 through bad checks, i id violating the Mann act, Mrs. j oris Berne, wife of a plastic sur- j ion, I>r. Louis P. Berne, was arrest1 in New York Sunday, with two! ten, one of them a man with whom | irs. Berne is said to have eloped to | lorida a year ago, leaving her six-! ?ar-old son, ill with pneumonia. Dr. erne who said he had forgiven his ife after she returned to him. ac>mpanied her to the police station, here she was held with Elliott Jaffe, er brother, and Paul Rosenthal, with horn Dr. Berne said she eloped. Dr. erne said Rosenthal was the son of "'wealthy shirt manufacturer." Mrs. :e^rrte eloped with Rosenthal in Febuary. 1025, Dr. Berne said, taking 45,000 from a safe deposit vault, he was gone two months and then e learned that Rosenthal had desertd her. He sent her money in Floria and 3he returned to him. / iiwest North Carolina. 16. Fire Cents * Cop; SALE OF 3.75 BEER t IS LEGAUZED L Little Interest in Washington Over; Announcement That Beer Can 3e . q Sold Without Prescription. Washington, March 30?While the nation seemed to get a kick today cut' of the approval given by the govern: meat sale of 3.7.r> per cent medicinal ; beer, about the only reaction the anj nouncement stirred up here was a j e> protest from the Anti-Saloon League I so - -- - cue issuance 01 pemits lor the manufacture of such strong- malt ton-1 ^ ics was a "mistake" and would iead I ! to diversions for beverage use. I Nothing was said in congress about j I the new order, in fact, for a change, j Ln the prohibition question was com-1 pletely out of the picture, except for] I the introduction in the house by Mrs.! * Mary T. Norton, Democratic repre-i1*1' sentative from New Jersey, of the! ^c resolution previously offered in the j senate by Senator Edwards, of New Jersey. proposing a sweeping investigation of prohibition and its en- 011 forccment. V: Officials in charge of prohibition declined, in the absence from the city' of Assistant Secretary A|ndrews or j the treasury, to say much about the i a[ new regulation, except to give assur- a'! ance that the new "health booster"; an would be available without prescriptions at drug stores even in bone dry i seA states. jan i >>? JONES IS FAVORITE hot FOR SOLICITORSHIP , *m bet I However, the Race Continues I hoi Greene is Wilken Mati'j Stronjj- | cut Opponent. J ,, ?? 1 North Wilkesboro, March 30.?The A( ' campaign for the solicitorship of the j IVth judicial district has been the] warmest one witnessed here in several rv years. At the beginning there were; several candidates in the race, but the number has now narrowed down! to four, with John R. Jones, of this city, arid (Charles Gieeu|, ??f Mitchell i ^ county, as the most active candi-: dates. j The feeling at Mr. Jones' head- ' quarters is distinctly optimistic. The. calculations there arc- that Mr. Jones' P^a will receive the 5S votes necessary to, nominate on the first ballot when the ovc' It*, publicans of the district meet at Tnylorsviih- April 17. \s there is no other -candidate from Wilkes, Mr.i^1 J orris will get its solid delegation, Letters anc* personal calls from Alex- not under county show that it will, in all :u': probability, follow the son ol Wilkes. l):. *io county, by reason of the desire d;; of leaders to promote party harmony, bus din not. instruct its delegation at the -en Republican convcriWon at Mocksville, ^0< but nine; out of the fourteen dole- ani1 gates are ejithusijistid supporters ofj All". Jfilw it i irkll.. tK.. l">- of five arv inefjjied that \vay.Avery inJ? county likev.i><? will: send an unin-j ,i0> . truetod delegation. This is regarded lXil1 as being very favorable to Mr. Jonfes' lou as Avery borders Mitchell, Mr. i:im Greene's home county and it was for-; mcriy a Green stronghold- Yadkin j t&ii and Watauga have candidates, but: gra leaders from each of these counties' tva say iliat when their man withdraws, j (hi the ^candidate from Wilkes will get wit the majority of their votes. v pic POSTCARDS SEVEN YEARS p NINE MONTHS ARRIVING ,hl -foot Ashevilie, March ill?Seven years. -x* and nine months to the day is the time four postcards were in coming a"1 through polar seas from Oslo. Nor- *? way. to their recipients here, having }JC^ traveled by way of thr- North Poum . with Amundsen on the ship Fram, | cltwhich was ace-locked for vears. j R*;1 The cards wore given to Amund-jthp sen when he set out from Norway j1''0/ by Miss Mimi Veleur. lciative of stu Mrs. M. Brochgrcvntk, of Asheville. They were addressed to Mrs. Borch greviuk, her daughter. Miss Agatha; her son. Valdcmar, and another: daughter, now dead. They were sent to Pehsacoia, tie where the family was then living. Ch and friends there foi*warded them to A<h(?vill(> Thf. *- * v?juj ""<ii cm.: j v,,i ; mark, "Polar Sea.'" I mil ! NORTH CAROLINA'S gu: SHARE IN WAR DEBT lar ' Washington Correspondence Win'- leg ston-Salem Journal.?North- Caro- of lina's share of the national war debt the in proportion to population is $165,738,000, according to Senator How- SA ell, of Nebraska, who is opposing the European debt settlements now pending in congress. Mr. Howell declared that debt edi cancellations to European nations in lo\ the pendi?vg debt settlements amount ho to forty per cent of the national war a debt. This, he contended, the cancel- litl Iation means $186,295,200 to North Fr arolina. er; ; According to Senator HowcU's f:g, ures, i-iorth. Carolina rank? four- as tccnth among the states of the nation iili i in the amount of its share of the an > national debt. / wi f NUMBER 12 aGREALKTATE TR ANSFER HERE . C. Winlcler Property i? Sold to Hickory Conoern for Contidtrition of $30,500OLF COURSE WILL BE CONSTRUCTED AT ONCE Probably the most important real late deal to be closed hero this sean was last Thursday, when the irolina Land Company, of Hickory, rough Mr. S. C. Rggers, local realr, bought from Mr. G. 0. Winkler 0 acres of land adjoining the lurel Hills development. The conleration was $80,500. The properis located about one mile east of e city on the state highway from tone to Blowing Rock, running as r west as the vicinity of Hodges' ip. The purchasers acquired this propty for a golf course and other elelopments, and reliable reports inate that work on an 1S-hole golf iirse will start immediately. Mr. lali Osborne, engineer and nationgolf authority, of Charlotte, has eady looked the proposition over d pronounco the location and neral typography ideal. Water ver and licrhfcs arc ??a?ulv jimiwc,..!.. J the acreage includes a valuable undary of marketable timber, iveways will be constructed, and s sold. Boone is undoubtedly destined to :ome a great tourist center, and ;h modern hotels and boarding jscs on every hand, nothing could more to fuither summer activities in a golf course. The one which 1 be constructed will be among the t in the south. VENING STAR FESTIVAL HERE ccum Course Begins Monday and Vill Continue Through Thursday; Presentations at Courthouse iVopie of Boone, who have been so so? confined to their homes and ces of business during the unpreen ted winter months, arc jubilant r the coming of the annual spring nic," the Piedmont Evening Star tival. Unlike the usual vhautauis. this iyceuin course is a state inution. jijid better than that, a thwest institution. In- iroa\ie iicudiiuarters at, and originated in leville. It's a home enterprise and success here is guaranteed by local iiucss men, without hope of peral profit. They want the city of sue to have some good, wholesome usement, and are providing it in ; way. Some of the young1 ladies thv* town arc now engaged in selltickets for the event which starts :t Monday evening at the courtis*-, and ends Thursday evening? r entirely different performances, using and educational. Rotable among the many good ugs we have in this season's prom is the Loseff Russian Orchcs! Quartette, the Griswold Duo lmoious sketches interspeiscd h music), the King Male Trio, nee men with trunks full of mu) and the Pelletier Players, in oily Applies," a comedy drama in ee acts. And to make the thing . iiplete an extensive program will prepared for the kiddies on the irtii afternoon, an elaborate page. which will seem like circus day the youngsters, and be also enable for the grown-ups. It is hoped that the people of the r and <*>unty will come out en 3se to these performances, enjoy mselvcs and help defray the ex'scs thereby of this educational in;uiion. ilTLING FOR THE POSSESSION OF PEKING Lbndon, March 31?A severe barter the possession of Peking, ina, is raging, says a dispatch to Daily Mail from the Chinese The fighting is taking place IS les distant and the booming of the ns is plainly audible in Peking. Wealthy Chinese continue to send ge quantities of valuables into the ation quarter of the city. Troops General Feng Yu-Hsiang still hold capital. ? kLE OF BEER IS ILLEGAL IN NORTH CAROLINA Raleigh, March 31.?The recent; ict of the treasury department airing medicinal beer with an aicoI percentage of 3.75 to be sold for tidal period of six months, means tie in North Carolina, according to ank Nash, assistantattownev genii. "The sale of medicinal beer so far North Carolina concerned, is 1 egal," said Mr. Nash tonight, "and \ y drug rtore undertaking to sell i: II be violating the state law."
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
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April 1, 1926, edition 1
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