Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / June 23, 1921, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE ROBESONIAN THE DATE ON THE LABEL IS THE DATE TOUB. PAPER WILL BE STOPPED. WATCH LABEL OH YOVR PAPER AND DON'T LET SUBi! SCRIPTION EXPIRE. ESTABLISHED 1870. SINGLE COPT FIVE CENTS. COUNTRY, GOD AND TRUTH- 12.00 A YEAR. DUE IN" ADVANCE VOLUME LI I LUMBERTON. N. C., THURSDAY. Jl'NE 23. 1921. NUMBER .18 Injunction Brought Against Town Temporary Injunction to Prohibit Collection of $5 Auto Driver's Tax by Town Signed by Judge Ray Case Will be Argued Before Judge C. C. Lyon at Elizabethtown July 5. Temporary injunction against the town of Lumberton, restraining the town from collection $5 license from automobile drivers, has been signed by Judge J. Bis Ray. The case will be argued before Judge C. C. Lyon at Elizabethtown on July 5. The town commissioners will be represented by Town Attorney T. L. Johnson, while Messrs. Mclntyre, Lawrence & Proc tor have been retained by citizens of the town who are making the fight. As has been state inoThe Robeson ian, the town commissioners passed an ordinance at a recent meeting pro. vidrng that each person living in town who drives an automobile must pay a $5 license. A number of citizens signed a petition protesting against the ordinance and employed council to fight the matte out in the courts As a result of the injunction Mr, J. P. Russell, town clerk and treasur. er, has refunded the tax to those who had paid it before the injunction was signed by Judge Ray. v Bond Money Ready --y-l77S $30,000 School Bonds Sold to Mutual Loan & Trust Company at Par Money Available for Paying for Lot . and Balance Due on Teacher age Bonds Purchased by Home Company. The $30,000 bonds voted by the town two months ago for the purpose of paying for a lot and balance due on the "teacherage" have been sold at par to the Mutual Loan & Trust Co., of Lumberton. The bonds bear 6 per cent, interest and will be re tired in thirty years. The bond money has already been turned over to the town clerk and treasurer and will be distributed at the direction of the school trustees. Twenty-thousand dollars of the bond money will be paid to the heirs of the late Simeon Carlyle for a lot directly across Eighth street from the graded and high school buildings. It is planned to erect a high school building on the lot at a later date, A balance of $7,500 due on the 'teach erage" will also be paid out of the bond money. Mr. H. M. McAllister is president and Mr. T. L. Johnson secretary treasurer of the Mutual Loan & Trust Co., purchasers of the bonds. VASS GETS NEXT CONFERENCE. Moore County Town Selected as Next Meeting Place for Annual Confer ence of Rockingham District Lum berton Among Other Towns Invit ing the Meeting. By 'Phone to The Robesonian. Rockingham, June 23. Vass, Moore county, was selected as the next meeting- place for the annual confer ence of the Rockingham district at today's session of the conference which convened here Tuesday even ing. Other towns inviting the con-; vention were: Lumberton, Hamlet, Laurinburg and Caledonia. Rev. Dr. R. C. Beaman, pastor of Chestnut Street Methodist chuch, Lumberton, preached last evening. The conference will close lae this afternoon. WANT ROAD TO McNEILL BRIDGE HARD-SURFACED AT ONCE County Road Board Also Asks State Highway Commission to Build New Bridge at Ivey's Bluff. The State Highway commission will be asked to hard-surface the road leading from Lumberton to McNeill's bridge, some three miles from town, during the next few months. The highway commission will also be asked to build a new bridge across Lumber river at Ivey's bluff, near Boardman. This was decided at a meeting of the county road board here Monday. N Young Woman Arrested Here. Sallie AJlen, young white woman, was arrested here Monday afternoon by Policeman Ed J. Glover. Sallie was wanted in Wilmington, having escaped from the New Hanover coun. ty farm, where she had served only a small portion of a three-months' sentence for larceny. Sheriff Jackson of New Hanover carried the prisoner to Wilmington Tuesday night. She was arrested here at the re quest of the Wilmington authorities before being tried on the charge of larceny. She was convicted of taking quite a quantity of wearing apparel from the "Y," dormitory in Wilming ton. She is alleged to have taken a number of articles belonging to other prisoners when she escaped from the farm. Crops Making Improvement. Crops generally have made con siderable improvement since the rains Saturday and Sunday, according to farmers coming into town. Many farmers have begun harvesting to bacco. , , - , ; Mr. and Mrs. Nash Townsend and son, Master Giles, of R. 6, Lumberton, were among the visitors in town yes terday. , , .., . .. - - - - - Recorder's Court Number of CasesDisposed of During Week Some Charged With Vio lating Sanitary Laws. The following cases have been aired before Recorder David H. Fuller this week: E. S. Walters, two charges assault upon Chat Edwards and Becky Edwards with a hoe'; found not guilty of assault upon Chat an( guilty of assault upon Becky and fined $10, of the old battleship ban Marcos, oft with those of Virginia cities from and cost. Walters gave notice of Tangier island. and to southeastern territory and the appeal to the Superior court and! Reports received by the war de- Virginia cities, and to the north and made bond in the sum of $50. partment from Langley field, Vir- east, was ordered today by the Inter- Robert Proctor, exceeding the speed ' ginia, said the accident was one of the state Commerce commission, to De limit, plead guilty; judgement sus-jmost peculiar on record. Lieutenant come effective Septmber 15. pended upon payment of cost, Lloyd Locklear, Indian, disposing of mortgaged property; judgment suspended upon payment of cost. Clarence McCallum, colored, lar ceny, round guilty; hired to Mr. w. K. Culbreth for 60 days at 50 cents the day, the county to receive pay for the first 30 days and the de fendant to receive pay for the addi- tional 30 days. McCallum was found guilty of the larceny of a cap from Mr. N. P. Andrews' store. Gaston Hooper, colored, drunk on public highway, plead guilty; judg ment suspended upon payment of cost. Talmadge Monroe, riding bicycle on streets at night without a light, plead guilty; judgment suspended upon payment of one-half cost. Charlie Jones, colored, exceeding speed limit; judgment suspended up on payment of cost. Horace Gavins, colored, operating automobile in town with muffler cut out open; judgment suspended upon payment of cost. U M. Edwards, Charlie Johnson and Sallie Allen, fornication and adultery; nol prossed. , , C. M. Usher, violating sanitary ordinance; judgment continued for two weeks upon condition that law be complied with. R. B. Bennett, violating sanitary ordinance; judgment suspended upon payment of cost, defendant to comply with the law. Elizabeth and Walter Springs, colored, violating sanitary ordinance; Walter found not guilty; Elizabeth found guilty and taxed with one-half cost. J. E. Clifton, violating sanitary ordinance; judgment continued for two weeks upon payment of one-half cost and meeting requirements of the law. June Shaw, violating sanitary ordinance; not guilty. Aggie Gillespie, colored, violating sanitary ordinance; not guilty. HUSBAND FORCES WIFE ' TO SUBMIT TO NEGRO MAN Grave Charges Made Against Hus- band by Pmehurst Woman. Carthage dispatch, June 21. lm Maples, of Pinehurst, whjte, about 32 years, is in jail here aged on a charge of criminal assault. His wife, a woman of about 30 years of age and of good character, charges that Maples held her and forced her to submit while a negro, Jake Smith, assaulted her. The attack, she says, occurred at her home in Pinehurst, where the negro is said to have delivered whis key to Maples. Mrs, Maples informed brother of the attack and they swore out a warrant against the man He was arrested and given a prelim-1 inarv trial this morning being heldi on the charge of criminal assault in! the sum of $5,000. Being unable to give bond, he was Drought to Car- .fhage and placed in jail. Officers are searching for the negro. Much indig nation has been expressed over the crime and it is said that threats were opnly made against Maples at the preliminary hearing before he was brought to the Moore County jail. The negro, Smith, is said to be a blockader, selling whiskey in the Pinehurst and Southern Pines neigh borhood; More Cotton Blossoms. Mr. C. H. Odum of R. 3, Fairmont, sent a cotton blossom to The Robeson ian office yesterday. The blossom was sent through the mail and was probably plucked Tuesday. L. H. Revels, Indian, who farms on Messrs, White & Gough's Wishart farm, three miles from Lumberton on the Fairmont road, brought a blossom in this morning. Mr. Lee Newberry, who lives three miles .east of town, brought , a long staple cotton blossom to The Robe sonian office this morning. This was the first long-staple blossom rep6rt ed to The Robesonian. Mr. W. D. Lewis, who looks after Mr. S. Mclntyre's farm, near Moss Neck, sent a cotton blossom to The Robesonian office today. As was stated in Monday's Robe sonian, Mr. J. S. Scott of the Rayn ham section brought some blossoms to The Robesonian office Monday morn ing, the first reported this season. Will Organize Fox Hunters' Associa tion. A meeting of the fox-hunters of Robeson county will be held in the court house in Lumberton Monday, August 1, according to Mr. W. K. Culbreth, the fox-huntingest man in the county. It , is the purpose to or ganize the Robeson Fox .Hunters' association at' this meeting. The meet, rag Will be held about noon Two Pilots Drowned Planes Collide and Fall Inttr Chesa peake Bay One of Most Peculiar Accidents On Record. Washington dispatch, June 22. Two of the leading flyers of the army' air, service, Capt. Howard T. Douglas and Lieut. Marll " J. Plumb, were .drowned in Chesapeak bay today after. la collision of their planes in the course of a bombing raid directed at the hulk Plumb, flying a fast single seat, Nortn ( arolina has thus won her plane, was dropping bombs, and Cap- rate case, which was brought before tain Douglas, in a similar machine, the interstate commission by cham was observing the raid from above. I bers of commerce and freigh associa Plumb's plane had just dropped a tions in the state, and the victory is bomb and was climbing upward as a great one. M. R. Beaman of Golds, is the custom after releasing the 'boro and Raleigh, and J. H. Fishback, weapon, when it struck Captain Doug-: of this city, deserve much rf the las machine, cutting of its tail. Both plarfes fell into the bay and disap - peared with their pilots, whose bodies had not been recovered tonight, al - though sought by a number of army, and navy craft ordered to the scene after the accident. Langley field off icials reported that soon after the planes fell another of the bombing planes dropped a bomb containing 300 pounds of T. N. T and that it fell near where the machines went down. It was eHV0jfia said, .that the pilot, of this machine, one of many participating in the at tack on the San Marcos, had not seen the planes fall. The terrific explos ion of this bomb, aviation officers said, probably would make more difficult the recovery of 'the bodies of the officers or the planes. Captain Douglas, whose home was in Covina, Cal., was one of the best known :pf army fliers. He was at tached to air service headquarters here and went by rail ahead of the army aviators on their flight to Alaska to select landing fields and make all arrangements for them. Lieutenant Plumb, whose home was in Fondulac, Wis., was recognized, officers here said, as one of the army's most expert fliers. When ordered to Langley field to participate in the joint army and navy bombing tests, he flew from San Antonio in a big Caproni machine. Effort To Aid Cotton Farmers n .,. , . Congressman Lyon On Committee to rw ww i r w uran Din 10 neip tmum runners ana r in rv eicome suggestions , on What is Needed. (Special Correspondence.) Washington, June 20. At a meet ingof the representatives of cotton growing States held recently, a com mittee of one member from each of the twelve largest cotton growing i ..-II wrl rt a; ' States were appointed to draft a bill, from the left to the right side of his or bills, that would be of aid to the : mouth. In fact he was possessd of cotton farmers of the South. The a look of disappointment. After get North Carolina member is Represen-j ting his chew in a comfortable posi tative Lyon. This committee will meet: tion, the farmer began to tell why at once and consider any suggested , he was disappointed, legislation in an earnest effort to se-j "You know", said he, "that I was cure a bill that will be of real benefit ' informed by the Republican leaders to the farmers. The committee is last fall that if Harding was elected anxious to hear from farmers and j President, cotton would go to 35 business men who have given this cents a pound in two weeks after the question some study and who have ounncoiiuua i iubc u i uoi 18 needed, ah communications iromipecting t North Carolina should be addressed to 1 Homer L. Lyon, House Office Build ing, Washington, D. C. SIMS IS BACK. Landed In New York Yesterday Everything Was Peaceful. New York dispatch, June 22. Rear Admiral Sims returned home today to explain to Secretary Denby re marks attributed to him in his recent London speech on Irish-Americans, Refusing to be taken ashore by a! cutter, he came up the bay aboard i the liner Olympic to meet friends or I foes who might be awaiting him near the pier. Everything was peace'ful when the veteran seadog landed. A thousand bluecoatg were massed on the dock to preserve order. Indeed, they were so numerous that with wharf workers and passengers it would have been difficult for many more persons to have found foothold on the pier. Police lines were drawn several blocks north and south of the pier en. trance. Not even when Woodrow Wilson returned from the peace con ference were more thorough prepara. tions made. Harriet Holloway, a negfess 45 years old, who lives near -Wilson, has been sick for some time and she de clared that it had been revealed to her in a vision that if she would be buried for 24 hours she would be cured. According she was placed under 2 feet of earth -Sunday, in a reclining position, with only her head out, and remained there until the same hour Monday. Physicians said the "burial" had caused no perceptible change in her condition. ' v ; Boards Will Meet Tuesday, July 5. The county commissioners and the county board of education will meet Tuesday, July 6, instead of Monday July 4 Independence Day. ' ' ' N. C. Shippers Win Freight Rate Fight Carolina Points Placed More Nearly on I arity With irginia ( ihes Means Saving of - 50.000.000 to State. Washington dispatch. June 21. Readjustment of freight rates to cive North aroIina jobbers and merchants a more favorable rate in comparison ; credit for hanging to it for severa ' years, when others said results could not, be obtained. ! It is estimated that $50,000,000 would be sarved -to North Carolina shippers annually by the decision handed down today. In the final I fight, North Carolina chambers of j commerce, the North Carolina Traffic ; association and the North and South Carolina corporation commissions fwere standing together. The case Wa.-Ori'."" J""W " -r .--- mission in May, 1920, but upon peti tions of the railroad companies and the Virginia 'corporation commission, it was re-argued in September. The decision today disposes of the case and sustains the contentions made by North Carolina that' the rates between eastern points and eastern interior cities and North Carolina, as com pared with rates to western and in renor cities ana virgmia cities, are unjust and prejudicial to North Caro lina. Instead of the present scales of rates under which, as for illustration, the rate from New York and Phila delphia of $1.60 to Raleigh, a differ ence of 76.5 cents, the commission orders that this difference shall not exceed 60 cents. For further illustration, that where as the ratefrom Baltimore to Rich mond is T68 cents and the rate from Baltimore to Raleigh is $1.50, a dif ference of 82.5 cents, the commission orders that the difference shall not exceed 60 cents, thereby requiring a reduction of 22 1-2 cents from Balti more in the advantage of rates be yond Richmond at present over Ral- leigh and other points in the large . .. , xr . ,. . . , , I territory of North Caro ina included . v.... SEEN AND HEARD ( By Happy Jack) "I'm disappointed", said the farmer he chanted his chew of tobacco election. I was simpleton enough to ucucvc n miu vuteu iur natum, ca- to sell mv cotton for 35 cents before Christmas. Here it is more than six months after the election and instead of cotton going to 35 cents look where it's at 8 cents for mid dling! Now ain't that enough to disappoint a person?" Being advised that it was a little disappointing to a man who had that much faith in what a Republican said just befoije a national election, the farmer's attention was called to cot ton prices a year ago compared with the present prices 36 to 8. "You know I'll never be fooled like that again", continued the who then paid his respects farmer, to the Republican leaders who misled him last year. The respects would not look good in the paper. Youll admit that Lumberton is "some" town. But what I started out to say was that a man. and his son both spent the same day in Lum berton recently and neither knew the other was here' until after they had departed. "Cotton is quoted on the local mar ket at 8 1-4 cents". That reads like we're on the way to "normalcy". Now, don't it? He might as well have fished1 in the well. A Lumberton man spent a whole half-day fishing and when he returned home declared that he had not been the recipient of a decent bite. That was his last effort. "It's too dull to advertise". That's what many business (?) men put up to the ad man when business is poor. When it gets too dull to ad vertise it's getting time to close the doors and quit. The dull season should be the advertising season as well as the brisk season. , The folks are spending money every day in the year. Why not go after your share of the trade.. No better way to go after it than the. ad route via The German Submarine Sunk Bombing Planes Sink Sea Pirate On Short Order Direct Hit With Pound Aerial Bomb Sent. II -Boat to Bottom Test Made to Demons trate Advantage of Aircraft in Actual War Against Watercraft Cape Charles, Va., dispatch, June 21. A direct hit with a 163-pound aerial bomb, dropped from an F-5-L type seaplane, sent the former Ger man submarine U-117, to the bottom of the Atlantic- today and abruptly terminated the first of a series of experiments by the army and navy, to test the ability of naval vessels to withstand damage inflicted from the air. The one time German commerce raider and .submarine planter was bound for Davy Jones, locker just 16 minutes after the first salvo of bombs was launched. The the U bomb that settled the fate oft the Baker sanatorium Friday, is 117 was one of a salvo of nine improving. He is gettincr aloni? as dropped from three planes that con- stituted the first and only aerial di - vision to engage in tthe actual attack. A few minutes before the fatal salvo was fired the same division had ton, where they are taking the Scot dropped three bombs to get the rage. tish Rite degree in Masonry. The projectiles were hurled from a la'a Davis and Henry Price, a height of about 1,100 feet, while the!colred couple of Shannon, were mar planes were making more than 100 ried here Monday, afternoon at 8:30 miles an hour. It was onJy.siec minutes ! the clock at the home-of Justice- fhf "'the" Xl-ilf made its last ''crash ' --The community aerviee motion dive" to find a resting place 50 fath-, pictures will not be shown at Parkton oms deep. Friday night, June 24th, as scheduled The sinking of the U-l 17 in so short nt will De shown there two weeks a time came as a surprise to most of from then, according to Mr. M. N. the army and navy officers who wit-! Folger, director. nessed the experiment, many of whom ', The pictures will be shown at had been frankly skeptical regarding , Hopewell (Indian) school Monday the ability of the planes even to hit , ilfht, June '27th, instead of Union the submarine, regardless of the factjChape'- that all the condition's favored the! Special Communication St. Al. attacking force, and no effort was ban's lodge No. 114, A. F. & A. M., made to simulate actual war condi-; tomorrow (Friday) afternoon at .3 tion3. The U-117 was securely an-;'chx for the installation of, officers chored and the bombing planes were n work, in the first, second and furnished with charts showing the ex-: and third degrees. Refreshments will act position of the target, but few! served from 6 to 7:30. expected that a fatal injury would be inflicted on the U-boat so quickly, Ihe plans for the test called for participation by 24 naval and marine planes and a later attack by 23 army machines if the naval craft failed to sink -the submarine. Nearly 200 bombs were provided for the affair, but only twelve were used, and of the! 47 aircraft scheduled to take part in today for White Lake, Bladen county, the bombing, but three obtained ajto assist the agent in that county in shot at the target, while three more j carrying out a club encampment. Mr. were robbed of their chance after M- N. Folger, director of educational reaching the scene, by the effective j moving pictures ip this county, also work of the first division. ! went to White Lake today with his The division that sunk the U-l 17 'picture outfit, was commanded by Lieut. Delosj Mr. F. Ertel Carlyle arrived Thomas. The three planes were com- home yesterday from Chapel Hill, manded by Lieutenants Keene, Rumill where he was a student at the State and Garvey. university during the last term. Mr. Although the detailed plans for the Carlyle has received license to prac exercise called for the appearance of f ice law, having passed the Stale the first division of three F-5-L type'Doard of examiners last February. He planes over the target at 9 o'clock, it 'will probably open an office here for was an hour later, when the division tne Practice of his profession at an was sighted. Led by Lieutenant I early date. Thomas, the planes approached the' Messrs. D W. Biggs, J. H. Wis target in battle formation. Each hart, A. J. Holmes and L. C. Town plane carried four 163-pound bombs, send went Tuesday to Greensboro to each bomb containingl 16 pounds ofjattend the annual meeting of the T. N. T. As the division swung round North Carolina Merchants' associa- for the run past the U-117 the planes dropped down to about 1,100 feet from the surface and when the head of the formation was almost over the bow of the U-117, observers saw three bombs, one from each plane, drop in a graceful curve toward the sub- marine. An instant later a great . column of water shot up over the craft, almost entirely obscuring it. i As the spray and mis cleared way. it was evident that while qo direct hit had been made with the first salvo, fired for ranging purposes, the aviators had . calculated the range so closely that not ; a bomb fell more than the length of submarine away from the target. The bow of the U-117 was lifted clear of about 9 o clock Tuesday morning on the water by the force of the explosion I account of a blaze on the roof of the and as the vessel settled back it was kitchen at the home of Mr. F. P. Gray, thought for a time that it was slowly Walnut and First streets. It is sinking. ( thought the fire started from a spark. In the meantime the three planes Very little damage was done, the fire had circled around and were again ap. ! having ben extinguished by the fire proaching the target against the wind, company. The fire company answer This time a veritable deluge of bombs ,ed the call promptly and rendered was dropped, each plane launching ; efficient service, according to Mr. three and the nine projectiles formed Gray. an almost perfect pattern around the 1 L-ll as they struck the water. A cloud of black smoke and dust, cen tered with the red flash of the explo sion, flew into the air along with the water this time, and the submarine seemed to be almost lifted from the water by the terriffic imoact.Members i of the official observing party credited I conference of the Rockingham district, at least one direct hit to the salvo and ! Tne conference began Tuesday even it was thought possible that another! inS and lasts' through today. Messrs. bomb might have found a place in the I DuBois, French and Humphrey r- TT k.i1. .at-!- tnrnorl lacr niirhf U-boat's vitals. Robesonian. It covers county like the dew. Robeson Stylish dresses should not cost as much as they formerly did. There's a reason. J It was about a year a'go that a local carpenter told me that he expected to make more per hour this year than he was making then. , "YouH be lucky to get a job at any prce", was the reply I made to his boast I'm sorry my prediction came true, but that same carpenter is without a job and has been for some distance. COTTON MARKET. Middling cotton io al market tod.v; ni'ind. is qur at id' on ccn:s the. tho BRIEF ITEMS LOCAL NEWS The Magnolia baseball team will play the Reedy Branch team, Indians, at Reedy Branch Saturday, June 25th. Mr. I at Hendren has opened a bicycle business and general repair shop in the McLeod building. West Fourth street. Regular meeting Maccabees to morrow (Friday) eveniner at 7:45. All members are urged to be prsent. Important business, Mr. D. R. Shaw went Monday to Charlotte to attend annual convention ' f the North Carolina Pharm.icpiirifl association, which opened Tuesday and and c h .es today. The condition of Rev. J. M. Fleming, who underwent an operation wt" as could be expected. ! Messrs. Robert Caldwell, Jr., Robert Mclntyre and" R. W. Wishart went Monday afternoon to Wilming- Prof. J. W. R. Norton of Laurel Hill, Scotland county, has accepted the principalship of the Lumberton graded school for the next term. Prof. Nortorj was principal of the high school during the last term and his work wis highly satisfactorily. Miss Martha Flax Andrews, home demonstration agent in Robeson, left tion. which onened Tuesdav and closes today. They went as delegates from the Lumberton Merchants' association, a branch of the State association. A petition which is beinc circula- ted by the Woman's club asking local merchants to give their emnlovee a half-holiday- on Thursday of each week has been signed by a number of merchants. All the merchants in town will be given an opportunity to sign the agreement. This plan has already been adopted by the mer- chants in many of the towns and cities in the State. The fire company was called out Rev. Dr. R- C. Beaman, pastor of Chestnut Street Methodist church, Rev. Lindsay Frazier, pastor of the Lumberton circuit, Messrs. K. M. Barnes, W H. Humphrey, J. A. Sharpe, W. J. DuBois, P. D. French and G. M. Whitfield went yesterday to Rockingham to attend. the annual Mr. Joe W.. Williams of Pembroke was a Lumberton visitor Tuesday. Mr. -C. W. Devar of Bladenboro is a Lumberton visitor today. Mr. N. M. Allen of R. 5, Lumber ton, was in town yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. P. Branch of Proctorville were among the shoppers in town yesterday. They were . ac companied home by Mr. Branch's mother, Mrs. Easter J. Branch. Mr. C D. Williamson of Parkton and son; Mr. Charlie Williamson of Charlotte, who is visiting his parents, were among the visitors in town yes. terday. . 7
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
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June 23, 1921, edition 1
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