Newspapers / The Daily Review (Wilmington, … / June 26, 1879, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Daily Review josh. r. JA"?i:n. B. and Prop THIRSDAV, J ONE 26. J8 9. VlEWb AND REV .V The Grant boom must have takeu lauJ arura in itu whisker. It appears to be sleeping. Ex-(iovernor Thorns A Hendricks ip in St. Louis on his way to the Hot Springs. He fays he is tired of politics and wants to be let alone. Wilkin Collins is coming to this country. WjS shall recpive him kindly, of course, but as an author of fiction, he doesn't-compare with the Louisiana witness.- Chicago Tribune. The last four years of a Republican House cost the country one hundred and two millions more than the first tour years of a Democratic House. There seem to be sine economy in Democracy, and the Hebel Brigadiers appear to be good men to lessen taxation. Dr. Schliernauu is about to ask the Porter for a firman authorizing him t make excavations among the tumuli of Sardis, near Smyrna, the ancient capital of Lydia, and the site of one of the seven churches of Asia mentioned in the Book of Itevelation. A project to rebuild Carthage upon the site of the ancient city is before the Bey of Tunis. The propos 1 is by M. Gay, an old French functionary, and the project is urged by M. Koustan, the French Consul General to that country, and by the Ger man Consul. Italy does not look favora bly upon the plan. According to his own account Bismarck is in a bad way. His health is giving way, his powers are failing, the Reich stag doesn't sympathize with him, the ministers of the various States look coldly on him, and he can't be always pushing the cart up hill . Such was the bu-den of a recent speech. A guest at the Christmas dinner of the United States Consul in Bangkok, Siam states that the edibles were almost en tirely canned food from America, include ing turkey, chicken, corned beef, salmon, lobsters, mackerel, clams, potatoes and other vegetables, fruits, and pies, both mince and pumpkin. It took an old rran of Chester, Massa chusetts, to get even with a young man who hid eloped with and married his daughter the other day. When the young couple returned for the "Bless you, my children," the old gentleman had his new aon-in-law arrested and fined for keeping an unlicensed dog. Dr. Vanderpoel assured the National Board of Health that there never was a period of three days in the Summer when there was not yellow fever in the port of New York, and yet it was kept out of the city by a thorough quarantine. The steam heat was recommended as the best disinfectant lor infected ships. Edwin Booth desires that Gray, the lunatic who shot at him, shall be kept securely in the asylum. I trust Gray' may become gray iudeed,' he says, 'in kind but careful confinement, or if earlier released, that his exit may be from this earthly stage of his dramatic exploits to that celestial sceue where idiots cease front shooting and actors are at rest. If he be ever again at liberty my own life I shall not value worth a rush,' Memphis is epidemic proof. Her streets and alleys and back-yards and vaults and other receptacles of waste have beeu surveyed and thoroughly cleansed. Twen ty thousand loads of garbage and filth, says the Appeal, have been removed, and now the city that is, the taxing dis trict defies disease. The city was never in as good a condition before. The miuisters whose churches are alon the lines of the elevated railroads in New York complain that the noise of the Sun day traius threatens to break up their ser vices and have petitioned the companies to stop running trains on that day. The managers can't agree to th s, but ay that "the engineers will oe instructed to con- . . . - X 1? troi tne steam ana noise, so as not to dis turb worshippers." The latett dodge by which charitable people in Euglaud are imposed upon is a very simple but ingenious one. A man carefully, but plainly dressed, visits the churches, is overcome by faint ness during the service, falls into the aisle and is car" ried out, to the great disturbance of the congregation. A pitiful tale of starvation and want is told in the vestry when the man revives, and, of course, a collection is made to relieve the pangs ot hunger which the "poor man" sutlers. Two newspapers in Virginia, one in Richmond and the other in Alexandria, have inaugurated a crusade against theob servance ofmemorial services in the South. The principal reason alleged is that i instigates the decoration services held over the graves of the Federal soldiers and thereby helps to keep alive sectional ani mosities. We can 't think much of either the patriotism, the con m m sense or the rev erential feelings of those who talk such nonsense. There must be something wrong somewhere in the upper story or else those who idvocate this practical forget falness of our heroic dead, are not the friends of the South aud its people they would have us believe The two papers referred to are the Richmond Statts an. I the Alexandria Gazette and we'll wager that the Only powder they snuffed daring the war was from afar a very far-ofl. THE FACTS IN THE CASE. In a letter written to the National Republican by a citizen of the State and dated at Warrenton, N. C , we find the following remarkable language: I have now been at home several weeks and mixed a good deal with the people I find affairs moving on smoothly. The crops are remarkably promising, and the pe p.'e aro contented, notwiths.anding the hard times, which are not yet over. 1 he towns in this State situated on the railroads are generally prosperous, and some of them have more than doubled in population since- the war. There is a marked improvement in the condition oi the colored people. Wherever one turns now and neat looking log house are seen to take the place of the filthy cabins that our people too often lived in when slaves. The fruits of freedom are manifest, and 1 will add that' in this county there are now nearly 300 colored families who live ou their own lands, while many others live on lands that they have coatrac ed for. Now, the above is not remarkable as a matter of fact, but as coming from the source it does (for the writer is intensely Republican) and appearing in the journal it does, it is worthy of note and com ment. I It is a fact that the colored people of North Carolina, as a class, or rather those who have a desire for improvement and have the energy to seefc for a bettor con dition of things, are making commendable progress in education and wealth, and as a natural sequence their relations with the whites are more agreeable. Many within our kuowledge have bougnt and paid for tarms, ranging from fifty to four hundred acres have improved the same by ditchiDg, fencing and the erection ot comfortable dwellings and con venient outbuildings, and are living as comfortably, contentecly and happily as aty people need to live. They have schools of their own, which are generally well attended, and they are making good progress in education. They have their own churches, of different denominati ns, and receive spiritual advice, instruction and consolation from pastors of their own race and color, and they are entirely un molested in their worship of God. They have just the same benefits from, and ate protected in their just rights by, the courts with the exactness which is meted to the whites. They vote as they please without let or hindrance. As is the case with the whites, the prudent and indus trious prosper, while the iudolent and improvident sutler. That the" colored people are in the en joyment of all the rights at the ba.lot box guaranteed to them by the Constitu tion of the United States is admitted by the Republican's correspondent in the following language: Politically the colored people are more united than they have been for several years. They .will stand by aud sustain the Kepublican party. General Grant is their first choice for President, but they will cordially suppoit the nominee We do not believe that there is more unity of political sentiment in the ranks of the colored people than there was four or five years ago. On the con trary, we think there is much division among them, and a growing carelessness Relative to the elective franchise; a result arising from having made the discovery that they were simply the dupes of office seeking whites. But whichever way they may see fit to vote, or if they see fit not to vote at all, they wiil be protect ed in their every right. The beauty and force, however, of the two extracts we have made lies in the fact that a North Carolina Republican has proven Senator Blaine guilty of masing a serpentine statement, (to use the mildest term at command) and has also placed on record a positive denial of the statements repeatedly made in the very journal in which his communication appears, that a free aud fa r election could not be held in the State. It is a nut for the Northern Republicans to crack at their leisure. It is a Kepublican statement, made in a leading and rantankerOus Republican newspaper, but, with the single exception we have noted, as regards the political unity of the race, we give it our endorse ment. There is another statement which the Northern stalwarts have delighted to fling ia the face of the Democracy, upon a subject concerning which they have stren uously worked, in season and out of season, to make political capital, bu which this correspondent disposes of in the most emphatic manner as follows: The 'exodus' fever has barely appealed iu this State, and I think that -not many will leave. The Ku Klux spirit, or at least the power of those desperadoes to do harm, has long ago died out in North Carolina', aud there is no din position here to 'get rid of the negroes.' On the con trary, their labor is much dstired, and, as statea above, many of them have become owners of the soil. Here we have the colored men owning farms, voting as they please and on friend ly terms with the whites. What better condition of things could be expected or desired? All of these blessings have been secured to the colored race since the Dem ocracy have come into power. They are the direst jenu't of Democratic legis lation. The ouly drawback to the., im orovement of the race occurred while the i State wa under Republican domination, at which time the money that should have been appropriated to the education of the children of the State was misap plied or stolen bv the shining liehts of t lie party, and the cause of education was at a standstill. Every blessing that the colored race have receined in the State, has been conferred upon them through the Democratic party. Every right whioh is guaranteed to them and every protection to which they are entitled comes from the same source. WASHINGTON LETTfiK. Washington, D. 0., June 24, 1879. There is to-day considerable differ" ence of opinion among the Democrats as to what course should be taken in the matter of the last veto.reoeived yes terdav from the White House. Bat it is a very amiable difference, and doubt not an arrangement will soon be reached wbiob will satisfy nearly all Democrats and be agreeable to Mr. Hye?. The concluding paragraph of bis veto message is a broad offer to surrender everything except pay for the deputy-marshals, and assurances are as thick as autumn leaves that he will enforce the law, if this be granted, in the leant offensive manner possible. The significant language of the veto is this: 'I have in my former message on this subject expressed a willingness to concur in suitable amendments for the improvement of the election laws; but I cannot consent to their absolute and entire repeal, and I oannotjapprove legislation whion seeks to prevent their enforcement ' The promises come not only from Mr. Hayes but from the Departments and from prominent Radical Senators and Representatives. The flurry whioh immediately fol lowed the veto soon died away, and, as stated above, the impression this morning is that all difficulty will be removed, another extra session avoid ed, and an early adjournment be reach ed. There are many rumors as to the standing of Cabinet members on the veto question. It is, nowever, gen erally understood that Secretaries Evarts and Schuiz desired approval of the bill, and that the former will take a more aotive interest in bringing about an agreement than he has here tofore taken in any affair not connect ed with his own department. That the inconsistent course of Mr Hayes in regard to the appropriation bills has had and will long have a damning elf .ct upon his party upon the Kepublican party, rather oannot be doubted. He has done just enongh to further alienate a portion of the party, and not enough to attract re emits. The men who have worked up the case against senator Ingalls now prom ise the most astonishing develop ments. If half they say is true Mr Ingalls should now be in a peniten tiary instead of the Senate. One of the Army paymasters yes terday confirm d by the Senate was Geo. R. Robinson, of Me., who was in tbe bouse of Mr. Seward and wa6 se verely iujurtd at the time Ihe Secre tary was attacked by Payne. Mr. Robinson has resided in this city since the war. He will probably be put on the retired list at an early day. Gurdge. A Freshman rejoices iu a new dress with 155 bi ttons on th waist ! Vasear MiBoeilany. A country blacksmith out West put np a notice: 'No horses shodded San day except sickness and death.' Ihe nimble-footed male is used as the light fantastic tow for a oanalboat. Ne w Orleans Picayune. 'One oan overcome any bad habit if he choose,' says an old moral law. We'd like to see any one overcome the bad habit of tobacco chewing if he chews. Exchange. Some queer, crooked things were dag ap iu the Treasury yard at Wash iugton the o her day, and now they don't know whether they are petrified signatures of ex-Treaaurer Spinner that fell out of the window, or a lot of old sofa springs. Bridgeport Stand ard. Ben Franklin sold tbe bottle in which he imprisoned the lightning to a Jerseyman. He and his descendants have been diluting it ever since, but it is still strong enough to paralyze a rmn at 300 yards. Boston Courier. Such is the formidable antagonism of the sexes that a chance to give a Boland for an O i ver is never lo t. . 'Don't you think that a good likeness of me?' said a pretty wife to a small fraction of herself oalled her husband. 'Very good,' was the reply, 'except that there is a litUe too much repose about the mouth Mint Julep I rjlrlK F1KST OF THE SEASON 1 june 2 J NO. CARROLL'S Hew Advertisements. DISLIKING TO ENTER INTO A NEWSPAPER CONTROVERSY, P. L. BRIDWEKS & CO., Have heretofore retrained from sayiug anything on the subject of the Dull Gordon Sherries. AND W. T. Waltenf& Coa Baker Whiskey, Both of whicb4tbey have kept since opeD ing, although some oi their friends and competitors CLAIM to be Sole Agents. W. T. WALTER'S & CO. Refuse to make auy one their Agent, re serving the right to sell to please. hnm) Uiev By Business Men It is well known that such articles as tbe DUFF GORDON SHERRIES, MUM'S CHAMPAGNE, etc., have no Local Agents throughout the country, as they can always be bought much cheaper, in small quanti ties, from second hands, than the Agents can sell at, they being compelled to pro tect the trade of those who buy hundreds of packages at a time. WE ABE SURPRISED That ourfrieuds, with their long Business xperience; should have brought forward such a weak point as this, but can now understand, paying package rates to the Agents, why they supposed, on account of the low price at which we were selling tbe goods, that ours was not the genuine arti cle. Respectfully, and truly. P. L. BIUDGERS & CO., The Diamond 3for 10 cents, Cigars, are all the go. The P-R-I-N-C-I-P-K Cigar is the best lO Cent Cigar Ever brought to Wilmington. A New Lot of them just received. P. L. BRID6ERS & GO, may o Corn , Bacon , Molasses. 40 000 Bush Primo WhUe Curn Onr Boxes L. S. and Smoked O 4tJ bides, s)i A Hhds New Crop Cuba .Molasses. QA Bbls Cuba. N. O. aid 8. H. v M Glasses. 1 250 Bbla Fresil flour' 1 "7 T Bbls Sugars, Crushed, HO Granulated A, Extra C, and C, 20 Bags Coffee, all grades, jQQ Tubs Choice Family Lard, JQ Boxes Tobacco, Tax Off. 7 r Half Bbia and Boxei Snuff, ' O Tax Of. 1600 Kegs Nails, ALSO, Potash, Lye, Soda, 8oap, Starch, Hoop Iron, Spirit Barrels, Glue, dec. For sale low bj WILLIAMS 4 MUBCH1SON, june 17 Wholesale Gro. k Com. Mer. $66 A WEEK in your own town, and no capital risk ed. You can give the bu- siuess a trial without expense. Tne best opportunity ever offered for those willing to work. Yeu should try nothing else until you see for yourself what you can do at the business we offer. No room to explain here Ybu can devote all your time or only your spare time to tbe business, and make great pay for every hour that you work. Women make as much as men. Send for special private terms aud particulars, which we mail free. $5 Outfit free. Don't com plain of hard times while you have such a chance. Address H HALLETT & CO. Portland, Maine. june 7"d Jfcw. Thos. H. JtcXoy, Jlobt H- McKoy WILMINGTON, N. C. wffice North side Market street, between Second and Third streets. ; an 27-w Steamer PassuDrt, JAPT. J. W. HARPER, will resume SUNDAY TRIPS TO SM1THYILLE, April 27, weather permitting. Dally Trips ju usual. Leave Dock at 9.3 A. M. apl 26 QBO. MTBR8 Ageut. Tonsorial. ATING AGAIN located la the bass meat of the Pureell House, 1 have thar oughly renovated aad improved the old stan and am now prepared to shaT,shaaa poo, aa out hair tor everybody. The beat of work men, clean towels, sharp run re and io prices. ML YIN ART 1 8. July ST Parcel House Barber Shop. g-TTsfr Miscellaneous. LIFE IN A BOTTLE. The Most Valuable Medical Discov ery Known to the World No More Use for Quinine, Calomel or Mineral Poisons Life for the Blood, Strength for the Nerves and Health for All. AN OPEN LETTER TO THE IM LL1 Believing that bv cleaoaiug tt.e bl.iod and building up the constitution was the only trut ik. nf bum niuv aw - ana oeintr iruuuieu with weknes of the lungs, catarrh, v, r much broken down in roustitutiow, A , c after trying the bi-t phynicians and lawnt out nay money ior mauy budu ui lueuium au V v - w I b i?an doctoring utvel(. using uirtticin. AmartimaA without find in a uerminent cu miiiA Irnm routs and hi-rbs. I f tu.al discovered a wonderful rt uteri or Bl.. Cleanser, the first botUe of whicn gave me new life and vuror. and in time enectea a -r w nent cure. 1 was free iroin catarrh, my lung became strong and sound, being able to stand the most severe cold and exposure, and 1 have arained over thirty pouDds in weight. feel I . .1 . T 1 . J J t I in cr ftnnnnent LOai 1 uau uiue n wmiuenui discover v in medicine, I prepared a quantity ot the Root Bitters, and was in the habit ot zivinsr them away to sick friends and neigh bors. I found tae medicine effected the most wonderful cures of ai) diseases caused from humors or scrof ula in the blood. Imprudence, Bad Stomach, Weakness, hid Bey Disease, Torpid Liver, Ac , Ac. The news of my discovery in this way spread from one person to another until I found myself called upon to supply patients with medicu.e tar and wide, and I was induced to establish a labor atory for compounding and bottling the Root Bitters in large quantities, and I now d vote ar.my time to this business. I was at first backward in presenting eitner myself or discovery in this way to the publi e. not Being a patent mea cine man ana wua small capital, but I am getting bravely over that. Since I first advertised this medicine I have been crowded witn orders from drug gists and country dealers, and tbe hundreds ot letters l nave received irom persons curea, Drove the fact that no aemedv ever did so much good in so short a time and hid so much success as the Koot Hitters. In tact, 1 am convinced that they will soon take the lead o' all other medicines in use. vea ly one hundred retail druggist, right here at home in Cleveland, now sell Koot Hitters, some of whom have already sold over one thousand bottles. Root Bitters are strictly a medical prepar ation, such as was used in tbe good old oays of our forefathers, when people w re cured by some simple root or plaut, and when calomel and other poisons of the mineral kingdom were unknown They act strongly on the liver and kidneys, keep the bowels regular and build up the nervous system. ' hey penetrate every part of the body, searching out every nerve, bone and tissue from the head to tr e feet, cleansing and sti engthening tbe fountain springs of life, hence they must reach all diseases by purification and nourishment. No matter what your feelings or symptoms are, what the disease or ailment is, use Root Bitters. Don't wait un'il you are sick, bet if you only feel bad or miserable, use the Bitters at once. It may save your life. Thousands of persons in all pans of the country are already using Koot Bitters. They have saved many lives of consumtives who had been given up by friends and physi cians to die, and have permanently cured many old chronic cases of Catarrh, Scrofula, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, and Skin Diseases, where all other treatments had faled. Are you troubled with sick headache, costiveness, dizziness, weakness, bad taste in the mouth, nervousness, and broken down in constitution? You will be cured if you take Koot Bitters. Have you humors and pimples on your face or skin? Nothing will give you such good health, strength, and beauty as Root Bit ters. ft, I know that jealous physicians will cry humbug because my discovery cures se many of their patients, b t I care not. It is now my desire and determination to place my Root Bitters as fast as posdble within the reach ef all those suffering throughout the world. Sold by wholesale and retail drug gists and country merchants, or sent by ex press on receipt of price, $1.00 per bottle, or six bottles $5.00. For certificates of won derful cures, see my large circu'ar around each bottle of medicine. Read and judge for yourself. ism. Ask your fruggist or merchant for FRAZIBK'S KOOT BITTERt, the grea Blood Cleanser, and take no substitute he ma recommend because he makes a large profit . W. FKAIZEK, Discoverer. 338 Superior St.. Cleveland O. For sale by J. 0. Munds and T. H. Burbank, druggists. marcn 2ttn eow-aaw THE NEW YORK WEEKLY HER AID, JAMES GORDON BENNETT. Prop'tor. The Best and Cheapest Newspaper Published. Postage Free. ONE DOLLAR Per Year, SO Cents for Six Mouths, An Eztrs Copy tovsry Club of Ten. ew York Herald, Published every Day in the Year. Postage Free. $10 pays for one year, Sundays included. $8 pays for one year, without 8undays. $5 pays for six months, 8undays ineluded. $4 pays for six months, without 8undavs. $'2 pays for one year for any specified day of me weea. $1 pays for six months for any specified day of the week. $1 per month (incleding Sundays) will be charged on subscriptions for a less period than three months. TO EUROPE Including Postage. DHy... , $17 jo Weekly (European Edition) 4 Of Weeklv (Domestic Edition) 2 00 NEWSDEALERS SUPPLIED, Postage Free. Daily Eaition...Two and a half cts. per Copy 8uday Edition Fou cts. per Copy. weekly Edition Two cents per Copy N. B. Not lees than 6 codim mailMttn newsdealers at wholesale rates. We allow no comm saions on subscriptions Daily Edition Address, NEW IORK HERALD, mch 19 Broadway an 1 8t. Ann N. Y. The Millionaire, PH. O BRIAN, of San Francisco, CaL, says : "Herald Oo-upound is the best Cement for broktn wares 1 ever aw. I have articles mended with it that stand as good as before they were broken." Sold by all drag guts and country merchant, or tf jour drug gist but t got it, or wont send for it send 1 cents for a bottle to T FATRI. Sola Maa'fr, apimt WadosbofoN.C Hfecellaneona. Q ls4 sKM H, 13, 16, So. Front St, Deviled Ham. 5 POUND FACKVGES, ONLY T5 C( PICKMCKERS and KXCDRSI well as Housekeepers, will finj thi, oat delightful as well as the cheapest li .cy ever offered. GEOKGE MYgftfl, Sol. Ant Cm, Sweet .Mash Whiskey! WE GUARANTEE THIS WH18t sold at $3.00 per trail ill), hotrwr t. .. anr Whiskey sold in the market at f 5 oo gallon. We invite special attention to thena GEORGE MYEKH, Sole Agent ., Wholesale' Buyers Y-ILL DO WELL TO EXAMINE THI LARGEST AND CHEAPEST STOCK OF GROCERIES ever offered in the State, at the LOWkV PRICES. jane 20 3t GEORGR MYKkS. Schedule B Tax Rotict, THE ATTENTION of merchant udt't ders in Pender countj ia invited to tk following extract from the Revenue Lwi'f 87V: Hec 12. Every merchant, jeweler, rrw, druggist, and every other dealer, who n buy and sell goods, wares r merenandu ; whatever name or description, except locbn are specially taxed eUewhere in ibu if. shall, in addition to his ad valorem tax on t. 8t ck, pay as a license tax one tebtb of per centum on the total amount of pa ctttxt in on out of thb 8tatb, for cub oroDcntf". whether such persons herein mentioned ii purchase as principal or through an tf or c minission merchant, t very peraoon tio' ed in thus section abail, within tea din after the first day of January and Jo!; each year, deliver to the Roister o' I a sworn statement of the total auinBttoiM purchases for the preceding six aonth.-, ing on the 3 1st day of December or taajji of June Any agent or ommUsioe more&fci making such pu chases shall, for hu p i pal, make and deliver tb statement a her reqai-ed. Provided, that the periori s lioned in this section may make oat in r ing a list of their purchase, and ttv t the same before any Justice oi the Pete their ooui ty, and return said list to the istwr of Deeds ; the Kejrialer of Ded keep a b ok in which phall he record list given into him, as herein reqaired,2 shall furnish the Bherifl with a copy l r . . a r Ai . fc itsi wimin 'en aays wwr ne emm 1 i I 111. 1 j..rulrifftoCw' in. iiMauwiH wjww1""" .ii Kin. Kit ih. u;to f DomHa the ta"( braced therein. The Register ot Ddi m hare power to require the m'chaot in hie stat inent to submit hia booki W r ination to him; and erery merchant fu to render such lint, or ref using to submit his b oks for stch shall bu trnWtv of a misdemeanor, victlon shall be fined not more than. Oft? lara or imprisoned not more than rtaarj It shall further be the duty of tbe 'V deeds to prosecute every merchant re as afortsaid to the end of obtaining formation and compelling pavntest I proper tax. .... ... ii L I as will be seen tbe law iwwj - - ,4 cretion in the matter and I .hal! be c w-j to prosecute to the full extent of the 1 who fail to comply with its proviawa. I. H. WMjgL june 19 Register ef DeedsPeader The Missionary COLPORTEUR FOR THE OOAj WORTH CAROLINA AS n jlfi. HAMA ISLANDS WILL '"-3 mingtoa and the Sounds dnrisg ta of Jane ; from South Caroiiaa Cape Fear during July ; from WF to Cape .Lookout during the jj gnat ; from ape LooSont to H2f y stat l ino of V lnrinia ana no--- , ,yr aarinjr tne monui 01 ck n.ttn .... - r j uihtr SB0 1 oer; frying ran 7 ber; f rying ran L.igBMm ---Islands during the Winter fiSL0, v . 1 1' MiamoneryColK rl4 d P. O. Bmtinnue, r. Salt- a Ann Salt Baa LIVBBPOOl'11'' mow isssmaaas J. 17 ..WILLIAMS k MOW --.a- a
The Daily Review (Wilmington, N.C.)
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June 26, 1879, edition 1
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