Newspapers / Orange County Observer (Hillsborough, … / Nov. 11, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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,..eN mi NrvYA ESTABLISHED IN 1878. HILLSltORO. N. (j. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER ll. m. NEW SERIES--VOL. XII. NO. 52. ' V'lf-iriort .M.ithoritif-s !lvc -s I -d r. rescript in v.hicli they call at M.th.n tu the "v.v ihr.t physician's '.it.tioi.H f.hrjll bc written iu a ilv. hind. A Baltimore invention is designed to outwit train robbers. It is a doubU M'" lork for. '-xpress car safes. Should th ... messenger be attacked he throws - - IIO III" sfe j-,ui thr-a ). opened only at the ter"iujv station. 1 f A calculation has been made by Pro 'b -MJr Huge, sh'-.viri-r tho difference in the purehasin power of money be tween 1 an. I th,- present day." Ho -ay tht the lirst. expedition of Co himhus rost .?7:t'l) of American inuney, n v. tv moderate Nina for tin'- equip ment of three vessels, small us they Were. Columbus, ),owcvi;r, W8H paid us Admiral only at the rat' of f '520 a voir ; Iiih captains received only 3 10 a month, and i !. ,rs from 2 to 3 of) Other exi-eimes, ,,f c.(irw, wto in proportion, f,- lit I If umwy went a -rnt d.nl furth-r in th-jso day, than J l Wi'lbl III these. 'ill'1 stocking ot Alaska with re u leer - i a pronounced Hticc,. according to 1 ' "Key. I ct r Sheldon Jnakson, ' :nt'..l States Oeneral Agent of Edu tin. n in Alaska. )i 170 rcijder brourht to Alaska from Siberia last -nr but I'l-'v.-n died, while eighty fi'h.t fa-vns h,t.' Ix.rn, of which ' v'!it -;.:: w,rr living three wtM'kfi ' l ie1 r.-vtui'le stei'u t 15mi.- madt? ' . r il trips :u-r iss t la straits this .I'nm. t an d transported thirty-seven ' i ( reindi-e- ti A!a-!vM. The pnrpoHe d th" sehein" is to fiirrish .1 reliabfo supply T fond forth" i;ave and also to .'-tablish the use of the deor for vor!v ni"i inn's, A I'.Tiiviau invent r his ende tvore 1 to provid" a.iint the danT to wiiieh ves--'ls an- rpo, I 'iion in th- viein ify of i.'.h.rs (,r oth t innx-ndiie f hsions hy desiuin a metViis of stop pin,' the yesst'I Huddt'lily. A vertieilly ' i 1m : fra-u" on a post at tli" bow of ti..M,.d vl (Il its si 1", pivot"! v. in s which will "Vp iTid transversel v h n- U re pi i red. I'll" witU'H lire held 1 : tie ur n orinal position., tty 'Tii'-aus of 1 1 ! - at 1 1 1 1 . 1 to 1 for war I oroj'' d ion tii-' ir.i ui', an I oth.-reh iin eo:.;i"ct i 1 : th. free ends of wins with the - h s of th-- ves-nd. A wieeli, th" ::. 'i'ii tntsm of whieh is under the coii tr ! oi t h" i ."!-.s "in ehare, is phi'-ed 'i 1 ' i'i 1 ho'd th" eh uus.or rope ' hi ;i aetiiMte the wins. As soon av " 'i '. r approaeiu's a few turu-n of. the ..ju h will thio.v open the wins :md a l si ,t :l ,.,.. il-'t hus he ohVred to the TAvald motion of the ship which will ue a material flTcct in lirinm it to 'i .standstill. ays tlie W;1 diin.-ton Star: "Stead ily and surely the' buitn ss con.ilitions in ttiis ,., mi nt ry :ir. itnprovintr and al though m niv muimfiK'tunii fstublish-mcnt.- motile of them very important ooiieenis are still i.lle and nnjrotitn ble, if is easily prohalde that before Jnauv months the 'growth of healthy 11 Tivity will restart every wheel. That stocks are str. n.er is n less satisfac tory M.eU than the fact that many more w t'hh op- n.'d up duriin: the past week than closet! down during t hat pciod. In sum,. mstancfs rsumption has only been er,.-.ich.t about by the co-opera-ti.m .-niph.v, s ;,, recognizing the ' lMr' .' ;'''"ss t!:. truism as to half a e' t ! vastly y,,riur to no bread, H ' : ' ri bic- I compensation aul I r ' .-' t.. cnt-nt ther wit'i until iu-:r: .! :;;ia'r-. ar" ir.or? buovani t: '" " In tii- m,.:iey mnrkets ' ' r' v, l-:;ce of r. t :'.i u'tsu' c :i:b f '" I :'b';ioaii:h. volume of u- !as y,-t sr t r'-tiv what it was ntlis ao it is Iarce cnonch to be an I rctr, -i:i:i enough to ir'ri?Ate t for so:v.-- tune has boon arid o: commerce and inve.t:r:ent. r nely rapid improvement need . " ov be expected a this tnne. This " elastic sort of a country, b it it t reeovt-r i!itant!y iro:n -Ueh "-n as has eite I thrott ;1 out t ' -m!U' r. Aji even upward ten ':' ' ail that should' be looked for : !' v'' time. The causes which re- : ' s.ieh distre.ss as w ill : lake a year to be le.'UeUlbered Were m their operation aud recover v ; 'i- la t-n ami probably will bo no 1cm tivhluriv.' A HAPPV MAN. W"e know a truly happy rnftn .Kn of him w must tll ; Di lariL-htf sr.u"nd a. plensnct A? ft ) irdr's dinner n"vT says an anry word, H aiwiy wf-ins a smile An I "vryifl 1y loves him For fh sroo1r.r"s r.f hj stvlA !? alw-.iys bravand rhrful An 1 i nfvr looking blu, ip. dan r t-rowl and irrutnhU T.ik-' othf p'opl'do. lb- doesn't trvto run the world f 'pe,n a better j Ian, Ife takes things as h Rnds 'm As .1 happy j.rson "an. Although h" is'nf weAlfhy, He dnn"t worry for a eent t In .overly 'T rlhr-s He is. equally 'orifnt ; , He lokp you quarely in th eyes And-firmly grasps your hand And any at of mnnnfRs H" cm ri'ivfr understand. He's ik'v.t heard eomplaininj? And i "nrvous" not at all ; He" always i-lad to ' you And you like to have him eall The hir-ls are eyer sinking In his heart forever liht I And peaceful are his slumrers When he lays him down o' ntght. In business heH suer.(i.sfti For he's always miking friends; His home it is the sweetest And its eomfort nver en ig. His wife ean't help i,ut love him And his hildren do the sane. His n'-itsh'.ors all respect him And af prou i to spread his fame. The re.j.-n oT his hapf'inesg ( Whi.-h any.'n" fan share") AVe think it ri.tr Mt to mention For the sake of t.einj- fair : 'J his in;ple man is happier Than any kins or queens JleeausM h has the eon race To live within his means. s, II.'. I'oltfe, in Chieacro Run. MALVINA FLETCHER JW EMMA A. OrrER. HIGH of von bovs is going: after the new teacher?" saitl Kphraim Olds.- It was an ex tremely informa meeting of the West ("ary Bchool board, held in Kphraim Olds's barn for con venience. The sons' of two of the di lectors had droped in. "Ves, one of you boys ha ot to jro," Marcus Loring appended. "Your dads are too old to he driving over the country after school-ina'ams. " ' Where is she V" Wade Luring in ouired, lazily. ? Wade had "clerked it" in a larger town, "and" wore better clothea than uuv fellow in West Carv, and held a very complacent opinion of himself. "Lives dowi to Trenton," his father respond... "And what does she look like?" Wade demanded. He. was smoking a cigarette. "If she':, good-looking, you know, I might think of it." Iase hired her." said Mr. Olds, "and he's t! rnlv one that's :en Inr." J Mr. Pease was looking at Wade fioring with shrewd eyes, which twinkled a little. "Wal," he said, drily, "she ain't much to look at. A leetle too tall in the tirst place, and 'kind o big-j'intfMl ves. kind o' bony. Don't know as I ran tell jest how .. sh looks; I didn't look at her 110 more'n I could help. Sue ain't no beauty. Reckon f.he'8 niv'h on to forty. Malvina Fletcher's h r name. " "i-euc !;;. Willi i a '. : . : 1 . 1 v y in v d. , p Fh t h r. i irt, svd Wade b. rin-. "You'ii liavc to con-re-rets to Malvina ny boy. " But Hurt ! ! bllowcd bim out of th.- barn. looking anxious. He stood in soir.e awe of Wade --of his self-con- ti.len: air. hi- -ir. ine"ss. his popu- biritv wit'i the K'lris. "If cue ot ".1 has .u t " go, Tt'aae, you'd do me an immense favor" he tegan. "1 can't do it, ray boy,". said Wade, decisively. "irive fourteen miles and fourteen miles back again with an old trump? That i-n't me!" "It will use up a day about," Burt insisted, "and I'm so busy with my onions I can't spar' a day. If .m crop's going to amount to anything, it's ot,t to be attended to right along. I know" you" aren't busy just now " "Have a cigarette?" said Wade. "No? Well, I can't do it, Burt. Sorry, you know, but jally I couldn't." f An ! h- annterel awav. Hurt's father joined him later in his "thfully-tenled onion field, where ".rt was pulling weeds. "Wa le won't go, will he?" he mu1 Val, I'd go if I could, Burt, but 1 1 1 VI; now what a twentv-eight-mile .ve would do to my rheumatism. J n't htan I riding lately, somehow." "I'll go, father,'- Burt s?aid chtor I'.ilV. He was a piiet, modeet young fel w, Tf'ao tried to do the right thing, anl was not ashamed of having it .sAn that he tried to. He mined his5 handsome blue ever nnd mailed at his regretful parent. "You're a good boy, Burt," said hie father, warmly. The West Cary school was to begin fie next Mondav. At two o'clock, on Saturday afternoon, Burt drove up a shady r-treet iu Tenton village, and hitched his hoi so before an inviting '. ulo ho,;?.' pai "ito l iu dull green, with c. pretty porch, unci a little bed ol foliage-plants, and a hammock. A handsome, middle-aged woman 1 tiswere 1 his ring. "Yes, this is Mr. Fletcher's." tbe t aid. "I co;ne from West (V.ry,"-Burt ex plained. "Ah, yes' Malvina hs been expect ing you," the lady answered, smiling. "Will you take thin porch chair while you wait? It is cooler here. " "Malviua's her husband' 4 sister. RUppo e, " Burt thought, and whistled eoftly while he waited. He had but five minutes to wait, and then a strange thing occurred. A slender young girl, with chestnut hair crimped around her delicate face, with bright, dark eyes and a vivid col oring, tripped out of the house, and shook hands with him in the friendliest way. "I was all ready, you see," she said ; and her quick snflle made two distinct dimples. "Oood-bv. Tom!" She huggol and kissoci a fourteon-vear-old boy, who had brought out a big sat (hfl. Uood-hy, mamma!" another warm embrace. "I'm coming home next Saturday on the morning train. nd 1 11 get back somehow. I'll write to you before then. Good-by !' Burt took the satchel, and followed the -affectionate family group down the walk. He felt dazed. He did not know exactly w hat he was doing. When the ' blooming young lady kissed her relatives yet again at the gate, he shook hands with them both, confuHedly. Then he blushed ; but the young lady looked pleased. ' A light wind lifted the soft locks of her pretty hair, as they drove away. Burt hardly dared look at her. He did not find his vo;ce till he had turned the first corner. "So you are Miss Fletcher Malvina Fletcher?" he said, abruptly. The new teacher turned her bright eyea upon him. "Who did vou think I was?" she de manded. 5 "Nobody I nobody," Burt fait ered. ? "Thank vou!" Miss Fletcher cried, laughing; and Burt laughed. He was half afraid of this bright young creature, with her charming urettinees and her liveb wr.vs ; and yet, he felt oddly nt ease with her, she w is h cheerful and so friendly. He did not "know how he did it, but. . ommencing stammeringly, he told her of the little joke hidi Mr. Pease had conceived and successfully carried through. . "How funny!" Malvina Fletcher cried. "And how cute of him! I be lieve I shall like him. I thought I should when I saw him. I believe I can mnnage him, you know make him furnih new thinir- for the school room, and raise ray wages a dollar a week," vsh declared, merrily, her dim plee twinkling: J "I know you can !" Burt responded, wjth warmth Burt, Jhe bashful, the aetf -distrustful. "You'll have hira at your merer, too, for you'll board there. They always boar! the teach ers. We live just rouud the -corner from the Peases'?," "he added, xor timorously. "I am glad yon do," Malvina r joined, frankly, and without blu-ru. "I've a tenni court," said Burt "if vou plav?" "Oh, ye badly!"' Malvina ltngheL 1 "I am glad you do. Wt-'i !nv oait canity I'm buy jujst now' but bj sr -nions will be of! my hands before j loner, and then I'll beat you some games if I can." Onions ! How far away and uninter esting they seemed! The color in her cheeks was like that of a rose, and her eyes sparkled with pjiek sympathy and girlish enjoy ment. The su was waning .when they drove into West CarV. . Burt had stopped and bought cara mels and bananas, and the half-emptied hug reposed in a companionable way between them. c Malvina had taken her hat off, for it was warm, and? her flower-like face shone forth in all its sweetness. Therefore, when Wade Luring came driving down jhe street in his new buggy, and met Birt and the new tep.cher face to fac1, he almost dropped his lines. He stared ; his jaw dropped ; he grew red and redder. Bewilderment was depicted on his face disappoint ment, indignation. And Burt ho could not help it as he drove on, laughed. The new teacher went home at the end of the first successful week of her Labors in the West Cary school, but she did not go by train Saturday morn ing. She went in Burt Olds's pha? ton, Friday uight, after school, and ho drove back for her Sunday afternoon. It was by no means the only time she made a trip home in the same way ; nor did Burt Vhitch up" only on Fri days and Sundays. Jt became a matter of common knowledge that Burt Olds took the new teacher driving quite often on moonlight nights, and that they played checkers in Mr. Pease's parlor when they did not go driving, and did other significant things. Malvina often wrote to her mother; but a portion of a letter written early in the winter, when her second term in West Cary was half done, was the most interesting of all her loving let ters ; . "1 eiu t wait till Friday night to tell you, mamma are engaged. Yes, engaged, an 1 I am the hnppi st girl in LH'ke County or the state. I iwer could have loved, any l o ly lait P.urt, an 1 I am so glad he loves rpe. There is no'.iody like him In all the world. Mr. Wade J,oring hasn't stopped 'aotherinir me for a minute well, you know what I mean ; he has kept on asking me to no out with him whn he knew I didn't want to, an 1 last night I told him it -as no ue, and h knew wh.-.t I meant ; he khew I must l.e engage 1 to dear Burt. Burt thinks I like hi-n lst because I didn't meet Mr. Lorlng tirst. Mamma, you know "oettor, don't you? "I will tell you everything Friday. H says we must I e married in the spriftg. Oh, tn;im:na !. "Make sjme caramel eake for supper Fri 1av ni'.-ht. v.-. .n ; . l..tr. iMo-s u so much. Your i.'v.ii "Mai.vina." -s A ir lay Night. Spfier'and Wasp Fight the Death. A fierce battle for life between a large spider and a wasp was witnessed by a Fifteenth Ward man in his garden one day last week. The spider had epread his web in a corner of the fence and was patiently waiting for some thing to turn up. Suddenly a wasp flew into the web. He was firmly caught, but his desperate effort to es cape tore several holes in the flimsy network about him. Here the spider rushed out and rapidly began to repair the breaks. The wasp fought harder still and seemed to be trying to get a chance to sting his sly foe. In a minute or two the wasp lay per fectly still, as if dad. The spider rushed out and seized tke body of his. victim. The wasp, who had apparently been playing 'possum, suddenly be came very rau-?h alive, and in a flash spider and wasp were clasped in a deathlock. Th"r? was a short, fierce s-trugsrle, and both insects fell from the dilapidated web t?the gTOun 1. They Say there quite still, and the interested spectator, st-.-pin? orer them, found that both were dad. Philadelphia Record. ... " Curiom Salutations. The kings of the African c-.it ;-r your middle ringer three times as a eicn of salutation, the Japanese tkes off his slipper, whila . the Laplander . pushes his no vigfrou?!y azaint you. In Hmdoostn they saint? a man bv taking him by the iir 1, while th people of the Philippine "Inl ands take Tour hand and rub th-.r 1 fC With :t. lh" KlDk -f Teiite risxs to receive c: n.nbjc.ti.- and th r Mt .iow is to Oite j.JU. Oiil . All gold an i ttlver manufact ar 1 In Great Britia must b hall-xaar.fsL "DERKLICI'S." ABANDON F. D VKSsKLi ri:P,TiNC, OFF THi: ATLANTIC COAM". Dangers to Navigation -Mrance ami AVeinl stories of Their Object less Voyage -lluruin-j For a Year. t'HINd the list r. .e v--ar P"o 1 vessels wt rf wrecked on th Atlantic coast ot North -vmerica. ir. tzie same region find period 1."7 derelicts -i. , 'floating j ard abandon. I er 1 ft wvre reported. - The worst derelicts ar- coal-la den and j lumber-laden ships. The Intter float j the loTiget, hile 1 1 ' r arc j pirticularlv dang. Tons because thVv . . . j are fo heavy and solid. The average ! derelict floats thirty days. J Two yenrs ago the Navy lcpart- j r.ient sent the Yantie to detoy twelve wrecks which lay alonr the Atlantic coast. Sue found them all and blew them into kindling wood. The usual method is to approach a water-logged hulk in a steam luuuch, drop over tho stump of a mast a hoop of iron-with torpedoes attached and then fire tho torpedoes, from a safe distauco by electricity. The North Atlantic is the chosen drifting ground of such floating perils. Timber traders 1 ound from this coast to Europe encounter cyclones on tho wnv and are deserted bv dozens. The ! vessels used in that traffic art. com monly of an antiquated type and so rotten that only good luck keeps them on'top of the water. Happy are tho crews to be taken olf when thev meet with disaster, before thev are drowned or forced to .cannibalism, as ""in. the caso of the Thekla, of Philadelphia, reported a few months ago. Now and then it happens that some body finds a derelict w ith a valuable cargo and tows her into port, netting a large sum'in salvage. The most re markable instance of this sort was that of a British ship called the Resolute", which was one of three vessels sent to find Sir John Franklin. During the winter of 1851 she was nipped in the ice of Melville Bay the irn at sheet of water crossed the other day by Peary and was abandoned. Pour years later she was found by a New England whaler, frozen in a floe and practically Aininjured. She w as brought to New London and Congress bought her for S200,0u) -from the salvors. After 1 eing thoroughly repaireTl hhe was sent to England as a gift and token of amity to her Majesty. Years later, when she was finally condemned and broken up, the Queen had a desk made from her timbers and made it a present to the President of the United States, Mr. Cleveland uses it for his work every day at the White Houe. When a ship strikes a derelict the occurrence is not sorted, usually, because no witnesses ro left alive to tell th tale. But there have been rases where vessels have had the luck to hit such hulks and P ecape de struction. Only last year the deserted Fred B. Taylor" was cut squarely in two by th North (ierinun Lloyd steamship "Trave." For many months the bow and sb m of the abandoned eraft floated about separately in the track of commerce, the former pre senting an extraordinary appearance with bowsprit standing almost perpen dicular. Thus Iwo d relicts were made out of one.- In April, theteam--r Cuban," ai Liverp H.l, ran into a water-lugi hulk, ctitti: into it thirteen feet. Happily, she escaped with small dama-. More than three-fourths of all dere licts alonu the Atlantic coast of the United States are created by storms off Caw: Ha tt eras, a t from that neigh borhood most of thesi ftart on their strange and object! voyage. Usually they drift vtar 1 until they get about half way across the ocean, whn they pans- and swing aimlessly about in circles. Out in the mil die of tbe wide seas jt is every tody's business to destroy thm, and therefore nobody 'a. So t her" r! oat aWat until they sirk. Many of them their way into the S-ar a, which ha he a described a a "griivryard of hip.-. 1 bat v&4 t: of growing marine juant. in v.h:ch mauy querr --cie ! flihes and o'lif-r animals dwetl, !i m a sort of el ma le bv the gr at revolvins Ss ocau c-.irrent. Fin !mg thir" war is- t o z .r.si vortex, the wrecks go round a44 r jaad uatil thc.y so loaser hkit fuulciont buoyancy to keep them on the surface. Then they disappear. Nobody can tell how many of th gTcat numlw rs ol g"od shtjs which hae sailtsl away, never to lo heard from again, have been victims of dere licts. For several months durmg the ariv part of this year an abandoned hulk called the Agnes Manning lay in '' very track of the tr.iiis .M-t a nic s ets. sjlt. nft, a tour nint - I schHnor 1 ; i 'inla b-lphia csrrym '.Mi tons e. c.e. (u February 2oth she ws deserted with her masts standing and ads fnrb'd. Her crew was rescued, but the floating vessel remained a menace to thousands of lies. There v. nuM have been erv little hope f )f th - strongest steamship that struck bu u in bject. An extraordinary instance of the burning of a vessel was that of the Ada Iredale, bound from Scotland to San Francisco with a cargo of coal. Sh mis abandoned in October, l7o", neuriy 2000 miles eat of the Mar.jue fas Islands. . ner crew took to tha b is ami succeeded in reaching the Marquesas. Meanwhile the wreck, still burning, drifted westward in the ' equatorial current toTahiti, a distance ot 4'22'i miles. Finally she Was towed into port and her cargo continued to smoulder for more than a year. How ever, she was repaired eventually and is now engaged in the China trade. On January 11th, ltiV, the Co lombo I), not far from Bermuda, saw a vessel three milea over the htarboard bow. The stranger was a three-master, square rigged. When signaled ehe returned no answer. She M-emed to bo steering erratically, with nil sails set. She was- approached so do e lhat the name on her stern. "Hutch ins Bros., Nova Scotia," was easily read, but there was no sign of life on her deck. The superstition sailors refused to board her, thihking that there was something uncannv about her. The Colombo l d ive 1 by all night, the skipper 'tit siring to investi gate the mystery, but in the morning, though it had been almost dead ciim, the three-master had vanished from the face of the ocean. The crew of tho Colombo I wero terrified, leliein that they had seen the phanKun "hq, and thev thought they would never reach port alive. However, thev , to land all right and learned that tho "Hutchins Bros." had been deserted when about to sink by her men, w ho Were picked up. The case wa- quite simihir to the celebrated ion of thn Mary Celeste, which wa fmiti 1 in the Mediterranean under full sail without ft ; vk on boar 1, though n. ihirjg iir p.sr. ntlv was tie matter ";th in r and the lire in the g.ailey M n v. 4 lighted. Ihat mystery na n.-cr oiv d. The ve.-el w n.s to '.rid liito lelio a!id was seuttled y his afterward in the ( iulf of Mexico for the insurance. The drifts of some of thee derelict ire astonishing. One of the mt re markable wa that of the schooner V. L. White, abandoned in the great bliz zar 1 f lsy.. Hr traek formed a pietnr s pie feature of the pilot chsrl for m.ifiy months- From March to November she wa.s reported bv tLi.tv si x vi w jfc. Irs a cruise td ten rnonthi she tr-avers d a bstnee of neTe than r0M' milet eventually going sh..r- .n one of the Hebrides. Tli American schooner Wyer (i. Srgent drifted aVout the ocean for two vear. rtivcr big .'.VKi mds. She was load" ! with . nf'o worth .of mahogany. Sh waa sighted thirty-four times and traversed the whole Atlantic, from the wet to the est cot and from the Azores to N' i -j in iifcii'L Wa.hui;toa Star. Guerilla Omnibuses. PrivaU omnibn--a are eauh r con- riT-iMRkiuu rm.Ai la, i a f hke tilW regular orTinioi-t- .-v p?v-- fi--r in, exyting to pay a tare of four or six cent, and Cannot g t out until h? ha jwaid a quarter. There is ipj -rently no bval rdr s for the ps-. t-nger. tecau- the pirat carry m side a ign reswiing 'A hilhng any distance." Nef Orleaa Picajrut ,. The New York News boasU that Stat-a Ikrd of Fpihzation it apfxrars that the apparent vulue of teal estate, plus th- &..-H-.ed value of t:Tflik) proerty, make an aggregate of- nearly six billion dollars. This i equivalent to about one thousand dollar for erery man, womau and child in the State, or five thoa-.and dollars for an average
Orange County Observer (Hillsborough, N.C.)
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Nov. 11, 1893, edition 1
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