Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Dec. 26, 1917, edition 1 / Page 4
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EAT MACARONI FORDS START EASY IN COLD WEATHER If yon use our new 1918 carburetor ; 34 mile?, per gallon guarantee ; 1-3 more pow;r. Use cheapest gasoline or half kerosene. Quickly starts cold motor, even at zero and moves right off with full power. No spitting or popping. Slow speed on high. Fits exactly. At tach It yourself. 30 off list where no agents. Big profits selling our goods. We fit all motors. Write for 30 day trial offer and money back guarantee. The Air-Friction Carburetor Co. 70S Madison St. ' Dayton, Ohio Quiet Man Had a Few. There was the usual collection of drummers in the smoke room, and among them the inevitable quiet man. Conundrums had been the order of the evening and the fun waxed fast and furious. Then the quiet man spoke. "It's easy," he began, "to answer such riddles as 'Why is your hat like a baby?' which only contain one simile, but some of those with two and more are twisters. For Instance, what is the difference between the son of a mil lionaire, an organ, and a gum pot?" "I give it up," said the mustard traveler, who was generally very hot at guessing riddles. "The son of a millionaire is an heir to millions, while an organ has a mil lion airs. See?" "But what about the gum pot?" in quired the hosiery representative. "Oh, that's just where you stick," re plied the quiet msn. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure Catarrhal Deafness, and that is by a constitutional remedy. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE acts through th5 Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. Catarrhal Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is Inflamed you have a rumbling- sound or Imperfect hearing:, and when It Is entirely closed. Deafness is the result. Unless the inflammation can be re duced find this tube restored to Its nor al ' ondltlon, hearing: may be destroyed forcer. Many cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrh, which is an inflamed condition of the Mucous Surfaces. ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any a&se of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot be cured by HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. AO Druggists 75c. Circulars free. 3. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. In Indianapolis. "It it's not one thing, it's another," exclaimed an angry passenger on a College avenue car about 5:30 o'clock one evening, says the Indianapolis Kews. The car was jammed to the doors and the brakes were not work tog. This required stopping at the crossings in Massachusetts avenue by means of the reverse, which threw many off their feet. When the car reached College avenue the one hun dred or more passengers were ordered to take the next car, as the damaged car was going to the barn. The "next" car was like all the oth ers loaded to the guards. About 20 squeezed on the "next" car and about 550 were left to pay additional fares n other cars that followed at irregu lar intervals. CUTTCURA HEALS SORE HANDS That Itch, Burn, Crack, Chap and Bleed Trial Free. In a wonderfully short time in most cases these fragrant, super-creamy emollients succeed. Soak hands on re tiring in the hot suds of Cuticura Soap, fry and rub Cuticura Ointment into the hands for some time. Remove sur plus Ointment with soft tissue paper. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere. Adv. English Women in France. Hundreds of women in the British army auxiliary corps are working in France, some in the bases and others In the country quarters near base towns, states the San Francisco Argo naut. For ordinary clerical work 23s. to 27s. a vvtfcK is paid ; for superior and shorthand typists, 28s. to 32s., with overtime paid 7d. to 9d. an hour. A bonus of five pounds is paid for 12 months' service. Uniform, khaki coat frock, with stockings and shoes, are provided free. The maximum fdr board and lodging is 14s. a week. To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showing it is Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. 6o cents. Hotels Favor Conservation. More than 90 per cent of the better class hotels of the United States have signed pledges for food conservation Including one meatless day and one "wheatless day each week. Tli. ft n n i. Tk.1 T . mam mm- . uai l ut; niM tiiect neaa Anmo Cn nmp n m h. titk.n kw -- ' . . , musing nervousness or ringing in the head. There atu-e is on box. 30c. Eugene Merrill, a poor cobbler o Hornell, N. Y., sixty-six years old, has fallen heir to $100,000. When you have decided to get rid off verms or Tapeworm, use "Dead Shot," Dr. Peery-s Vermifuge. One doBe MU w ttta. Adv. Kace prejudice keeps many a dollar at of the bookmaker's hands. Some things are hard to explain an also quite unsafe. When Your Eyes Need Care Try Murine Eye Remedy Wo Smarting Jr st Era Comfort. 50 cents at Sroggists or ma.iL Write for Free Bye Book. MURINE ETJfi EKMEDY CO.. CHICAGO Many Historic Events Have Happened on New Year s Day By RENE BACH EVENTS of utmost historic im portance, many of them tragic in character, are associated with New Year's day. It was on the first day of January, 1513, that Juan Diaz de Solis, the ex plorer, coasting in a sailing vessel along the eastern shore of South America, discovered and entered the mouth of a mighty river. He called it (by reason of the date) the January river, or Rio de Janeiro, the name it bears and which is also borne by the city at its mouth, the capital of Brazil at the present time. The tragedy, in this instance, came later. Three years afterward the same adventurous explorer again en tered the river mouth. The natives were suspicious of his intentions, and when he landed they captured and killed him, and within sight of his ship roasted his body over a fire and ate it. Thus perished a man who, in his day, was reputed the ablest of living navigators. Bartholomew Esteban Murillo, great est of the Spanish painters, was born on the first day of January, 1618. For many years his services were em ployed by the churches and convents of Seville, which were enriched by his incomparable masterpieces. He earned by his art a considerable fortune. When at the height of his fame he was invited to Cadiz, and there executed his magnificent picture of St Cath erine, the mother of Jesus. Just as the work was on the point of comple tion he fell from a scaffold and was killed. It seems rather odd that history should take the trouble to record the death, on January 1, 1630, of so unim portant a person as Thomas Hobson, a carrier of Cambridge, England. He made a business of hiriug out horses. Hobson was merciful to his beasts, and enforced a rule that required for each one of them a certain measure of rest. Those which had not had their proper time of rest he would not al low to go out. "This or none," he would say, indicating the horse that was available for hire. Wtence came the familiar term, "Hobson's choice, this or none." On the first day of January, 1776, the town of Norfolk, Va., was burned, not by the British, who were threaten ing the place, but by its American in habitants. Lord Dunmore, the royal governor of the colony, having aban doned the town and sought safety on board of a ship (one of a number of vessels that were under his command in the harbor), found himself in dis tress for provisions. The frigate Liverpool, on arriving, threatened to turn her guns loose upon Norfolk, because the people refused to furnish food supplies, but In response the inhabitants set fire to their houses and even wiped out the plantations for a long distance back from the wa ter, in order that nothing in the way of subsistence might be obtainable by the enemy. Exactly five years later, on Janu ary 1, 1781, an incident very alarming to the cause of the American colon ists occurred at Morristown, N. J. It was nothing less than a revolt of, troops of the Pennsylvania line, who nad enlisted for three years' service. The term having expired, they de manded their discharge. The incipient rebellion was promptly suppressed, however. On the first day of January, 1801. the astronomer Piazzi, at Palermo, dis covered Ceres, the first of the minor planets, or so-called "asteroids," re vealed by the telescope. It is less than 500 miles in diameter. Since then a great many of these baby sis ters of the earth have been "spotted" ! by enterprising star-gazers, though none of them is so big as Ceres. One of them, Eros, is twins, two little globes revolving about each other. Up to date, 822 of these minor planets have been discovered. Here He Is, Lake Abitibi. Abitibi is an old Indian name, and yet comparatively new to most Cana dians. The building of the Transcon tinental railway made it known to people outside the comparatively small groups always interested in the Northland. Lake Abitibi lies about due north of Lake Timiskaming on the boundary between Quebec and On tario. The name means "halfway across water," due to the situation of the lake, which is about half way be tween Timiskaming and James' bay on When New Yeah's Calls Were Made Got. T&rwilliger Bluegrass Lo quitour. Folks somehow aren't as sociable As in the good old days. When, sah, a certain grace an' cha'm Distinguished social ways; Fo' instance, sah, on New Yeah's Day, When chivalry arrayed In feathas fine would gathah, sah, An New Yeah's calls were made. We greeted one anothah, sah. With smile an'cotly bow. An round the brimming punch bowl sah. We gracely mu'mu'ed "Howl" And conve-sation sparkled, sah. With wassail's kindly aid But that was in the golden days When New Yeah's calls were made. Pure nectah was that New Yeah's punch How generously it flowed! ( The season's compliments were passed; One's heaht, sah, fai'ly glowed. The recent gene'ations, sah. Old customs have betrayed But, ah those olden, golden days When New Yeah's calls were made. Paul T. Gilbert in Cartoons Magazine. The first day of January, 1810,, was made memorable in East Haddam, Conn., by a happening that was in its way wholly extraordinary. There were in the town nine unmarried young women, and it had been de cided that husbands must be found for them. Accordingly, In the spirit of an enlightened public enterprise, nine men agreed to marry them, and on the above-mentioned date all of them be came wives, an elaborate ceremony and much rejoicing signalizing the event. On New Year's day, 1914, London experienced a most remarkable fog. The city was immersed in a sea of sus pended moisture that extended for a distance of 70 miles beyond its out skirts. Business was at a standstill and many people lost their lives by falling into the Thames river and into canals. Four years later, on the first of January, 1818, the White House (which had been burned by the British troops in August, 1814) was for the first time thrown open to the public after that tragic event, at a New Year's recep tion given by President Monroe. Even then, however, the building was still undergoing repairs, which were not completed for more than a twelve month. It had newly received its first coat of white paint, to conceal the marks of fire that marred the brown ish stone of which It was built. The cost of reconstruction was $246,490. On the first day of January, 1825, Great Britain recognized the inde pendence of the South American re publics. Paul Revere, hero of the famous ride, was born January 1, 1735. Mason and Slldell, the Confederate commissioners, left Fort Warren for England January 1, 1862. President Lincoln issued his procla mation emancipating the slaves Janu ary 1, 1863. These are only a few of the many notable events that have marked New Year's day in history. To give any thing like a comprehensive list of them here could not be attempted. Some of the most important happenings of an cient times, in Rome, in Greece and elsewhere, are also associated with the first day of the year. New Year Hint. Was it Confucius or Lao-Tse who said, "Good resolutions, like fainting women, should be carried out?"- Philadelphia Ledger. Right on Time the old route followed by the voyagers of the Hudson's Bay company. A few years ago all the region about Lake Abitibi was a wilderness ; today It contains a flourishing colony of French-Canadians, who are carving farms out of, the wilderness and turn ing the timber into lumber and pulp wood. "Who is going to score the new opera you are going to produce?" "I am afraid it is going to be thf critics." ! THIS IS THE YEAR. RAISE your hat to the Glad New Year ! Raise your voice with a hopeful cheer! Make a vow that while it stays YouTl make the most of its glorious days, And What? That sort of resolve is old? Sounds like a tale too often told ? You've made it every New Year's day, Then frittered the live-long year away? Well, s'posing you have ? What's that to do With this particular year? It's new! New, you grouch, not the same old kind Of muddled up year you've left behind ! New each day and each minute too ! New; each second is fresh-laid, new! New for the things you've left undone ! New for the races you haven't run ! New for ambitions unachieved! New for mistakes unretrieved ! New for unfinished efforts too ! New for the things you mean to do ! Never one day in its bill of fare Is like another day anywhere. And if a year can be fresh and new Why in the dickens can't you be too? You can! So wash from your care-stained face Of memory's dirt the last small trace. Put on Ambition's garments bright, Light your cigar with the Future's light And say to yourself : "The old year's dead. Bury it deep! Look right ahead! Here's a New Year laid out for me, As full of chances as it can be, So out of my way and let me go! It's up to me, and by jings ! Ill show I" Then start ! And keep at it ! Hang on ! Stick ! You'll notice the difference mighty quick, And you'll find, before f s half-way through, It's the Happiest kind of a year for you ! Paul Witt. t 1 1 1 1 11 111 M I 1 1 1' mtm ggar s ilesoiutions By KIN HUBBARD . 4 1 1 1 "So We Start Off th' New Year With Lofty Resolutions. We'll Quit Drink in', or Chewin' or Smokin' or Swearin'. Maybe Our New Resolutions 'II Include All off 'Em." No sooner is th' spirit o Christ mas givin' exhausted till we're seized with th' spirit o' retrencliin' an', after a season o' spendin', with th' New Year jest around th' corner we unconsciously fall int' a retrospec tive mood an' take a personal invoice an' solemnly resolve t' make a better showin' both morally an' financially at th' close o' th' com in' year. So we start off th' New Year with lofty resolutions. "We'll quit drinkin' or chewin' or smokin' or swearin'. Maybe our new resolution 11 include all of 'em. But we never seem f think o th' many other things we might elimi nate from our program fer th' com in' year that would not only better our chances in th' hereafter but which would make th' path o' life far pleasanter fer those who by force o' circumstances are compelled f tol erate us. So let those o' us who are perfect, aside from smokin', drinkin', chew in' an' swearin', dig around a little an' see if we can't find a few things besides th' ole moss covered habits aforementioned that we could cut out with profit t' ourselves an those we mingle with. Next t' thinkin' only o' ourselves th worst habit is tryin' f save ever'thing we make. I don't know which feller a community has th' least regard fer th' one who licks up ever' penny he gits his hands on, or th' feller who holds on f ever' cent that comes his way, but I have my suspicions. He Who Toils. The average man does not love work for Its own sake. This is a truism, and a truism rather mildly worded, muses an exchange. And yet we are convinced that real laziness, real dis inclination to bodily or mental effort, is one of the rarest things in the world. Cases of it are unquestionably known to the medical profession and to the poorhouse authorities, but when the cause is not hookworm or anaemia, it is usually a too enthusiastic thermometer. I H I t"l"l"I "M '1 1 I1 1' 1 1' IHIHI iiminiinnm Lavin' beyond th' outskirts o' our incomes is another habit that is worse than either smokin' or swear in' an' a habit that is doin' much f create a widespread distrust in so ciety. Eobbin' Peter th' grocer, t' pay Paul, th' auto dealer, kin have but one result. "We never hear o' our women folk makin' any New Year's resolutions. Ther's many things they might re solve t' do besides cuttin' out eggs. Ther resolutions might have a blightin' effect on clubs an' billiard rooms an' other refuges fer th' hen pecked an' homeless, but they would help t' revive that feelin' o' lov an' respect fer women that seem f be goin' out o' style these days. Good resolutions accompanied by a great flare o' trumpets last about as long as an ice cream cone in a Turkish bath. Th' feller who boasts that he's goin' t' quit smokin' never throws his pipe very fer, an' th' fel ler who proclaims from a store box that he's thro' with th' demon rum is about as reliable as th' statesman who says he's thro' with th' Repub lican party. Let's do someLhin, original this year an' gather up a whole lot o nasty little characteristics an' try t do away with 'em fer good. We've all got 'em. If you can't find 'em ask somebuddy who knows you f point 'em out. They're there. Ther's lots o' folks who don't chew or smoke or swear er drink who carry a full line o' mean traits. I Copyright, Adams Newspaper Service.) Origin of Collie's Name. The collie's name appears to be shrouded in mystery ; but there seems to be a fairly reasonable foundation for supposing that It Is from "coll" or ""collar," on account of the broad white mark round the neck which is seen in the majority of these dogs. Chance for a Genius. Inventor "Do you want to buy my newly patented bullet-proof vest?" Financier "No ; but I'd be interested In a soup-proof vest." Puck. The mcrm CABIC She who always wants her own way is soon left to travel alone. Many a person is satisfied to rest up on the reputation of his ancestors. MORE WAYS WITH CHICKEN. We cannot afford to despise an old fowl, for there are many and appetiz ing ways to treat them. Time is al ways necessary to bring about good results. Ragout off Chick en. Clean and dis joint a large fowl. Take the dark meat, freed from skin and bone, and put It through the meat chopper. Season well with salt and pepper, a few drops of onion juice, or a clove of garlic finely minced ; then add a well-beaten egg. Make into small balls and set aside. Cover the bones and white meat with three cup fuls of boiling water and simmer gent ly until the meat is tender. Set aside, and when cooled cut the meat In dice. Blend together two heaping table spoonfuls of sweet fat and the same amount' of flour ; when well browned add very slowly two cupfuls of chicken stock and stir until it thickens, then add salt and pepper, and a quarter of a teaspoonful of curry powder. Drop in the meat balls and cook for half an hour; then add the diced meat; cook 15 minutes longer. Dish and serve with rice. Chicken Pie. A fine pie can be made using an old bird. First cook it as for a stew, adding a small slice of onion or a clove of garlic for flavor. Lay the chicken In the dish, season well and cover with the broth, not too much ; then put biscuit closely togeth er over the top, using any good baking powder biscuit recipe. There will be plenty of room for the gas to escape between the biscuit. Just before serv ing add a cupful of good thick sweet cream, making this a queen of chicken pies. Old fowls may be stewed, the bones removed and then cooked to remove all the gelatin ; pour this broth, with the addition of a little gelatin, over the chicken and mold. When cold It may be cut in neat slices, served as a salad with salad dressing or as cold sliced meat. Hard-cooked eggs may be added to the mold If desired, making a most attractive dish when cut. Chicken soup may also be made from old fowl, and as there are few flavors in soups more appetizing than chicken it Is a general favorite. One may always have a pint of broth left from almost any fowl, as It Is improved by parboiling a short while even before roasting. Not in the ciamor of the street. Not in the shouts and plaudits of the throng, But In ourselves are triumph and de feat. ARE YOUR MENUS IN A RUT? The greatest help In planning a week's menus Is the chance for vari ety, as It Is easy then to see the lack of variety. An occasional meal may be left vacant which may be filled with leftovers from a previous day. The character of the menus depends upon the people who will eat it. L Active children need hearty wholesome food, as do hungry men. Whenever a heavy main dish is served a light dessert should follow, and when a light dinner, a hearty dessert. Heavy salads fit into light luncheons and may often form the main dish, while a fruit salad makes a most ac ceptable dessert. Fat meats need acid fruits and tart flavors to cut them. Bean Soup. Cook a pint of white beans in two quarts of water until ten der, add a stalk of celery, minced, a sprig of parsley and rub through a sieve, season with bacon fat, salt, pep per, and half a cupful of sweet cream, serve hot. Lima Bean Soup. Pick over, wash and soak over night sufficient beans, then cook slowly until soft enough to rub through a sieve. Return the sift ed beans to the fire, adding a spoon ful each of flour and butter rubbed to gether, thin with hot milk, season with salt and pepper and add a little whipped cream. Any vegetable for flavor, like onion, parsley, or celery, may be cooked with the beans If de sired for flavor. Bishop Williams Corn Bread. Sift together one cuprul each of cornmeal and flour, three tablespoonfuls of sugar, a half teaspoonful of salt, a tea spoonful of cream of tartar and a half teaspoonful of soda. Add one cupful of sour cream, two eggs and beat vig orously, then . bake In a hot oven 20 minutes. If sour cream is not avail able milk may be used with the addi tion of two tablespoonfuls of short ening. Sausage and Banana. Cook link ! sausages until well done and brown, take up and in fat cook bananas cut in halves crosswise, dredge with flour, and fry a golden brown, serve the sau- j sages and bananas together. I Always have a few ramekin dishes ready to take bits of left overs. With gravy to moisten, covered with but- tered crumbs and baked they make nice luncheon dishes, and no two being alike, if it so happened, would not be I a disadvantage. "Vt . . . Ivi , eO J VlUM Q Y V4f VfWC What Service Is. The most blessed of human endeavors Is service the service that educates and builds and makes this old world a better and happier place In which to live and work. Service is the spirit of the hour. It blesses him that gives and him that gets ; it is the brotherhood of man in business ; it is the helping hand extended unselfishly; It Is bread cast upon the waters; It is a way of help ing ourselves by helping each other. The best that can be said of any man Is this: "He served others that they might better serve themselves." WWW Save 9c. Buyinor Ever Reliable UCARaBquink tablet, you "iL Jr tmm 1m k iMKkiffitfBili MTbUtfor2Sc. AtaarDrucStor SHELLS BURST THREE TIMES Explosive for Anti-Aircraft Gun h Compartments Set to Let Loose at Different Intervals. A kind-faced Britisher, not sat! fled with having one try at n Zepnl Mn or an airplane with each shot from an anti-aircraft gun, has designed and patented a progressively explodlm, shell which has three separate com partments, arranged to burst at differ! ent time Intervals, says Popular Scl ence Monthly. If the first explosion Is too early the second or the third may find the mark. Each compart ment charge gives off a different col ored light for the Information of the gunner, who knows the time intervals between the charges and the time for which the first compartment is set to burst-. By comparing the position of the red or blue or white flare with the position of the airship, the gunner cor rects his range. This performance is made possible by a shell having three separate and heavy compartments, each with its load of shrapnel and bursting chain They are connected only by a small fuse passage extending from one to the other. BOSCHEE'S GERMAN SYRUP Why use ordinary cough remedies, when Boschee's German Syrup has been used so successfully for fifty-one years in all parts of the United States for coughs, bronchitis, colds settled in the throat, especially lung troubles. It gives the patient a good night's rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration in the morning, gives nature a chance to soothe the inflamed parts, throw off the disease, helping the patient to regain his health. Sold in all civilized countries, 30 and 90 cent bottles. Adv. A Foolish Query. In a certain office building I saw the other day a placard posted near the elevator calling attention to the necessity for conserving coal, and stating that In view of such need: "Our elevator service will be re duced. Our lighting service will be re duced." At the bottom of which some tenant had foolingly written: "Will our rent be reduced, too!" Boston Post. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA. that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Stenature of ScLjLGZ'j-J'iII X .1. , . In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castorii First Chinese Woman Voter. The first Chinese woman to cast her vote in the San Francisco primaries was Mrs. Ton King-chong, wife of the first member of the Chinese communi ties in the United States to the Chi nese parliament. To Cure a Cold in One Dy Take LAXATIVH BROMO QUININM Ta&u. Drdgirists refund money if it fails to care. & W. QHOVB'S signature is on each box. 80c. Facility. "So you study French?" "Yes. I speak it fluently. But It takes an expert to understand it." Roman Eye Balsam Is an antiseptic oint ment, applied externally and not a "wash. It heala the, inflamed surfaces, providing prompt relief. Adv. It is astonishing how far a few femi nine tears will go with a man. Women hate to answer questions, but love to ask them. Do Your Cows Fail to Clean? This is a serious condition and re quires prompt attention Dr. David Roberts' Cnw ClfianerS gives quick relief. Keep It on ban and prevent the ruin of your cow. B.Hth Pnrtinl Hnmff Voierinjriu Bend for frw booklet on Ibortloo 1 Tf rfn.lnr in C..T1T !n(Il ftmti Or. David Roberts' Vet. Co., 100 Grand Avenue, Waukesha. Wit IF YOU 0WHALITTU FIELD i rn rue I a u rft SAKE run n"-- UMITmUTOfiAKElTV The Greatest Farming Opportunity of the Day Men wttr sense and energy are matting fort vines here. DR. WIMBERLY, Lumpkin, Frott Proof Cabbage Plants Barly Jer,ey and Charleston VakefieM S Early Jersey and Charleston Vakefie.d, r Re cession and Flat Dutch. Bexpress, ,800, 1,000, $2.00; 6,000 at $1.75; 10,000 up at $W0. B. HERE. Delivered parcel post 100, soc , i. $8.50. Satisfaction guaranteed. D. F. JAMISON. SUMMER VILLE. S. U PARK E R'S HAIR BALSAM A toilet pwPVirr Helps to eradicate danJ ForRertoriM Color nd Baauty to Gray or Fad" Hair. 2 KODAKS & SUPPLIES We alio do highest class of fjj!f Prices and Catalogue upon request S. Galeeki Optical C, Richmond, Vi. ft W. N. I. CHARLOTTE, NO. 52197.
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 26, 1917, edition 1
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