Newspapers / The Albemarle Observer (Edenton, … / Dec. 11, 1914, edition 1 / Page 1
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' V T" At '. - - ' - -J. . , . i - "' - r iJ - - 7 " 1. f' V. TJ7T . .. . ' - - . . ' i w . - " . - : -it - -. .. , ' - - ' k i it ''4- &Mfc- '.;';f Vol. 5. i No 50 IN THE By pa , 6 i that - nation : wnere pdvertx breaks the croifna of the queens of tbe 0ine; despair hturla a mother't' J lote ffojo its throne and hunser drives! iuuuwju vuuureu xrom in BQaOQUQoa to tan :riflrMT .: S . v.-' - i ott:these: woAen am forty-fir yeaA'ajef and over. There is not OVER "A MILLION-AND A HALF u WOMEN WORK AS FARM HAN D8 77r iaca'iji flfcl' JSij- til ; "nizLtibti : tbaj UNITED' STATES. Peter RadfonJ -,.- Lecturer . National - Farmers' . Union. Our governntfentr never faced so tre-. mendoua a problem as that now lying dormant the doors of congress and the, legislatiirea, and , which,, whett' ardusedk win shake- this nation frota Reenter to' 'circttinfere.nce, and make : civilization hide : its' face in i shame.' That probrem is women in the field;, t The -last-federal census reporta show we hdw have 1,514,000 women4 working in the field, most of them There ' were approximately a mluioh negro slaves working ; In the;, fields when liberated by , the emancipation proclamation. . We ' have ' ' freed " our: slaves and onr 1 women . have' taken; their nlaces ' ! in " bondaee. -We harv3 broken, the shackles, off the he fM Ml 9 f t. lit A million women in bondage In the southern fields form the chain-gang of7 civilization the industrial ; tragedy of the age. There is no overseer Quite so cruel as that of unrestrained greeu. t tbse, saintly mptbers of Israel stooped wih agi, drudging in ;the : field ftotiifc sssaa gun and nightenchini their dingy pillows with the tears ; erf idespair as 'their aching hearts tak4 God in-prayerx "Civilization ttiikes them a blow when? it should L givthgm a eTpwhi and; their 'onljf Meid 10 he who broke bread ' ,trith beggars nd sai;dr "Coriiie unto me all yeat are weary and heavy laden and I-wlIgive. ypArest 'p--! i'7'$f --fl. Abmrica! and the home ,of7 the ; brave Vth world's ; custodian ot chivalryi thej soutn or tne xaason , ana inxon.unevi mwwu H4 uau ngnis anu me ue- mmS: mm FiioK ARE, LONG ON P TIQW SHORT ON DIBTftl BlriONV .HIE. IIU l!ULi,...?Hl 'rf.J;vJxv:v:Tv?ur;:,?.5 ms:.u ''.'iv'-.i', TH E CUSTODIANS ipnllS!ear Sil 'ICE COTTOIl'S -- FARMcna . .-"-- Xecturer" .!! ;J'-,,S STAPLE : MUST PAT RAT. OM INTO THE COFFERS OF " C ' .' & '. til A t ' r:--: V -'-''7 "V '2 ,jS- oil rtlrtgr WlthCrlet of Stricken ..Industry, fender'.of the oppressed shall we per mit Qur, maidens fair, ip be torn from the'Vhf a'rstohVbjr the ruthlessl hand bfiflestlhy- and chained to the plow?; Shall ' wer. permit our : faithful wives, fwonr we covenanted with Qod to Cher- isn ana protect, to ve nurieu xrom me economic aistr ffroducts to'todjllAetjiaf r Oonimunlty 1 proDiem ana rtnee, war broutite'had v r '- ihasl:i bv o, lu pensate us ior our business . interests. ,V;, Bj? Peter Radford .IjecturMlpnal Parniers. Union. Xhlg Cotton has Buffered more from the 'IJuropean war than auy other a f(buiir4oss aterests ank goyernment "fough them life may attain its grears. ',-- and welded them upon- our dau-rhters.4-nomo to 'tne lestr lehi. our been dumping tons .of product in t: mosi exwuiT7-W? vr u. Mf7V1"Jr a wbrfc1 Sdctefy -has danced before the: side of agricureOTpa ment of agricutture haae tons or literature him how no 'suborned destiny; and no auctioneer's ; block quite so revolting as that of or- ganized avarice. : ,.; - The president; of the United States was recently lauded by the prjess,'and very properly so, for suggesting medi ation between the ' engineers and rail road managers in adjusting their schedule of time and pay. The engi neers threatened to strike if thelr wages were jnot. Increased from jib proximately ten to eleven ddllarsper ;day and service reduced from ten .lb : mothers dear to be driven from the old nation's earbafte can for want of a rarm 'chaiif id the cotton opatchf x :' t market. gl rescuing our citizens .fromf the r v: WlttNiv. forcerof civmat on can we,notapphr im0mMm io ow--fair Dixieland the rule of .the , WAM .. J 4u rioo Zt women, Vd;chUdren antra HmSitMSim&Zffi suffered from lack of ptoductlon,; but ip that! stings like the . lasb. of fciW; must.e a; Readjustment of . eight ;hourB jinent of the and a similar readjust OTertime whedule. Our women are working inHhe field, many of them barefooted, for less than 50 'cents ner day and theirf scheduleia tthirai: r ttmd after m dayBYsr is 1 milk the cows, slop the hogs the baby to sleep, is anyone meaiatr ilng Wer their problems' and to whom shall they threateD a. strike?: - i Congress has listened approvlnglyj 1 to those who toll at the forgeland be- hind the counter, 'and many of our1 j statesmen have smiled at the. threats and have fanned the flame of unrest amohg' industrial-laborers." But worn- ; en are as surely the final victims of iraausmai. wanare- as- inex ..are w burden-bearers in the war between na tions, &nd those who arbitrate and j mediate the differences between capi Htal and labor should not forget that j when the expenses of any industry are ''Unnecessarily, increased,, society foots jthe bill by drafting a new conslghment I of women from the home to the jBeld. j Pinch no Crumb From Women'a Crust - 'I ' j of Bread. ' 4 No financial award can be made without someone footing the. bill, and we commend 1 responsibility r ,.v -y -Z 'M.-' that the 1 producer i,wouid not supply The committee of raflroad exec- lOmYandslgM.has idnndiexpres tives, headedby Mr. Prarbul, ,,0 Statute bSka ot cr states to those who accept the of the distribution of in duatrial justice,, the still small voice of lthe woman: in the field as she pleads for mercy, and we beg that they, pinch (no crumb fiom, her crus of. bread or - . . ' . . . . ' : . a I put. another-paten upon er: raggeu garments. - ,:---h: We bear that they listen - to the i scream ol horror from tiie eagle : on i every American dollar that Is wrung J from the brow of toiling women And , hear the .Goddess , of Justice ,his at ft .Terdict that I increases the want of 'woman to satisfy the greed of man The .women behind' the counter and in the factory cry aloud for sympathy .and the press thunders out in their ; defense and J thg pulpit , pleads - ior mercy, but how about the woman In the field? Will not these powerful exponents of human rights turn their talent, energies and influence to her relief? .Will the Goddess of Libert j enthroned at Washington hold' the cal loused hand and soothe the feverish brow of her sex who sows and reaps .the nation's harvest or will she permit the male of -the species 4 to shove- women weak and weanM-from the bred-line' of industry to the back al ltyjbf poverty? : '' . Women and Children FlrsC census enumerators tell us that of uitf 1,514,000' women who work in the .fields aa farm bands 409,000 are six teen -years of 'age and under. What is the final destiny of a nation whose fu turf mothers spend, their girlhood days behind the; plow, pitching hay and hauling manure, and what is to become of. womanly culture and refinement that ' jgrace the home, charm society and enthuse man to leap to glory; In noble achieyements if our daughters are . raised In the society of the ox and the companionship of the plow ? In that strata between the ages of sixteen and forty-five are-960,000 wom en working as farm hands and many of them with suckling ' babes j tug- ling it their breastt,Vtar- drenehed 99 perppiratlon, the jseajce scale of Industry so that the women can be taken from the field or i4VA A MAAJIAihalllA .SiNj A A' Kn-'aAM 'I tamy raised, but . the: Farmers' Onion, some people have gone hungry from theday of creatldn to ffitejB&fciwtf. the . lack of . proper IstriKmon. Slight variations, in with' W membership of tent million, puts its ,. organized: forces . squarely behind 1 the issue and r we now enter upon he docket o( cjjdlizationjthe case of "The an in ine tneia" ana aesuaa an immediate triaL :-.Trrr ?iir-' i i R1ILR TO PRESIDEOT under cultivatidn. and we hc only nave this surplus areatof raw jonl phm ltrtaaaf d toemate' thajkin necessity ,.one-half the , earthrsr Mpulatibn could at" the present knopk. their iiving putof 'ihef ltrs flings for:theIr;ableVa airvice, and I shaU olter tbirnre o Zr Splf -ing Plansj ; congress -and legislative ;iseries of articles ton. co-dneration a- Zi nn th rJ!??" measures; i statesmen an .wrSers ca Tk? eloquent: expounding Saao nC1 ;mCtoalienabie rights of "Hia Majesty li SP5Sed r d presenting,- schemes .for prtserv, cWh H financial integrity of t . era. ,rope has. proved mightier than the pen a . . i in m uiirinii in '. 11 Till mi mca .Tiiwin WTPtis The American farmer is theeateStSnroductFof thi sunnvVaoiitSrli VrieSm Mtmn's'morality upon nis shoulders t forced a change in diet antf eto ?9' . h ever ha ve been bayofieted. "Values riddled w ttvhas felt the- tiineh of ahi wilil f00: u. custodian ot .the ' and markets Hartmt0fihv th inttiho another surfeited but-' the World a wbe Thas ever bee a land Tweiiow have lesi tbahaeetb the tillable land of the ;earthfce B SnOUIUerS ; hosts nf : fh MOttdml hAinf snft'oT iratn tfSsts,thjaaot,the7Jcoye fte Is more responsive to reous In rar-loss of S400.0M. a nal 1?Aae ot aPn half. its value of o to prison untU the Buut u,wu t cnurcnei at n a cost of wai. ii ri.i? ' rt.OU,vw,uuu,,wiQ: xne enai-''onmimt4ttBe--or-.thWirrtint fir CiUm ' tr3 T5;f?. i.Wi vlEiir?i fmurcn Tepresenting thirty-five of ,the ieading railroad, systems. of the nation, resent ly presented to jPresldent Wilson, ft memorandum briefly reviewing the dif ficulties now confronting the rereads, of 4the cbuntfyjand; askingfor tiwcd operation of the governmental authorf ties jand the pubUc m suprtin road credits and recogniiing an emeK gency which requires - that the rail-' roads be given additional revenues. ! ' The memorandum recites that tbje Efuropean war has resulted in general depression of business on the Amerl can continent and in the dislocation of credits at home and abroad. . .Witi revenues' decreasing and interest rates increasing the transportation systems of the country face a V most serious crisis and the ; memorandum is a strong presentation iof the candle burning at both ends and the perils : that must ultimately attend such a ; conflagration when the flames meet is apparent , to alL In their general discussion the railroad representa tives say-in part: MBy reason of less f islation and regulation by the federal government akd the forty-eight" states acting independently of each .other, is well as through the action of a strong public opinion, railroad expenses in recent years . have .vastly increased. No criticism is here made of the gen eral theory ' of governmental regula tlon,' but on. the other hand," no in genuity can relieve the cafriers of,ex penses created - thefifeby. . f President Wilson, in j transmitting 'the memorahdunVof ; tie railroad presidej td ; ,hlspubiic, I character izes it "a lucid statement of plain truth." .1 recognizing the : emerncy extraordinary, con tihuing, saiyaTt:M;; 'J.-. ;You ask meto. call the attention Of the country to the imperatiye heed that railway credits be sustained and the railroads helped in every possible way, whether,- by Tprivate coroperativeT effort Tor iiy tte. . actip wherever feasible of governmental agencies, and ; I am glad . toVo so, because I think the need.vefy. -ml;;; -' r The conference as ; certainly e, .fortunate one-for ihe natietLTSJ: tne I president r is ; to , pe . congraraiaiea ior KnTiaTiIno' ' tba Veto tft DIW WnHd flf - effort in which everyonelmay coperr, ; There are niany vimportazit prob lexns in our complex ciyilization that will yiefd , to co-operation which will hot lend themselves o arbitrary, rkl: lags of commissioha and , financing railroads is : one of them. The .man with the. money; is ;actor that can not .be eliminated from anj; business transaction and the public is an inter ested party that should always be conH suited and happily the president nas to?it:d ill to psrticipstt-ta th9 wia-J and nations and the farmer nas $een jtaed to prepuce recklessly and with out reference tp'a market, and regard less z the 'demands of the consumer. i 4 ' 'icv; Oaek ; to the Soil. 1 ' v . The city, people have been: urging ,each Other to move back to the farm, but yery f ev? oftiiemnave 5 moved. We welcome our: city cousins back to the soil and this earth' surface con tains 16,092,160,000 Idle abres of1 till- able land where , they can make a living by tickling .the earth with' a f orked stick, but we do hot need them so far as increasing production Is con cerned; W6 now have, all the producers we can use! . The city man has very erroneous : ideas of agrieultural Condi tions.! : TJie commonly accepted theory that we are short on production's all wrong. Our annual increase In pro duction fax exceedj that of our In- creue In population. . & : The -World as a Farm. ; K: x Takug the worlds as one big farm, we find twot billion uteres of land , in cultivation.'.1 "Of this amount there is approxisiately 760,000,006 acres on the .western, and 190,000,000 aeres on the eastern hemisphere, in cultivation. This estimate, of 1 course, does not In; elude grimg ; lands, c forests, : -eta where large quantities of meat are :producedC,Di S''xg 'J The wdrld!s i annual!; crop approxi mates fifteen billion bushels of ce reals, thirteen, billion :pounds of fibrei' and sixty-five million tonji of meat ' The average annual world crop for the past five Tears, compared with; the previous five years, is. as follows: 3 ' Past Half r Previous Half Crops---; fiecade. Decade. Corn (Bu. 3,934,174,000 3,403,6&5,000 WheattBu.) 3,522,769,000 Oats (Bu.) 4,120,017,000, Cotton(BaleS) 19,863,800 The world shows ' an crease'' & "cereal production of -13 per cent during the past decade, compared With th previQus five years,' while the world's population Ishows an mcrease of y:1; per cent" ; - ..V'. The gsih in prodtjctlon. far exceeds tiiat of our Increase in population, and It is saife estiifeste that thefarmer yCajv easii Incrse prod 25 per cept if a: remunerative market can be foundvifbf products: -; In? textile fibres the world . shows : a., increase during the past half decade In product tioh of 18 per cient against a popula tion nfirea8erO threer per cent ' . The.'jpeople of this .nation . should address themselves 'to the subject of 1,257,626,000 3,50815,000 1741,200 average in- cf-proiietldahd OTtIfwmS!inttf iftiweacherl .Jfe3;4a?pxaixatip3: tzi la coopsr: per annurn The' farmera of the Sn imunlcantpiiKha sat ottotsritW churche reside Mjto$o&a$ffit; f rfa:iStJIe pdwertte ot ess and the birthplace of in that ,ia noble, iThe Gardeni of t Eden wia. ia ui couniry, ana tne man wno wouia tlon.; '4 CONQRCCa 0CnCC3 DOLLAltS in- dulginq In uuxura t,iuoT - war Revenue Tgx etMOrO WtB.?er;C. . Curden. .4 yet dose .to. God mtfst first get clOfe th4 American -farnierU and frem lthe Oturej, ,',.. viewpoint of the producer, would seem i no runcTionaoT a nurai nurciwy I to justify extraonflnary, relief mea If the rurar churcher jtoiia go- nres,.eviBfi"K the point of bending the Ing to render a. service whichithis age .demands, there must .be co-operation uctweeu vom reugious, social ana eco nomic life of -the immunity. r ' The church to attain its fullest meas ure of success must enrich the lives ef the people i In, ' the community it serves; itmust build character; devel op thought' and increase the efficiency of human lifdr It must serye the so cial, business and intellectual, as well as the spiritual and moral, side of life. If religion does not make a man more capable, more useful and more just, what good is it ? . We want a practical religion,' one we can.' live by and farm by, as well as die by. Fewer and Better Churches. . Blessed . is that rural community which, has but one place of; worship. While competition is the life dt trade, it s death to the rural church and moral' starvation to the" community. Petty sectarianism ris -a scdttrge that blighta the,life,jad'the church preju dice saps the vitality of many com munities. An over-chuiched commun ity is a crime against religion, .a seri ous handicap to society and a useless tax upon ctt:'it;:' :r r While dentominations are essential and church pride , commendable, . the high teaching of universal Christiani must prevail if the rural church is to fulfill its mission to agriculture. -.1:... r We frequently have three or 5 four churches in a community which is not able to adequately support one.. Small congregations attend Services once a month ahd all fall to perform the re iigious functions of , the, community. The division 4of, religious forces and tiie breaking into fragments of moral 'efforts is ofttimes little less than a calamity and defeats the very purpose they seek to promote; v '.. , The evils of too many churches can be 'minimized by cocperation. The social- and economloJife - of a. rural community are respective units, and cannot oe successfully divided by de nominational ilnes and the churches can only" occupy tills important field by MBo-operation and.; co-ordination. M The - efficaent country church , will definitely serve its. .community- by iead ihgn all worthy efforts at community bufidingm . uniting ;the people in -all eo-operative endeavors for the gen eral welfare of the 'community and in arousinsr a' real love, for country ' life andV loyaitytd theiconntry Acme nd dthese results ,can onye .successfully accomplished' brfAtjBtel 'effort; of trs,.the c:;p$fez r Ctongrehaa Oeyled; wgr; Ux of si05,ooM)0ft Caefc a sin-Jlaranunint ollota r)a Imborireyenue Ltha ' European disturbwicer"' and "cT N Utia ' iuifTii'''i. the i heaviest cdhufor; ' hjiylnf beehmisi84a $ prpiinmfelyt50,00o;o()07ft stamp tax oa T negotiable m8truiaenta,'it lit estimated. WtU yield? 131.000,000; . a; tax on the S Capital, stock of bahka' of i Mtijm & and a tiut .da tobacco, pertu ter tickets, fete:, makes tiie remainder. ' Congfesi i 1.S8 . decid ' that ;the ' brewer, the banker and ' the; investd? must shoulder the musket audimsri!i 4v add to her, beauty must first tip tJncIJs Sam, and a doUar tJiat sesrj phature ualUtJs1alnte the flaitat Pleas-. t ure and 'Profit- the twla Serosa. , of " many wars shall figtr the. xatienB battles i and by :sa Ihteniously "ar ranged . schedule ctarr 'rgresa; i has shiftifed tie- war budget "froia -the ; smUdefsfef : KccSty ev:cl Choice . "and. Gain, touchlnj in His yarious;fa)iufic , 'tf''hlUUs4".: '4rf'!:;'.",': ? y. 'W . , 1- I tm i hafi- the lofiaa bletii its Country; that barea its : brtait & the fortteriof warad rtika tta,U2e - to preserre the ictabllitr and lnterritr -.- oi.xneiacu-a'B creuix. 'r ' . ; . The marm; pUc U . a favorite stand ' Jr war jivenjie "el- ' lecpjrs KhV trideir;li 'av rtst. fli- cial itriot HU dollar Is the . fim:t , and ih la! f'lMaLrZi3tmiina c fr f ibtaye: witi-f) sY' and money is as portant'Ta factor' l"7 naye eeeiT erecto. i.aonor- ot nerpes slain in battles, poems ha've been'writ- -tenbgiiihr their1 nobla! rdeeSii. tsd the .nation , honors (1U. soldiers iriiiier they live and places a monumUitt; teir graves wnehttlipsy le,b'fJ Utile has been said of the dollar that : . bears the burdens of war.. tX? -Hdnor 'to the Dollar tliat Dears' the Burdsna . of : War,,, 'rr . AH honor to the dollar . that : aa swers the call to arms and whan 'the;' battle is oyer, bandages the wounds v of; stricken soldiers, lays a, wreath upon the graves of fallen . heroes and ' cares for the wldywa and . column e5 press, . wants, to thank avra tress v andv,toreet;iatre operative metiiods tnecessary to per manently assistf the Marketing o sU 'farm prodtfets.- . - " ?jThe present eniergency.' presents tas grave a situation as ever confronted the constltutioi and straining business rules in order to lift ja portion of ,thp burden off - the backs ,of. the farmer, for unless something Is done tb check the Invasion of- the War . forces upon the. cotton fields, tiie pathway of the European pestilence on this continent will be strewn with mortgaged homes and famine and .poverty will stalk over the southland, filling the highways of, Industry with refugees and the bank ruptcy court , with, prisoners., . . , . : All, calamities teach as ltspons and the present crisis serves .to Illuminate the frailties of our marketing meth rods ahd the weakness of ,our credit system,! and out of the., financial an guish and travail of the cotton farmer wiir come a volume of discussion and admass of suggestions and .finally a solution of this, the biggest problem In the economic life. of. America, lit indeed, we have not already laid the foundation for at least temporary re lief. U- . V.,;.. .;v. , . -.' , More Pharaohs Needed In. Agriculture. Farm products have4 no . credit and perhapeij can. never have on a perma nent, and satisfactory, basis , unless . we build warehouses, cold storage plants, elevators, etc;, for without storage and credit .: facilities, the r. south ;. is com pelled to dump its crop on the market at harvest time. The Farmers' Unions for the past ten years persistently ad vocated the construction of storage laxities. -We have built during this perled 2,000 Warehouses with a car pacitjrpf approximately; 4,D00I000 bales and looking ! backward the results Would seem encouraging, but' looking forward, we are able to - house less than one-third of , the crop and -ware houses without a credit system lose 90 per cent of their usetnlness. The problem Ir a , gigantic one too great for ;the farmer to solye Junaided. He must have the assistance of the bank er, the merchant and the government. In production we navereached, the orphana. AH honor to tt Indmtrlci that ' bend their bacto under the burdeni of War; lift the wtiht from the shoul-. ders of the poor and build a bulwark ground the natldn,credit ; AH honor to those wno contribute to the necessities and administer to -the comforts of the Ipju who are marchmg: cool tie fever of aCicted soldiers and kneel with the crcta be- ' side dying heroes. : ' ' ?v.-: ;4- A dollar may fight Its c'Etitor tn busmess,. industries. may ctrngsle tar supremacy In trade and occupations may view; each ;- otijer with cayy or suspicion, but when the bngle. calls they bury strife and rally around the " flag, compaiiitE23' and friends, mesa; mtftes and chums, all fighting for one flag, one canae and ope cbuatrj The luxuries In' life: kye always been the sTeat1 burden-bearers in gov ernment We will mention a few of them giving the annual contrtbUtione to the nation's treasury: Liquor, $250, 000,000; tobacco, $103,00003; . sugar, $54,000,000; . .silks,' $1500.000; V dia monds, $3,S3?;0OO; ' mlUthery, iltfl 000; furs, $2,024,000 and-automobiles, 87400We-.c of Internal and custom refenue annually and $450,000,000 of thia amount classi fies as luxuriesif and tc ibijf amount x we should add the $lC0,0C9tC73 war tax now .levied. -S'Ml&M ., ' :t Tuej war tax' ia iismeilcly eiJeo tive.' Tramp , the ; industries are msrchlng ld0,CC3,000 stroni and-, beneath the starry 'flag . nigh water mark ot perfection in the ! heyrill fm the treasury arain while World's ; MstorVr but 'I our niarketing methods are most primitive' -"'"in the dWn of history we find agriculture plowing with i a forked sticky but with: "a system of warehouses under govern mental supertisiph that made the yptlans the marvel tOf civilization, fjr who has not admired the vision of 7dseph audi appiade4 the wisdom of Tadh for storing tiie surplus until demanded by' .the consumer,' - but . in, this' aae we bve' to6"mny Vloeesha ther ancit. "Hurrah tzr Urda Cira!' . - , . " . .... . . . ; ; ; :j ' Ineyery field of human activity the demand, for more competent men and , women Is growing eYery day. Cspe- dally so; In agrterature. K j ,, ... . , - ,' Home pride xalghty ;yarsat!e"t aet and the farmer ; whd; najrnone Is . carrymg a htavy ?iianAdcap..ca the oa4:tO:-sessijt iii'..!AA.AU -invited, all to cmicicaie in us iww .1:3 uarssauxuca, cs u.wRr- ' v-r,:v-r- 1 wno.tsreaw asa few r .x 1. -:
The Albemarle Observer (Edenton, N.C.)
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Dec. 11, 1914, edition 1
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