Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / June 16, 1921, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 16, 1921. The Charlotte News Published By THE NKWS PUBLISHING CO. Corner Fourth and Church Sts. IV. C. DOWD Pres. and Gen. Max. JULIAN S. MILLER Editor JASPER C. IIUTTO City Editor V. M. BELL Advertising MfcT. Telephones. Business Office tlS Circulation Department 2793 Oty Editor 277 rXIKUriiU IWWIU3 , Printing House 1WU MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS. Tho Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein also are reserved. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By i Carrier. One year $15.00 Six months 5.09 Three months ' 2. .10 One month .8- One week ". : 29 By Mall. One year 8.00 Six months 4.00 Three months 2.J2 One month " . . .75 Sunday Only. (By Mail or Carrier) One year Six months 1.30 TIMES-DEMOCRAT. (Semi-Weekly) One year . 1.50 Six months 75 THURSDAY. JUNE 16,1921. THE PEOPLE ARE TO BLAME The new federal prohibition commis sioner makes his first statement after assuming office in the form of an appeal to the American people to lend the gov ernment aid in the enforcement of the laws against whiskey-making and whiskey-selling. His predecessor went out cf office with a lamentation on his 'ips a complaint that it had been almost a hopeless task to enforce the prohi bition laws so long as so many people of this country, who are rated as self respecting and respectable, lent coun tenance to infractions of prohibition laws. This is touching upon a theme upon which this newspaper has ofttimes re marked. The real peril of prohibition does not rest with these who are the flagrant violators of the law. not with tnose who are sc?f-ted in mountain fastnesses making moonshine, nor yet with those who are the runners be tween the stills and the consumers. The peril of prohibition Is that it will bo; killed in the house of its friends, that the many who proclaim its virtues and expostulate upon its benefits, will undermine it by reason of their own vio lations of laws dealing with liquor m these days. There is a large class of people who would not thimt cf violating any other law, but who seem to have no conscience at all when it comes to sneaking a little liquor away from a blind tiger. These people are not culprits. They are among the very best people in any community, but they believe in having a little whiskey around and so ardent is their belief that they propose to pro cure it by hook or crook so long as it is procurable- The destiny of the prohibition law, it seems to us, lies largely ir. the hands of such people, with the men who are good citizens, leaders, perhaps, in thir vocations and in the social, political and economic life of the country, men in whom their fellow-citizens have con fidence, men of reputation and of char acter, but such men as will still buy liquor when they want it and think nothing of it. So lone- as r manv nf thic, . , . .. ""'"- - the American people are thus givin and lending countenance to the trartic ir. moonshine, it is going to be an ex ceedingly difficult matter to enforce the Volstead law or ever to have real pro hibition in this country. That seemed to be what former Com missioner Kramer meant to say and that is exactly what the new Com missioner Haynes does say in his first pronouncement upon the duties of his office. In the face of the universal hope and belief that the world would be a better world to live in after the war, we see that the portly cucumber is still on the market. STATE IS BUILDING ROADS The State road-building authorities are moving out. Information is that contracts are either awarded or are about to be awarded for the construc tion of nearly 500 miles of hard-surfaced roads. While 500 miles is not much in contrast with the 5,600 miles which are now included under State super vision, it must be admitted that for the brief time the State highway com mission has been functioning, it is an exceptional showing. And it is a fact to be encouraged over as well as surprised at that the procession is going on without being embarrassed by financial stringencies and restrictions of any sort. The coun cil of state lias informed the highway .commission that the money will be available for the work to be done with in the reasonably near future and the highway commission is proceeding on the assumption that the financial end of the burden has already been solved. It is a good thing for the industrial and economic life of the State that this -work is to be prosecuted so vigorously. The building of 500 miles of hard-surfaced roads within 'the next few months will entertain a . lot of labor that is now seeking work of any sort and thus there will be distributed, through this agency, hundreds of thousands of great-iy-needed dollars at a time when the peo ple need every cent they can lay their bands upon. -. " i ITS A FIZZLE SO FAR The Harding administration is begin ning already to reap the fruitage of a vacillating leadership in the Presi dent himself. Mr. Harding is trying to be President after a fashion that will not avail in times when the coun try demands strong-minded, fearless, resolute iron-willed men to shape, a policy and then lead their countrymen to it.- Three months have elapsed since the Administration took the reins of gov ernment and nothing has yet been ac complished. The inertia of the Ameri can congress, the leaderless appear ance of things in Washington and the general incompetency of those who are positioned to accomplish something for the people have within these last few days become the subjects of impassion ed partisan attacks from the democratic side of legislative halls. It is all very pleasant to democratic palates to sip the delectable criticism which such men as Senator Pat Harri son and Senator John Sharp Williams are shooting toward the enemy, but it really is a serious situation that has developed in Washington when, with the country demanding constructive leg lation, the main task of the Adminis tration continues to be award of poli ticals pie. Mr- Harding went into office on the crest of a stream of promises,, not a one of which has as yet been con summated. He was to effect economy and we are told that jobs are still being created for the millions of repub licans -who voted in the hope of getting a job at the hands of the patronage dispensers. The tariff was promised those who wanted it and the effort, to effect a tariff has produced discord and animosity in the party ranks. The issue of a separate peace has split the republicans asunder again and on prac tically every question of paramount in terest so far developed, a fight has arisen which defeated the hope of a favorable decision. Mr. Harding is going to find some of these days that if he is to become the sort of a President which the times demands, he will have to eliminate a lot of this soft-speaking, happy-go-lucky, shilly-shallying and get down to busi ness, make himself the real head of the government, shape a definite policy for! the benefit of the people and thenj plunge straight toward it. There are too many men surrounding him who have got the idea in their heads that they are presidents pro tem, or emeri tus, or some other sort. So far as the average American is concerned, Mr. Denby need have no in vestigation of Admiral Sims. He is abundantly well known and understood already. THE REACTIONARIES Governor Morrison misses no oppor tunity to give a flailing to the reaction aries in the State arid, as a general rule, reactionaries deserve some criti cism, but we are rather disposed to b lieve that Mr. Morrison is taking thsm entirely too seriously, and condemning them without reasonable cause. North Carolina has been largely re actionary in the past and by that term we mean no opprobrium. The people are conservative in their temper and iu their conduct. They move slowly, they weigh the innovations carefully and they take their time in making up their minds as to the socalled modern reforms. That is the reason that North Carolina has not pushed itself to the front of the table long before now both lr. the matter of education and in the matter of good roads, as well as many ether enterprises which evidence a pro gressive spirit. Being traditionally disposed this way. therefore, the State is not to be expect ed to move out all at once, cut in stantly loose from all its former bear ings and go surging with the stream. There is no reason, either, to wish " juusrneut ui conser- c-.livc men in me ocate is stm need aid i A. . . vative men in the State is cu. men cauuuii win stana us in good stead and their slow-going tactics may yet avail to keep the ship of state be tween Scylla and Charybdis. The militant spirit of the progressive minded people of North Carolina is ad mirable. We are making great strides We are on the eve of a great renais sance in those developments which mean so much to the inner life of the commonwealth, but they are develop ments which will require time and to which time ought to be devoted. We are not yet ready to make a whole Bale condemnation of the reactionaries and to designate then as undesirable. Residents of Charlotte who sweltered Tuesday with the temperature at 99 ought to be thankful that they were not victims of 100 degrees' of the same sort and that in such a place as Colum bia. A SPECIAL SESSION The Legislature which met only a lew months ago lacked but a few nun dred dollars of costing the State $100. 000, which, at least, is one substantial reason that Governor Morrison should think a long while before calling an extra session of that body. While we can readily appreciate the plight in which the cities of the State find them selves by reason of their limitation in finances, it does appear that some way ought to be developed by which they can struggle along for another eighteen months, or until the next regular session of the Legislature. The mayors and city attorneys of the Municipal League are to hold forth in Raleigh Thursday when they are to confer about the proposition, chances being that they will urge the Governor to relieve them by calling a session of the Legislature, but the business men of the State are already pouring their protests into Raleigh, we are told, and urging the Governor to let the mem bers of the Legislature stay where they are for the present. A few more of these blistering days and gardens of the year 1921 will have become merely prospects. WHAT WE FOUGHT FOR ' Secretary Hughes can give Mr. George Harvey a few instructions as to what America went to war for if the eminent ambassador ia in a frame of mind to be taught. Speaking Wed nesday to his, fellow alumni of Brown University, the Secretary of State,- who has always, been a devoted partisan to the cause of world-peace and whose animosity to the Versailles treaty and the league of nations is far less acute than others of his party, uttered sent! ments which are almost synonymous .with those expressed by former Presi dent Wilson. Mr. Hughes declared vir tually that George Harvey slandered the American people and betrayed the thousands of American soldiers who so valiantly participated in the world war when the ambassador said that this nation fought because it was afraid not to fight. On the other hand, it is Mr. Hughes belief that -"our men did not go forth to fight for this nation as one of imperialis tic designs and cunning purpose or to protect a land where avarice might And its surest reward. They offered their lives and all the energies of the country were harnessed in the supreme effort, because we loved the institutions of liberty and intended to maintain them, because we hated tryanny and the bru tality and ruthlessness which found expression in the worship of force and because we found our fate linked "with that of the free peoples, who were strug gljng for the preservation of the essen tials of freedom. With them we made common cause, and, as from ope end of Lthe country to the other rang appeals in the name of civilization itself, the whole nation responded." That is the sentiment of every right thingink American. TYPHOID DIMITY For the month of May only one case of typhoid fever in Charlotte was re ported to the State board of health and only 128 cases throughout the en tire State. Durham led the cities with six cases, Winston-Salem had three, Wilmington two and Charlotte and Ral eigh, one apiece. This is a ' remarkable showing, a re markable testimonial to the anti-typhoid campaign which has repeatedly been conducted in this community and to which the people have been unusually amenable. The State board of health is elated over the showing, because it was under its auspices that the vaccination cam paigns have been conducted in the past and it is now calling attention to the fact that if it has been two years since you. had a "shot" of the anti-typhoid vaccine, it is time for you to bare your arm and take another. It is bet ter to take a thousand of them than to take a case of fever. AT LAST! That the York and Mecklenburg com missioners are about to build a long discussed bridge over the Catawba river ( will be a source of general rejoicing not only here, but oyer the stream as well. Two or three previous boards of commissioners had the problem to face, but multiplied hitches developed which have hindered this linking up of the two counties until this time when, with proper legislation and with means available, an agreement has been reached by which the structure can be built. There is only one objection we can see to politicians. It's the fact that at election they have funny dispositions. They always try to shake the hand of everybody in the land and whisper. "I'm at your command. I'll carry out your nicy see you pass, ana maice a bow, and almost scraoe the ground, and cry, "My friend, you made a vow, and you are honor bound to help me wallop Hiram Jinx and win the vote at all precincts remember I will 6" urines wnen 1 am congress uuunu. men tney pass another guy who has a pious face and wants to keep the country dry. They cry, "I'm in the race to do, away with rye and gin ana even Dottles it comes in. I am a man who battles sin and cleans out every place." They always tell the ioiks tney meet that when they are elected and put down ina ruler's seat they'll do just as expected. But once they start upon thQir reign you never hear from them again about things of a public vein. Their aim has been deflected- The capital is filled with boobs from all of our great states vho ex ercise their speaking tubes in useless hot debates. They stand upon the floor all day and argue on the price of hay and what they think an ox should weigh. They all have funny traits. Make a person understand that von are not affected when he-comes up to shake your hand that he may be elect ed. Know a man you're voting for before you let him wield the law. Hes itate to shake his paw. His acts come unexpected. Harvey and Rear Admiral Sims have opened up -our eyes with countless traits and brainless whims quite foreign, to the wise. Long ago they shook the hand of half the people in the land. It looks as they thy'll both be canned. Statesmen bring surprise Copyright 1921, By Xcwa Publishing Co. PROFITEER IN BREAD, SENATOR CAPPER SAYS Washington, June 16. Profiteering on the part of the bakers of th mo tion s bread was charged by Senator tapper, Republican, Kansas, in a speech at last, night's session of the benate, during consideration of the packers' regulation bill. A vote on the bill will be reached late today. "With a maximum cash decline in price of wheat of ;nearly 38 per cent in the year ending May 15 and a maxi mum decline in the price of flour of 40 per cent," said Senator Capper, th size of the crust the bakers of ten of the, leadinK cities of the country hand the public varies remarkably from a measly decrease of but 9 per cent in New York to a maximum reduction of only 21 per cent in Boston." COMMUNICATIONS FAVORS MARKET HOUSE Editor The" News: Tour editorial in directly against a market house in the News of June 11th issue entitled, "The Case of the Truck Man" is so con trary to general opinion and your own as expressed in your columns at dif ferent times in the past, and so de cidedly against both the farmer and the consumer that one can't help bein surprised and taking notice. The solution of the whole problem of proper local marketing of trufKing stuffs and all farm products for the ta ble is the market house. It is a suc cess every where it is conducted right and the people would not think of do ing away with it' By "conducted right" is meant first a market house and not a market lot and this market house should be centrally located, well arranged, san itary, and have all the conveniences and police protection such an institu tion should have; a special officer is Usually appointed and is called the market-inspector with police powers. The trial made several years ago on an open lot with the hot sun beating down, when it was not raining, proved that a market house would be a great success here, as well as the way the people are patronizing a box car at the present time. Furthermore, the market house is an inducement for the farm wife to exert herself and add to the line of vegetables, fruits etc., such things as a greater variety of dairy products, jellies, dressed fowls, pies, home-made mince meats, and many other things, some of which this mar ket never heard of for the lack of encouraging the making and selling of these food stuffs. Undoubtedly the merchants have de cided they do not want a market house but how far they would go in opposing one is another question, but :f they looked at it in the right light, they would invest money in it, for a market house would help wonderfully to build up Charlotte. Let Charlotte become known as a good place to eat in the proper sense of the word and then "Watch Charlotte Grow". It is a well known fact that agriculturally we are away behind, so let s pull for getting out of the rut, in stead of deeper in. A CITIZEN DR. . ALEXANDER EXPLAINS. Editor The News: The expected has happened. In sending out a circular letter telling the farmers something about the Federal Farm Bureau, the officers of the North Carolina Farmers Union expected criti cism from certain sources. But we were not the first to expose the origin, inspiration and backing of this new so called farmers organization. It, along with other farm organizations, has been subjected to investigation by the banking and currency committee of the Lower House of Congress, Louis T McFadden, chairman. This investiga tion was prompted by a demand made by the Farmers' National Council, ashington, D. C. The Farmers Na tional Council is the lesrislativA rmrs. sentative cf some six or eight farmers' organizations, ana was appearing be fore the banking and currency commit tee of the House urging certain legis lation for financial relief of the farm ers of the nation. Mr. Benjamin C. Marsh, secretary, was asked by Chair man McFadden what organizations he represented, and how the Farmers Na tional Council was financed. Mr. Marsh requested the committee to summons officials of all the farm organizations to appear before the committee and pro pound that question to all alike. This was done and a public hearing followed. Several State Unions, including Geor gia, Kentucky and North Carolina from the South, several State, Granges, the American Society of Equity, the Fed eral Farm Bureau and other organiza tions, were represented. The facts brought out in these public hearings are published in pamphlets and can ba obtained by writing your member of congress, or to Chairman McFadden. The facts brdught out by this inve?i gation show that the first Farm bu reaus were inspired and organized by Chambers of Commerce but th all local in character: that county, state anu national organizations were in " . f spirea ana promoted, not bv thp. fa ers oat by the Federal - Government through the agency of the Farm Exten sion Workers. This fact was admitted Dy ur. A. c. True of the Federal De partment or Agriculture. Dr. True also admitted that the Department did not cooperate with any otherfarm organi- .t-inuiiH man me j?arm Bureau. Dr. True is director of States' nrtn. tions' Service, Federal Department of Agriculture. He was asked by a mem- uer ot me DanKing and currency com mittee "Did you find them (the Farm Bureaus) already in existence and did you increase both the number and strength of them, or were the original organizations to a large extent made upon the inspiration and suggestion of your ceparrmentr' Dr. True answered, ' The latter is true." He was then ask ed why his department had used and helped to organize Farm Bureaus any morfe than it would help to organize the orange ana the Farmers' Union? Dr lrue answered, "Because the Farm suread, as organized, was a general or ganization, having no restriction con nected with it as regards membershiD except that which might grow out of the payment of mutual dues." In other words, the Farm Bureau is not a class organization. The word "farm" ought to be stricken out of its name. AH classes are eligible to membership; and I know men living in town and engaged in other occupations who are members of the Farm Bureau. In fact,-if the whole truth was known, it would most likely be found that a majority of the membership of the Farm Bureau or ganization are living in towns and en gaged in other business than farming. Most certainly the great bulk of the funds behind the organization has come from the Federal Department of Agri culture and BIG BUSINESS. The De partment has a director of Farm Exten sion in all the states; and there are two thousand County Demonstration Agents and eight hundred Home Dem onstration Agents; all on salary paid by governments; and all of them are behind the Farm Bureau organization. And the Farm Bureau, like the Farm Extension work, is being supported by contributions from BIG BUEINESS; as much as ten thousand dollars and fif teen thousand dollars being furnished to put over the organization in a single State. I happen to know that Sears, Roebuck and .ComDanv of Chicaeo have ! contributed to the Extension Work in tnis .piedmont section as much as a thousand dollars in a single check. 1 know the firm that handled tho ohoplr The Federal Farm Bureau is also buy ing successful leaders from other farm organizations by the payment of big salaries, as much as ten thousand dol lars per annum. Anrt it has tried in bUv some Others anrl falWl. Anfl oil the local workers in this movement are being paid for their services. And no doubt Mr. Sapiro of California was yam ior nis services. And let me say here that it is absurd to argue that marketing associations will accomplish for cotton and tobacco air they have done for citrus fruits. The conditions are not the same, the cases are not analogous at all; and the mans or instrument that solved the problem of the citrus fruit growers will not and can not solve the problems of the cotton and tobacco growers. The problem of the citrus fruit growers was purely one of .distribution, shipping fruits only where there was a demand for fruits, and thus avoiding congestion of markets. But more than half of the , cotton crop is exported and nearly half of the tobacco crop. The prices are de termined by the gambling stock ex changes of the world; and these ex changes are controlled by, and operat ed laieely in the interest of the MONEY POWERS. Cotton and tobac eo also constitute the raw material of two of the largest manufacturing en terpriaes ofthe world. Citrus fruits do not. Cotton and tobacco tare also pro duced largely on credit and call for large amounts of money in marketing. This is not the case with citrus, fruits. The men who control the money and credit of the nation will continue in the future as in the past to control the business of the nation and the prices of cotton and tobacco. And this market ing pool of the Farm Bureau, like the holding propaganda of the American Cotton Association, is a scheme of BIG BUSINESS to make the farmers carry the cotton and tobacco crops, bearing all the exDenses and taking all the risks during the perio of reiOnstructio l ? in bankrupt European countries. n there was a probability of ihi3 plan en abling the farmers to fix the prices of these crops, then the movement would not have the support of either the Fed era! Department of Agriculture or of BIG BUSINESS. The Federal Govern ment is now simply the agent of PRIVI LEGE. Why does hot the Federal Depart ment of Agriculture publish the data on cost of farm production which Dr. Spillman gathered over a series of years while he was chief of the Bureau of Farm Management? This would let the public know that staple farm crops have been sold for years at price be low the cost of production, if men, wo men and children, workers on fara.s, are to be allowed anything like a fair wage for their labor. Except for two or three years of war prices, the farm workers "of the South haze labored f.r a. bare living. But when Dr. Spillman requested permission to publish this cost data, the Secretary of Agricultu--3 refused to grant it and sa'.d "It is not the farmer's business to know what his products cost; it is his busi-iwi to pro duce." As to the American Cotton Associa tion, the facts in its origin, financial supporters and membership will 6i;ow that it was not a farmers'- organization I was in the first conve-'t'on. when the organization was launched That convention declared for an export, fi nance corporation, and "Governor" Harding of the Federal Reserve Board promised the backing of the Reserve Banks. That convention, on the de mands of the farmer delegates, agreed to continue class organizations as inde pendent units but have them cooperate on all questions of common interest through state's committees and a na? tional committee. These committees were appointed, and the majority of them were not farmers. Later on these committees met and abrogated the ac tion of the convention by abandoning the export, finance corporation, and changing the plan of organization and preparing and sending out constitution and by-laws for an entirely new organi zation composed of all classes; and money was put up to finance the move ment and expert organizers employed and offices opened in Atlanta to put over on the farmers a so-called farmers' organization headed and financed by other classes, and in which all classes were eligible to membership and solicit ed to join. This movement probably served its purpose in making the farm er "the goat" in carrying the cotton crop last fall and winter. Later on the South Carolina organization launch ed the finance corporation. The only reason we ever heard given for dropping the finance corporation was that Harding told the committees that the Reserve Banks could not back j a marketing association. We heard no I explanation as to why the committees j had changed the plan of organization i adopted by the New Orleans conven- j tio.n. j This is not intended as an attack : on our home bankers and manufactur ers. I believe they are largely the vic tims of an infamous monetary and banking system that allows a few men to control ana monopolize the money and credit of this nation. One of the leading cotton mill men of the . Pied mont section told a friend of mine that he would have bought cotton last fall nt 35 cents and sold yarn against it, if he could have gotten the money; but he could not get the money to do it. A prominent banker of this section told a farmer friend that . the banks had been coerced into the policy of defla- w i 1 1 V. Vt III IU I-. V i l. V W . VAVi 1 CA- "Rut ho cairf "w harbors rinn't rta make a public protest for fear that we will be squeezed." He said the people must make the fight to break up this gigantic monopoly of money and credit. And I believe that one purpose of those behind this Farm Bureau movement is to arouse the hopes of the farmers in other directions and turn his attention away from the real cause of all social and economic evils, knowing that in the end those who control the money of the nation wilj control the credit of the nation and the business of the nation, including prices on all staple farm crops and prices on all manufactured commodities. Capitalism is moving every agency to prevent the working masses in field and factory, office and store, from getting together at the bal lot box. A prominent democratic law yer said to me recently, "the people will never get relief except by ballots or bullets, and every real friend of democratic government will use all hi-t power and influence to use the ballot before the people in desperation resort to bullets." The purpose of the circular Mfor of the Farmers Union and of this article is simply to tell farmers the truth; and then they can and will do as they please. H. Q. ALEXANDER. INGROWN NAIL Toe Nail Turns Out Itself if You Toughen Skin. A noted authority says that a few drops of "Outgro" upon the skin sur rounding the ingrowing nail reduces inflammation and pain and so tough ens the tender, sensitive skin under neath the toe nail, that it can not penetrate the flesh, and the nail turns naturally outward almost over night. "Outgro" is a harmlessr antiseptic manufactured for chiropodists. How ever, anyone can buy from the drug store a uny Dome containing direc tions. F. D. A. A READT FRIEND IN TIME OF TROUBLE ATTESTED BY LONG RECORDS OF "MONET FOR ASHES' ALEXANDER'S F.' B. TH6S. U . . , . .Insurance.,; ' Always Protects Never Sleeps. 25 ELK Offer For uFsdayj 1 L Aiglon D h3 $4.95 Middy m Made of the best materials such as Hague Cloth, Belgian Cloth and Middy Jean. Colors are Navy, Rose, Green, Ca det and all white. Values to $7.95. Now Voile New Voile and Dotted Swiss Frocks. A very extensive collection of these hot weather dresses have just arrived. No matter what your choice of patterns, yUJ Jt am&y satisfied in the wide range of shades and styles shown in this group at prices to suit your purse. There are values in this lot to $24.95. rice M nun tr TuJ5?.ay Friday and Saturday a Sale of Women's Hats. This season's newest shades and best styles arc included at prices that will make them hard to resist. All untrimmed shapes priced $3.98. Now $1.00 One lot of trimmed Hats. Values to $10.00. Now $3.98 Special prices on all trimmed Hats for these three days. elk: Friday9 day atur resses We have just opened a new lot of these charm ing dresses in Voiles and Tissue, all cool and fit ting, and in the wanted shades. Most women know there is nothing like them. ouse rocks d $9.95 and $12.50 ery BROS. f
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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June 16, 1921, edition 1
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