Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / Feb. 10, 1887, edition 1 / Page 1
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is; X T ham Rocket. L, Epnoa ahd Pbopeietor. j ; - odce: .VERSTT, WAcv 11 .'a . r f1i ' t.VH; I & company's; 8UBSCBIPTJ0X BATBS S t V- Ca year, ...U.T..., $1.50 - .75 . wix months, ...,..; j...-,.,.. Thre months,.........!, k ' All subscriptions accounts 'must "be . pajdjn advance. I-. , vV' 3 Advertising rates furnished cn ap plication. j ; ' CUPID S WAT. . . If arrows keen be;shot'ijy' eyes' -.l' 7, That might belon&to $af adiae ' .Tj,' , . If hearU be pierccq byarrows keen; . : Love's warfare fill the shifting scene,. Snow no surprise ; It's Cupid's way, theangeT-boy," . Whose irissionVvto"deceivel" destroy," ' ' - I Or bless. He never recks.the end, Tf Via Vnf. mor if Via Vmf man) 1 ' This urchin boy.' I - : : " v - I Somethink"he's demon in his birth, ,v . . A SpwH-ff-nnn the darkestcaves of earth, . 1 And say he plays with passion deep V And wins the hearts he :willJiot keep ; . : ; All, all in mirth; ' The Proposed -R. B. Tax. Dear Rocket feel sure, from iny knowledge of your uniform fair ness upon questions affecting the common weal, that'you wnTallow a few words against the ruinous pro posed tax upon the people of Rich- mond for the new railroad. We havo no objection to the building of the -winding railroad from Smith- vill, N. C.,to Bristol, Tenn., and do ot doubt but that it will be built how, without bur people-voting 13 iaxior-j consiruuiiivu. -, & A. R. R. was constructed j our county wpou. a tax 'our devoted people, and it sup $ a want and opens a way much Y needed than the new road Ve have a way ' already 'If C. R. R. to the sea and i mountains, shorter and more Mous than the new road will "iwe, lucu, Huuiu uc ,uo pverishing our people, of the means 6f ed iMn dncfaininiv ties.of nress- M march of mz r . iicuittirar and -- mecnani' im- provement -all tbis to -enrich a C3 VIZ 1 northern corporation of wealthy L; bondholders ?i What is it thhave i the temerity to ask of "Richmond county for the construction of their railroad? Why, principal and in terest, according to The Rocket, $340,000 ! Let the, good people of our county think of this. They will t- it: it U,..t tinn it i Tm iJilTC tJ jJaJ im nicjr ure w.v axxu V Rocket says it will take $8,000 a to grade and equip the railroad crnss-ties through the county, $288,000 the road will ex XconstructionT They iGzr "more o you, oh, s-lPf J.ichmonJeyasKa vou-i J-000! Wbata nrfnceivsum : wtfecompanyIt t any won ' der tbat these railroad aesara ; grown : grShe.Q s such fci f:yeit,the LauriiiVarg Exchajtte&6-at a way 75 tsfoptoif e i v6ry r the assessed "valueof .your l rmilUnglo give ' (vibirds ofyU you own., to 1 ? The roactill benefit a luals right jalpng the line Hbe value ftheir lands V : a ready. market for "t nre our people will-' selves.- their v' for the tSagainst will be ILL. amed neighbor, Jer, says : i n hunting for Bing .eeks, at - least since 5Utnto a private y lunatic . e . . ' ' ig t0 whether the a.. ,lrrpr of Miss .'loriins- .Kllv i3' iD a:pivat6:.lunatip 4 m j mnhatically that be . ... ; -:ly i.v.incr wuHwici.cvi' .3ows,; re is littlevjioubt 1 :- - - .ffii "iTc WALL, Editor and Proprietor, 4 A RAItROAD UPJHE PEE DEE. TH .BOTTQSIS QF .TBK GREAT RIVER. Its Water' Power, Fertility, Products, Cot f: ton. Wheat and Corn The Navigation of Rl very Special -Cbrrespondence of the Rdcket.r k . Little's Milm, Jan. 28,' 87, jXhe valley of the Pee Dee, from the' Montgomery lioQ-tb the Grassy Islands, covers argerea of rich and productive londsThb.bottoiris on" both, sides tf&HIteiare pla carded with large plantations. The lands are -held in extensive .bodies. The soil, where nptrCarjiecl away or inundated with safia bytverflows, is fertile and prodTRTvCdnsideTable area of wild laijfetfejairis uncul-liif ivated. If the river. was. successful- y leveed thesviorpminds might be drained. . The loam-.in l: these swamps is some feet in depth.; Yin- er oaks' and vines grovf oh the wet savannas. An attempt Lsvas made before the war . tovieveci part of :the river, but the enterprise is to6, heavy for individual effort JThehOals and falls on the river hold immense water power force enough to turn mills and factories sufficient to man ufacture the commodities of the State. " Fine mill sites are formed on the. bluffs, overlooking the river. Cotton Tactories could be erected to work up the crude products of the valley.- Thousands of spindles and Wooms could be set in motion, and villages, built up on the river to turn the cotton of the Pee Dee into man ufactured goods for foreign exporta tion and consumption. Cheap trans portation only is necessary for ship ping manufactured wares and im porting supplies to excite a busy manufacturing mart into, activity. : The principle productions of the valley are cotton, corn, wheat, oafs and barley. The com landsjtte along ine :; river side ; tne smai gram is sown on the second bottorras. The Spring rains often give wheat the rust, and the Pee Deeflour is not of very fine quality. When the corn crop is drowned out the farmers re sort to peas and hay on their wet lands. Tobacco has been success fully grown on the sandy bench lands in the fork. If the soil is suitably selected and the plants properly - cultivated, a profitable yield can be grown. Sun-cured to bacco, however, does not pay, and only barn-cured leaf finds a profit able market. Fruit near the river .side does not do well; the damps from the fogs give the fruit the blight and damage the trees ; the young apples and perches drop off, and- the trees don't live 5 long. On the Bandy table lands and hill-sides fruit grows finely, and some ' large and well selected orchards are culti vated. - Distance from market makes the, fruit of little saleable value. Grapes grow to perfection on the Pee Dee. ; The yield is prolific, when wet seasons don'j; cause the . vines to shed. Fine scuppernong vines are found, in nearly- every yard. The vines ; crow to a great length and large arbors are formed. The scup pernong is weirsuited to the valleys, and grapes of excellent quality are gathered. Some large vineyards are worked tend wine is manufactured. Grape growing and wine manufact uring could be made one of the chief industries "of the' valley. As yet the production is in its infancy the en ternrise ' is new and has not been fully or extensively tested. Califor nia makes a great deal ofnnoney by making its grapes into brandy. As the'; people will have' spirits, they may as well have a pure quality as the ' medicated, doctored stuff they get for genuine stimulants. As the Pee Dee bottoms are well suited to the scuppernong, the latter might as Jl be turned-into "Cognac." valley; produces, within ; an v twelve miles, 10,000 bales XfKX) bushels of wheat, of corn. The toduc oducts to e.d in Rockingham, RiCHHONixCQUNTTpX OA "-f?1"8 about up to the hubs of the wagon wheels. The cotton is hauled to Rockingham, after tbe crops are gathered, in the worst con- dltion Ot the roads and an inrdpm- en. siaie oi the weather. The wear on the vehicles and the damage to the mules is great. The stock are so crippled, up that they are almost worthless - for working crops. The valley - has . long beenm need of a ratlfbad to carrv its staoles to the seaboard Tlie central and southern .. rf - r . I parts -of tho county have railway ac- commodations, but northern Rich- J. J I Ti I ft,.. .11 uiujju uarnouB.t x. uas paia taxes to . assist its southern' neighbors in securing Jtransportauon conveyance . ; . . - - vcnniA nnm ki-a rn it onnt),n menus u assist 11 in ODaining me same advantage. It wants a rail- mate of the feasibility and desira road. With a majestic river cours- bility of the enterprise advocated. ing- through its plantations, with fine water powers standing idle; with a fertile valley teemins with nro- ducts, it has often asked the Nation- al Government to open up this mag- iftficent : stream to navigation, and 1 give the Pee Dee cotton An 'outlet to the sea. The national authorities have been in no hurry to heed the appeal. Surveyors have come down arid figured oh the project, and re- western rivers have received liberal ported that the cost of ite coraple- ly from the bounty of the govern- tion , would almost bankrupt the treasury of Uncle Sam. The remov- al of the shoals between Cheraw and the Grassy Islands have greatly discouraged the advocates of naviga-1 tion on the Pee Dee.-, TJie expense would be enormous. AVe can never expect the National Government to I undertake it, The uudersigned has a scheme which he thinks will relieve the Na tional exchequer of this : difficulty and accommodate the people ori the PeeDee to shipping facilities toith el seaA xne uuueuotaresuovernnieni dS.recenuv oraerea anoiner suiwev to be made of the river and a new estimate to be made of the expense his sei vices and influence in its be of perfecting navigation oh its wa- half at Washington solicited.; ters. Ine subscriber has - haa occa sionai correspondence with the engineer-in-chief at Wilmington. He now invites the attention of Captain Bixby to his proposal, and .asks him to consider well the facts submitted and act thereon in accord with the dictates of his own conscience. Be tween the mouth of Little River and the Narrows but few shoals obstruct the current of the great riven These shoals can be removed and the chan nel deepened with but little expense; Navigation will then be open on the Pee Dee between the two points' men tioned. A steamboat can (and will) be built by private enterprise and run on the big river between the en trance of Little River and the falls at tfce Narrows. A railway can be surveyed and constructed from the mouth of Little River down the val ley of the Pee Dee', and up the gorge of Mountain Creek and across the country to Bethel and ML Pleasant, extending east of the old Dockerv mansion, leaving Mason's Hill to the right, and down Hitchcock - Creek , O T . . . via Scales' mill to Rockingham Connection can there be made for the ports ot Wilmington, Charleston, Norfolk, Baltimore or Sandy Hook at New York. ' The products of the Pee Dee valley can then seek a; marl ket in any direction theya find; most desirable, and the planters can im- nort their sunnlies from any mart - most advantageous. All parts of the county will then enjoy equal shipping facilities, and the industries of the Pee Dee .valley will be stimulated; its - resources more fully developed, and its: pro ductions increased. .The railroad could be built by county bonds, or by "stock" taken by the planters in the Pee' Dee valley. If found " de sirable and convenient, , the road could be extended to Mangum, Mt. Gilead or Troy. ; If the Rockingham route is con sidered too expensive,-a shorter line from the end of navigation, on the west bank of the Pee Dee, to Liles- yille, canbe mentioned. ; The Anson te would extend along a ndge- the Carolina Central railroad. will not exceed nine miles d it is.: thought can be 1 1 graded: for: $3000 a -mik "Depofe can 'be constructed o'n:hi Pee Dfc and the cotton from the -vallevS brought down the fiver b' steamej1 rnn ha transfrraA V. ... f i v . uu iiu vaia cLUQ directed to anv nort nreferrpd Anson branch can also hniu u. & .jr. private ? enterprise. v. w W. W I To perfect this scheme of tfar- portation, in the interest of e pie of the Pee Dee vdiyjr --v bririff the immense wate'power. ol,ceDted bv the Deonle as a well o the river into operation and. stimui late the erection of mills and facto ries, the co-operation of Captain Bixjment Cin connection with the Aeri oy is uesireu. . ine wnoie scneme depends on his report. The Captain JJ J mi . . 1 1 . 1 . ,T t 11 .. 1 . is coraiaiiy invited to come up onT" pOQ Ttoa inonv u jr wms siaieu, auu jorm nis own esti That the Pee Dee is entitled to aid from the National Government in the development of its navigation is unquestioned. $250,000 was appro- pnated last year to the improveWeriment stations is to conduct ment of navigation on the Cape j iear river. rlhe Pee Dee is a larger river and its valley more fertile and productive than that of the" Cape Fear. The northeastern and north- ment 1 in the improvement 6T their navigation, and the Pee Dee claims equal 1 consideration. I think that Congress would be equally as ready to listen to the behests of the people on the Pee Dee river, and as ready to make an appropriation to its im provement as to the benefit of other nvers, whepever a proposal, practi cal in its nature and promising in its results, is reportea. uaptain Bixby and his engineers is therefore again directed to examine apn- ider-thiMiopos4tioii &bo v ed. congressman Kowiapa atten-T r tion to ine wants ana mteresu ot tnei i Pee Dee valley is also flirected, and J. N. "Ingram." A Renefaetor. If a man is a benefactor who makes two blades of grass grow where but one grew before, how much more is he a benetactor who should succeed in doubling the poultry products of this country? Such a result is in a fair way to be accomplishedand that very soon. The discovery of Sheridan's Condi tion Powder to, make hens lay, will not only result in doubling the egg product; but will revolutionize the wnoie poultry inausirv. curing me autumn of 1885 and winter of 1886, a thorough trial of Sherman s f ow der to make hens lay, was made by thousands Of intelligent poultry keepers, and the result was mostsat- lsfactorv and convincing. rot a man or woman, who made the trial got ; less than double the average number of eggs, and many got more than four times as many as they re ceived from the' same number of hens during the same time the pre vious yearAf This trial was no hap hazard .ahaif, but was as severe a test as could bo applied. The trial was made Under prescribed Tules, and every report had to be signed by the person who made the trial and then sworn to before a justice of the peace. There is therefore, no longer any doubt in the minds of intelligent poultry keepers but that a judicious use of Sherfa1i's Powder will not only I largeiyincrease the egg pro duct,! but -willii stimulate such a heath v- conditloh amongst bit3s of any name and pature, as will greatly increase the profit in raising them. This is a lrlatterTof supreme import ance to wbmenf children and inva lids, for there-is no way by which a steady cash income can be secured with so little labor . as by keeping and caring fprj poultry. I. S. John son fe Co.,.of.22 Custom House St., Boston haves published recently a book entitled 'The Farmers' Poultry Raising Guide," price 25 cents. They will however mail it postpaid to any person" sending:-60 cents for two 25 cent packs' of Sheridan's Powder, or $1.20 for a 2 lb tin can. The annoyance of a -crying baby at once ceases when Dr. Bull's Baby Sy rup is used.'"- Only those 'who have tried it know its value 4)ayfs Horse Powder, we mean. ? Price 25 cents. I- No one .can-think clearly when suffering with headache. " Dr. Bull's Baltimore Pills cure it. Onee tried alwa3Ts used; Drexels m v Bell Cologne, TERMS: February 10, 1887 - Iu the Interest of Farmers.' ovthe Charlotte,, Chronicle, v : It looks as"Aif Congress is really going to do something , of interest ard importance for the benefit of mers. It comes after many years p waiting and we trust that it is ac companied with permanency. We ve that the agricultural experi- .v-ia Liuu of Congress, will be conceived measure. : Among other things the bill directs the establish - - r": T .. . . ... : '.w . . . . o . . Agricultural Experimental Sta- tion." It also provides that where ithere are two such colleges in one State the, amount appropriated to each State and Territory for this hnrnnw n m() a venr is t.n hfiivinnl- fr 1 v y -i ly divided between them unless the State Legislature shall otherwise di rect. The object and duty of such original researches ; or to verify ex periment or physiology of plants anc inimals the.diseases to wbich they. are sOTeeiyf3atject ana thereme- dies therefor r thel! chemical com sition of useful plants ; the'eompar ative advantages of relative :crop Lping - the capacity of new plants'ot trees for acclimation : the analyst of salts 'and,WatertlhexbimcatrWnir position 6f tnanures ; the adaption and value mof grasses and forage plants ; the composition and digesti bility of the different kinds of food for domestic animals. Scientific and economic questions involved in pro duction of butter and cheese, and such i other researches or experi tnenis "bearing directly on agricultji- r?U industry of the United States1 as mayue seemed advisable. , '.tt a r wv vv vv .... Fronthe Charlotte Home-Democrat. Congress has passed the Mexican pension bill. It provides that a pen sion of eight dollars a month shall be paid to all surviving officers and enlisted men, including marines. militia and volunteers of the milita ry and naval services of the United States, who being duly enlisted, ac tually' served sixty days with the army-or navy of the United States in Mexico, or on the. coasts or frontier . i ...... thereof, or en 'route thereto, in the war with that nation , or wh o were actually engaged in battle in said war and were honorably discharged ; and to such other officers and sol diers and sailors as may have been personally named in any resolution of Congress for any specific service in said war, and the surviving wid owsof such officers and enlisted men Provided, that such widows have no remarried ; Provided that-every such officer, enlisted men or widow who is or may become 62 years o age, or who is or may become sub ject to any disabilities or dependency equivalent to so some cause pre scribed or recognized by the pension laws of the United States as suffi cient reason for the allowance of a pension, shall be- entitled to the benefits of this Act; but it shall no be held to include any person not within the rule of ago or disability or dependency herein definelcl, or who incurred such disability, while in any manner voluntarily engaged in or aiding ot abetting the late re bellion against the authority of the United States. ; Section 4,716 of the Revised Statutes is repealed, so far as it relates to this Act or to pension ers under the Act. . - The restrictions are'unreasonable and odious, and r shows the mean ness of those who insisted on them. Three C's There are three c's that seize the children and carry them off. The three c's are coughs, colds, and croup. Mothers 1 Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup saves the little one's lives! , ; - If men are suffering tortures with toothache they should not try to smile and look cool and handsorne. How much wiser to ease the pain with a bottle of Salvation OiL .Price 25 cents. . r 'r Send $1,50 and get Th Rocket $1.0 a Year in Advance; .; No. 6. Our Premiums. . . ;,The Rocket is determined to give its subscribers their money's worth ; that it does this even in its j own pages we have often been assured by its patrons, but in order, to give: a large variety of reading matter we have; arranged to offer again this year jhe following premiums, yjzid c- i m auvtnce. we will send. free of charge, the NewYork -Weekly World six months. . .The World as a newspaper is unsurpassed, and it also -contains interesting sketches stories, agricultural matter, &c. ; Or we will give Country Homes for one yearv a sixteen-page agricultural pa per published at Asheville, ' N. C. Country Homes is handsomely illus trated; and is gotten up with special reference to the wants and needs of the people of North Carolina. , Present subscribers can get the benefit of above offers by paying up arrears and for one year in advance. OUR CLUB RATES. In addition to above premiums, we have made arrangements to club the following valuable publications with,the Rocket at the prices given : The N. Y, Weekly! World, together; - ' " with its premium" History of the U. S., and the Rocket one year,. The Southern Cultivator and the ... T - -1- - A . V" $2 00 2 25 2 00 :" 2 50 e Detrmt Ifree Jrress and Kocpet eyear, ' Hie hiladelpbia Times and Rocket one year, . ; j " f. . . . The above are all standard publi cations and too well known to need any further notice irora us. The New South. rom the Baltimorean. As the late distinguished member of. the abolition party in Boston, Wendell Phillips, was wont to tell his people, the resources of the South are wonderful, and if they do not now hold the"balance of the power,'' ue a ay is not iar uisiant wueu luey will. (Advices fiom Ljnchburg, a., of Saturday last state that Botetourt county is excited over the discovery of gold and silver deposits on the ine of the Shenandoah Valley Rail road. Assays range from sixteen dollars per , ton for surface rock, to sixty dollars at a depth of fifteen 'eet. -;; . On the 15th of the present month, he Steamship, "Seminole," started from Charleston, S. C., for New York with one hundred and eight tons of pig iron trom Birmingham, Alabama. This is the first cargo of pig iron ev er shipped from Charleston, and the beginning of a trade which promises to make ..Charleston the most-im- portant shipping-port for Alabama iron on the South, Atlantic coast. With each recurring year.there are developments in the South which prom ise to render that section'of the United States the most valuable on the American continent. V Loans on Mortgage. . Cor. Ral. News and Observer.. Referring to Articles in your pa per some weeks ag regarding a low er rate of interest, I venture the sug gestion that the Legislature pass a bill declaring that loans on mortgage of real estate shall not be classed onA tn-rpd as solvent credits. For UAIM the following reasons : 1st. Because it is clearly a douJble tax on real estate, which bears the principal burden of taxation, and is unjust. ;- 2nd. Being generally so regarded but a small portion of money so invested is listed for taxation, but in terest eharged on such loans is at the highest rate, because it is liable to be tax ed under constru ction of tax-listers. ; 3rd. Recause if would put afloat in every community considerable amounts of money now deposited in banks at 4 per cent or less interest which pays no tax the banks,.hy some means, always managing' at tax listing time to have sufficient treasury notes on band to cover all their deposits. ; " . , . The legislature.can legally do this, and I believe it would Jje effective. At all eventsU ia worth fa trial, and would do more to enhance the value of xeaj- estate Anel make it more pro ductive,not.hIy. tolhe owners, but revenue collected , fron loats on T v aj! , - rra (tpu JoSr Prihtinr ; , Having recently purcb class outfit, -vte are pre' all kinds of,. .." . PliAIN ANpl JOS PRIl in the ! ; : . BEST " OP STTiv And at Living Piv , ; ; jTheOld Stotyv -? ; Fromthe N. Y, World. -A'.". Again the . old story comes Washington: f'Debt' yeductioi the month, about $9,000,000 ;'J reduction 0. It iswjustice to the pec a reproa-, to our so-caii' manship that this co things - should have cc long. During an extend business depression, in people needed to be relic unnecessary burdep, they taxed to make forced payr on "a publia debt not yetcK. bearing a rate of interest not H. man nan us large us uiey imvtj an average been compelled to payrr for the money, necessary to carry on I ? their business. If the nation hadj , ; been prosperous it would have beent! only xight to , leave for posterity to . j pay some part of the cost of a restor-' ; ed - and regenerated Union - from j which it will; receive unmeasurable benefits: Inasmuch. as the country J has suffered from , business depres-1 sion and Labor troubles, it is doubly wrong that it has been; compelled to bear the burden of wholly unnec essary taxation. ft There are only; $40,000,000 of re-f , deemable bondsnincalled. W" Four or-' dinary calls will'.wipe them S They could audfihould be paid at once from-the sjirpTus noRf, in ; the j Treasury; : - Wjlf "Congress dare " to thout providing for tax t 'V: A. Dael In the Road. Charlotte Chronicle, 3rd. 4 ' -f-, A' rumor reached ,the city yester -day that Mr. John Baker and Dr. Ji y A. Wilcox,vtwo well known citizens ; of AsVy-ttinty, fought a duel a few. -SAYtVaX'llfTTSSSi Was: wounded i tho encounter. A tele gram to the Chronicle from Hickory last night, confirmed this rumprbut did not give the particulars. ' Dr. Baker is a Democrat, and Drl r AVilcox is a Republican, both being partisans, and politicians who were v recognized, as leaders of their respect-! ive parties in Ashe county. The"Te . T-irrf rrnpa iVi'nt.j.d nri nr . t.hfi lnaf wimJ paign a bitter animosity was engenJ dered between the two men, and it seemed to increase as the days wen by. On the day of the trouble they! ' met in the public road quite unex pectedl', and as they came face to face they renewed the subject of their differences raild agreed to settle the matter by a resort to the code. They fought it out in the public road, and s Baker received a ; painful wound in the head, but we could not learn the Extent of his injury. ' il Died on His Mother's Grave, About seven years ago the mother ; of Harry M. Gettie, of Moriches, L. r 1., died, leaving the son and 2 daugh ters. The death of the mother, who was idolized by her children, was; a great blow, and seemed to jeffeCfc the son particularly. He never en tirely recovered. t 1 1 The young man i3 about 30 years, old and was in the employ' of : F? Hurd & Co., of 70 Beekman'treet, and boarded with his -sisters WiHot.-, boken. He disappeared Thursday January 20, and was not again seern alive. His body" was found near hisk ' mother's grave in the Moriches Cem. etery by Allen Barnes, Monday af ternoon, and was at once identified Death had resulted, from loss of; blood caused by a ; self-inflicted cut . ; in the radial artery of his left wrist. It is supposed that he must have ar. rived in Moriches on the Thursday t evening train and proceeded direct to the cemetery. . ' t- Coroner Edwards, of Patchogu held ani inquest Monday evening the verdict being in accordance" with the facts stated On a copy of Puck of January 19. Gettie had writtsn : what disposition he wished made of -h,is money after bis funeral ex.pen,ses . had been paid. . . , V Cooper's Eliiir.of Buchu, for tho Kidneys, the best combination ever-. used for Kidney anaSaaejy troubles" f Try it For sale" by Uzl -W. M. Fowlkes & Co. . . ( V- 1 r- " A 1 " f pi its spiendiq premiums 1 v . , r r
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 10, 1887, edition 1
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