Newspapers / The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, … / Dec. 3, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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i 0 17 T7 . . . a . 0 VOL. XXII, NO. 80. $1.00 PER YEAR. REIDSVILLE, N, C DECEMBER 3, 1909 ISSUED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYpi Sp What in m nam 7 Muck when it i a piano's nam. The name Stiaff aignifiea. s weet T one Jndisputable Excellence Fine finish For prices of Stieff and Shaw pianos write to Chas. M. Stieff Manufacturer of the Artistic Stieff, Shaw and Stieff Self-Playing Pianos. Southern Wareroom: B West Trade St., Charlotte. C. H. WILMOTH, MANAGER. (Mention this Paper.) INABRIEFFORM THE NEWS SINCE OUR LAST ISSUE CONDENSED. i Yqjj Cannot, Always judge of the qual ity of Drugs you buy. your druggist must be depend ed on to do this for you. We want you to always depend on us for this, and know that our 'reputation--for' honest reliable drug selling Is back of every ale made at this store, Fetzer & Tucker The Dependable Druggists Sparks Caught Hot From The Wires, Dealing With News Of Various Sections. Jack Johnson has refused to come below the Mason and Dixon line to fight Jeffries. Twenty thousand business men have sinned (he petition for the re-esti.ii lishnient' of horse racing and book nnikine in New Orleans tinder re stricted conditions.' The Jockey Club .will present the petition to Governor Sanders next Monday. i Six thousand five hundred miles of .railroad forming the St. Louis and ; Sun Francisco Railroad Company.gen- erally known as the Frisco, cnangeo ' hands in New York by Us severance from the Rock Island Company, with ! which it was merged In 1903. 1 Mr Jeanette Ford Stewart, the 'woman In the case of C, L. Warriner, iwho stole $013,000 from the Big IFour road declares that she has let ! ters to prove that another Big Four I official stole $r;,0,000 and that she will reveal his name when she is put on trial, John Harvard, a negro preacher, who shot and fatally injured Will D. Ilooth two miles from Cockran, Ga Wednesday afternoon.was captured by a mob of enraged citizens and burned nt n stake, more than a carload Of light wood. It Is stated, 'being .heaped about th body. One of the amendments of the ex isting liquor law of Virginia which is said will be the grounds for the in troduction of the amendment of the llvrd law will be that which w ill set a to urohiblt the shipping of llyuor from wet towns into dry territory. Under the present law this Is allowed. Miss Helen Frtck, daughter of the steel king, has engaged Miss Anna O'Neal, a poor Southern girl, to teach her singing and dancing at $400 a month with a saddle and driving hors and her own maid. Miss O'Neal wag one of the stars in the "Pirates of Penzance" ballet, given by society girls In !!0S. Miss Frick was also a member of the ballet. Horrible scones In connection with Former United States Senator T. C. Piatt was reported to be 111 when the case of Mae C. Wood for perjury was called. The case was put over until December 15. After 15 da8 of negotiating be tween the Switchmen's Union of North America and the Joint commit tee of railroad managers, represent ing 13 railroads of the northwest, a strike Involving 2.300 switchmen be came effective. Tuesday. The men demanded 6 cents more an hour and double pay for Sunday, and overtime In excess of ten hours. The men are employed by the various railroads running west and north of St., Paul and Lake Superior to the Pacific coast. Prof. J. D. Harris, principal of the Warrenton, Va.. high school, who was convicted of manslaughter and given four years in the peniten tlary ftfter bring tried at Warrenton In September on the charge of hav ing shdt and killed W. A. ThOmp son, editor of the Warrenton Virgin ian. Is to have a new trial. In th Supreme Court of Appeals Attorney General Anderson confessed error i me recent trial, ana the court re versed the decision of the Circuit court of Fauquier county and grant ed a new trial. According to the annual report of the commissioner of Internal revenue the temporance wave throughout the country Is having serious effect on revenues. Nearly eight million dol lars less booze taxes were collected this year than last. The tobacco tax es have Increased Over two million The tobacco taxes are about a auar ter as much as the llouor taxes. The cigarette, pipe, snuff, chewing tobacco nawt is increasing, and the cigars are decreasing. The commissioner est! mates that the corporation tax for next year will be fifteen millions and the following year twehty-f ve hill lions. in me sedate, detached manner characteristic of proceedings In the gnuea enamber, and in direct disre gard or tne advice df some 6t. its aDtest and oldest members, such nuseDerry, woreley. Lord James of uererord, Lord Cromer, Lord Bal four Of Burleigh, the Earl of I.vtton Lord Courtney and the Archbishops of Canterbury and York, the house of lords created a situation unnromitont. ed In English history ,at least 300 years lousing lorniai assent to the bud get Din ana referring It to the coun useii ior ;uagment, thereby, in meory, making it Illegal to collect taxes to carry on the. king's govern- TAKES HER LIFE FORMER REIDSVILLE GIRL'S DISTRESSING DEED. ment. CIST OF SAMUEL8 CASE. me guiiioiiiuug iii iummici. mi; w.. uuuyc vdrnwcu oiaist point on dit murderer, in trance may rcsuii Which Trial Court Is Reversed in lorciiiK private executions. uu gathered hours before the execu tidn and fought with the police to tt i l i 1,11 tj aiiaii , v "---;.. . was cut off a hundred rushed to diplne corporation of Danville In the handkerchiefs in the blood for sou - se F tn commonwealth vs. W. B The Supreme Court Of Appeals of Virginia a few days ago handed down an opinion reversing the Judgment of PLUn B ING HEATING We all make mistake?, but a mistake In selecting ymt plumber often proves fatal Don't make that mistake, but let me do your work. I'll absolutely guarantee your job to be put in in a perfectly sanitary manner. I'll do your beating or make you an awning. P. H . P ET T I T 114 East Market St., Phone 609 Greensboro, N. C . venlrs. - The Court of Appeals of the Dls trict of Columbia granted the peti tion of Samuel Gorapers, John Mitch ell and Frank Morrison, of the Amer ican Federation of Labor in the con tempt case against them for a stay of execution of the mandate of the court sending them to jail. The man date is .stayed indefinately, pending appeal to the United States Supreme Court. In glowing terms, Sec. Wilson, of the Agricultural Department, In his annual report pictures the results of the farmers work for the year ended June 30 last. "Most prosperous of all years Is the place to which 1909 Is entitled in agriculture," Is the way the secretary puts It. The value of farm products was $8,760,000,000, a gain of $869,000,000 over the preceed lng year. The personnel of Uncle Sam's es tablishment Is Increasing by leaps and bounds, the grand total of all Federal employes at present approximately 370,065, as against 306,141 In 1907,! an Increase in two years of 64,000 per sons, or about 20 per cent. These and other interesting facts- are orougm out in the official register, or Gov ernment "blue book" for 1909, which shortly will be Issued by the director of census. Martin Vernon, night watchman at the leaf Dlant of the American To bacco Company at Danville died Tues day afternoon at the General Hospi tal, where he had been taken on Aion day night after he had collapsed on the street, while running to sound an alarm of fire. It Is thought that the death of Mr. Vernon was due to excitement occasioned by a fire in the American Tobacco Company's plant. . '. ' . '.. iii 11 Gentlemen of refinement who take a pride in their personal appearance know tha properly laundered linen is not only desirable but absolutely essential for all full dress occasions. Men of good taste are equally as particular about the chss of laundry ihey have for use when at work. Thus they patronize us, knowing their linen will be just riht. STAR-LAUNDRY- - DANVILLE, VA. J. S. HUTCHERSON, Agt Reidsville. bamuels, convicted of murder In th second degree Judge Richard H. Card- wen, wno wrote the opinion of the court in this case, thus stated the grounds for reversal: "We do not think It at all material that the federal and State statutes impose different penalties for perjury. out ao consider it conclusive In this case that the federal statute was Intended and has the effect only to disqualify persons convicted of per jury in the federal courts to testify as a witness In the courts of the United States. I. e.. In the Federal courts; and that the Virginia statutes were Intended, and have the effect only, to disqualify persons convicted of perjury In a court of this state to testify as a witness thereafter In the courts of this State." The trial court errored, therefore, In refusing to permit Samuels to testify In a State court when he had not been convicted of perjury In a State court. This Is the gist of the decision the effect of which Is to require a trial anew of the case In the local court. Samuels cannot now be con victed of murder in the first degree, and may escape with a lighter pen alty than was Imposed in the other trial. Samuels was convicted of the mur der of Policeman Flannlgan, of Spray, The Reading Club. The T. A. R. Club met this week with Mrs. R. M. B Ellington. An in terestlng program was given to the study of "The Spy," by J. Fenimore cooper, Miss Katharine Ellington gave the Incidents that suggested his writing u, ana mere are several who are supposed to be the person he had in mind when he portrayed the charac ter Harvey Birch, the peddler spy. He was a man who had friends In both the British and American armies, and never lost an opportunity to befriend them..'",'-' t ., Mrs. Ellington gave a good, brief outline of the story, and those who had not read it felt as if they had gained just as much from her paper as they would have done by reading it. The book is one that holds the reader, but will -not bear a second perusal. There are two amusing char acters, one strong one, and matmthat are indifferent. After the business meeting, Mrs. El lington served a two-course luncheon. On next Tuesday the Club will meet with Mrs. Scott Ftllman. Ethel Norman, a Pretty and Sweet Tempered Girls, Dies From Pistol Wound. Greensboro, N. C Dec. 1 Without any previous Intimation and with no earthly motive o. her than a slight re monstrance from- a member of her family about extravagant iiidulgen Cles, Ethel Norman, seventeen year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Ndrtiian, passed her mother in the hall at 5:30 and went directly to her room and thirty minutes later pressed THE STATE NEWS revolver to her heart,' the bullet I fions. a disturber of the! national and passing through the center of her heart and death resulting instantly, the terror-stricken mother rushing Into the room just In time to see her devoted and youngest daughter breathe her last Why the young woman should be prompted to such a rash act Is beyond WAR IS IMMINENT. ' Knox Upraids Zelaya as a Disturber of Peace and as a Tyrant. A Washington dispatch says that Secretary of State Knox has returned the passports of Felipe Rodriguez, charge d'affaires of the Nicaraguan legation, with a letter scathingly de nouncing the Zelayan administration of the government of Nicaragua. The letter is definitely declared to repre sent the views of President Taft. and Is about as plain spoken as.-anything emanating from the State Department In years. : The extraordinary feature of the l..,.,.- I. 1. - . : lener is uiiu n eeeiiis u- evince an Jt i,,,i.,,.j ik, fnnarinv Intention on the part of the United a stroke of paralysis several months States to hold President Zelaya per- .,.. sonally responsibl for the alleged I ' u t ,1B nlal,p to Gov. torture and execution of the Ameri- ' " " " .. 0,.,QI1 nr ! IVltClllIl IU lUIIIIUUtC IHC otmi-i.i v i itaxter Shemwell. under sentence to ITEMS OF ALL KINDS ABOUT THE TAR HEELS. A Variety of News as Boiled Down Many Items Are of Interesting Nature. Marsden Bellamy. Sr., one of Wil mington's most distinguished attor- cans. Cannon and Groce, and exhibits the unique situation of one govern ment . holding the Chief --Executive: of mother practically as a common male factor. Zelaya is branded as a viola tor of solemn International conven- r i LUCK international peace; a tyrant whose administration has bi?en a blot upon the name of gooj government. Secretary Knox virtually announces the recognition of the Nicaraguan revolutionists,- declares it to be the conviction of the United States that the revolution represents the senti ments of a majority of the Nicara guan people, and that there is evi- tha, ,mnr.UnaUt, nfh. in -'i. '1 uontly no responsible government with ,7" ::"-. " ; 1 which the. United States can deal. He t!on,surrounded at all times by ardent ; therefore announces that all narties admirers, overwhelmed with devoted will be held accountable for their ac attentlon by her family and societv, in tions as effecting the interests 'of the very glory of youth and the ' Americans and the peace of Central . , , . , America He further Informs Senor charms which attach to a young wo- Rodriguez that while he has lost his mart, graced with the culture of re- diplomatic quality, he may still serve flnement and the best society, it Is! as an ."unofficial" channel of commun hard to attribute any cause for such d tragedy Other than that in a mo- ication with the faction which he is regarded as representing. Tins brings the crisis as near to ment of terrible despondency, brought liw-atatna of war as it could be about by the slight, but kindly remon- brought by executive action without a aennite declaration uy both nouses strance, the young woman became for the moment deranged and fired the death-dealing bullet into her heart without a full realization of its awful consequences to the aged parents and devoted relatives and friends. Miss Norman had been " up street shopping all the afternoon, getting ready to attend the marriage of a friend next week, and returning home at 6 o'clock she went directly to her room. Failing to come to supper her mother called her, receiving a re ply that she would be down in a few minutes. . Shortly afterwards the anxious mother went to her room, but receiving no alarming news, she start ed back down stairs, the report of the revolver coming before she had reach ed the bottom step. Rushing back into the room, Mrs. Norman found her daughter writhing In her own blood, death resulting almost instantly Miss Norman was one of the most popular of the younger society set.she being one of the most prominent mem bers of local society, andbeing noted throughout the State for her beauty and traits of noble womanhood. Other than a remostrance about extrava gance in purchasing clothes for. the wedding, which she planned to attend next week, there is no possible mo tive for the act of the young woman. Besides her father and mother, the following brothers and sisters survive Mrs. R. B. Boren, Pomona; James nd Richard Norman, Siokesdale; C. L. Norman and Mrs. Cleland Young, of Greenshoro. - - of Congress, which will convene next Monday. Mr. Knox's letter, in all but so many words, makes it plain that the action represents the wish and atti tude of all of the Central American States with the single exception of Honduras, Which is regarded as entire ly dominated by Zelaya. Mexico has all along shown its sympathy with the United States in this matter Just what action the consular, rep resentative of the United States in Nicaragua now enjoy, is not definitely explained. It is expected, however, that Vice Consul Caldera, who has been occupying the legation in Man agua, together with the other consuls in. that country, will' be given their passports at once. This is the usual method of procedure in cases of such action between governments. The hews of the ending of her. life by Miss Ethel Norman came as & se vere shock to people In Reidsville wl known to have reported some of them MURDERED BY MOONSHINERS? Aged Whits Man Found Dead in Dur ham Cuonty. Durham, Dec. 2. Sheriff Harward and Coroner Jordan returned tonight from Lebanon township where Jim Kimball, an old bachelor, was found with head and face crushed with an axe and partly devoured by dogs and rats. Kimball had been missing since Saturday and yesterday was seen On the floor, presumably drunk, but un doubtedly dead. Late in the night he was found, but communication with Durham could not be established. The coroner thinks he had been dead sev cral days. Recently three raids resulted In four moonshine. distilleries being captured and eleven men arrested. Kimball is serve five months in jail, to a fine Shemwell was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon. A few days ago the State farm ad vertised for bids on cottonseed irons about 200 bales to be opened on W ed nesdav. November 24. There were several bids above fifty cents and the seed sold for o212cts. This is a record breaker. Mrs. R. B. Glenn, who underwent an operation at the Charlotte sanita rium several weeks ago, nas not Deen doing so well since she returned home and she has returned to Char lotte, where she goes to re-enter the sanitarium for treatment. Sunday, November 28, had been selected as "Sanitary Sabbath" for North Carolina, but the date is post poned undl late in March to allow the State Board or neaitn to luruisn ministers with literature giving in formation on important sanitary points. As to cost of production 68 coun ties in this State show cotton pro duces at average cost of $33.39 per bale; wheat in 77 counties at 77 cents per bushel; corn in all counties at 53 cents; oats 38 cents; di counties i bacco averaged $7.71 per hundred pounds. The final dividend to depositors or the City National Bank in Greensboro v ill be paid in a few days when each depositor will have received In full th amount of his deposit. Mr. C. L. Wil liams, the receiver, who has been very successful In winding up the af fairs of the bank, has gone to Min eral Point, Wis., to take charge of a bank as receiver. On Sunday morning the telephone train dispatching system recently or dered by the Atlantic Coast Line was put into use for all trains between Richmond and Rocky Mount. The tel egraph wires over that division are practically dumb so far as train order are concerned and the telephone . Is handling all of the business, under the direction of a chief dispatcher who sits at the telephone, with the re ceiver to his ear all the time. The Supreme court sustains the Mecklenburg Superior Court In hold inir that the $1,000 tax imposed by the ieitv of Charlotte in the case of the State vs. Dannenberg, on near-oeer sa loons, is valid, thus setting at rest the prohibition forces of the State, whose leaders had declared If the pow er of cities and towns to Impose such license tax on the places was not sus tained there must be another Legisla tive campaign that jfc-ould assure to towns the power to absolutely con trol such places. Following the announcement that Guilford cotintv had been awarded the first prize of one thousand dollars Some people put the savings of years into a home and then rely on their LUCK to avoid the thousand and one chances of fire. Do You? Insurance la too cheap to warrant you in taking any surh risk. FRANCIS WOMA K, The Insurance Man W. ROBT. KELLY, CIVIL ENGINEER-SURVEYOR. Plans and Estimates Famished. Farm Surveying. Peoples Bank Building, LeaksvUle, N. C. Believes in Plenty of Air. God made the air for us to breathe. or raJier made us to breathe the air. A great many people do not seem to know this from the way they hermet ically close up the doors and windows of their sleeping' rooms and then pro ceed to manufacture an atmosphere composed mostly of the effuvia and carbonic acid gas from their own bod ies. People talk about the danger of night air. . It Is not nearly so In jurious as people believe. Besides It is the only air on hand during the night. The beasts, breathe it and are vigorous and hearty. - There ought to be a constantly flowing stream of outside air Into our rooms during sleep. We do not mean a 4raughMkwiBgopon wa. bute tneless night air should constantly come into our Bleeping apartments. Good ventilation Is better than all the drugs In the world. Rockingham News. knew her until her parents moved to Greensboro a few yeas ago. Her brother, Mr. Charlie Norman, and a sister, Mrs. Young, were to take Important parts' In the Smith Hufflnes wedding In Reidsville next week, and Miss Norman was planning to attend. Mr. Young was to be best man. . The sympathy of the entire com munity goes out to the Norman fam ily In their terrible affliction. Rockingham Teachers' Meeting. Wentworth. Nov. 30 The Rocking ham County School Teachers' ASsocia tion had a most enthusiastic meeting Yesterday two stills were taken and six young white men captured in that section. Every raid recently was made there and the old anchorite declared a few days ago that moonshiners would murder him. The six men caught yes terday, however, were not released until after the body had been found. An empty pocketbook on the floor, fire applied to his clothes and other appearances of murder for rob bery tend to make officers believe it was a case simply of robbery for money. The axe, bloody and placed under the bed.gave no doubt of wea pon, but t lie house had not been bro ken open. The robber undoubtedly here Saturday under the leadership' mt':int'tornfure H,e ho,ls,e and covpr his of the county's most excellent superin tendent, Prof. L. N. Hickerson, who 1 doing great things for the county school system. Instructive addres'sess were delivered by Messrs. Hickerson. L. C. Brogden of -Raleigh. State in spector of elementary schools. Pro- tracks. There Is no clue yet. Death at Spray. Mrs. Maggie Cook, wife of Mr. Nel son Cook, died Friday afternoon at her home at Spray after a short ill ness. She was forty-three years of feasor Shellev of the Reidsville Sem-i a Re and was a native of Henry coun- Inary, S. G. Harden of the Reidsville! ty. Mrs, Cook is survived by her hus- jrraded schools. George W. Deshax.o of: band and nine children. Spray. J. E. Crutchfield of Madison The funeral services were conducl- and. others. . " ---- led Sunday afternoon at 1 o'clock at Altogether the meeting was one of Boxwood. .Interment was made In the the most enjoyable In recent years, 'family burying grounds. m r4'sr 1 Royal Baking Powder is the greatest of time and labor savers to the pastry cook. Economizes flour, butter and eggs and makes the food digestible and healthful 'a f i Makes most healthful food No alum no lime phosphates "The only baking powder made-. from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar CHAS. O, McMICHEAL, Attorney and Counsellor at Lav, Wentworth, N. C. Practices in Stat a and Federal Courts In Madison on Saturdays. Same offio as formerly, over the Postoffice. A. L. BROOKS H. P. LANf BROOKS & LANE, Reidsville, N. C. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. ror me uet .iuu . I Carefur attention to an business eg recent New York Herald-Atlanta Jour- trugt0(j nal automobile tour between New I . .-. - York and Atlanta, there came In the 11 " mail, addressed to G. H. McKenney, treasurer of the county, a check for . one thousand dollars signed by the business manager of the Atlanta Jour nal, and payable to the county of , HI- . . -J . l.nnn,nnnnlnn r-Ilft' UUUIoru. -fttvoiuraujins i.io was a very complimentary letter. The annual renOrt of the commls- atnner nf Tntrnal Revenue discloses al-' most startling facts bearing on tne, fcUUAK II. WKcININ. JK.. iifhih a annnnaan . Saintslng & Salntins Reidsville, NC, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Practice in State and Federal Courts. Office in Bank of Reidsville building. prohibition law, which is supposed to be in effect in North Carolina. This report furnishes the very Interesting! information that the federal govern ment, through the Bureau of Internal , LAWYER. Office in Fels Building. All business intrusted to him will be Revenue issued retail nquor n looked after promptly and carefully. for the fiscal year, ending June 30 of, r r the present year, to 618 dealers. But this is not all. In prohibition North lllCXirn & fil inFWFI l' Carolina the report discloses the fact! ICD CK UUUCWCLL, that twenty-four wholesale liquor ATTYIRNFYq ATLAW ' dealer's licenses were issued during'. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, the past year. I Practice In State and Federal Courts. Dr. J. J. Hilton had a narrow es- ., ; . - cape from death Tuesday at the rail-J Offices in Reidsville and Greensboro, road crossing In Greensboro, near the mmmKmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Southern nassencer station. He was crossing the- track with his automo bile, when the crossing gates closed down for the passage of a freight train. He was In a trap, and the auto was struck, the doctor sustaining se L. L. SAPP, M. D., PRACTICING PHYSICIAN. Office at residence on Main street rlous bruises by jumping from the aut Telephone No. 146. Calls promptly re on the pavement. The maenme was .ponded to day or night. completely wrecn.eu, mm mo, 6i' tank broken. Tne gasoline poureu out, and some fool spectator threw a lighted cigarettt stump aown, it i n,, tiifinmmnhla material, set it III l.l . ' DR. J. VV. McGEHEE Office same as formerly occupied b '- . . . . tt 1 1 a I, I. ... U i ... afire and tne macnine ""i"", v ""rT j- wr"" , an before water could be poured on It. ville bmldmg. 1 i v., w n n ...'J TM FA 1 rnone ou, nesioence rauue ovi Ex-Ray and Massage Treatment. . North Carolina Day. t,, Rinte suoerlntendent of public instruct ion has designated December i7 an -Monh Carolina day,' to Deou- iorvo-1 in the nublic schools the State over and admirably gotten, up booklets containing- a programe preparea ay Mr. It. D, W, Couner, or tne tiaie torual' cniomlssion ai tne requt-ou u. , uiKrintendent Joyner, are oeing . . i ....i . , .... .1 .lilt malum t; tae couuty niiicim,-..." for. the teachers in all paru oi me , State. Some of the features of this j hnnkl. t are the' following: Gastou's famous song, "The Old North State;" "Tho Land of the Sky; Names of the Sixteen Mountain Coun ties :o Which the Day Will Be De voted;" "Cherokee Indians In the AnCDWCTHV Revolution:" "The King s Mountain irt. iu. uri--.rs.'i-i f DoTi;" "HeWeB Ot Klnoyrtejn , I ..tvaxt- Shelby, Cleveland and Sevier;" -mo r it i aiUiUA. jm au oixvujjw For Carolina;" "David Lowrie Swalm - - ' . - r , -V J)-clatrntion;" "The Western Office to. Fels Building. , Residence Carolina Railroad." Bf1P church. DR. O, J ETT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. by Office in new Ware & Somer's Building Residence at Hotel Rockingham. Phone 4 : DR. J. R. MEADOR, DENTIST. 'History and Office formerly occupied by Dr. Rom- Inger over Citisena Hank. . t . 1
The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, N.C.)
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Dec. 3, 1909, edition 1
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