Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 13, 1922, Page 4

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e S S S e BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY BY THR BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING COMPANY @. E. GARSON, President K. H, DENU, Seoy-Mg?. ¥ " J. D. WINTER, News Editor : TELEPHONEK 922923 :—t @ntered at the Postoffice at Bemidji, Minnesota, as Second-class Mat under - Act of Congress of . March 3, 1870 MEMBER NATIONAL EDITORIAL. ASSOCIATION i Porelgn Advertising: Represeasatives & { Theis Co. Chicago, Ill, and Ne e Nu attention paid” to' “anonymous ~contributions Writers name must be knewn 't the editor, but not cessarily for piblication. ~ Communications for the ‘sskly Ploneer must 4 'office Dot later them ,'ho‘n?:.y of aach week to Insure publieation in the sir- en ue. - SUBSCAUITION RATES B By Ml 33 Dne Year .. .........96.00 80 six Months . . 380" One Week .16 Three Months . 138 THE WEEKLY PIONEER—Twelve ), published every Thursday -and sent postage paid to any eddress for, \n advance, $2.00. Unless credit 1s given this paper, only the United Pross ls entitlsd to the use for re-publication of all aews diapatches creditea to It. or otherwise oredited. and also tho local news published herein. 5 OFPICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROOCEEDINGS ——y HARDING'S PLEA ; Warren G. Harding’s plea as president of the United States before the United States Senate in favoring the disarmament conference treaties will thrill all who belicve that a definite step has been taken to wipe out the curse of war. They aro valid for the hope that this will be true. “It is not necessary for me to remind you,” the president told. the senate, “that the conference work was not directed against any power or group of powers. There were'no punishments to inflict, no rewards to bestow. Mutual consideration, and the common welfare, and the desire for world peace impelled. .The conclusions reached and the cove- nants written neither require nor contemplate com- pulsive measures against any power in the world. The offerings are free-will; the conscience is that of world opinion; the ‘observance is & matter of na- tional honor. g “These treaties leave no power despoiled. The delegates of every power participating adjourned with every right and every authority with which they came, except that which they willingly and gladly gave up to further the common cause. “I can assure you that the nine powers have been brought more ~closely . together; ' they are stauncher neighbors and friends; they have.clearer and better estimates of one another; they have seen suspicion challenged and selfishness made to. re- treat; they have keener and more sympathetie, un- derstandings and they are more strongly willnd‘{‘or right and justice in international relations than evar before.” b It hasn't been very long that such things could be said—that is, they could mot be said and" ring with the truth that now marks them. It would seem more like old times if we wero to hear Americans proudly boasting that we could win any war ever started; Great Britain harping about her rule of the waves; Japan slyly hinting at her prowess on the field of battle; Germany idolizing &n-invincible army. Those are some of the things we might hear. Instead, we have the president, spokesman for the world, telling us that the nations everywhere are bound together, not by the secret, war-budding machinations of old time diplomacy, but by the —— e Y J strong ¢ords of friendship, formed while fa face, in. open( frank discussions about the confer- \ehas mble. ! .7 Sir ‘Harty Lauder is right; the time has gone by when & man need go out on the battlefield and gat . Jilled in order to prove that he is a brave man. Senator Kellogg is “satisfied” with tne Justice Hallah is looking abwut quite Governor Preus is sitting tig]::.fflihbing Tribune. | wHAT EDITORS THIN ri¢ 0,217 THOUGHTS FIOM N 1f yom are one of those whooping it- up-for-tounty. division, you have pleuiy 0L Cusipusiye, i “You} }fyfiehaa are'glad you fi}ed,_” says'a; Bgnud man, in a letter. It all g:ight if our enemies’ don feel the same way 'about’it. el Voliva of Zion City says the world is flat. 1f he moved to.a live town like Baudette he would get over that idea. 5 5 g As a rule, the Region isn’t strong for politieians, but there is one candidate for Beltrami county rep- resentative that we think a lot of. ol A number of summer cottages near Bemidji are being occupied this winter, but the trouble with a summer cottage in winter is that it is still a summer e, i i cfll‘:fin Smith, Cass Lake Indian, who died | this week at the age of 137, drank and smoked for more than a hundred years. It was bound to get him in long run. . 3 anr. ficl’artlin filed for office on Friday, _If Mac dogsn’t make the grade he will have ibi anyway. , . ahgomem ixunt have dropped a raisin in the Bel- trami county political sitpation. It's: beginning to 4 ent. !»er(;':xer opponent for the legislature, Mr. Opsahl, writes suggesting that the two of us travel together in stumping the county in order to cut down cam- paign ‘expenses. Can 'you imagine the joy that would come to a homesteader. when two ‘caniidaces errived at; his abode at the same time to talk hiin stif? Neither can we. Have a heart, J. J. the 13th. a good Millions of people pass by a school or 2 chureh daily ‘without é’iving cither & second thought. ; Yet both-are a vita! necledssity in the lives of the men and n.of this world. i & ‘m”l";t‘e school prepares the child for its place in the social and:business world. Without the knowledge thus obtained a man or woman would be totally un- fitted for .the conflicts of life, handicapped from the cradle to the grave. | The church prepares the r‘m’nd and the heart for * the greater life to which our earthly carcer is on'y a prelude.’ It opens the door to those mysterious steps which lead upward to the realm ot eternal . glory,/the final resting place of the soul that repents of its earthly transgressions, 3 ¢ Without a second thought!—Gonvyick Banner. Billy Noonan, editor of the Baudette Region, has filed as' & “eandidate for the legislature from Bel- trami county. If Billy receives the support he is -entifled to.from Bemidji he should be elected by a large majority.—Park Rapids Journal. * He will! NOONAN FOR THE HOUSE William Tecumseh Noonam of the Faudatte Re- gion announces himself as a candidate for the house of representatives from the Dixty-second aisutict, composed of Beltrami and Koochiching counties. Besides being one of the brightest newspaper men in the state, Bill is booster extraordinary. for ail sec- tions of Northern Minnesota, but particularly for the Rainy River district. He has a aeep ana abu- ing faith in the future of that country and sines its praise eloguently and unceasingly. ~Mr. Noonan . ; knows his district and unaerstanus its needs. He | has a wide acquaintance among old members of the Uhouse, 'many of whom will be returned for the next term, and he would be a strong, influential mem- ber from the outset. Bill can be most awful seri- ous when he chooses, even if he doed make-a play- ground of his editoria: page. He is a clear thinker and_ talks to the voint, If the voters of the Sixty-second are alive to their own interbate, they wiil give Bill the b.ggest vote * of any man on the ticket.—Thief River Falls Times. i the | through the woods, | them | Cove arid Hatton | | | that were as five years to this man | of " soapstdhe, Merciful tears blinded him, and he couldn’t see. It was a compensation, a pitifully beauti- ful compenration. . . Five minutes passed, five minutes { who had never been in the presence By Hapsburg Liebe - Tlastrations by Irwin:Myers (Continued of the mauntain nignt. | work-tinie that day. ted alone 6n the way of i fn the darkuess A little aft Nl Dale ing. He wished {o what the damage trestle, and be hoped to meet Goff, or of death before. Then ho realized that he was being surronnded by kinsmen of the dead mountaineer. He looked up into their ashen, angry fhees, and they cursed him. , Big and geipping brown hands were pliced upon him; | several rifles were turned upon him. e se and spread ont his afms; and oftered his breagt o the-frowning g They. coul a Ball, or a Torrey, and learn some- | thing that would be to his advantage. | Betore he had covered two miles, he | d seen two of the enemy skulking and he recognized from Jerusalem Hell; he knew it for Torr { by their very swarthy skin, their high | cheelhones and their eoarse black { Indian blood in them. air, the outeroppings of'the Cherokee, They " looked and_wicked. ale looseneéd !in its hoister the big revolver that SEES BIG DEATH - TOLL FROMHOOCH Oteveland Chemist Declares Un- dertakers Will Have Pros- verous Year About 1926. slig™™ Meaces of Adulteriflod {Tut cllp year after year {Aom a life have been found in almost every bottle of alleged “bomded” liquor “he has an- alyzed, he asserted. “It s tvue a portion’ of the:contents of most bottles is pure bonded whisks. l’x‘hut gives it the color, flavor and ' taste,” Curtis gdded. “But the good liquor s mixed ‘with ingredients that are harmful to the human system, and the question uppermost in the minds of those who como to me for analysis of thelr liquor -is how o remove the ! ASKS PROTECTION FOR GAME Hawaiian Fish and Game Associaticn Asserts That Condition on the i " Islands Are Bad. | fTne Intest application received by the American Game I’rotective associn- tlon for club membership comes {rom Hawali. - The' Hawalian Fish ‘and Gae association has been formed by, a handful =f the sportsmen in the territory who have realized $hat un-! less they take drastic steps the game ingredients and leavy “the bonded jon the islands will soon be exier-| minated. . ‘DANGER FROM RAW FUSEL OIL ¢ Removes the Oxygen. .From the Biood, Causes Lips and Body te Turn Blue and Has the Same Effect as Asphyxiation. Claveland, O.—Undertakers will have A prosperous year about 1926, in the eplofou of analytical and consulting chemists'here, because, they claim, the Grim Reaper 1s whetting his scythe for & barvest of prohibition liquor drink- Hundreds of persons are slowly but Kurely asphyxinting themselves, ac- cordiug to J. M. Kovachy, assistant city chemist, by unsuspectingly assim- liating the poisons found in almwst every sample of what was believed to be “pare bonded™ llquor, Hundreds of samples are brought to Kovachy each month for analysls, he sald, and ail thus far analyzed have contained a high percentage of fusel, ofl in the raw, . In large quantitles, consumed by steady drinking, fusek oil changes the bleod from oxyhemiglobin _to methewniglobin, he iusists, Same as. Asphyxiation. In other words, Kovachy says, fusel oil removes the oxygen from tlf¢ blood, causes the lips and body to’ turn blue and has the sume eftcet as as- phyxiatlen. = “Illicit peddlers of whisky use eth- Flacetate for flavoring purposes in sonie cases, and this is very injurious it taken in any quantity, acting as a heart depressiuent,” the chemist de- clared. M. E. Crutls, proprietor of the Chem- Jcal Laboratories, advises ;the present- ey drinker to “analyze, well before | stufl.” Gross Misrepresentation. That “bonded” whisky s belog | grossly misrepresented by bootleggers was revealed recently when a raid of a printing shop in the downtown sec- | tion by federal and police oflicials un- covered a plant which s sald to have been devoted exclusively to the manuy facture ot counterfoit labels aud' bot- tled in bond revenue Stamps. 3 |+ The .labels were sunilar to those used by promliunent disHllers on popu: {xr brands of intoxicating liguors pre- | vious to the elghteenth amendment go- ing into efect. TTen thousand alleged counterfeit revenue stamps were contiscated. Fed- eral seeret service opefhtives. declare that statements made by come of the six persons arrested in connection with the raid indicate that §30,000 had been “cleared” during the last year through sal¢s ‘of the labels to bootleggers in Kansas City, NewyYork, Chicago; D& IREER-2 A TR, T Y ed Question,, . 5 Alice Whitney -Auerbach, su'fe&&&, ol aughter of uumg‘ sAnezbueh, exveutive secretary of the Yndfung T#: bereulosis assoclation, is an srdent ad- vocate of women's rights, Alice weat to churcli Chrlstmas Sun- ! day ana the cholr sang hymns in whicit ‘Cence on Earth, Good WIll to Mea” { often occurred. i Aliss “Auerbach stood It as long ¥ she could. Then she lenned over to her parents and, in & whispec that ! was easily overheard, she sald: Daddy, why do they dlways sing “Peace on -Earth, Good Will to'Man'? A¥hy don't they sing ‘Good Will to lies' now and_then?’-: iy e 48 Bruce Cartwright, secretary of the | awalian assoclation, writes that for-| merly . the Islands svere alive with | | game, but due to poor law enforcetment i and the lack of adequate protective measures the condition is now serious. ‘The greater part of the population ‘are Orientals, and to teach them that game must be protected will prove a | laborious task, he says. | The Chinese dove, Mongolian pheas- ant and California quall are the most common upland game birds, although formerly peacocks, turkeys and wild chickens were plentiful. Golden plover are . very numerous during migration. Ducks and other shore birds also visit the islands. . The game animals in Hawail con- glst of goats, sheep and decr. The| theory has been advanced—and found the enrof ‘the lawmakers on theis:| tands—that deer are-detrimental to forests.” It ix asserted thut, they de-| -stfoy forests by eating the protective “Lm; from the rogts of the trees. { i | ! Voices of the Dunes. Yy The voices of the dunes ave in many | ket The crles of the gulls amd crows 2 tHe melodies of the songsters--the tvind tones among —the roar of the sur ‘on the the soft rustling of the loose nds, eddying among the beach gra the whir uri startled wings In the’ ravines-—the piping of the frogs ‘and little toads in the marshy spots—the chorus of the| katydids and locusts—the prolenged notes of the owls at night—and many other sounds, all\ biend into the; { 1he greater song of the hills, and be- | come @ part of the appeal, in this land| i of enchantment and mystery.—Eax} H. Reed. | Ing, and went on toward Adam. Ball, or Bradley, had persuaded him to earry for his own protegtion. John At a point near where the little ! stream that flowed past.the Halfway switch emptied into Doe. river, where Doe river turned almost squarely to . the left, Dale halted abruptly. He had seen a man dart bebind a serubby oak | some thirty yards'ahead of him; quite naturally, hé concluded that, the fel- low meant to waylay him, and he, too, | stepped belind a tree, a big hemlock. A'silent ‘minute went by, Then Dale | put his hit out on one.side of the tree | and peeped from, the other side; it was an old trick that Grandpap More- land had told- hfm abeut.. A rifle cracked ‘promptly and sharply, and a bullethole appeared in the tim of his hat! \ oo f Following- it, there came the coarse, bass' voice of Black Adam” Ball, the mountaineer Goliath: ©“You cain't fool me. I jest shot to put a hole in yore netw- hat and to show ye 'at T .ain’t no.bad shot. You cain't hit my hat!” v Dale’s temper, the temper that had always been:so hard to keep under Contmel, rose quick He tried to rea- son with himself, and couldn’t; his paesion mastered him, He snatehed the biz revolver from its imister:and | Cozked it. With as ste \ hand as | ever held a weapon train®d, e bezan to take aim at Ball's slouch hat, the half of which was in plain view at one sliie of the scrubby oak, paki! “I fooled you once, back there; in ! the middle of the river,” ht cried hot- 1y, “and: now I'm going %o fool you | again 1" R i | There was.in hig volce:that old, old “ primitive rage, which frightened him, | and puzzled him too, in his better mo- ments, . He let down the bead until it was ! barely ‘visible in the notch, and eased off the trigger. The revoiver roared | and spat forth a tiny tongue of flame and s little cloud of white ‘smoke. Ball sprang ereet, wheeled, “and fell cmsn-l ing to the leaves! Dale dropped his weapon. He went as white as death, and his two hands clutched uncertainly at his throat. He was: a murderer! No, he wvasn't—his bullet had goné wild; it had s Ball’s head on the other side of the tiee, by accident. But how could he prove that it had been an accident? Would any jury believe him? It was far- from probable. e stepped from behind the hem- lock and went toward the writhing Goliath, whose legs only were visible now. Then a third shot rang out on the morning stillns It had been fired from a point some little distance away, and Dale’s condition of mind at the moment was such that he didn't even note the direction. from which the sound had come. He was unhurt, {'and he had not heard the whine of a hullet or the pattering of shot on the leaves. When he looked about him, he saw no one; neither did he see any | telitale smoke, Perhaps, he thought dimly, it had been s squirrel-hunter that had fired th: ot. He forgot bout it very quickly for the time be- v still. | gh and | who now was lying perfe There was a bullef-hole thro hrough the great, shaggy liead. The face . behind ‘the short,.curly black Loard was of the colorless bue-.of | SOipstone, dead. DM Date knelt there beskle Black | Adam. Again he clutched seahis throat | with his two sha ! time he tore hi e1sh ngony and all the remotse in tle » seemed to be gathigpng there s heart. Never before:had, he seen Qeath. Its grim presence terrified him. . That the deplorable ihing lind been an accident, due to his faulty marksmanship, mattered little. ' He had killed a man, apd ‘the blood-re brand of Cain was burning away on¢ his brow; he was a man in a Hell of ! own making. And kneeling there 3ill Dale sobhed: 2 great sob “that shook his broad shoulders as‘a violent ague would have shaken :them. | He tried to look at the blue-edged | hole in the shaggy head; at the cruel, | brutish face that was*ofl the ‘colorless | [ “We'd a durned | was a acciden | too, were there, The giant hillman was | 4 | with ughoot, If You 'Likel” He Said Bit. terly, “It was an accidenf, y'know, but— shoot, if you like.” > . “No” commanded Adam father, a slender and angy old man with a straggling iron-gray beard— “No, don't shoot. ‘Shootin’s too quicl by gonnies. And ’en, it ain’t accordin’ to law.” (Queer how suddenly he res spected the. majesty of the law!) ht ruther see him ontel dead in the ville. Yeuns put s. Put down all hear Ball's down them t o' (hem thar guns right now; me?” He turned back to Dale. “Ye say it ” he sneered. “Yes, it was an aceident.” -, “Like the old devil!” roared ‘Black Adamr’s father, $ lie stopped and picked up his son’s biack slonch hat -and _examined it There were two bullet holes close to~ gether: in the rim—and one of them had been there for a long time. “John Moreland, he’s been’ a-I'arnin’ ¥e how to shoot,” he said, “and you've shore I'arned purty d—d well. It must ha’' been yore third shot ’at got Adam:? “I fired only once,” disagreed Dale. “Your son fired first; I fired second; and somebody else, I haven't the slightest idea "who, fired the other shot.” “Aw, shet up! Ye can tell it at the growled old Ball. Then to his Kinsmen, “We'll hold Dale right here, boys, | ontel the shurifl he's sent atter com And we'll not move Adam, which same is accordin’ to law. I reckon Shuriff Tom- Flowers'!ll find a diffefent’ job from what he expected to find; won't he, boys? Say, 1 wisht one o' you fel &' me a good, big chaw o cker. Be durned ef I don’t. Adam’s denth, it bas made me feel sort o bad, by gonnies, and tobacker’s allus a consolation— “Bill Dale, you hain’t got a chaw.o’ tobacker on ye, have ye—bought to- backer, store tobacker? It's a durned sight better'n home-made, T says. Ye say. ye don’t chew! Chew—h—I1!| Whyn't ye ‘chaw,’ like a manl I allus. knowed wasn't Qo ’count, no- | how. Nobody “at don’t chaw tobacker aim't no 'count. ... All ‘right, Jim Ike,” to his nephew, “Ill take a chaw o' yores, then. And T'll take a tol'ably big chaw, Jim. lke, ’cause Adam’s | death has made me feel sort o' bad, and tobacker's allus a consolation.” The sounds of the shooting had car- ried far, and it wasnlt lohg until the seene of the tragedy was crowded with Jalls and_ Torres Littlefords and Morelands. Major Bradley and Hayes, ivery man of them was armed; a very little thing might asily turn the place into a shambles. major saw ' tl and. he He - drew the-steaders ~of= the | dsoand : the - Litttefords - astde,- him, Af they whole Bull set{lément, Jerusalems: Coy. and Hatton's #ell. to accomplish 1t! | Ilappily, the ma “counsel prevaited. Sheriff Tom Fiowers was a tall and lithe, smooth-faced man. He arrived Luke Moreland: at noon, after) hotrs of bard riding: He saw the high ion, and immediat teeled - him- self to- handie the situation. Afier riding straight to the - center of the gathering and there halting his horse, he said evenl, “In order that I-may know who to arrest, I must know: something of the circumstances, Only, one man must ‘| great will power. Hé BDowed: slightly speak at a time, playing we; and remember that, gentlemen. Tl certainly - drop. the fellow who starts playing hoss with me, if it" Jast move I make on earth. Now some- | hody gently use his powers of speech.” Major Bradley, more soldierlike than ever, went forward. ‘*As the attorney ! { of Mr. Dale, who stands decused of Kkilling Adam Ball,” ‘he said to the of- | ficer, “T beg leave to stafe that my ! client will do no. talking at present.” | Dale understoxl, and he did not | open his. month. 5 ‘= Tut,0ld Ball bad somef I over licte{o see, by gonnies, what was | the'matter; Well, by gonnies, we found LBIlL Dille thar down on- his Knees de o' my son, Adam, who was us ad as h—1 or deader; and Bl Dale {/was a:sobbin’ and a-sobbin’ .about: it. And ef he never killed my son Adam, | what was he a-sobbin’ and_a-sobbin’ | about, 1 ax you that? And.my son Adam, he had a rifle, by gonnies, but { he never shot non¢ at all. He was | with us up to a few minutes before, and I'he hadn’t shot ‘mome 'all - mornin’. | Shurif¢ Flowers, I wisht ye'd gi’ me a | good, big chaw o tobacker, by gon- | nies, ‘cause my. son Adam -his death it has made e feel bad.” | Major Bradley stopped caréssing his well-kept gray imperial, walked over to |, the -dead mau’s rifle, picked it up and " put its muzzle to his nose, He scented | fresh powder-smoke. --Then: he faced -old Ball with a strange, hard glitter In his blue eyés. “You are a liar, sir,” he said with a | peculiar politeness, x x and Torreys. Sheriff Flowers called jout: “Quiet, there!” and there was quiet. | He continued: *“Where is Mr. Dale’s revolver?” The Balls had'it. They produced it. It ‘had ,three empty chambers:."when | 1t should ‘have had but one! “Pass it to me ‘butt first” ordered the- law’s representative. He knew that many a man had been shot while | taking a revolver.barrel first, and he | was taking no chances. 3 0la Ball obediently turned the weap- on around. 0 * “Say, sheriff,” he chittered, “have ye plumb fo'got about me axin''ye 'fo’ - chaw-o* store-bought? - By gonnies, Adam’s death—" e \ Flowers turned. to Dale. “T have heard through-Luke More- land,” he said' with- more or. less of feeling 'in his voice, “a good many things in your favor. I‘want‘you:to know that I'm-sorry, to have to take you and place you in ‘the Cartersville jail. To show you that I:mean it, I'Tl spare you the irons and mllow you to | ride’ your own horse along' beside me, | ‘as“though you were not under arrest |.at all” : Dale had by this time "worn the keen edge.from his grief by means ef-his to the officer and replied with grive courtesy : \ “Believe me, sir,” with the very faintest trace of a smile, “I.am very much obliged to you.” / . Luke Moreland led wup the sleek young bay that Bill Dala had named , Fox, and Dale swung h¥mself easily | nto the saddle. He faced the sheriff. “If you're ready te g, sir,” he eaid, “I am.” Together they rode | through the woodland toward the brpad, green val- ley, with the Littlefords, . the: More- lands, Major Bradley and ‘Hayes fol- lowing closely behind them. i Up on the side of David Moreland's mountain there had been'a silent and unseen witness to the uwrest of ‘Bill Dale. She was hidden: behind @ & goarled and twisted clump of ‘sheep- laurel, sitting on a matck of tiny, dainty, pure blud dayflowessi—crushing | in her hands the tiny purpiew blossoms | that are known as Job's teurs. “ “Lord, what'll I do now}” she mur- mured, A stir ran ‘quickly over the Balls.| “Lord, What'll 1.Do Nov?” She Mur- mured, It was a-great and ‘wnanswerable question, and it was a prayer, too. “Lord, whatll I do now'?’ she.re- peated. . When Bill Dale_bad_ridden ont &€ N I with her face ' cloge tol the- Hemlock: o the | needles and the earth, and ept 10W and bitterly, and wept.and wept— “Lord, -what'll T do now?* ' “Here is your opportunity to insure against embarrassing errors in spelling, prosunciation and poor choice of words. ~Know themeaning of puzzling war terms. Increase your efficiency, which resultsin power and success. WEBSTERS |NEW_INTERNATIONAL ing teacher, 2 universal question answerer, made to meet your needs. . It is in daily s by hundreds of thousands of suc- cest{ul men and women the world over. 400,000 Words. 2700 Pages. 6000 I lustrations. 12,000 Biographical En tries. 30,000 Geographical Subjects. ‘GRAND PRIZE, (Highost Award) Panama-Pacitio osition, REGULAR aznd INDIA-PAPER Editios WRITE for Speclmea, Pagee * FRE] Yocket Maps il you namethis paper. G. & C. MERRIAM CO. ‘Springhicld, Mass., U. S. A, Feeling Grippy? Cold Coming On? 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