The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 26, 1933, Page 4

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oe) The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST ty iy NEWSPAPER ‘Cstablished 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- une Company, Bismarek, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck ‘as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .......$7.20 Daily by mail pez year (in Bis- MALICK) ....sserssceeescecoeces 1.20 Daily*by mail per year (in state pally by mall outside ‘of Norih mail out of Nori Dakota .......+. ‘Weekly by mail in stat ‘Weekly by,mail in state, three YOATS ..rereseee Se tasescotessas ‘Weekly by mail Dakota, per year ...... sees ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year 3.00 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. outside of North t Knowledge and Determination A little item in Tuesday's news- papers gives apt illustration of the benefits which come from knowledge, properly applied, coupled with the ancient virtue of persistence. His 20-month-old child pulled from 2 Minnesota lake apparently dead, a Fargo man refused to give up hope, call an undertaker and go about the business of consoling himself and his wife about their loss. Instead he set to work to apply ar- tificial respiration to the little body. After an hour's work the faint spark of life had been revived. The baby apparently is none the worse for his experience. ‘The child was fortunate in having a father who knew how to apply ar- tificial respiration and who refused to give up in the face of apparent defeat. To the father this knowledge and this determination meant the difference between a live son and little mound in the graveyard where- in would lie buried the hopes which all fathers hold for their own. To learn the art of artificial respiration is easy. It can be learned in five minutes in a score of different places. Every Boy Scout is taught how to do it and the wide dissemi- nation of this knowledge undoubted- ly has saved scores of lives. ‘The refusal to accept apparent de- feat, however, is not so common. It 00) united action, formulae, pacts and Try, Try Again Ineffective as it has been in deal- ing with the problems of the world, the London conference loses nothing by arranging for further sessions at a later date. In some diseases the patient must become very ill indeed before he be- gins to get better and this is the case in our economic distress. Until a nation realizes that world coopera- tion is necessary to get things on an even keel there is no point to wast- ing time. “As a man thinketh in his heart so is he” and unless a nation has a real desire to cooperate, a true understanding of the necessity for proposals become idle words. A little later, perhaps, when things get settled down a bit and the na- tions not now willing to cooperate have felt the pains of further pres- sure, we may get somewhere with this meeting. Certainly there is every reason for trying again and again jpntil definite and worth while re- sults are obtained. Making Progress Maybe this business of kidnaping isn’t so easy and profitable after all. Last week the abductors of August Luer, Illinois banker, were arrested in that state and now “Terrible Tuohy” and his gang are in the hands of the law in connection with the Hamm case. This is encouraging to those who felt the forces of law and order had definitely been proved unable to cope with this situation, but the real test remains to be met. These men must be convicted of the crimes with which they are charged if their arrests are to mean anything. If and when this is done, the pub- lic will be able to breathe more freely, and for two reasons, The first is that these particular criminals will then be in no position to repeat their exploits. The second is the lesson which will be taught to those who might otherwise think that kidnaping offers a safe and lucrative business, Controlling Hard Liquor Prof. Yandell Henderson of Yale university offers a suggestion for the control of hard liquors which at least has the merit of being new. “After repeal of the 18th amend- ment,” he says, “the stronger aloo- holic beverages must be absolutely separated from the weaker ones and controlled essentially as morphine and cocaine are controlled under the Harrison act.” Beer and light wines, Professor is a trait which all of us, no matter what our natural determination, would do well to cultivate. It may not always bring such splendid re- sults as came from this case but there is always the satisfaction, no matter what the issue, of knowing that we gave the best we had and that we were true to ourselves, And once we think of it, it is sur- prising how many battles have been won in the last ditch. Not a Just Bill Burleigh county may be crossing a bridge before {t comes to it in pre- paring to resist any attempt by the state to collect for the cost of the “military occupation” on June 1 and 2. Whether or not this is the case, however, it is well to bear in mind that the expense was unjustified, re- gardless of who pays for it. To assess the cost of this action against the county would manifestly be unfair. Peace and order within the county were not threatened at any time. There was no situation which local officials could not handle without difficulty. The troops served no good purpose and certainly none in which the taxpayers of Burleigh county had commendatory interest. For the state to attempt collection from them would, therefore, be a demonstration of unparalleled bra- zenness which no right-thinking citi- zen could find reason for supporting. The county fathers who foresee such an effort doubtless know what they are talking about, but to the average citizen it seems all but in- conceivable. Grain Trade Reforms Henderson says, are really in a class with tea and coffee. The strong liquors, however, ought to be classed with narcotic drugs, he believes, and should be dispensed under the same sort of laws. It is doubtful if many repealists would go the whole way with him on this prograny. But his remark does emphasize the fact that the sort of control which works very well for THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1933 » SECOND ANNUAL yee: SAX, DO WE HAVE To FILE A CODE, UKE THE OER ‘INDUSTRIES? an! DO WE HAVE TO v AN INCOME TAK, => Lie THOSE NEWYORK, A. BAN <5) F self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Dr. jam Brady, JUVENILE HYPOTHYROIDISM The substance which the thyroid gland secrets into blood is the na- tural spark of life. When the gland furnishes an excess of this internal secretion or hormone the entire body is overstimulated and all functions go on at excessive speed; this is called hyperthyroidism and it occurs typically in the state known as ex- ophthalmic goitre. When the thy- roid function is insufficient all the life processes slow down; this is hy- pothyroidism, and when it is extreme the condition is known as cretinism if it happens in infancy or myxe- dema if it develops in adult life. Moderate hypothyroidism is quite common in the early ‘teens, particu- beverages like beer might work very disastrously with whisky. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. ‘They are published without regard to whether they aj with The Tribune's $4.86 Is Enough (Chicago Tribune) Now that the dollar and the pound have reached their old parity of $4.86, the moment has come for a real test of the administration’s policy with respect to the dollar. Perhaps dis- test in this connection, for no one as yet can be sure what the administra- tion intends. The official statements have suggested that the purpose of our government is to raise prices to the Pre-depression level. It was at least arguable that as long as Great Bri- tain’s currency was cheapened as against dirs we could not compete fairly with sterling countries, and jly business and prices in this country would be depressed. The re- turn to the old parity should serve to reestablish the basis of our former price level. It seems probable that those who control our fiscal policy will be con- tent with the decline in the dollar which has already taken place and will seek to halt it at this point. If they do not it will be either because they wish the dollar to descend furth- er or because they cannot halt its descent. It seems pretty clear that Reforms agreed upon by the rulers|@ further decline, whatever the ex- of the nation’s grain exchanges un- doubtedly will do much to correct the situation which has caused so much trouble in recent weeks. It is inconceivable that crop con- ditions can actually change suffi- ciently in one day to warrant a fluc- planation, will be profoundly disturb- larly in girls. As a rule there is a moderate enlargement of the thyroid gland associated with the hypothy- roidism but the swelling or- fullness in the neck just above the breast bone may not be noticed by the or- dinary observer. It is pretty well established now that this juvenile hypothyroidism and the simple goitre associated with it are both due to iodin deficiency in food, drink or medicine. It is pre- ventible and curable by an adequate jodin ration. Among the symptoms which sug- gest hypothyroidism are apathy, sleepiness, waxy pallor, anemia, cold- ness when notmal persons are warm enough, forgetfulness, nasal voice, constipation, weakness of knees, closure would be a better word than| snapping of joints, pronated or sta-|akin severdl times a day. tic flat foot. Girls with hypothyroid- ism are likely to have difficult or scanty menses, or the function may be absent for months at a time. Tinnitus (hearing odd noises in the ears) is 2 common complaint of pa- tients with hypothyroidism. ‘The apathy amounts to melancho- lia in some cases, but as a rule the young person is just anhedonic — that is, incapable of enjoying life as @ young person should. ’ The blood pressure is below nor- mal and the body temperature is be- low normal. The young person is unnaturally short of breath on slight exertion and complains of palpita- tion of the heart. There is a tendency for the eye- brows to fall out, especially at their outer ends. ‘Any fish, crustaceap or edible plant that comes from the sea is a good source of iodin for the body. Fresh VP KIDNAPERS }, Soriveront A Devilish Industry That Is Growing “ WELCOME To our SECOND ANNUAL CONVENTION! SINCE LAST: YEAR OUR MEMBERSHIP HAS >. GROWN BY LEAPS AND BOUNDS. = OUR ACTIVITES Now FoRM A MAJOR, SOURCE OF NEWS, WE ARE NO LONGER. An INFANT INDUSTRY. WE TAKE at AND YOUNG. WE DONT KILL-WE ONL WE’ Peele p Bgl TICS OF THE LAW. corneon AD THE PAPERS HAVE BEEN a Gur THE HEAVY HAND OF THE LAW-HA Hi « (HAS MERELY SLAPPED US ON THE WRIST. "A AND SO We aoWw! "4° mo * PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Willi in care of this newspaper. instance South Carolina carrots con- tain twenty times as much as Cali- fornia carrots and 85 times as much as Oregon carrots. I recommend the universal use of iodized salt for cooking and for the table, in place of plain salt, but I do not think that is enough {fodin for the body's needs. I do not ad- vise the use of any tablet or any fancy iodin compound. But I am glad| to send instructions for taking ®@ suitable Iodin Ration to any cor- respondent who provides a stamped addressed envelope. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS i Chalasion Please write an article on chalaz- fons, (A Fan). Answer—That is the name given swellings or cyste of the oil glands of the eyelids, in the upper eyelid. The treatment is simple—eurgical removal of the lump either thru the lid or thru the lining with the lid everted. Chapped Knuckles I suppose my work (dry cleaning) is the cause, but I wonder if you can recommend anything for chapping, ‘and cracking of the skin over the knuckles. (T. A. W.) Answer—Boil for an hour or so till all dissolved 80 grains of tragacanth shavings, 3 drams of boric acid and one-half ounce of glycerin, with a Pint of water. Add water for evap- oration. A clear thin jelly is the Te- sult. Apply some to the chapped Just be- « | HORIZONTAL 2 Man in picture. lu Deity. 12 Form of “be.” 13 Card game. 14 Junior, 15 Hurrah! 17 Morindin dye. 18 Neuter pro- noun. » CIE IT] i. STAID] AIS sea, food is best, of course, but canned salmon, shrimp, whale, lobster and ing to our foreign and domestic trade. oyster all retain their idoin or a It will be an augury in many minds | good proportion of it. 47 To let fall. 28 Abdicates. 483 Native metal. 25 Group of nine. sy Highe: 27 Sash. political office fore beginning work anoint the skin of hands with a little castor oil and lanolin, equal parts. * OH Folks Legs. Advise what I ean do to prevent cramps in legs at night... (H. B. H.) Answer—Press toes against foot- board, or get out of bed and stand on toes, or take @ level spoonful of sal- eratus with a drink of water. (Copyright 1933, John F. Dille: Co.) wg NEW | YORK By PAUL HARRISON New York, July 26. — There's an overdose of irony in the story of how 24 happy people won a trip to the Chicago fair. It all goes back several months ago when some press agents were wracking their brains, as press agents sometimes will, to devise a Promotion stunt for Mary Pickford’s Picture. “Secrets.” Then they recalled that the movie was a highly sentimental one, all about an enduring marriage. And, since the marriage of Miss Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks had endured to the point of becoming the pride of Hollywood, it was suggested that a contest be Jaunched to find the twelve happiest couples in the United States, and to send them to the Century of Progress Exposition as guests of the Hollywood pair. ‘Which was just dandy, except that before the winning couples set out for the fair, the Pickford-Fairbanks me- nage had aired its discontent all over the front pages. So now the press Who Is He? wer to Previous Puzzle 19 Billiard rod. OARS 2a Heathen god. CTT RIEISISIETS) exile home, 45 Sea skeleton. of a competitive race in devaluation, {f not indeed of a race in which all the currencies engaged are out of con- trol. To expect, under those circum- stances, any business activity except frantic speculation and flight from all) tuation of more than five cents a| currencies is to expect a great deal. bushel. Provement always is a progressive thing. It never breaks upon an un- Suspecting market like a bolt from the blue. Limitation of one trader to a “line” of not more than 5,000,000 bushels is not unreasonable. Even the biggest gambler ghould be willing to leave enough in the larder to feed the fam- ily for a week or two in case he loses. Increased margin requirements also ‘will serve to limit the volume of grain gambling. This rule will permit $100 to buy fewer bushels of grain than was the case when 10 cents @ bushel wes the ordinary margin. It will make a given sum of money less ef- fective in stampeding the market, either up or down. Much, of course, depends on the manner in which they are enforced but self-preservation should cause the grain exchanges to see‘ that the new rules are obeyed to the letter. If they are not, other and more dras- tie changes will be made by the gov- eznment, 7] Crop deterioration or im- The substantial devaluation of the dollar in terms of foreign currencies which has already taken place may have had an important part to play in the business pickup that has taken 28 Embryo bird. 29 Depending te mye upon ‘experl- 51 Beer. ence. 52 Second note 84 Region. in scale. 85 Verbal. 88 Book of maps. 40 To make lace. 54 Move: 42 Butt of a cigar. 44 Ord, Vegetables and fruits grown in low valleys are likely to contain more fodin than the produce of mountain- ous sections. Likewise the drinking water in some regions has little or no fodin, while in other places it contains an appreciable amount of fodin, and it has been found that the prevalence of endemic goitre is greatest in places where the drink- ing water contains the least todin. Vegetables grown in South Carolina 57 Vagabond. 58 Model : 53 Large body of 11To burden. truck. 56 Each (abbr.). place since March. It does not follow that further devaluation will be pro- Portionately beneficial. An ounce of castor oil may prove beneficial to a sick man, but that does not prove that he will be benefited by drinking a bottle of it, have been found rich in idoin. IN Wuar COUNTRY ARE THE MOST GYPSIES FOUND ? In @ fight between two elephants, housed in circus winter quarters, a number of years ago, one pushed the other through @ solid brick wall 14 inches thick. Our globe is encircled with more than 300,000 miles of submarine cables over 100,000,000 miles of tele- Phone wires and 5,000,000 miles of telegraph cables. “Wheelbase” is the distance from the center of the front axle to the ‘ARE THE LIGHT- center of the rear axle, we EST AND HEAVIEST KNOWN GASES ? Cobras spread their hoods by means of @ set of movable ribs near their - heads. OF WHAT METAL IS THIS ‘THE CHEMICAL SYMBOL ? nute cavities filled with water, a Pieces of quartz often contain | For agents who went along to write about of pictured man, [aj 22 What country does he live in? 24 Epochs. 26 Approaches, at Dad. 1 To re-equip RIT ILI = with weapons. AIC IES} 32 Company , éabbr.) 33 Political party in Great Brit- ain (plural). VERTICAL 1To taunt. 3 Minor note In 3 scale, 39 Net weight of 4 Poglish coin. container, 5 Barks shrilly. 40 Pedal digit. 6 Relish. 41 Japanese fish, 7To decay. 48 Stick. STo depart. 35 To stuff. + 9 Loaves. 46 To exact as toll, 49 Tiny green vegetable. 14 Mane-like srowth. 16 Man. 50 Knock, 19 Horsefty. 53 Senior (abbr.), 21 Political faith 55 Northeast. . Be the secrets of marital constancy are functioning as suppress-agents in- |stead—statements are given out about the Doug-and-Mary rift, and perhaps Sa CUE Bis Sikes oer ee Piest couples” file divorce pa! dur- ing their visit. sacs a awn, eee Brown, bustling and be: » Alice Foote MacDougall renuined frees Italy the other day and plunged feverishly back into her restaurant, coffee and giftie shoppe business—a- series of amazing enterprises which grossed something like $3,000,000 annually un- til the disastrous year of 1932. Things looked pretty hopeless for a while, but baad she says the goose again hangs 5 ‘ Mrs. MacDougall’s success has been | the inspiration for scores of women/ around New York—and no one can guess how many outside of it—to go into the atmospheric tea-room bual- | ness, What most of them fail to real-; ize in time, though, is that she has! her own staff of architects and decor- | ators who actually go to Spain when/ they want to reproduce an Alhambra | Toom or a Seville wine shop. Nor do they know that Mrs. MacDougall has, subsidized a whole villageful of pot- tery makers over in Italy to produce , her tea sets and plates and such. She used to be an anti-suffragist, | and was forced into a career only by | grim necessity. Her husband, a cof-j fee jobber, died and left her with; three’ children. She determined to! carry on his business, though at first ' she had to borrow money to buy stamps and send out her sales letters. She prospered, however, and became rather well known as the only woman coffee dealer in town. Later she add- | ed tea and cocoa to the liné. In 1922 she started a coffee shop in Grand | Central station; then others, which/ were designed to look like quaint little! courtyards in Italy. (The site for the | one on Fifty-seventh St. was leased! for 20 years for a million dollars). After three of these, she started on Spanish types, also quaint. There never has been anything at- mospheric of whimsical about ie food, however. It's pure American, though slightly garnished with die- tet Her establishments are thronged with shoppers, bridge clubs and out-of-town visit having lunch or tea. These patrons are al- ways anxious for a glimpse of the marvelous Mrs. MacDougall, but sel- dom get it because she herself has neither lunch nor tea. Too busy working in her office. Ey All the reformers I have met have ® genuine itch to make the world better, but they irritate more souls than they heal and purify.—Rev. Charles H. Parkhurst, New York. ee ‘The United States army in size ranks 17th among the armies of the world. While there is no thought of this small force, which is only the framework of an army to be created in case of emergency, I am in favor of making it the most modern and, effective military organization Possible—Secretary of War Dern. + ees Putting brandy in a mint julip is like putting catsup in iced tea.—Irvin 8. Cobb, humorist. . Tee | Hollywood women get old sooner and lose their beauty earlier than wo- men back east. The dry air and the blazing, sandy California scene is too much for them.—Polly Moran, movie actress, Labor Recalls . His Nomination After being nominated as lial- son man between the labor ad- visory board and the National Industrial Recovery Administra- tion, Dr. William M. Leiserson, &bove, was jolted when his nom- ination was suddenly withdrawn. Letserson, Antioch College eco- nomics professor, had been nom- inated by President Green ot the A. F. of L, Objections to a speech in which he was alleged to have criticized A, F. of L. methods, were thought to have Prompted the withdrawal. he didn’t pattern after Mattern. es *% ‘We refuse to dispute the assertion of the Oklahoma State Barber Board that there are 120,000 hairs on the hu- man head, but if you want to count ‘em it's all right with us. * % Unfortunately for the average motorist, the government's efforts to reduce the number of hogs in this country does not anpy tc road hogs. ae Yale professor says beer is fatten- ing and will increase the waistline. Now, it seems, we shall be able to de- tect the beer drinker not only by his breath, but also by his breadth. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) se * Prohibition is on the skids. We can’t escape it and we might as well not kid ourselves.—Major A. V. Dalry- mple, national prohibition director. * 8 It is as easy to form good habits ay! bad.—Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. | . + Barbs eo —$_—$———4 Nikola Tesla, veteran scientist, claims to have discovered a new source of energy. Most any of us could use some of it about the time the alarm clock goes off in the morn- ing. * * 8% : Probably a large part of the success of Wiley Post, round-the- world flyer, is due to the fact that CHAPTER LV. mother hasn’t had a chance to know you yet,"’ he told her quietly. “You must remember that when I returned to her from the war she Copyright, 1930, 6 the marriage and for word of you, she discoveréd absolutely nothing, she quite nat lly became con- ced that if you ever had ex- isted, you existed no longer, and that we were not married. The deception she and Dr. Matthews undertook when Mary Lou, with her resemblance to you, came here, was undertaken solely be- cause they felt that my condition called for it, and so didn’t, I sup- pose, look very far ahead— “You don’t blame them, then, or her?” she asked curiously. “No. Now now. But it couldn’t have continued much longer,” he answered, staring out of the win- dow at the moving pattern of tree branches against the clear, blue sky. “I think they imagined that, gradually, as I became more like self, ? would remember every- thing, I would begin to question more closely and perhaps come to the right conclusion by myself. I don’t believe, however, that I would have ever done so. I think that the encounter with you was AKE-BELILV Distributed by King: Features Syndicate, Inc. by Faith Baldwin was real, how much a part? The question had tormented him for hours; would continue'to do so, he thought, until he died, Did he love Mary Lou, the girl herself, the girl who had become, suddenly and dramatically, a sti er? “I don’t know,” he answered, miserably. cates ner ileksuepectenty ome, rry; let’s be_perfect frank. When you saw way Lou again and thought her light Harford you, I suppose, experi- enced no shock, no alteration, in your emotions, I mean. You just / Sy FAITH The struggling artist often finds his palette little help to his palate. BALDWIN ou, and I answered you honestly. won’t ask you if you care for me: I know that you do not. But —do you care for anyone else?” “T might ask you that,” she mur- pinged “in fact, I have! No, “Then—will you marry me?” he asked again. “We loved each other once. We have, I think, something to build on. I—do you know,” he said, and stopped to smile at her, in a sudden, whimsical astonish- ment, “I am really very fond of yu, Delight. I just found that out! E think pemape I could make you happy. At all events I could take you away from a lot of things which I don’t believe you like very much, and do ay best to make you a good husband. I don’t suppose cure. Strong medicine,” the onl; he said, with wouldn't live tew bewildered seconds when half a smile. “I in through one saw you and heard you speak again, for anything I know of. My entire world was turned upside down. There seemed no foothold in it, no sanity. for ge ail that ft ba ed.” “Was it? I wot ar” But it was best Delight turned her head, forced his eyes down on her own, “Lorry, there's no use being chivalrous and all that. ¢You don’t want me. You don’t love me. For a time, you foved a memory. But, not “ne. Heart to Heart 1 Sg et he = ated she cried out, shay But she flushed as she said it, For she had not given him hon- Not yet, and thought, fleet- ingly and rather tragically, that if he denied her accusations she ight close her eyes to everything alse and try to believe him, and so forget her own integrity. “No,” said Lorrimer finally, “I don't love you, Delight. aioved the irl you were, a long time ago, ind then, as you have saic, her memory.” “And since then,” proved, with a sharp stab of authentic jeal- ously which she was unable to con- “since then, you've loved the of that memory, have had heard nothing from me in months. And I returned pretty much of @ w! mentally an physically, vie wire one Bhonett inl my mind, to find you again; wil the fixed ides that we had been married, that you were my wife. It was considerable of a shock to her; and when, after engaging agents to search for the record o! ly: “Ob, be honest with me, Lorry! Isn’t that the most important thing we have left to give each | er?” | le did not angwer. How much st went on lo », in. her. But here I am. You couldn’t go on loving her as me; could you go on loving her as _ He said, slowly: “How ‘much of that girl know,. Delight? How. was Mi Th did I much of her mn and how “I'm not likely ever to see her eter Me ebrow and el one ow her round. shrugged ulders under the lace and chiffon of the little bedjacket. “No? wasn’t, the impres- sion your mother and Doctor Mathews gave me,” she said. “Why should I see her,” he asked violently, “with all that Sorel cid Sie, iat ly abruptly, ost formal, ‘I faney she would rather I didn’ The situa- is, any all, almost Tniae. i you merry light? You have asked me if I love T'm offering much.” “Too much,” she answered, after & pause. “You'll have to let me think it over. I’m not going to rush you-—or myself—into something we might regret. There's your eeee to reckon with, too, No, won't answer you now. you do something for me, Fatwa | Page Larry He rose and looked down on er, selon of hana of Me, ote @ 0; e} Prieve, for which he hated hia aif, “Then get -hold of that press agent lad. I want to talk to him.” “Larry Mitchell? Of course. It be Probably at ee ae ae ee i ie ol ee Ne Nf | mAs Ao wet awe eet POSOMWE HAO eee Ea eye

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