The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 3, 1935, Page 3

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4 “ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1935 ON MAJOR BOWES’ HOUR From New York comes word that Jack Carignan and Frank Fiske, both Fort Yates pioneers and old-time musicians, have wangled @ spot on one of Major Bowes’ NBC Sunday evening amateur hours. The North Dakota men probably will be heard either ee ee 4, or Sunday, Aug. 11, EVOLUTION First it was a bank building. The bank failed. Then it was a barber mee Now it is a beer parlor. Balfour wonders what will next, : ees TOMATO JUICE LAKE FERA RECREATIONAL INSTITUTE PLANNE Program Details for Th Details for Three-Day Conference Announced by State Director Program details for the FERA rec- | reational institute, which will be held here August 5, 6 and 7 at the World’ War Memorial building, the last of a; series of eight being held throughout North Dakota, were announced Friday Up near Painted Woods lake, Charles Benzi is wondering how many tomato juice cocktails he will have ‘round August 15. He has 17,000 plants jush with green bulbs that promise tons and tons of the juicy red fruit. And this winter sauerkraut and spareribs will be prominent on the Benzi table, for he has four acres of cabbage. eee PAH-AH-TAHSTA-COOTAH Maybe the title is just mumbo-jumbo to the white man, but to the Sioux it means “Shoot-the-Deer Butte.” Charles Armstrong, Grassy Butte rancher, is authority for the statement that white men did not name the Killdeer mountains. Tt was the Sioux, who long before Sully fought a bloody battle among the rugged hills of Dunn county, invaded that rough stretch of country to kilt deer and steal horses trom the native Indians, SPORT Bowdon has turned out enfnasse to fish. Not that there are fish but the Wells county townsmen think it is their duty to retrieve the set of store teeth one of their neighbors sneezed into the lake. ees OLD ENOUGH TO PLAY Pioneer Emmons County Attorney C! 40 on the local goif links at Linton and Mrs. Clinton Richards of Deadwood, 8. D., ‘Then Coventry went out and shot a 39. game is better now because en eee * ‘NOW YOU TELL ONE Hilmer Wolfgram of Carson owns a outside of town. Morning and night he cow comes ambling. HAPPY CASHIER John Will, cashier of Garrison’s recently looted bank is mighty, mighty glad Dan Boger, farmer, dropped into the midst of the holdup and refused to obey commands, “They weren’t through with the job,” Will says, “when Boger came in. But they hurried after he fled. If he hadn't come I might have had a hard roe to them that I could not open the safe, which has a time on it.” There was $4,000 in currency in the safe. eee MORE FISH Bathers in Seeman park’s Beaver creek near Linton were well nigh crowded out of their favorite swimming hole as a school of suckers, 6 to 8 inches long, jammed along the bathing front by the thousands. So thick ‘were they bathers scooped them out by the handfuls. AND STILL MORE And up near Stanton, Randall Fretty went a-fishin’ and came back with {fo rewboats that had floated down river from some unidentified places above. eee ADVERTISING BRINGS RESULTS ‘You remember those stories this spring about the rattlesnake catcher of Emmons county who kept his slithery reptiles in barrels. The story was printed broadside throughout’ the nation. Recently, Raymond Crawford, in- structor in an Ohio university, went to the Kyes ranch near Livona, bought all of the snakes for experimental purposes. He had read about them in an Ohio paper. eee iid eee A ar lany motorists, passing the new high school building, have wondered ahioat Ris cause 08 ines ecdentbaniier aeae tin etecedacton Goer ture. The Tribune reporter was interested, too. They are not tool sheds. Rother are they telephone booths They are just what everyone thought they might be, constructed as an FERA project ee ee at $14 to $16.50. REWARD OF HARD WORK more than 100 years no one but a Lehman had been a partner. Hancock was the first outsider to be admitted to the charmed circle. His admission was due entirely to his ability as a financier and a doctor of businesses. He had put Sears-Roebuck & Co. on its feet; rejuve- nated the moribund wae into many another giant corporation or Hancock is a director of both of the above firms and the follow- ing: American Stores Co., B. Ku & Co., Brunswick-Balke-Col- lender Co., International Silver Co., Kelly-Springfield Tire Co., Cluett Pea- body & Co., The Cuneo Press, Inc., The Florsheim Shoe Co., General Ameri- can Investors Co. Kroger Grocery & Baking Co, Long Bell Lumber Corp., Piggly-Wiggly Corp., A. Stein & Co., Van Raalte Co. and many others. A tycoon, yes. Yet John Hancock was born a poor boy, Feb. 2, 1883, on his father's homestead near Emerado, N. D., small town 16 miles west of Grand Forks. He worked his way through the university. He wanted to enter West Point or Annapolis. Mumps kept him from taking one examina- tion, @ broken arm kept him from a second. But you can’t keep a good country boy down. He enlisted in the navy, worked his way up. When the World war broke out, his ability already rec- pushed him to the front. Truly an inspiration for any North Dakota boy who has ambition, vision ‘ind elbow grease. ence BIGGER AND BETTER EG trying to win « prize, Last Easter-time biddy won mention in The Tribune producing an egg which was 8 inches long, 12 inches in diameter More than half a pound. On its outer shell was what appeared to be writing, although it looked more like Merry Chris! Happy Triside was an- other shell protecting a double-yolked egg. A little later the hen repeated her performance and. last Tuesday an- other mammoth bit Of enIrDs QDERr es -Ub see, RE Re bne DERE HENNEY: EMBALMING FLUID Visitors to the office of the state beer commissioner have North Dakota hasn’t gone into the saloon business. Piled handsome around the walls are bottles, small bottles, big bottles, long-necked bottles, squat bottles, colorless bottles, leries of color MUS one An WHETS. Pu OO SOME DO EES, SONS SAE | But inside! ‘The stuff is what embalmers use—acidic, scarifying and narcotic. Of the hundreds of containers of so-called liquor seized by Owen and his agents there’s hardly a potable pint. Hair tonic is a pure, delicious beverage compared to what the bootlegging fraternity is putting out, PERSONAL HUDDLE E, A. Willson is North Dakota's FERA administrator. E. A, Willson also is North Dakota’s new Youth Administration admin- istrator. the following telegram: Recently he received tele a in the A ‘busy man? Yes! SUB CAMP SET UP Hebron, N. D., Aug. 3—(#)—The 000 bes & sub camp here to repair present dams and construct Ba.caee es views, og ld ‘boys will begin repairing damage done ‘dams by recent floods. Mess quarters and Weirton, W. Va., the high water subsided quickly. ____——X_—as_—!_= GRADING. Sealed bids (with certified check covectay 5% of ater) are requested by unders! or grading the for the company will be set up here dig Bg ‘High and the boys will sleep in tents. 1 building in Bismarck, N. D. in eCity Engineer's | oftice, perint Board in tice High School 7:30 P. M. Thursday Privilege reserved to reject any or all offers. * Leaying deep mud in streets e ition, Bismarck, Ni. ‘and in Te Follansbee | 7.24 3-3, here Bihan Peas einmeserea nro erder of The Reemt s Richard. Penwatden, Clerk. by Mrs. Hazel Falley, state director of women’s activities. FERA recreational directors from eight Missouri Slope counties will par- ticipate in the three-day conference during which model programs and Projects will be presented and reports thade on the progress of the work in each county, Bismarck and vicinity: erate fair tonight “a and Bungay; night and Sunday; id east of Divide sunday. Minnesota—Fair wenlee and Sun- FOR! iy ht Bea. in southeast Counties sending delegates are Mc-|_ For the ion of the Great Lakes— Lean, Grant, Morton, Sioux, Oliver, ie ue Pe it gs week, ex- Mercer and Burleigh. The program will open at 9 a. m.,|perat Monday, Aug. 5, with a demonstration |al of get-acquainted games led by Mrs. Stella Clary. The balance of the|™ day’s program includes: 9:30 a. m.— er Play production and staging, Alice Bender; 11 a. m.—Home-made mu- sical instruments and demonstration, Mildred Downs and Mary Cave; 1:30 p. m.—Community singing and im- Portance of music in recreation, Miss —Reports by counties (McLean, Mrs. Sr Schempp; Grant, E. J, Lawfer; Mor- jcei ton, Ellison; Sioux, Mrs. Cleary; Bur- leigh, Mrs. Hancock; Oliver, Frank temperatures first of about Sat the boundary “Rapid City Chl ers fell from ‘Mountain region to the Great Sica x oie aie Mississippi and low- sissipp! fair For athe northern and Serene shi Cave and Miss Downs; 2:30 p. m— % an Handicraft demonstration, Miss Cave (206, rst of week. and Miss Downs; 4 p. m.—Treasure |close; perat' Seat mt near or hunt, nature eee Picnic, W. P.}above ni i; ison, Mrs. Lois Schempp, Miss Ben- saree der and Mrs. Charlotte Hancock, ‘Low pressure eld An Tuesday: 9 a. m.—Program, cin ee es 20.00) and the ‘and publicity, Mrs. Falley; 9:30 a. m. slope Noun .78) Ww! mie nigh nt Mont Show- the southt {|SWISS NEWSPAPER { Weather Report } BANNED BY REICH Hanover Lutheran Church Is Deprived of Financial In- dependence by Nazis Berlin, Aug. 3—(®)—The Prussian} minister of interior Saturday joined .|Dr. Paul Joseph Goebbels, minister of Propaganda, in his action against for- eign journalists by banning indefi- nitely the Swiss newspaper, Thursz- auer Zeitung. While the propaganda minister was trying to create more favorable com- ments about National Socialistic Ger- Weather Oueak fr the Reid many by what many believe to be a “cleaning of the ranks of foreign Journalists,” other endeavors were di- .. | tected toward a move to cement Nazi- ism domestically. Two new decrees struck at religious organizations. Hans Kerrl, begin- ning as minister of religious affairs, deprived the Hanover Lutheran church of its financial independence, and decreed a special finance depart- Lerten Bice or eaneaday; client headed by Dr. Carsted, a. Nadi lay and Sat rising} of Kiel. Simultaneously the Saxon » cooler | minster of interior dissolved “Mazeaz- nen Bund,” a religious union based on lee Philosophy of Zarathustra. nee" | Tugwell Expands RFC Rules to Aid Farmer Washington, Aug. 3.—(?)—Rexford west-|G. Tugwell, resettlement administra- (Boise tor, Saturday expanded rehabilitation au area is/eligibility regulations to provide aid Kd farmers on the verge of relief ‘Lakes He said the eligibility list will now Etherington and Mercer, W. W. Jes- include farmers who have unsuccess- ke.); 10:30 a, m.—Creative dramatics, re 1 ee ene: the weather is/fully sought credit from the farm Alice Bender; 12:30 p. m.—Luncheon, |generally fair. ‘Tem ie Great, ates Grop-|credit administration, and farmers Mrs. Grace Clendening; 2 p. m—|ped somewhat tro from Lakes/who are delinquent on federal land Craft demonstration, Miss Downs,/region westward eastern | hank Payments and in danger of Miss Cave and Mrs. Schempp; 3:30|/Rocky Mountain Liane: Pp. m.—Exhibit of games; 4 p. m.— Visit city playground and marionette demonstration, Mrs. Harold Pike and Aldeen Paris, Wednesday: 9 a. m.—Games, Jeske; 9:30 a, m.—Marionette, Miss Bender; 11:30 p. m.—Life-saving exhibition, Arnold Van Wyk; 1:30 p. m.—Make- up, Miss Bender. Autogiro to Appear At Local Air Show es: ft. in this new machine. A public ad- dress system will be used to announce the numbers of tickets winning rides and for other purposes during the show. e-——. | Shoemaker Scores 7 | Another Decision | Meg Minneapolis, Aug. 3. — (7) — Francis Shoemaker, former Farmer - Labor congressman, got into another traffic jam here Friday night. Seeing a stalled automobile, Shoemaker said he thought he ought to offer aid. As he stopped his own machine, a third car bumped into Shoemaker’s, The other driver, A. W. Dwor- sky, and Shoemaker had some words, Hurot From now on I'm wedded to my art. I'm through with matrimony. at least, I think I am.—Buster Kea- ton, film comedian, STAR AND DUBLEKEEN RAZOR search bureaus. tion and acquirement of homes. this month to date Normal this month to date pe Jan. Ist to Recumulated excess to date . Minneapolis, clear Moorhead, clear | Rapid ‘city, y, cleat Havre, clear .. Helena, clear . WANTED Distributor for BLADES Dublekeen double-edged blade has the highest recommendation by one of the country’s leading re- tion meter, 28.21. Reduced to sea level, 20.97. Missouri river Leogaa oy a a. m., 6.5/must apply 24-hour change, - PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: date +. ane ae to date ......11. oe 401 WESTERN FORTH, panor ,, Jan. inch- | foreclosure and | eviction. The twe ney groups of eligibles r loans to local rep- resentatives of the resettlement ad- ministration, Loans, secured by mortgages on goods or crops, are made to enable applicants to become vt economically self-sufficient. Picard-Revolta Team Leads Toledo Event et Pet.| Toledo, O., Aug. 3.—(#)—Henry Pic- MINNESOTA POINTS High- MONTANA POINTS WEATHER AT OTHER POINTS High- Low- est est Pct. 92 66 1.76 86 68 (00 12 44 36 92 70 1.20 80 62 00 86 72 «10 9 70 56 7 46 14 82 58 22 102.72 _—68 est est Pct, sonia MARCK, clear .- 0/ ard of Hershey, Pa., and Johnny Re- Persons attending the Bismarck Air Beane rites i a 00) volta of Milwaukee were leading the Show, Aug. 10 and 11, will have oppor- Cue clear” 56.00 pack Saturday as action was resumed tunity to see and ride in an autogiro, |Crosby, c 1% S8lin the Iverness best-ball team play the type of airplane which can rise Dickingon, clear « 76 52 00|Mmatches in which 16 outstanding golf almost vertically and come straight |Drake, cldy -... +--+ 78 $8 00 | pro's are taking part, down without injuring the plane or! Garrison, clear .. 73 52 00] The top-notchers have a plus 4 its occupants, F. M. Roberts, show| Jamestown, clear 55 .00/rating, that being the margin they manager, said Saturday. Max, ly 40 00! have earned over three sets of foes to Checking over the attractions for|Minot, cl 51 .00/ date, and in building up that edge ene jerial demonstration here, | Parshall, oS "1 na they have been 14 under par for 54 ought an autogiro would 4 holes, the best mark of the tourna- be of interest and started out to find| Williston clear ...... SM nent, one. But it wasn’t as easy as he had EASTERN NORTH DAKOTA sisi a of owners, furnished pee pool yy the manufacturers, showed = Angeles, three in ‘the central states." "(Devils Lake, clear 16 $4 00 Modena Ulan belay’. a8 Se By keeping on the job, however, |G! 4 7 SO 1No. Platte, Neb,, clear Roberts arranged to have one at the 56 00|Okiahoms City, cldy show and it will be here both days. 50 Wed =p = A number of the 50 free rides to be 54 00 gia Starnes a, Uy given away to show visitors will be | Wish 54 ©.00/ Roseburg, Ore. clear St. Louis, Mo., ptcldy. Salt Take City, clear Seattle, Wash. see ridan, oe po City, clear .. e, Wwash., Ptcldy 8 Sat Current, 8. The Pas, ELETYPE BRIEFS“2:2*| FRENCH MISSION SACKED Rome—The newspaper Giornale D’ Italia reported Saturday in a dispatch from Djibouti, French Somaliland, that a French Catholic mission in Ethiopia had been sacked by armed natives, S. D. WHEAT UNFIT Brookings, 8. D.—Estimates that 70 per cent of the wheat crop in north- east South Dakota will not be har- vested because of rust and heat dam- age were made Saturday. HAMER PIONEER DEAD Hamer, N. D.—Siver Christofferson, 58, president of the Cooperative Ele- vator board of Hamer and resident of Ramsey county for more than half a century, died at his farm home south of Crary Thursday. Funeral services were held at Hamer Saturday. TROOPS MASS IN SIBERIA London—A dispatch from Man- churia reports that Russia, as a pre- cautionary measure, is transporting 160,000 troops to Chita and Irkitsck | * in Siberia ready to advance at a mo- ment’s notice on Mongolia. FARGO WOMAN HURT Fargo, N. D.—Mrs. Burt Lovsteen of Fargo is in critical condition from injuries suffered in a car-truck col- lision east of Glyndon, Minn., late Friday. SULTAN’S KIN SUICIDE New York, Aug. 3—()—A man be- lieved to be Prince Abdul Kerim, grandson of Sultan Abdul Mamid, monarch of the old Ottoman Empire, was found shot to death early Satur- day, apparently a suicide, in a Broad- way hotel room, STORM MAROONS TRAIN Alamosa, Colo. Aug. 3.—(P)—A train carrying 11 passengers and a crew of four was marooned Saturday near Barranca, N. M., a grade-fill ahead washed out by a cloudburst. and a bridge behind ripped from its moorings by flood waters. CARRIES $100,000 Minneapolis—An unidentified aged |, woman was being cared for in a hos- pital here Saturday after she was found walking about the streets with nearly $100,000 in cash in her pos- session. TRAIN KILLS FIVE Caniden, 8. C.—At least five persons were killed near here and an unde- termined number injured when a Seaboard Airline railway passenger train struck a truck load of farmers. COOPERSTOWN MAN DIES Fargo, N. D. — Peter J. Tang, 59, Cooperstown, N. D., pool hall pro- prietor for many years died here Sat- urday from heart disease. MILLER ENJOINS PERRY Fargo, N. D. — Federal Judge An- drew Miller Friday granted a tem- porary injunction restraining H. H. Perry, collector of internal revnue, from collecting the processing tax on wheat from the Fargo Milling com- pany. CONVENTION POSTPONED Dates for the state Izaak Walton League convention at Velva will be set later, M. O. Steen, state secretary, said Saturday after announcing it would be necessary again to postpone the session scheduled for next Tues- fan., ra 58 Winnemucca, Nev., clear 88 Winnipeg, Man., ‘cldy.. 76 BeeRBResscsssasResss SSSSSRSSISSSTSSSaS day. FREE HEELS: - pales of will be” SHOES ae on 30 CAPITAL SHOE a eee AUG, 12 To the first 50 persons in shoes for half-soling on bringing that date we will donate free new heels (guaranteed Cat’s Paw 50c heels). On that date we will have installed a new and up-to-date FINISHING MACHINE ially built and enabling us to put » genuine FACTORY-FIN- ‘spec! ISH on your shoes, You deserve This new your money's worth. will replace our old machinery—at con- siderable expense—to give you better service. We half-sole men’s and women’s shoes without nails—we have forms for any shoes. We can improve your footwear so that you hardly will recognize it, We can handle LARGE QUANTITIES DAILY Shining Parlor and Hat Cleaning Establishments in Connection. CAPITAL SHOE HOSPITAL 42% Broadway Jack Gartner, ¥ INSURED ¥ THE FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION ‘The officers and directors of the Gate City Building and Loan Association announce the insurance of shareholder accounts up to $5,000.00 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation of Washington, D. C. ‘This insurance is another progressive step taken by the management of this association in providing a safe and dependable savirtgs and loaning institution for the present and future shareholders of the association. The Gate City Building and Loan Association is the first state chartered institution in North Dakota to qualify for insurance of accounts. ‘With @ background of conservative management, membership in the Federal Home Loan Bank and now insurance of shareholder ac- counts, this association stands ready to serve the people of the community and the state in the accumulation of savings and the moderniza- SAVE AND BORROW WITH CONFIDENCE IN AN INSURED ASSOCIATION Gate City Building and Loan Association 518 N. P. Ave. a an ious Fargo, N. D. 111 Third Street Phone 877 , Prop. 20 Bands Entered in Linton Tournament Bands from 20 towns are expected to compete in a tournament at Linton Sunday, that city’s third annual band festival. The two-day affair will start at 10 a. m., Sunday and will end Monday evening, each competing musical or- ganization taking its turn in the bandstand. The feature of the affair will be a parade of the massed bands nor Walter Welford will speak. Bands are expected to coms from Strasburgh, Zeeland, Fullerton, Fred- erick, Columbia, Napoleon, Wishek, Selby, Steele, Ft. Yates, Ashley, La- Moure, Oakes, Artas, Eureka, Lem- mon, Herreid, Kulm, and the Bis- marck and Mandan high school bands. Company M Captures CMTC Strength Test Company M won the strength test held Friday at the CMTC camp, Fort Lincoln, a check of the records showed Saturday. It rolled up a total score of 475 to nose out Company K, with 4715, eed L brought up the rear with gre the rules, designed to deter- mine the average athletic ability of each company, 75 men from each company participated and were di- vided into five squads of 15 men each, with each group taking part in one event. Company M won the hand grenade throw with a total distance of 916 feet, 1-inch, and the hop-step- and-jump with 145 feet and one inch. Company K won the pull-up with a total of 102 and the 100-yard dash with a total of 132.2 seconds. Company L won the shotput with a total distance of 228 feet, one inch. | Meetings of Clubs ‘ | And Social Groups A regular meeting of the W. C. T. U. will be held Tuesday afternoon, August 6, at the home of Mrs. F. E. McCurdy, 415 Ninth 8t., at 3 o'clock. Mrs, E. A. Wilson will be program. leader, and Mrs. Gust H. Sjoblom will lead the devotionals. ——.—_-—— | City and County | “Can you trust Him?” will be il be the subject of the sermon to be delivered Saturday night at the World War Memorial building by Evangelist A. J. Lamm. Mandan Net Tourney Scheduled on Sunday Invitations have been extended to all Bismarck tennis players to partic- ipate in the handicap tournament which will be played Sunday, start- ing at 9 a. m. at the municipal courts at Mandan. Concrete Building Tile Drier and Warmer—The Ideal Building Material See us for estimates BISMARCK BRICK AND TILE COMPANY Wm. Noggle, Sup't. Phone 128 Bismarck Marble, Terrazzo and Tile Works Steps, Bathrooms, Fireplaces, Etc. L. Braida 108 Main Ave, Bismarck, N.D. Walsh Construction Co. House Moving, Raising and Ce- ment Work. No Job Too Large— No Job Too. Small. All Work Guaranteed. J. V. WALSH General Cont! Sunday evening, after which Gover-|. Squirrel Attacks Little Minot Girl A oo Minot, N. D., Aug. 3. gray squirrel attacked a little girl in Minot Saturday, inflicting wounds on her lip and arms be- fore being knocked off her head by a man who came to the child’s assistance. Subsequently the ani- mal was killed by another man as it was preparing to leap on him. The child injured is Beverly Maxine, $-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Mellberg. She ‘was the second within three days to be attacked by what is believed * to be the same squirrel. Thursday, 9-year-old Margaret Beaton was scratched but not bit- ten by a squirrel. Cow Elk’s Presence Verified by Miller Verification of the fact that a cow elk had been seen in Oliver county was announced Saturday by P. H. Miller of the state game and fish de- partment. Following reports that a cow elk had been seen in the vicinity, Miller made a trip to Oliver county and, although he did not see the animal, he found where it had lain and also was told by farmers who had seen it that the elk was accompanied by a calf. They had been in the neigh- aoa about two weeks, Miller was told. He asked that sportsmen and others take note of the elk’s presence and do what they can to protect it. ROBBERS GET $178.79 Minneapolis—Daylight robbers took $178.79 from the office of Dr. Henry W. Quist. Saturday and Sunday SPECIAL -at- Patterson Bakery (Main Avenue) Three loaves assorted rye, whole wheat, white bread and a cake 22c All Bakery goods specially priced on Saturday and Sunday. ‘We take orders for birthday and wedding cakes and cakes for Parties. You will always find fresh and delicious pastry and breads as well as delicatessen specials. Highest Standards Serving well ts the fine creed of this modern Funeral Home, wherein reverence and rare econ- omy of cost are the Golder Rule. PERRY FUNERAL HOME W. E. PERRY 208 Fifth St. Phone 687 And We'll All Go Over to the Patterson She loves to eat there, and I know you'll enjoy it, too. They have such wonderful electrically-cooked for mentioning it, the food ... and if you'll forgive me Prices are so sensible. THE PATTERSON (Just Wonderful Food) ONLY FIRE-PROOF HOTEL IN BISMARCK POWERY, eat these Flash! Are you looking for a cool place to THE SIANASOR TRIBUNE Readers can in the POWERS HOTEL, FARGO. OTEL hot summer days? We recommend the Powers Hotel Cof- fee Shop in Fargo. their at the News Stand

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