New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 25, 1916, Page 8

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1916. EW BRITAIN HERALD JEERALD PUBLISHING, COMPANY, F Froprietofs d dai) aily (Sunday cxcapted) at 4:15,p. m at Herdld Building, $2 Thurch'St. i Ped at the Post OMbs at New Britain as Second Clas Mail - Matter. versd by carrier o any 15 Cents a Waek. 65 Conts a Month Tiptions for paper.to be sent by mail payable in advance. 60 Cents a Month $7.00 a year. only profitable advertisin I & medium in he city. Cigoulation books and press TOOm stways gven to advertise: —h sl Herald jwill “be’ found-on sale at Hota= Ng’s News Stand. 42nd St. and Broad- way, New Tork City; Board Walk, [Atlantic City, and Hartford depot. TELEPHONE CALLS. e85 Office. . : brial Rooms. “OUR DUTY IS CLEAR fow that the hot-headed Congress- b Who took part in inst, President Yy hape had it that ‘they slative, nch of jsuch they no authority Stions of ‘diplomacy, ected to settle down the ‘revolt” Wilson's foreizn | impressed upon are members of the overiment have the aid: “not I2xecutive oup and that | over they may be and attend to' | jir knitting, is strange that-supposedly Nt men, elected to repres ble in the halls of Congre 0 bereft of reason, amiliar with the yery his government, intel- ent tne should. should be su}‘ fundamentals should so ignore | United Sta Executive is free to ‘the Legislative | Constifution of the t they forget the n responsibility bartment. It would seem that any h school boy know that,— 1d fealize that undet our system of | ernment the Legislative branch has | control over the I | would | ecutive except | | | { _u.r | Connecticut is ! bed are his preachings no one outside of the collegiate world knows, for authorities at Yale have determined 1o’ conceal hig name and title, . The only inkling,as 10. his identity, comies from Anson .I'lelpa. Stokes, seortiary, who offers th discredited, or the rebuked, “too English™. Harvard, Coming from dear old it is surprising that the pro- fessor should have such an accent, be- cause all his predecessors in the pub- lic eye have somewhat Teu- tonic once has the T from Harvard. Prof. had a tongue. Never been ' dropped Muensterberg caused quite a pro-German utterances, later questioned and gentleman Harvard's school is to be from from pre- with a - de- John vented cidedly preaching English accent, Yale does an the interests of professors should | on Ger- By hearing either from the Yale ppreciate the language of their United States. injustice. neutrality be allowed to go “fifty-fifty” Even in Harvard } man and English. these accents Cam- bridge contingent bette students can own ME AND THEIR DRINKS, Indeed. it begins to seem as if of the few where personal a~cherished one states liberty right of citizen- In Virginia milady's skirt has been the subject of legislative attack, in the Union s stil ship. | in certain states the cigarette has been hit, in others the hour has come ‘What with all people in under the ban. the form or another threatened. the democracy There are follk who for- or fail to that while seems get] consider, Bre impeachment s in h -event the Senate, order. In and not the se, has the sole power and “when | President of the United States is | d ‘the Chief Justice shall i 1o person shall be convicted with- the concurrence of two-thirds of | members present.” They e body.of men, those framers of | Constitution, and they foresaw ctically all the possibilities of a d and. unruly gathering like se of Representatives even before preside; were a | -he ew to one-third of its present pro- jons. It is well for the United tes that the one man in the White se has the power to conduct our eign relations' and 'that they are given to the whims and caprices half a thousand men or more who e up the Senate and the House. ongress is peeved,—naturally. The iticians are aching to get in the glight. They want to make a show- L to the folks back home. While 211 dickerings with the.Central Powers | Boing condheted by the executive, legisiative branch has been taken | newhat out of the limelight. The k. barrel was naifed #p when the iparedness program of the admin- | dtion was formulated; and it looked if Congress would have nothing to | but sit and wait until the war lpped. Then a happy thought cc- bred to some poor benighted idiot | th Congréssiontl halls. and Re fell | spread broadcast | {the propaganda oughout this country by aliens and | Reasoned this Congress- | got to be done igners. Something ha. re, and dohd guickly, or-this fellow | filson willblunge us in war if he eps foolinz yith = those German ns. Germany sdys she wants to sink | armed merthantmen. .If Germany way we will have | jés not have her ir. Ratlier would; 1 er , principles, all fits under ' international law, g her go to-war.” ‘And’ then jution was introduced in Congress traveling .on gep < America} fevifice all h her than al " prohibit Americans jmed merchantmen’ nted, | it# would be a zood g’?fl'/{nienmm kept off ships be- hging to-any of the belligerents. It ! buld be a good. thing if Americans ! pt off the hish se altogether,— t, the backing (11)“ 1w of this nation this time would' be the saddest blow Nor would the United | trals ever suffered. pis be the only ates would have to yield; e other laws which hamper the war- | would he Wilson in | point, for there j Ing nations and these too ricken from the s letter to Senator at the very things we are contend- g for in this matter are those which books. Stone has said | | ve made America a na- on, and “She ithout conceding her a nation and pnder of her jong the nations of the world.” 1If we sovereign cannot yield them own impotency virtual making sur- | independent position | because then let it must have war up- Bld our rights merica, while it does not court ouble, has not yet degcnerated into | nation of cowards. THE PROF. AT YALE. Yale accent ZLING Because like underg of ‘a Harvard the o not the jspects there are many | differences | one man he would have the nation grate on forthwith there is started a fashion re- | form Those. who would reason cannot and their set should exist. ‘must we say now being made to pass through the Massachusetts legislature a bill regu- | lating the size of drinks? prize reform of all. leave with power of measuring a with this restriction: be the prescribed maximum of an in- | toxicating potion. That we should live to famy. togéther. most depths of eternal perdition. 180 long as polished by the-soles of many shoes, so long as the mahogany is spread out in tempting fashion, so white coated cup bearers of the gods are colored fluid, | givén the option | ize of his own poison. Hng the cause of those addicted to the | | use of intoxicants, it is [ Ryons have Torced { can the | have. All tin order to foster u | military | full | weeks’ aduates | He is | favorite son human is alike in some re- and nature variot between men. Because detests the evils -of dry. An- likes the not singing the nerves of another, song Women's and | movement. And so it goes. | live by the rule of see why Bohemians | But wha of this effort which | That is the ; This bill would | the full | arink, the bartender man's two ounces shall | the old sea captair <ce such stuft all nether- | But | Shades of in- the vile it to the Take away Confine the brass rail remains | long as the allowed to dispense the amber then should of' measuring the Without plead- enough to the By menr upon them penalfy of saying “when'. 1y limiting their portion to two ounces the evil overcome. Nor accomplished by cannot be result be eXplanation that. the;! professor | possesses an accen: at i ided 5t the C"Yt t that is decidedly sensation some few months ago by his if this | of going to | numerous | the land who favor one re- | | York drink | | country and he would | styles | | murder against the kaiser by coroners’ | ness | would have | which are seldom enforced. | i man be | | terrible | | man of the peepul, a carpenter. His ;candldac, ‘$h6uld be conducted along peaceful lines if he holds to tradition and will “Say nothing but saw wood.” Wouldn't ‘it joke on Mr. Gar- rison and some others if the conti- nental army plan re adopted by congress, after all?——Rochester Union. be a That alleged German spy, lgnatius Lincoln, boasted a liitle too soon and too loudly. The United States se- eret service has some detectives, too. —Buffalo Expres: The old Apache trail in Arizona has become a $350,000 automobile road- way. The old Apache spirit would doubtless find more stir and comfort today on the automobile trails of Manhattan.—New York World. The colonel grows charitable when i he says of the president: “There are | only two things he is afraid of. I am one and the kaiser is the other.” A | lot of people have been hinting he was { afraid of. his own shadow.-—Pittsburs | Dispateh. 1t was about time for that anuual wail from the icemen about the sho age of the natural crop of frozen wa- I ter. However, we have the wintry ! months of April and May to look for- | ward to.—Ruffalo Commercial. The Grand Duke * Nicholas shown what he was sent down to the eastern front for. Likewise he has demonstrated that with sufficient am- munition at his command he knew i how to fight as well us retreat.—Utica Observer. It is difficult to discern in the “dec- laration of principles” of the progres- =ive national committee at Chicago anything but an attempt to dictate the course of the republican party this ear without uniting with it New Journal.of Commerce. According to the Washington corre- spondents Roosevelt is now the mo: talked of man in the United State This may be so, but Washington al- ways enjoys a sort of poetic license to believe that it speaks for the whole —Burlington Free Press. The bringing of v juries in England is a waste of bre as well as an exhibition of childi. Zeppelin raids can never coped with by such antiquated meth cds.—Rochester Democrat and Chron- “Bluc Laws.” (Washington Post.) In the course of Western trip President Wilson violated the law of one of the States by giving a mu en- ger boy a 10-cent tip. It is hardl probable that the officials charged with the enforcement of the law his to direct the president’s attention to its infraction, even though the matter had been brought officially to their attention. The antitipping law is a modern in- vasion, which is merely a revival of the old “hlue laws" passed in many States more than a century ago and number of the States have been con- sidering bills to regulate the length of skirts, the size of hatpins and other matters previously left to individual discretion. When laws cannot be enforced, be- cause public opinion is against them, they should be removed from the statute books. Recently in Maryland a number of amendments to the an- tiquated ‘‘blue laws” were introduced of the "delesates, who had previously made a similar effort and failed.” The Maryland “blue laws” been made to them The reason why the paid little attention to the ef- and few efforts have | repeal public delicate around the labeling gentlemen;” drawing rings glasses ladies, " and them, “for and “blow- Ling a piéfiire of a hog on the topmost _No!' While men are laboring form of government -let one. under this i them go their way unattended by leg- islative rulings intended to into their system mordls they will not attempts to legislate so far, proven decency have, failures: in- men to obey only what conscience he h: made laws easily Human are so0 broken. So long as.the United States harbors | such industrial concerns as the one in Pittsburgh, which has announced that patriotic spirit | among its employees those who er training camps shall receive while away, besides a two with Uncle Sam need have no fear for nation. Nor can there be any politics in this action which is designed to 2 sist the national administration in its The concern is pay vacation remuneration, the preparedness plan. not interested one way or another in politics or the munitions of war. makes plate glass and employs some six thousand men. There are many come, | Other firms throughout the nation that | according to a could well afford to follow the example set by this concern in the Smoky City. far off North Dakota comes the ranks of From the latest tepublican presidential pos Wwilliam H. Heinrichson, a who holds forth in thc addition to ibilities. rofessor who was engaged to preach | goodly town of Denhoff which boasts o them in the college chapel, this iment scion of Cambridge has been lummarily dismissed from his im- some eight thousand population, all of whom are for Heinrichson. They are going to run him against all the bosed duties, ~Just who he.is or what IWau Street candidates because he is a “for:| inculcate | It is'the nature of the heast | | forts to repeal the laws was because | the country and city*authorities made the laws a dead letter. Small groups | lately have sought to have the laws | enforced. and whether ‘these efforts { were made in good faith-or not prob- | ably no hetter way could be devised | to bring about the repeal. | So long as laws are on | books thev should be énforced, even | though they are of silly and frivol- ous character. If enforcement is tried, it will not be long until foolish | laws are repealed, the statute | | Manm | (Bridgeport i | ying » Woman- of Genius. Tarmer. Mi. Tellegen is doubtless to be con- gratulated upon his capture of so talented, famous and heautiful a wo- | man as Geraldine Farr Such a union will doubtless be happy in its | incipiency, and may prove a perman- ently happy marriage. The doctrine 1 Creations. {and | vhite, and white with rdicts of willful | |50c Each, but you 'McMILLAN’S NEW BRITAIN'S BUBIEST BIG STORE “ALWAYS RELIABLE" SILK TAFFETA DRESSES $16.50 to $25.00 Really New smart models shown in the Spring Shades, CHILDREN’S COLORED WASH DRESSES 98¢ to $2.98 each. Come and look over the New Spring They are prettier than ever. NEW LINEN BLOUSE At $1.98 each. LINGERIE BLOUSES 97¢ to $2.98 cach. Of Soft Washable Materials. broidered and lace trimmed. COLORED SILK pRTTICOATS. i SL.98 to $1.98 Each. New Colors, see the changeable sijk Em- two-tone FOR EVENING GOWNS. has | AND BLOUSES Choose from our strong of the New Spring Season's Laces, Embroideries, Trimmings, silk and Cotton Nets, Chiffon Cloth, Flowered Striped Chiffons, Georgette Crepe, Gold and Silver Laces, Pearl, Metal, and Rose Bud Trimmings in a splen- aid variet TWO CLASP KID GLOVES. Special at $1.15 Pair. Three row embroidered backs, in white, black, tan, grey, black with black. Our ready. AT OUR MEN'S DEPT.| You can buy the town, just get a peek at the new ones to go on sale Saturday and the price isn't a dollar either. Our price get a dollar’s werth of quality and style. OUR MEN’'S SILK SOX : Pair Arc Real Hosiery Value. SPECIAL PURCHASE SAMPLE JEWELRY. Hundreds of pieces to choose from Saturday at 19¢ each. Spring Importation now smartest ties in been so discourteous as | Lately a | 1 his wife’s were passed more than a century ago, | i quality, D. McMILLAN 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. of probabilities is set against lattel conclusion. Famous women, like famous men, belong to the world. But the of men is to think of their wives as belonging to them and this in a very strict and literal sense. A great singer who keeps up her work cannot always be situated con veniently to set out her husband slippers and find his dressing gown The laws of matter forbid, for it is established that one body cannot be in two places at thée same time. Only when the man can accept the fact that there are other claims on time, than his own, is there much change for prolonged happiness in marriage like this. Men do not as readily adjust themselves to the idea of being merely the spouse of a cele- brity, as women do, This speaks for a greater nobility of character in wonmien, than is commonly féund in men. The ego is the great elemental fact. Any child, or any savage can ac- centuate the desire to be first, giving it dominance. Tt takes some higher to gracefully assume a posi- tion of subordination, and subordina- tion is what must follow when a man of mediocre ability marries a woman of genius, whose work requires her to be a personage. (New Nobody ~ Roosevelt. Nobody Haven Times-Leader.) can beat Wilson but can beat Wilson ton Nobody mins." Nobody Weeks “Nohody Hugh ' So we hear. has the call. can beat Wilson can beat Wilson Looks showing | the habit | but Bur- | can beat Wilson but Cum- | but | but | like Nobody ¥ flanger is Daily Bread of Dwellers in T, rzpolz | i { Washington, D. C., Feb, 25.—Tripoli | hly inflammable land of Arab and Berber, has exchanged its peace- time industries for industry of war and statement just pre- pared by the National Geographic so- ciety at Washington, the newer dustry adds little to the normal hazard of Tripolitan life. The statement reads: i ‘Danger i of the dweller in T | country flecked with cceasional and iringed with narrow striy of coastal yegetation, even principle na- tive pursuits for wealth and- happiness are accompanied by hidden terror and grave risk. The three principal sources of income to Tripolitan are in- the daily bread and meat poli, and, in this | cases | bottom of i sponges, j the morning mists of the desert, or | following the caravan of a thousand | are picking, and of carrying on the trans- Saharan caravan trade. “Whether make the native son seeks to his ‘pile’ searching the slimy the : Mediterranean for or gathering esparto grass in camel back from the coast through 1,500 miles of Saharan desert to tae distant Soudan, he stakes not only his ]’!bol‘ and capital for profit but also h|~ health and his life. More often than not he reaps disability or death as his reward. 'he wild seas that over the nothern the smallest part now and again coast of Africa of the sponge diver's hazard. Paralysis is always just ahead of this venturesome laborer who, day by day making foolhardy boil those of sponge gathering, of eésparto ) rapid ascénts-from the sea bed under press of later experiences the return to board in terrific diz plete paraly seem, many are able to continue their calling upper air feels normal circulation re- turn to arms and into the sea on And the lieving the disease indispensable to the vocation, their phlegmatically sons until ¢ chosen trade. Back Sahara, the silent, wastes, the desert broods under the blighting »es over the dunes at night, which paper is manufactured in great mills in England. working for the starvation wage of twenty cents a day or less, picking the Here are Just a Few of the Extra- ordinary Bargains that Await You | SATURDAY At The Mill Eand Sale Wise Smith & Co. 1,000 Pieces of New Spring Neckwear Values Up to One Doliar Saturday Comprising another sample line from one of New York cream and limpes and collar and coat sets, zh neck ¢ weac., Beautiful Venise lace lar ar.l cuff sets, net fichus, hig urday at the Mill End Sale A Thousand House Dresses at Bargain Prices Saturday at the Mill End Sale. . $1.00 GINGHAM HOUSE DRESSES AT 69c. Percale and gingham, in stripes and checks, three- quarter sleeves, turn back cuffs, trimmed with con- trasting colors. $1.45 FAMOUS ALTERLESS AT 95c. HOUSE DRESSES Good quality gingham with chambray collar and cuffs, several styles and materials, good colors. $1.00 LONG FLANNELETTE KIMONOS Pretty floral patterns, extra long and full, and empire style. 39¢ BUNGALOW APRONS AT 29c. Striped and figured percale, extra long and full, trimmed with contrasting colors. $4.00 SILK PETTICOATS AT $2.69. Chiffon taffeta with tailored and fancy flowers with silk underlay, also extra sizes for stout women in black and all colors. CORSETS AT MILL $2.50 Reducing Corsets, heavy 36, at $1.00. $2.50 LaResista Corsets; pink stripe coutil, at 99c. $4.00 LaCamille Corsets, lace front, medium bust, long skirt, handsomely trimmed top, 2 pairs hose supporters, $2.50. $1.00 Thomson’s Glove Fitting, P, C. B. Corsets at 67c. 75c W. S. Speciai Corset sizes 18 to 36, at 49c. AT 69c. belted D PRICE coutil, sizes 19 to R. & G., and other 25¢ e lace n Swies 25e foremost importers of Ven white, in fifty different desigr col- dainty neckwear. Your choice Sat- Charming New Waists Saturday at the Mill End Sale. $2.45 NEW SPRING MODELS AT $1. gerie Waists wtih panels of embroidery and combined, back trimmed to match $3.00 STRIPE TUB SILK WAISTS AT $1.95. Tailored style with convertible collar, attractive assortment of plain colors and strip .50 LINGERIE AND STRIPE VOILE AT 98c. New Spring colors, new collar and sleeves. $1.00 SAMPLE LINGERIE WAISTS AT 59c In trimmed and semi-tailored stylés, many trimmed back and sleeves. .25 GIRLS’ MIDDY BLOU AT 95c. l'ld\n and smocked with plain white or red and blue collar and belt, sizes 6 to 20 years. Dainty Undermuslins At Mill End Sale 69¢ COMBINATION cellent quality, deep embroidery beading, drawers style. » COR! ' COVERS AT 18c. Fine nainsook, trimmed back and front with lace and embroider: $1.00 CAMISOLES AT 79c. Several pretty styles, fine lace and embroidery, some with net sleeve: $1.00 NIGHT GOWNS AT 59c. Nainsook, empire style, elaborately trimmed with ces, hamburg and ribbons. 69¢c CREPE NIGHT GOWNS AT 39c. Chemise style, neat lace edge ribbon beading. 39¢ DRAWERS AT 25c. and muslin, wide embroidery ruffle. WAISTS with Prices. AT 48c. yoke, ribbon Cambric SALE OF PLUSH COATS One lot of plush coats, and fur trimmed, One rack that have Tailor-made suits of serge, poplin and gabardine that were up to $22.50 at $10.00. One lot . materials, and others fancy med,” value up to $12.00. One lot of suits in gabardine, poplin and serge that value up to $27.50 at $14.00. $12.00. ———ee LACES WORTH UP TO 19c, SATURDAY AT THE MILL END SALE, YARD 50 Wise wash- laces in ‘edges only—Linene edges for trimming. summer dresses, etc., also fine Hamburg embroidery edges up to six inches wide, all at 5¢ ) MADE VEILS WITH ALL THE NEW BORDERS. Including fine chantilly lnce, latest meshes, o) ry regular 50c and 75c kinds, Saturday at, each [ One rack coats, plain have been at $10.00. One rack of suits in various some plain tailored braid trim- $25.00 at and some with full backs, have been $32.50 and $35.00 at $18.00. been $17.98, at $8.00. of winter and $18.98 of cloth various materials, double faced goo been $22.50 and some with belts and others with flare bottoms, plain winter $14.98 coats One lot of dresses consisting and of serges and a few poplins, value $6.9%, at $3.75. One lot of dresses in various materials, silk poplins, taffet: and taffeta and serge com- bination, have been $10.98 and $12.98, at $7.00. coats in One lot of silk poplin dress- mixed es, some with embroidered have fronts and others with cuff but- $25.00, at tons and ruffled skirts, have been $12.98, at $9.00. cloth fur trimmed, and $20.00, grey THOUSANDS OF Y‘\RDG OF UP TO 29c, AT, YARD RIBBO\ S, WORTH Including New Millinery Ribbons up to six inches wide, stiff hair bow ribbons in all colors, plenty of pink, blue and white as well as light and dark warp prints and checks for all purposes, all at 17c yard. ————————————————————————————— CHILDREN'S RIBBED SILK STOCKINGS. In white, sk» dn(l pmlh slightly_irregular, other- wise worth sSale, pair PLAIN WHITE VOILE. 40-inch wide chiffon finish voile, worth Zic. at the Mill End Sale, Sat- urday vard ONAS WASH SILK. 32 and 36-inch wide, assorted patterns and color- ings, regular 39c qualit Mill End Sale, yard DRESS PERCALES. 36-inch wide figured dress patterns and colorings. End Sale, yard NEW SPRING SKIRTS. Saturday we'll place on sale at first bargain table, Main Floor, New Spring Dress Skirts of serge and wool crepes worth $ Regular and extra sizes. SEAMLESS BRUSSELS RU Size 9x12 ft., desirable pattérns and attractive colorings. Extra Special Saturday at $14 95 percales in assorted ‘Phone orders 3050, saturday at the 27 Charter and Mail Orders WISE, OUR DAILY AUTOMOBILE DELIV- ERY Daily Delivery i competition, sooner or ship- iness which forms prelude to partial or com- Strange as it n partially paralyzed divers and the grass loaded on camel the port of keen usual fety unfitted, helpless cripple «in picker lowered | field, and begins ground be- legs when the sponge Arab divers of Tripoli, high, and inured to hazard " in particular fatherland, dive through a few fat sea- killed by their and again, per. ippled or the venemous prove fatal. however, that in the plateau lands of the behind the coastal greens in treeless, untenanted desert where the alluring mystery of | death. “Of the employed by one-fifth of it sponge dive: it by erably brought over in fanciful tretch from of day and beckons fields of wiry esparto gra In these fields, more t the SMITH & CO. | 55 HARTFORD INSURES PROMPT New sritain, Elm wood, Newington, Cedar Hill. and tying it in large bales to be | vans, rains rps of workers in their begins for the esparto in the moonlight of ecarly the chill of the desert leaves his nearby shack for the work, ‘breaking the longest from the most And in the heart of these clumps, lurks his form of his arch enen In the clumps, Nortn scorpions, whose stings now and again It is the poisonous vipers make parto picking a sporting 000,000 Tripoli was produced by s, more than one-third of the esparto pickers, wide, desert from the Soudan. the Mill End Sale Our Restaurant idcal wubstanial past. OF ¥ ntR PURCHASIES, and Clayton. DELIVERY MapleHill some of a few and some of thousand camels, fitted out in 7 and undertook the danger. journeys to the great marts of ese trade-—Timbuktu, Kano, ¥ Kuka, Bornu, and Waudi neys sometimes last two year and brought their for Tripoli ipolitania, is an- who adventure picker morning. In morning, the undertakers rapid task of wiry blades, matured glumy ever danger in the the deadly vi- also, are hidden African rock Robbers the desert, affords. across infest all and, the lee C8 besides vengeful capric of the ma with not pay a sufficient tribute of the camels and men caravans of the past bleach along the work of game es- | to with harm but there are stroved by thirst, by or by the water of inter-tribal wars. some aming them trade war, the of export before the wells Of all the most men will risky; and the old ca fina h!(lo in the newer dustry of war for which their time labors have not fully them,” ’ ana consid- one-sixth w. treacherou Many cara- ripoli, raught oudan- anem These jour-. around® every species of danger that the desert lanes thesas, all the Inner Dessert lies subject to the sked Tuar- egs, the strange people who are at war all who cross their paths and do The bones of a myriad of desert trails caravans that mostly came the hands of marauders, the sand storm, poisoned in three risky Tripolitan trades, the caravan trade s wvan peacet preparéa

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