The Cedarville Herald, Volume 43, Numbers 27-52
*« Hedarvi *- ■> m '-w>*'■+*& * Mercdd. CEDARVILLE, O m O * » ID A Y , JULY 16,‘ 1920 «, T b s « 4 v<»-titm«iat finat te$U* f a t h e a d tK a t d o o t n 't fcy t e M l „too m u c k , PRICK, *L50 A YEAR OW« la th e politrieal center of the *5*"* end wjft remain so trabO after fj** Noveinbar as both Republican and Democratic eandida- ” from the Budceye state. July Stud,* Sfiator Harding will delfear % key-note speech at Marion , noWftoaldon ceremonies take plaee. The Senator at that tune wiG no doubt define his jxHdtion to the multitude that will gather and the •nth* Miaon yriji Have the position of fee Republican candidate! i „ Ail arrangement* nave been com? preted for a great crowd and special trains wilt carry large delegations from over the state and nation. As we understand it Gov* Cox will have his notification on July 30; The most important announcement of the? week from Gov. Cox is that he la to "*** * conference with President TOlson in a few days a f which time it will be made plain that, f e i s members of the cabinet nCuft be in formed that, they are to have no part in the campaign. While no names, are mentioned in the public prints yet we are sure Postmaster General' Burleson is "the une aimed at. No. official in national politics stands today in pgbKc re fu te as does Burleson* It i s . little wonder that Gov, Cox does not want him connected with the campaign. Secretary ,pf War, Newton Baber, is another that may have to beep under cover following certain war contracts Senator Harding as well as’ Gov. Cox is aware, of what has taken place the pastrfhreO years* I t “is certain stheae men will have to leaye the cab- inet even if "Jim” should happen to defeat "Warren.” .. Men in touch .with public affairs think that following the Senator's election he will Appoint strong, able nfen to Cabinet positions, the cabinet under the present administration be- ing the weakest etfer known, Certain* ly Cox, should fortune smile on*him, would not follow the same mistake president Wilson,h a s ' made. Presi- dent* Wilson from th e first, has been determined *to run th e country he- cording .to narrow lines and .of course ’ a cabinet of big brOad-minded•men was no.t a t ail necessary. ' 1 t In the^statethe race an the. Repub- lieamsJde fo r Governor between Cole, McCpllofigh and Davis is going to at- ^tractSsomiiderSble attention by pri- mary^dfiy, Animat Toth. Davis will ve the big^fity organisations and sfe$re*ent with; v'.aSro F a m o u s o f o f C o fifTM * t o S p e a k a t f h e C h a u t a u q u a HENRYFORDGETS D. T. &I. RY. HAIL DID MORE DAMAGE TO CROPS. THAN ESTIMATED. ’ Two l a i i storms‘within a week did more damage than was thought a t first. In driving about we find that Lawrense Barber, Elmer and Frank Townsley suffered as'much from the hail as anyone. The Marshall water melon patch on the Spencer farm was about in tbacenter of the hail storms and the chances for melons this sum mer a re poor. Wheat harvest has progressed rap idly considering the kind of weather. Some report fa ir crops but others say their yield will be light. The prospects •fo r,25 bushel yields are very few. As a rule the better wheat is fond on the upper land, the black ground freez ing out. ■■•■■■■■• As fo r hay harvest We find every one busy th a t has completed their wheat. Most of the meadows have much white top hut w* notice several In our rounds tha t are extra good. W. H. Smith on the Federal pike has a piece of more than 80 acres th a t is Very ‘heavy timothy and stands straight* 'Mr. Smith early in the spring went through ifi and cut out all the weeds. He aloe has 30 a sm of the finest oats in this section that should make fifty bushels per acre. F. 0 . HarhUon reports th a t thresh ing will sta rt next week with any thing like favorable weather. THORN-BAKNETT NUPTIALS. The many friends o f Nelson Thome and Mise Helen Barnett will be pleased to hear of their marriage on Wednesday morning about tan o'clock a t th e M, 32. parsonage. Thfi ceremony was performed by the bride's pastor, Rev. E. V. Busier, Both the bride and groom were students of Cedarvilie College last year, the former coming here from Spring Valley, The groom comes from Brooklyn and is also, a student in the Tbeoolgical Seminary. Mr. Thom expects to continue his studies in the College this winter both will return here, Following tb marriage the couple left on a trip fo Pennsylvania. ASSOCIATION RACES.. Horsemen in this section will be interested in the opening of the Mid- Sommer Grand Circuit race meeting to he held a t Columbus, Ju ly 36 to A tgM I I , Parses and Stakes aggie- ga&bg $MM? 0 Q have been hung up for Mia- t***W AH the famous horsee and the famous drivers wiH be there. » wfll he four ranee each day, liMurtril cftolie . ■linMaeasmnTf) inewa.im aesyy inde»-AnNm * twa>i*«ireM*»>iWi' ■• t o s s ARNOLD RESIGNS. Henry Ford needed more coal fo r his vast mann^tetetring plant In De troit. .ns- the railroads were unable to mkke delivery, Tbia.waa true of alt the other concerns in th a t city* ' To meet th is situation Henry and his son Rdeel, purchased the Detroit, Toledo & fronton road la s t Saturday fo r a consideration over four million 4 ol< lacs. The road has been in financial difficulties f onsOma time and the bond holders ware anxipus to sell, To keep anyone from loosing a penny Ford paid more than the price asked. \ ' The Toad ie'*iH>4 miles in length and ■: Mr. -Ford 'made a personal inspection ;,of all the; grades and brigea. He ; followed the ‘t r a c k .by automobile Swhere eyer possible maldng twadrips for inspection. He* would leave fhe machine and^walk over miles o f the track. *He also visited all the towns on the line unknown to the citizens. A new name is to be given the road and it is said tha-t M r,FQ rd a« d h is wife stayed up most of Monday night trying to decide on a proper name, jv The equipment is to be repainted and repaired for better service and HON, % ADAM BEDE several hundred new cars are to be ' . • . , ordered besides new motive power. J. Adam Bede, ex-congressman from l The passenger .service on the road, known Has been very poor but this *will.be improved. There is talk th a t Ford will try oufc^hig new gasoline cat on the CONDEMNED OHIO NEWS News Item# Piekedj . and Boiled Down for the Busy Reader. Minnesota,, and ' nationally author and. ieetUrer, will be heard on the CfaautaUqua program this summer, In a’ lecture on “What's Wrong .With 1 The World." s Mr. Bede has a point' of view that, analyzes present conditions in civic, and national life and looks far into the future. RETURNS ,FROM WESTERN TRIP Milton Voder has retumedjfrom his Western trip and h$ very mijch, im pressed wi.th that^ country. His trip Waa through the ,Dakotas, Montana, fdaho, Oregdn*arid Washington touch ing all ..the various cities and- import-' ant lumber and grain and fru it sec tions. He state#, that the crops through the w e st'are excellent and that the Dakota wheat*yield Will be fa r great e r that fhe average. Montana, which has been hit hard for the .past th ree years by .drouth,, has been having a- hundance of rains which will .insure good crops and plenty of pasture. > Mr.- Yoder .inspected the American in the irrigated sections. The average pronounces th a t farming land as Ideal There are* seldopa ever crop failure# in hte Irrigated sections* Tb* average heat crop i t abo.u|AO bushels to the marketed th a t, averaged fig bushels. In .the irrigation-territory says Mr. Yodet, they have ideal conditions. Never have to Worry about srafitfall, wind o r hail storms* The soil is of the lava composition and requires no fertilizer* There is never any rtun du r ing the summer months but any plant or seed will have rapid growth if watered* There is much rain during the Winter in th a t valley, quite a bit of Snow but it hardly ever-gets below xero. The section is famous for flho fruits of all kinds but the peach crop this year was killed by a late freeze, something unknown fo r a number o f years, Thefruit is not subject to dam age from insects as in th is country. When asked about prices obtained in that country Mr. Yoder says that wheat .is always about 15 cents a bu shel under our prices, this being due to freight rates. The average fru it crop brings about $90 a ton. This season if the fru it is boxed the price per bushel will be increased 60 cents to cover the cooperage.* Alfalfa riast winter brought $35 a ton blithe rick and this summer with plenty of gbod pasture it brings $32. -Ranchmen bring fheir sheep in from the moun tains in the winter and feed the alfal fa on, the ground where is was cub The roads in th a t country are not the best but At present considerable attention is being given them. There Is abundance of material haridy to have gdbd roads a t a low cost per mile as compared with costs in fhis state. , The great irrigation plants are con structed by the government and the cost levied on .the land benefited, pay able in twenty annual installments. In some o fthe irrigated sections the first year’s crop has amounted to more than the original cost of the ir rigation plant, n this Way hundreds of thousands of acres are being re claimed and producing enormous crops. A good irrigated farm brings $500 an acre. The other land in the dry section that is yet to be irrigated by the government can be purchased very reasonable. > The lumber industry in Idaho, Ore gon and Washington is A' big thing and something that interested Mr. Yoder, he having been engaged in this business some years ago. When asked how the West looked upon the political outlook he stated that Idaho, in particu lar-it covered by Socialists and Non-Bartizans* In most placi * neither Harding or CoX Were receive® with favor and everyone was looking to the new third party to -give them a candidate they could support, .tv-••- -y NOTICE* line for, passenger service.1. The car was first made .to compote With city electric ears. It will he as -'large* am th e usual interurban cars. The road will have ample finance back of it from now on and will be* improved in every respect. How the Fords do things is also told in a dispatch'when Henry and hisv- sbn, Edsol, purchased 400,060 acres of -fimberland in Northern Michigan la s t week to supply his factory with lumber* ’I t is said that Ford,has a number of.things in view th a t he is working on that will startle the manufacturing world-when they are announced* The Ford plant is the only automobfle .plant In Detroit th a t is operating, a t full capacity. Thous ands of men from the auto trades are now, without work in th a t city. / «"■ R. E. CORKY FOR RE-ELECTION ■w*een*|jy R. E. Corry, candidate fo r county commissioner does, not need any in troduction to Cedarvilie fwonship voters. He comes before the primary fo r the customary second term. His service to .the county has been*faithful to .the tru st imposed upon him by the voter#. Mr. Corry, while a t no time was he a resident of the township, yet his association with our people while on the farm in Miami township, has almost made him like one of our own. On matters for the-general welfare of the. township and the county a t large, he has always granted ail that duty would permit for our people. —THREEf THOUSAND A DAY. -»mm m$&M& h « txw- ftteti p aWMmt one hi a high school pear Yuwiiwnrit * •alary of llttO salary la mush greater than the " ami pay. The** a** two ■ la the local Order your wall paper for fall pa pering before further advance in the price of paper. Sample hooks a t office one door south of H. A. Barr's furni ture store* A. B. McFarland. Harry Owens, who is homo on a va cation, being employed as an inspector in the-Ford plant a t Detroit, states th a t a t the present time 3,000 Fords are being .turned out each day. The company employes 55,000 men and women and the plant is operated up on a different plan than anyother in the country. The .employees are but p a rt of a machine in the plant each one having a certain Work to do and in a certain time. The company con ducts the largest grocery and meat store in th a t City* Owns clothing and shoe stores where goods are sold to employees a t greatly .reduced prices. At present sugar Is being sold a t 18 cents a pound. Last winter when flour was to supply his employees. NEW PARKING RULES. Springfield has new parking -rules that will have to he observed. When in that city you cannot . leave your machine on the streets around the main Square which is bounded by High, Limestone, Main and South Fountain,avenue. You are given fif teen minutes to stand in front of a busine?<t house to load o r unload. You can pitrx your car On the other streets outside of that boUndry* ENOUGH BUT WHERE IS f f ? A Washington dispatch says that We have enough'.coal in this country to supply our needs for" 6000 a t the present raid of consumption. This may be true but with the^un-mined coal and no cars to haul i t we might as weP be without coal. The present price should be the mean# of conser ving coal if such a thing can be done. W. C. T. U AGAINST GAMBLING CLUB PICNIC TODAY, The Kadantra Club is "holding the annual summer picnic today at Sny der Park, Springfield, The member ship his invited a number of Maude .to join with them oa th|« eceaeion, The W. C. To U. will protest to the management of fhe .county fair a* gainst all forms Of gambling on the grounds as well as immoral shows* A resolution was pasted to this effect a t a meeting held a t the home'of the county president, Mrs, Carrie F lat ter, Tuesday. The county'convention Will beheld in Xenia, September 17, ■■■■■■ f CedarvHli Chautauqua, Aug. 1044. Federal agents, Valentine ok - a drugs, say they loynd^ a swamp district im sugar and potatoes oner declares addicts change for morphine*'’ . BUI Milk negro, leg, and Paul Jeff, shot ip the arm by Tl! ty authorities la a stilL located in a rial southwest of Magnc The sum of $lj52,7 dividual-tax ever Ini| upon, an individual paid by the executor the late James R. of the American Dak pany, Cincinnati, A t Manhfleid. C'lpyt Sherman Help are- connection with- the 1 the electrocution of The child was. killed an automobile to had been attached to ’4 In spite of the herd 9-year-old sister, Rc Cleveland, was drag Jake.by the powerf drowned. Dtto- Christiansen, <jj and John Harms, GQ-<, jured when an auto a train near Csmp Pe Ohio stale Bar asa vention at 0 edar Fob .let w. .hidings, Daytc Samuel 0 * Rogers* - former common died a t ctesvfand. ' Samuel v. Rented lost both legs when ing machine on h l s j Albert Kicbaum, 7$' stantly. killed when truck,, r _• ' Major Rudolph -Wiri "Howard Rinehart, ,1 * plan to leave in Sep' to compete In the plane races* - 'Water- rates &l 'S been raised 25- per v«j users will pay f $ U s of $3, - />/ H. A, T h e n ^ - !- Otterbeln following a • John U drowresfi.wiiugSi footed Fred, gelling home in ^edo meat. tha prig* fhim in or al I n , the |lored, was swag cpim- att illicit two miles largest ip- in DbiO/ will lie lie estate of president tther com- I’Hare and arrest In litigation of RendrtM ty ' betouched live Virife i a thief, torts of his Davis* 10, ck Into the Icrtow and i - I-,,.’ ' <’ | Wad killed seriously ip-, Was hit by. don, in con-' looted'Dan- president, tRorney and loari judge, Delaware, t in a mo,w- j'AYarnL, . tod, wks.In- dver -by a" iroeder and rof Dayton, &£for France national pijf- Slintoa have Domestic year instead resident of •a t DayMn, a -• ; v k&fc» * was: .hridgn on l» fhb c*n land, and obtained Mies Gladys ssaieB of Flam city and Mrs* Mout BootSif FoweR were probably fatally in jtu » whan an auto in which they woreRiding struck a heavy tynck in Coin Mayors of 10 Obh* dtUe#’ rede to Cleveland m Rirplauw to attend the outdoor aviation show- of the Associ ated Aviation CJub* i t Ohio. Four persons wSr« iariotisly hurt, when a motorcycle %pd an au te col lided a t Akrop, V Ethel Gregg, T9, wj^nber of an Auto aerial troupe, was badly hurt a t To ledo when the nuto ip which she makes her leap overturned upon strik ing tbe ground. Three person# Were killed and three injured, one probably fatally, when a fa s t' Erie passenger train crashed into an automobile gt a crossing near Cleveland. The dead are*. Mrs. Elite- noth Ousek, 40; Mrs, Amelia Fibich, 23} Jerry Flblcb, 3, J in a vain attempt to save the life of Edward Shanteau, a Boy Scout, caught in the undercurrent 'of, the Maumee river at Toledo, Scout ^Mas ter J. Roy Fttkln was droVmed. 'The scout master and his young charge went down together. A 2i4-ineh nail swailswed' three month# ago by Jamba Mowrey, aged 19 months, son of Mr. and Mrs, John Mowrey of Attics’, was removed from the duodenum by Bucyrua surgeons. Benjamin M. Ring, 30, former serv ice man, was instantly killed when he tilted back bis chair lo watch an - airplane and fell from a second-story window of his home a t Youngstown. Arthur E, Morgan, chief engineer of the Miami conservancy district, an nounced his acceptance of the presi dency of Antioch 'college. Yellow, fc'i rings. Jack Dewitt Of Washington C, H., who whs hurt in an auto race a t the Fort Miami track when his Ford racer crashed through a fence, died In a Toledo hospital. Seized with cramps while swim ming, Paul Thorn, is, was drowned in a quarry pool at Columbus. George BoCkert, 11* Lancaster, gave hi# life beneath the wheels at an auto that his little red wagon might no f be destroyed. Mrs. John Hamilton drove the auto. «, Mayor M, JR, Smith of Conhiaut, candidate for re-election to the state central committee at the Republican party from the Nineteenth district, is unopposed after names of two Other candidates are withdrawn, Marie Franklfh, reporter of the Cfaiilicothe Gazette, Chiliicothe, waa drowned while bathing, Fairfield gets the army air service repair depot, according to announce ment made by the war department, The depot was formerly a t Indiauapo- Ita.- . ' . Jacob L, Bachman, attorney and Socialist leader, died a t his home in Columbus. He had been slated for the Socialite nomination for governor this fall. Expense of the recent railway strike hearings a t Youngstown will exceed $ 12 , 000 , Arbitrators get $7,100/ Fred M, Martin* 34, Youngstown, manager of a roller coaster device, w«e kitted when struck by A oar. Martin *p. Walsh, 59, for years hotel man in Athens and Gipuster, Is dead from ‘■complications, fojiowihg- influ. on#** Jeremiah B, Reeves, 75, millionaire pipneer iron and steel manufaetuipr, died suddenly of apoplexy at his home in Dover* " Five firemen were slightly buruad in .powder explosion# while fighting a $185,000 blaze a t the plant a t the Ohio Bronze Powder company, Cleveland,. Caught bteween two cars In the railroad yards a t Columbus, Berry J. Butcher, 50, Fertnaylyanla' ratlroad police .lieutenant, was killed instantly, ■Marion police are. searching for the dynamiters who blew up the home of Antonia Nieuesi, an Italian. The home was wrecked. Nieuesi was blown into ■the yard, but escaped uninjured. Heavy decrease# in Ohio’s major crops, winter wheat, corn, oats, hay. potatoes aud. tobacco, and increases In ’the apple and peach crops,, are forecast in the July report of the crop reporting service, 'made .public by N. E, Show, secretary of the de partment of agriculture. Angerdd because he thought 22 -' yepr-old Georgia ' Ooten* resident of the Y, W. C, A. -at Dayton, met -a younger—man | in Cincinnati, police ray, W, O. iWysong, 64,- attempted, her life in an office where she is a stenog rapher by firing five bullets into Jiqr body. She is fatally wounded., „ Chip’s 1920. wheat crop will be from 20 to 25 per cent lower in yield than that of last year, due to the "fly blight,’*which lias beeii playing .havoc 'wR^ the Buckeye fields, according to information obtained from the^state board of agriculture. \ - ' Joseph Dwy, 30, Bucyrus* fell off a tree white--picking cherries and frac tured. his, skull. ‘ ' David Thompson, -- 8 , ■Greenfield township, oepr Lancaster, was struck % ' lighlnVUg and seriously injured While .playing in jn chickeh house* , Estate Ohio C, 'Barber, late match’msnufacturer, Barberton* id ap praised-at $5,581,115. . • ’ Joslah Botkins,, 50, a farmer resid ing northwest of Defiance, is, in jail charged with beating ,to death the 3«jrear-old son .1 Of’ his., housekeeper, Mr#, Ida May Bulloch* a former' resi dent of Dockland,' Farmers of Ohio, wjll need 5,000 cate during July and 4,500 during t thair .wheat' i l l e y " ™ iBl" year before. ..This i t the estimate at W, F, Coilander*. chief of .the teate- federal crop reporting' service, tor '1 Ohio*' , - 6 . -*■• v • - ■’ ■, ’ 1 *' Flan# fob picketing Senator Hard ing’s home and heartauafters a t Ma rion' in case Yermont fails -to ratify the federal suffrage 'amendment ai< being -laid by huffragist leaders. ■ - Samuel Karf, 40* died a t a Bueyfu * bdapital as the result of Injuries- r< reived in an nutomobile accident. Four men were arrested a t Allianc. after an attempt to rob a safe in r theater, J. H. Jacoby, Cleveland aviator plujoged to his death .before thou sands of picnickers when his -new seaplane fell Into „tlie shallow water lit Chippewa lake, Medina county*. . Guy Lentz of Newark was elected president of the Ohio division, of the United National Association of Post- office Clerks at the closing session of ■ the twentieth annual convention, at Newark. ■ : Following ati all-night Gearch in which ,100 men participated Geraldine Maher* 3, daughter of Mr- and Mrs. A. Maher of Youngstown, wns found on the Taft farm, near Warren. Norman Goss, 43, Warren carpen ter, died as the result of an automo bile accident. C. Stanton, who drove his car into one driven by*Goss, was bound over on a charge of manslaugh ter, : Paul Rlingel, 16, was drowned in the Whetstone river a t Glaridbn, nea Marion, when picnicking with a Sun day school cldss. He waded into a deep hole and was unable to swim. Stepping beyond his depth .in Big Darby creek, nCar (.ritnt* Addison 'll. Miller, 2G, Canton, Wav drowned, Dayton streetcar strike ended when car men voted to return to work on: the basis of 58, 60 and 62 cents an hour for three, six month# and one year's service. The city Commission granted a 7-cent fate, With tickets at eight for 50 cents, David Griffith, living near Prospect, shot and killed his 17-year-old daugh ter* Eva. The only cause assigned is The belief' that- Griffith suddenly lost his mind. City line employes- of the Northern Ohio Traction company at Akton went on a strike to enforce den-and for increased wages* Governor Cox, Democratic nominee for president, intimated he if, ready to ' make an intensive campaign in every state, IF is said he has no in tention of resigning as governor. Harry Clay Smith, colored edyiar of Cleveland, whose candidacy for the Republican nomination for sect«iary of state was ruled out last we*k by Secretary of Stnie Harvey 0. Smith, brought a mandamus action in the supreme Court to compel placing his name on tlie August primary ballot. Captain J* C. McAuley, 46 was drowned when he fell into Black river a$ Lorain, Charles Miller, 27, Was instantly killed a t Warren when caught be neath a locomotive crane, Columbus streetcar men’s union de mand# a fiat Increase in wages of SO per-cent for all employes belonging to the union in a statement presented to Rail-Light MmuApy officials* THE INFLUX of wealth to *UsacfciGas o f the vUnit«d State* I d tjbo paat few years in enabling many„peopl© to burld up Savings Accounts—-but it is also causing soma to be careless, to join the so-called “American Orgy o f Spending.” ^ The wise people belqng to the first class* Do YOU? We invite your Savings Account a t 4 per cent compound interest. / Make this Bank your Bank Resources Over Half Million - y ' " ; r ^ D o l l a r s ' ' . The Exchange Bapk C edaryille, Ohio. SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT ' U, S. Liberty Bcmds bought and sold. THE WOR L D AT YOUR VERY DOOR , w i i I N ' ' a COMES - 5 A X I A I O ^ T 1 Q c .1 A **. > A ' . 0 *H . | l a r tm a n , S e c . BE A BOOSTER—Buy Season Tickets NOW * For Real Satisfaction— —and your own .mental comfort—see that the investment for your Savings is selected because of the Security assured—rather than for the rate of interest promised— —for no increase in rate can properly compensate you for the corresponding sacrifice of adequate security. - - The conservative policy of -this Association for more than a quarter of a century now enables us to provide a standard of security excelled by none and equalled by very few. i Gem City Building find Loan Ads’n* RESOURCES 7 MILLIONS. 6 N. Main—Dayton ^S5 s e t t s Addition# to. Gulf fetream* ) The gulf stream would be little felt on the coast of Europe did U not re» eelve a great addition to it# volume of heat when on route. Till# is by means • a t a gentle flow from.the northeast trade wind currant that passes out side the Caribbean island# and the Bahamas. The surface temperature of this outside current Is about the tame In lis passage along the West Indian island# a# the gulf stream, in th e ’ Strait# af Florida, hut it is less vio lent in its movement and there is lew Intermingling of ft« «Pi>er nnd lower waters* m that it arrive# off cape Hat* teraa With a'much higher tcmpentane than that of flho more turbulent trait t ttiN k - ■■ ■ - . Wideawake Youngster. It was a t the movie#. William wm drinking in every netion of tee shadow figures with little Comment offered* A cat had entered tics seen* and km* down a cage containing tha heroine*# pet canary. The little bird escaped and the hero and heroine both gav** chase. They Collided in each other** arm* near an old atone wall, delight fully screened by shrubbery, snd tie# bird was forgotten for th# moment fa the love-making that resulted from the collision. William gave « ponderou# sigh and lisped in an ataltbi* m m whisper t *TR batcher thegfre #*d **t bird got Awayi" I V
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