The Huron Expositor, 1916-06-02, Page 6'Shrink
Woollen
ESIDE being a
wonderful cleansers
LUX adds to the
life of woollen and flan-
nel garments. Keeps
alllooselywoven fabrics
from shrinking or
thickening in the wash.
L U X dissolves readily in
hot water, makes a smooth,
cream-likeather which can-
not injure the filmiest fab-
rics or the daintiest hands.,
LUX --pure essence of soap
in fakes --is the favourite
washing preparation in
homes of refinement.
Soul at
10 cents
• to -1 11-1111.11144“ 11 l l[U{(1,fflty.•tklfr
TNE. t'LLS O.FLICE
111 caNSTIrA
When the bowels becomeconstipated
ll.film stomach geb out of order, the liver.
wor work p opedy, and -then follows
'fit sick headaches, the sottiness
the , beleldng of wind, hell
water: brash, b , and a
Alma feeing that you do not care to do
your bowels Eby using
's lLiver Pis. They will
awy all the effete matter which
ii} the system and make youthink
'life is worth "
Mr. B 'GCS; Watson, St John,. N.B.,
ferrite!: • 1 have been troubled with
for the fast three years,
had &rine that time have tried several
•F, of which failed to help me -
friend ceded Al'ban's Lam-
and after using three or fora
, l: felt She a -new man.. I. am now
1th -see, and am y sure
am on the lead to recovery. I
recommend a taxa -k
• l l ur sl. Lama -Liver Pills are 25e per
M 5 pis for $1.00, at all drug stores
his deal or Will be mailed on receipt
price by The T. Milburn Co, Limited,
(Toronto, Ont
f1r, Farmer.
Your land is valuable. Our' country
needs every ounce of produce it can
grow. It means money to you. and
prosperity to Canada. Doubtless
the seeding will be late this year
and the onlyway to rush the growth
is to apply large quantities of
{
ll.
Buffalo Brand
Fertilzer
A fresh car load just arrived and
oar prices are right
Ideal Wheat and Corn
at $30 per ton
Buffalo Garbage Tankage
at S24 per ton
€r ,ist of October settlement_ or five
per Bent off for cash.
We also handle all kinds of logs
and lumber, Lehigh Valley Coal, Can-
ado Cement, dressed lumber and
shingles, Canada Fibre Board, Metal
Building Material's, tile, cedar poste,
etc.
Telephones:
Bayfield office 8 on 174;
Brucefield office 11 on 145
John B. Mustard
'heft the Back Becomes Lame
IS A SIMI OF KIDNEY TROUBLE
Doan's Kidney Pills cure the aching
Itack by airing the aching kidneys be-
neath—for it is really the kidneys aching
'and not the back.
Doan's Kidney Pills are a special
/kidney and bladder medicine for til['.
!cure of all kidney troubles.
Mrs. Louisa Const aw, 683 Manning
Ave., Toronto, Ont., writes: "I take
eat pleasure in writing you, stating the
f " efit I have received by using Roan's
`dee e Pills; M•out three
years ago I'
wds terribly afBicted with lame back, and
so bad 1 could not even sweep the
Moor. I was advised to try your, pi:ile,
,and before I had used one box there was
>a great improvement, and ny back was
such better. However, l kept on taking
Ahem until my back was completely
gamed. I highly recommend ,' Doan's'
for lame back."
Doa es Kidney Pills are the original
:pill for the kidneys. See that our trade
rk the "IV aple Leaf " appears on. the
w tipper.
Doan's Kidney Pills are 50c per box,
boxes for $1.26; at all dealers or mailed
-direct on receipt of price by The T.
glifuuurn Co, Limited., Toronto, Ont.
d s : "Doan's.".
th G
A
Semi to
fi�llia
re are bzt two classesOf ne-
in _a-lse Eskimos and -eh
'ans. Eskiioa live along the 1,Frti-
i ern coast line, while the 8iwoh is
found in every part of Alaska.
The Esk�i. mo is probabl of on,
goiian extracti4l 1, aind. the Siwasb cer-
tainly is. In a .mixed co , patty o Si -
wash Indisns nd Chinese coolies all
dressed in s ar garb, i,: waul'. ° be
impossible to distinguish o e from the
other by physical appea, ince al nee
Likewise in sp eeh the' guttural f «nes
are identical, a d pecup = ties O _ in-
flection and he urico' - 4us 1 the
mannerisms of rlentals and Sin, i --hes
are as strikingl,, similar as their p y$ -
Seal characteris: s. The iwasb vo-
cabulary conf : s between . F ani! 300
words—some v4 ges 1181114 more nd
others fewer. wards, but all con
some words of +°dental o
The la.ngnage of all
=questionably the same
although at p , ent the hih
some villages = re unable
std the language spoken
The speech. of these , halo'
Aleutian islands probably
` fit divergence from
os all the varfon4 dialects.
Many Indians speak
not a few sped the pro
called Chinook, common In
lumbta, Washington and
states.
All these Ind1a'ns had a e
gin, and that origin was
fora •Che continents divided g
striilt. Siwa$l� frequents
hair, and bald heads are m
fir. n. Not so ofthe true
Indian. While '5iwes •. ' 1; a
sonthwserd, even 'into Calif , ne
of them ever crossed the bFg barrl
as they terms the Rocky in `tains.
In every way except in .-.,cupan-
they are different from the dame of
the states. The Slwash his - to
tention to hunting and ping • r sn
nee sity not from choice. He n;• er
hits for sport• -only for eat..
�.1..
$i ashes
1. 1
Iti
to
in ;
es oe e
sihowsi
e ori + al
r
sa
tial,
riffs
me o
mmon
Asia
at Be
have;
ofuax
Amer,
d
..• 1
f.
k
it
Flight of the Locus
in South Africa
at most two or -_
imp, yet giant jai�ved and s
1 brow$ mall so hard
strike it s ausesi = sharp ,
travel. In such' zit a, , •
them four or fiv days to
The scouts alone, hovering
Ithe red dust el; ¢ ds, z
month to destroy; the vege
district, while the min
1 the air, a host elf lfttl b.
tretcle out ' 1 •
screen between 1 ven rind
fanning of their • • {� gs
over the 1 of earth
; ; of summer. +� 1 . e
l breath of • •+�-e a* of
/1 F
very
ee inch
ailed
t as
PI 144
101
the It
alis o*,
pa 1 are nutue -
tion
1 1 _-1 14
as,t
In -�e
e enin1.!
1
Ths Phrase "Ms Ma
In his book, "The Pulse of
Fleet Street Mem ea,"
gives what he be ves
the expression "m a man."
doctor, ohe says, ` • : as `fo
The earliest use t the p
to me Is id_ the sho
where it is raid, ' o mere
the fan is able In 1 life p
keep the comma. ',entre,"
caught on fn ScotM 1 d and
ably brought to ;,,1• land sho
the union.. ' The only dl ptI
way of this theo Is that
barely two cents ti Is for th
mind to see the jo e.
'This last senten a Is Ind
Ing the war into th enemy's
1
,Ii
14
see.
•1
eW
1 1
l 1
1 •1,11
jI
1 1
1
hnS
ows:
im
1.; /' • 1
It 1
Prize Stor Briliian
• Gems from a• rec t shpr t ,
competition:
"Oh, if my poor Id. mother could
Up in her .cold, cold grave an, see
how happy she wo Id- bel" `
"Madeline seated hers If a i twiligb
an the wisterized p azza '
"Eth _1 decided to prep re met
appitable for her h sban 's • Aper."`
"Adelaide was a custo ed to ha
her fracturous ho e br►ugh arou
every morning beto ,e- breekta: t so the
she might take an ahilsi.ra: ' g galla
through the Paris t ourse."
rt
as p.
• 1 1
it ia110
Eng
ca
camp.
17 P
1 :
The First Anthracite C
When -the first two tons of a
coal were taken in`o Palled
1803 the good people of that ci
records state, "tried, to burn
but at length, disgusted, they
up and made a walk of it." 1
years later Colonel Georg Sh
sold eight or ten, wagon ifoads
the same city, but warrants w
issued. for his arrest for
ender false preteirs •
•
HUMAN VISI N.
IVear�i h
Farsight, 9 tl and Me
Testing t ® Eybs,
Farsight or nears' t-*hic
ter? We must reme ber that
has unusually acute vision for
at a great distance c rarely
needle or read sm 11 'pr'int
glasses, while the p rson who
virion is so acute to serve
most like a microsco sees dist
3eets as a blurred m ss.
The Medical Rec rd comm
"how little is know as to th
of vision of the farsi hted and
of,the nearsighted." a have
in order that our vizi n may b
scopic, and it is thus that we
to judge of the relati e distance
jects, and it brings e. greater
fore the retina at one time,
sight of two eyes is no keen
that of one. "Ind if ;hers
quired a greater int hsity in.
field it is a natural dens► to
the vision of one ey ' That
moot women close on eye when
lug a fn needle and 'why men
a rifle at a target shut one eye.
The Medical Record doubts th
of uniform tests for; eyesight,
that tests be .made in relation
ffihe occupations. - For example,
nearsighted ,man would. be total-
al,
lthraci
1phia
, sot
e stu
broke
It
0
1
•
e
t
• CII
emak
of it i
re 8bo
Mone
1
hod to
is bat-
he who
object
read
'thou
neap
him al.
1 1t o1P-
is on
exteex
1 les
Q eyes
stereo-
- abl`
=
of o
eld -be-
nt the
r than
be re-
givete
bscur'
whyi
thread
valuI
urgin
o deb'
a vett
Ica.
pada ire
G Weave.
suci� wo
sight ne
won
Pi
err
•div,
educ
pow
ant
Mit
ceiv
field
Ea
New
of a ,1, on
IS used for
rishe' , and
Am 'a.
is
kauri (ores
d
ns
!t,
tt
worn iii the field of
, yet adhis'ably fitted. for
engraiing, A. very far-
ou the of . et • hand, . who
Orly itseles as a proof-
em - setter, might be a
surveygr,'a forest rang:
comotive a gIneer.
ts," says the 'Medi as
be preen d by de t r-
d of occutation the hi-
e best fl for. In the
t should : e the aimto
Sion. one ' as to greater
,ng to aid 11 sources• of
educate nd train vis -
on ;so that ne may Rte..
of the objects within t
s 'vision." i •
Nautical 'sots.
feet long. The d
N w 'York to Liverpool; ie
W. miles by the north
by the eouth`ern tra
'arse Is taken by vessels
York, the Latter by vein
Liverpool. From Liver
ork. the distances
9 and 3,109 miles.
g records the
side are Sandy H
ck, Quee town her
t ll. ht sighted' o the Bri
is th l.3 1, Cow ,a d Cam
and o,l t e America coast either
cket , r ire ',laud.
The 4 at4ri- Gum 'Diggings.
, found underground
nd dug to the amou
i a half pqunds yearl
iture polishes and va
emist of It Ls exported
he' industry of digging
ther in the world.
is a beautifel sight, b
kauri gum
and esolat
often, with
soil, . ut of
kauri I pines.
ished ores
are hole
1,caur1 coun
tie se b an
ntryis treeless, barr
ven and swampy ve
Even
heavy, clog
ch the gunk formed on
ancient and long va
dug or speared. The e
tches of this treele s
with nothing but a 11
fern growing on it.
0
One of th
of En lish
onies is re
"The Gove
Palffierston
try Aid_in
all
of
wn
ur
cial ignorance.
best of .t the .any stori e
Oat ig,noirance of the co
ilea by P1,.1 -A. Siiburn
ce of Empire." Lor
forming a new
p eliminary council w
composition. He ha
e portfblfos with the e
Ionia' office..First on
another ;was sugges
1 e. At last he said
els: "Isup,oseIm
myself. Come ups
ehojv ins {where th
e maple";
annets warm.
t remarable sights
d Island, in South
on the* uring so
ear it is ` terally cov
Nota tofgro
here, ' y after da
nets s t round, an
to.eac•h 't er that th
eems sl. ,tartly alive
seem is sight sa
ich can never be f
One i�f the
the World is
pica, f4' the
*opt . : of
eyed
hit to
thtoua:a., _ of
thej' a . so c
- wto1+1 ishan'
Theselio
that it j on
gotten. F
'A Jlipanes
take poison
mach happie
be if that
Ieclpzil
suffer less
not think ab
ring Pa4n,
✓ verb say , "When yo
' liek the pate_" llo
One of the
on th groun
t Mist.
altnirinasdein sc. eyion has a
oW. Ins ad of lyin
11 strive to make
moister. Many peo-
ive. Health with-
, intellect without
pleasure without
e incomplete and
ements of living.
We should
oouutr
pie only' a 1
uneelfishne s,
The
TOe white
lirttie cells fl
eating the w
ed and o
losed, Which
ppearence to
f a stale egg
xygen, will
tesily digested
nd, of course,
ure air Is reit
lite of an Egg.
an egg is made up of
e I with albumen. By
these cells are rup-
from the air is in-
s the whlte and light
eggs.1 pie white
not inclase as much
t be as ' light and as
s jthat of the' fresh egg
lees valuable. The im-
atiny sgeen.the e," in cold,
How is It that la manacled convict
rt by leaping from a
t the, rate of thirty
tvaeu every time the
lips in alighting from
'himself so severely
company must pay
can escape tin I)
train miming
es , art hou
at the! railw
big damag
M ixe
The dove
wheeeby
th Tenth a
ted to sta
thematichins
Th
"I dine at m
e fninti by 73,
"Not ye Th
the Streete.
g of the new eity plan
e old line of New York
ourth street crossed
al a.chiehentent war- '
ee the brainiest of
regard yeti as one of
e they bawl me out
the tableclotLe"
t hey Have Done
rdffered I great many years with
kidney frer.3tble se--vey-r.0 remedies, end
also doctore' dedithte, with no result.
Two yer ago read an ad, in a news-
paper of GMT PILLS FOR THE Km,
tkiEYS," and sent (or two boxes„ They dide
me more good _than all the medicine I had
ever taken. Afras".-r[ I need the first two I sent
for two More boxas, ar.d am satisfied, and
also know that G4 Pinsaro the best kidney
I used to have to rhe three or four times
in the night ; now 1 can sleep and don't
haat to get up at ail, thanks to GIN FILLS.
Aro seetutyetto vow 011.
24
Alattgatla LA DUE,
11,0e. a box at 14111ragests. Sample free
upon request to
National lc Chemical Cm
of Camula, Toronto.
THIS PLANT IS A THIEF.
Dodder Steals all the Digested Food
self. or lt mar be that he came from •
a family of critninals and can't over-
come his hereclitiy. At airy rate, he's
robber, a thief and a plunderer. None
of these names is too severe, and if
you doubt it tetk the f.arnter, who
knows him for the damage he does
every year to the clover and alfalfa
crops. The planeis the dodder.
Perhape coda forgive the dodder
for not preparing his own food, for he
has notOnag to prepare it with. Nearly
all Vents have chlorophyll, the sub-
stance which makes plants green and
digests the food Which. they take from
the groUnd and the air. The dodder
has no chlorophyll.
So it has to turn robber to live. After
the seed springs from the ground the
dodder vine reaches out until it touches
some other plant; clover, for example.
It attaches itself to the clover stem by
its tiny reotlets and begies to eat the
food whieh the clover bas taken and
After awhile the root withers and.
dies, and the vine keeps reaching out
for more victimie binding them to-
gether with Its tiny threads: You prob-
ably have seen the small, pale, bell
shaped flowers elitalang over a field of
Once dodder gets a bold in a clover
field the farmer's Only escape Is to cut
clover and dodder alik'e and burn the
crop. An,d the farmer believes this
death none too horrible for the little
robber vine.
Tavern Heroes.'
The Marquis of aranby bears a, title
that swings from many a tavern 'sign-
board an England over. London alone
has some half a deem. Yet thiapopu-
1 lar soldier, who commanded -England's
,troops GermanY during the Seven
Yen!' Wait was the target of some of
"junius' " most bitter invective. The
iieeret of his popularity lay in the fact
that Granby was 'always a soldier's
general who not only led them well in
the fight but also cared, for their com-
fort in the eamp. The Seat inn to bear
the inarquie head as a sigh. Is said.to
have been ope by one of -his own
guardsmen at H unslow. Apart from
Wellington and Nelson, the marquis
comes easily ft t -among England's
tliagiat version f the Old Testament
follows: Pthlemy hiladelphus (284-247
0.) when enga ed. in making a col-
lection of the la s of all, nations for
the great Alex= e library waft a&
vised by his llbra an to have the Jew-
ish - Scripture ir nelated into Greek
and the king ha the work done by
seventy (or seven -two) learned Jews
from Jerusalem. be letter of Aristeas
is probably mythi al but the substance
of the story it te s is probably quite
true.
The term bully 1 the days of Shakes-
peare had quite different meaning
from that which has at present; be-
ing an expression of endearment and
good fellowship. Stome suppose that
the word, when it is used in approval,
is dexlved from the Dutch boel or Ger-
man buhle, which stands for the Eng-
lish lover. The harsher use of the
word is, however, to be traced to bel-
low. the root of bull, with a signifi-
cance of noisy blustering.
Paying For the Bait.
Husband—Here's an 'enormous bill
for a ball dress. What does it mean?
Wlfe—Ah, you remember that green
robe I wore at tbe ball at which I was
introduced to yeti Met year. Husband
—S -o! Do you Wean] to say, then, that
I am to pay for the trap in which I
was caught?—London Telegraph.
Fooled Her.
'Astounded Mother-e,Why, Tottie, you
never told me you bad invited so many
children to this party. Small Hostess
--Teat's cause you said that I could
never keep a secret. -
Very Seldom.
.When a man gets araise at the o ce
be can seldom keep it from his wife --
that is, the information—and, well, the
raise too.
Fire In the heart sends smoke in the
head.—German Proverb.
Emotionally Senile.
I know no mere dismal spectacle
than a man talking shop on a moonlit
hill in August, a wonian,gossiping by
the rail of a steattier plunging through
the sapphire of the gull stream or a
couple perusing adverbisments through -
advance as typical a drummer I once
saw read a cheap magazine from cover
to cover in the finest stretch of the Ca-
nada= Rookies. He was not a man,
but a sample fed, word emitting ma-
chine. ,TheigePile. emotionally sneak-
sze seance They should not trY to
read poetry.—Henry Seidel Canby In
Elatper's Magazine.
A Trick With an Egg.
Place two V shaped wineglameo of
the same size near the edge of a table.
In the right hand one put an egg, just
fitting the rim of the glass. Hold the
bases of the glasses firmly donne the
top rims touching each other. Now
with a quick, sharp breeth blow _upon
the line where the egg and the glass
meet. Tbe egg will jump to the other
glass. Witb a little practice this can
be done every time. earefut to blow
in a line with the left hand glass, or
the egg will jump in the wrong direc-
tion and land on the table.
Submarine Wonders of Hawaii,.
Nowhere in this wide world are there
such rainbow fish tie in Elawaii, of ev-
ery color and shade and hue.. .If there
Is any tint or gra.ndeur of tints in the
prism that is not reflected in the scales
of the tinny tribes in the waters around
the islands I should like to see it. A
visit to the Honolulu aquarium (far
superior as it is to the world famous
one in Naples), or to the Coral gardens,
where we see the fieh through' a glase
bottomed boat, disporting theMselves
in their own front yards, so to spmir,
is well worth while.
DUMBEST OF ALL ANIMALS.
This Creature Sits on its Mouth Dur-
ing Its Entire Lifetime.
What would you think- of an animal
who sat on his mouth? You would
guess he didn't know very ,miech,
wouldn't you? Neither does he. You
could call him the dumbest, of dumb
animals. In. fact, he's so very nab
that most people don't know he's an
animal at op He's the sponge.
No, not the sponge you are acquaint-
ed with—not the bathroom. kind. That's
just his skeleton. The sponge we're
talking about Is the one that lives In
the bottom of the sea, where he stearin
day ondils mouth.
In the beginning he's an. egg, 'which.
spliaz ail up in many cells and then.
swiras around for a day two. Theis
there comes a dent in one side—that's
his ruouth. Soon the sponge stops
swimming and sinks tq the bottom,
month downward. There be ett- and
eats until sometimes he gets to be
three feet tall and as thick as he is
talL
He's covered with a jellylike flesh.
When 'sponge fishermen hunt him to
sell they go out In boats and pull
sponges from the bottOm of the sea
with long handled forks. Then' they
put them on the shore to dry. 'After
days the jellylike fiesh drops off and -
the fishermen tramp the sponges with
their feet. Then they are considered
clean enough. to. selL We really get
the bones of the sponge, that's all.—
Rescuing Napoleon by Submarine.
, In his book on submarines Frederick
Talbot tells -us that the submarine
IS °practically as old as the sailing
ship," 'though he passes the fact over
with the statement that the tWorIter
ception and crude in design.
The most daring expedition ever sug-
gested in the early days of the subma-
rine was that proposed for kidnaping
Napoleon from St. Helena. It was
suggested to a British mariner, ;Cap -
tan Johnson, who was to get it0.000-
- The tonstructIon of the boat was be-
gun, but on the day whea the work on
the outer shell' of copper was to be
started Napoleen died.
Varnished. His Own Coffin.
Tommaso Salvtal was one of those
men vrho take a. grim satisfaction in
making preparations for their ow4 1.12-
terment. He assisted in varnishing his
own coffin,, a magnificent walnut one,
destined to be inclosed in a solid block
of marble, with the curt inscription,
"Tommaso Salvini, Nineteenth. Cen-
tury Actor." In the same way his
countryman, D'Annunzio, has eon-
structed hb own tomb.—London Stand-
ard.
Success doesn't "happen." It Is or-
ganized, pre-empted, captured by con-
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
410
•
•
•
•
':i40M444411.4040.444,4*.644443
mad
Light Buckahot.
Buckshot should be relegated to the
past along with the buffalo gun and
the market hunter's "cannon." it will
inflict a painful wound upon deer and
yet will nor kill except at very dose
quarters. Even the poorest t cam
usually seore a Int with buekskot. and
he will in nine cases out of ten be
tempted into "letting her have It" whea
the game is absolutely out of effective
range. About the only useful purpose
for Which buckshot can be -recommend-
ed is In self defense against a human
enemy at close range.—Ouling.
The Total Sum.
The three children came and stood In
a row ha front of their mother.
"hiamma," they said, "what would
you like for your birthday?"
The mother looked dowa benignly
Upon. the group and answered:
"My dears, mamma, wants nothing
for her birthday, nothing but three
good children. She'd like that."
"But then, mamma," cried the eldest
Had an Answer.
"She looked killing."
"How can a woman look killangr
demanded the purist
"1 suppose it is erhen she looks dag-
gers," ansvrered the resourceful party
of the first part.
specific for constipation foe
people of all stges because
having a tonic effect on tis;.
bowels, their Use tends tee
normal activity.
Even the most delicate
child can be givezt Reorsei
Orderlies, fon they rune
easy to admhgster and
in action. No other Umtata
is so good for children.
onlyat the Remelt Drugaitiereee
attar
Showing Roof Covered
with Brantford,Slates
in Solid ColOr.
Thpre is $afety
Under This Roof
roof? If you have, you certainly are in a Position to appreciate the value
of roof that is positively water -proof. Someof the treubles-eommon to s'
wooden shingles to -day are that they are iiipt to split warper blow off as
well aeleak, soon after they are put o'n. !Years ago they were good, but
the quality has since gradually depreciated as the available supply of
suitable timber became exhausted.
Brantford Slates have none of the fatil, ts of wooden shingles. They
cannot rust. They do not allow rain to!be driven under them as do
metal roofs. They do not require rigid subporting as do the common tile
or slate roofs. On the other hand Brrzntford Slates afford the utmost
protection with little weight. They are made on a long-fibre4 felt
"base" which is thoroughly saturated under pressure with asphaltum or
mineral pitch. Crushed- quarried slate p tides are then deeply embed-
ded in the outface of this "base". making t water -tight and. fireproof,
Brant o.rd
Roofing
Brantford Slates are made in the nattiral slate tolors of green, red.
black and grey. The colors never fade- nnd the slates do not require
painting nor repairing. These slates are pliable and fit readily around
gables and into the angles of any roof. This means a continuous roof
Ivithout seams -or joints. Sparks die on B,rantford Slates. When you
have these sletee "on" you are done with the job. Remember they don't
require painting or staining and may be stieeted to harmonize with al-
most any extetior color design, and the prtee is not beyond your reach.
We Would be pleased to send you sampres and our Roofing Booklet.
Brantford itoofing Coripany, Limited
Brantford, Cana a
For Sale by II6nry Edge
VRO
THE PRODUCT OF EXPERIENCE
GreAtiate
acuity o
Cal SC
trIC
MODEL FOUR NINETY
Complete $675.0' F.
GEO D. HAIGH, Agen Seaforth
Phone 95
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