The Huron Expositor, 1930-10-24, Page 6POMP
o. r
�;� a c' � �� �� precedent an the
rit ah tip rf been the 'warning of
fav nae it4, erath o DOM Taylor,.
:ripping" licr named Grand Sue,
ae whie a •'woft the Carfiu Carhandicap
in Lanark':.on jtdy, '24th. The press ae-
nfalinta ayleleh va'have read do not say
kw the discovery was made but not-
ed merely that the Lanark stewards
areted the matter to the stewards
of the4ockey Club and that they con-
cluded the investigation and made the
decision; Taylor says that he will
appeal the ru'lin'g, but we do not know
to whom he will appeal unless he
should take the matter to the foot of
the Throne, since the Jockey Club is
omnipotent on the English turf. The
motion is unprecedented, not in th3
fact that the trainer and the horse
have been forever barred from racing
in England, or anywhere else in the
world for that Matter, but because of
the drugging of the horse. The word
"drugging" is used in England, but
the word "doping" is used here. If
we were to say that a horse had been
drugged we should convey the mean-
ing that he had been incapacitated
from running, but obviously Grand
'Success was merely stimulated since
he won the race. In other words,
they were running him "hot."
How general is the practice of Eng-
lish trainers using dope on their
horses we have no idea. In view of
the different conditions under which
racing is carried on, one of the most
ruPa.tant of them mg the tracks
,o: r -Web the horse runr B
we should
net eloped it to be general atsome
thirty years ago it was. Maybe the
wrinkle was introduced from the
United States for about that time
American jockeys and American horse
ea were having a tremendous run of
lack in the Old Country. Eventually
the attention of the Jockey Club was
directed toward the practise and it
was forbidden under penalty of
"warning off." This "warning off"
is something like taking the "Chiltern
Hundreds," it seems to us. Nominally
it applies only to the heath at New-
market. There are plenty of other
race tracks in England, and it would
seem that merely to be warned off
one of them would not end a train-
er's career. Similarly it would not
appear that the mere notice that a
member of parliament had applied
for the Chiltern Hundreds would
mean that he had resigned. But that
is what warning off means; and that
is what applying for the Chiltern •
Hundreds means, and we gather that
one does not need to receiive the Chil-
tern Hundreds to be disqualified from
the House.
In his book, "Men and Horses I
Have Known," the Hon. George Lamb -
ton, the famous gentleman trainer,
tells how he opened the eyes of the
Jockey Club to the doping evil then
rampant. He told his brother, Lord
Durham, a steward of the Jockey Club
that he intended to run some doped
horses to prove his contention that a
stimulated horse would show vastly
A BOX OF TRICKS
There's a Trick in making money out of Poultry
The Trick is to get lots of eggs and the way to do
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ASIC YOUR bEALER
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ir,cng vel f. rtgi. Lora Aim was at
first opposed to the pian 'but eventual -
1Y consented, n view of the,
that
the paactise was not then illegal, and
his brother said that he would not
bet a shilling on any of the doped
horses. Mr. Lambton then reeords:
"I obtained six dopes from a well-
known veterinary -surgeon. They were
not injected with a needle but just
given out of a bottle. Their effect
on a horse was astonishing. I used
five of them and had four winners
and a second. Not one of these hors-
es had shown any form throughout the
year. One of them, Ruby Lopez, who
had ,previously entirely defeated the
efforts of the hest jockeys in England,
ran away with the Lincoln Autumn
Handicap, with a stable boy up, rac-
ing like the most honest horse in the
world."
Mr. Lambton had one shot left and
he gave it to Lord Charles Montague
to use on Cheers, winner of the Eclipse
Stakes and a high grade horse. Cheers
had run disappointingly all season but
with the stimulant he beat a big field
in the Markeaton Plate. Nobody can
have muoh acquaintance with horse-
men or racing without hearing a lot
about doped horses. One well known
trainer has said that in his opinion
all trainers use stimulants at some
time or other. Indeed, we are aware
of one trainer who has acquired quite
a reputation because it is taken for
granted that he will dope a two year
old. Originally, we presume, the dope
was given to ease pain in foot or ten-.
dom which .galloping at top speed
would make unendurable, ordin-
arily. With the nerves number the
unsound horse would gallop strongly.
Then some genius had the idea of
giving a horse a tonic, composed of
some powerful drug that would act
on him as a cocktail might act on a
tired business man. The effect was
wonderful. Other experimenters fol-
lowed his lead, and it was found that
generally speaking, horses would run
with keener speed and greater cour-
age when temporarily toned up by a
shot of some kind.
On the face of it, there might seem
nothing objectionable in this practise
since it could hardly be expected that
a horse would •be doped frequently
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be!c e and d •th s-
en ugh to become om addict .il � .
fore suffer mental and Physical agon-
ies
ge
ie8 when dePr4ved• f the stimulant.
.
The trouble was that the dopingof
horses is the most popular way of
cheating with them. When they are
not trying to win they are run •'cold,"
that is to say, without their dope,
and they give inferior performances.
Then when they seem to be in a fav-
orable spot they are stimulated, and
their racing ability for the time be-
ing is increased perhaps' .,by twenty
per cent. Sometimes disaster over-
takes a horse, and the men around the
track describe it to dope. Some years
ago at the Woodbine a horse won
two races in an •afternoon and died
that night. It might have been un-
duly stimulated or,, of course, the un-
usual effort might have proved fatal.
We have heard it suggested that vet-
erinary surgeons might determine
whether a horse is doped by taking
its temperature, but we are unaware
whether all stimulants would be re -
fleeted in the heat of the blood. Un-
doubtedly a good deal of art is re-
quired on the part of those who make
a practise of doping horses. Just the,
required dose must be given and it
must be given so that its maximum ef-
fect will be exerted in the course of
the race, and not at the start where
it may be revealed by the antics of
the horse, which plainly show that
something untoward and at the same
time highly exciting is proceeding in
his innermost being.
INSTANT TRAVEL
Slightly more than one minute is
the average time required to com-
plete a long distance telephone call.
Just a minute! --and in a flash your
voice has crossed a hundred miles of
space—or a thousand! Distance means
little, and rates are remarkably low
—especially after 7 p.m.
CLERGYMAN CHOOSES BEST
HUNDRED HYMNS
We have received the following com-
munication from the Rev. T. A. Pat-
terson:—
I read your column on the hundred
best novels. I wish you would write
another on the hundred best hymns.
I have not seen the new hymnal of
the United Church, but I have heard
disquieting rumors that many old-time
favorites have been idisearded and
that classical ,music instead of old
blood -stirring tunes has been put into
the book. Doubtless a blow is being
struck at anything which may appeal
to the emotional in us, so that form
and formality are to usurp the place
which the grand old hymns and tunes
held in the hearts of our fathers ani
mothers, natural and spiritual. I
enclose a selection of the best hundred
hymns. It is a choice lot. Possibly
some favorites are not there. Well, I
am willing that selections should be
made, and if they meet with the ap-
proval of a plebiscite of your readers,
let this one hundred hymns, when a
final selection has been made, stand
for all time as the very best one hun-
dred hymns extant.
Jesus, Lover of My Soul, C. Wesley;
Rock of Ages, Cleft for 'Me, Toplady;
Abide With Me, Fast Falls the Even-
tide, Lyte; Just As I Am, Without one
Plea, C. Elliott; How Sweet the Name
of Jesus Sounds, J. Newton; My God
and Father While I Stray, Charles
Elliott; Nearer My God to Thee, Mrs.
Adams; Sun of My Soul, Thou Savior
Dear, Keble; I Heard the 'voice of Jes-
us Say, H. Bogner; Art Thou Weary,
Art Thou Languid?, Stephen the Sab-
aite; For Ever With the Lord, James
Montgomery; God Moves in a Mys-
terious Way, Cowper; From Green-
land's Icy Mountains, R. Heber; When
I Survey the Wondrous Cross, Watts;
Lead Kindly Light, Amid the Encir-
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ilo
"BUY NORMALLY" AND 'i'i3 WILL DE NO 1JN1 : LOYM1 NT I
N. CLUFF
3
l��,rky+I� r•'�i
Try
�i Magnesia
mach Trouble
To Neutralize Acidity and Fermenta-
tion, Prevents Indigestion, Sour
Gassy Stomach.
People who suffer from indigestion
usually have tried (pepsin, charcoal,
soda and various digestive aids and
got little more than slight temporary
relief—sometimes not even that.
But !before giving up to chronic dys-
pepsia, just try the effect of a little
Bisurated Magnesia—not the, ordinary
commercial carbonate, citrate or milk,
but pure Bisupated Magnesia which
you can obtain from any druggist in
either powder, or tablet form.
Take a teaspoonful of the powder or
four tablets with a little water after
your next meal, and see what n dif-
ference this makes. It will instantly
neutralize the dangerous, harmful ac-
id in the stomach which now causes
your food to ferment and sour, mak-
ing gas, wind, flatulence, heartburn
and the bloated or heavy, lumpy feel-
ing that seems to follow most every-
thing you eat. You can enjoy your
meals without a fear of indigestion.
:tll K under the riaMO of hy'ingie, +,.
tot with some surprise that Mr,
.
tors n has not included that boautful
h y , n written by Tom Moore, O me
Ye Disconsolate.
ATTENTION JUNIOR FARMERS
Junior Farmer's Trip to Royal Win-
ter Fair, November 18th to 22nd.
The trip of the 500 Junior Farmer's
to the Royal Winter Fair during the
past three years have created a great
lea) of interest in all ,parts of the
province and as a result the Ontario
Department of Agriculture is again
offering this trip to ten boys from
each County in Ontario.
Contestants for this splendid trip
must comply with the following regu-
lations:
(18) They must take part in a
judging competition conducted in each
County during the month of October.
(2) Contestants must be farmers
or farmer's sons between the ages of
16 and 20, inelusive, on November 1,
1930.
(3) 'Contestants must judge five
classes of live stock, one class of poul-
try, and five classes of crops, such as
grain small seeds, potatoes and roots.
(4) To be eligible for the competi •
tion, contestants must first submit a
cost record pertaining to the cost of
producing some farm product or per-
forming some farm operation. This
statement may be quite elementary
but must be complied with before
eligible for a trip to the Royal.
The ten high boys who are within
the age limits and who have complied
with Regulation No. 4 will be the win-
ners of a free trip to the Royal Winter
Fair. For these boys the Department
will provide free of charge:
(1) Railway fare from home sta-
tion to Toronto and return.
(2) Meals and lodging for four
nights in Toronto.
(3) A programme to include a
tour of the city and visits to the
stockyards, abattoirs, factories, and
other commercial 'concerns as well as
a study of the Royal Winter Fair.
The competition to decide the Royal
Trip winners from Huron County is
to be held in Clinton on Wednesday,
October 22nd, and contestants must
register 'art the Agrie'uItumal !Offilce
before 9 a.m. Cost record forms must
be submitted at time of registration.
Bulletin No. 338 "Hints on Judging':
contains valuable information on the
judging of all live stock and crop pro-
ducts and may be secured on applica-
tion to the Agricultural Office, Clinton.
For any further information apply
to the Ontario Department of Agri-
culture, Clinton.
cling Gloom, Newman; Hark the Her-
ald Angels Sing, C. Wesley; All
Praise to Thee My God ":T This Night,
T. Ken; A Few More Years shall Roll,
H. Bonar; 0 God Our Help in Ages
Past, Watts; Our Blest Redeemer,
Ere He Breathed, Harriet Auber;
All 'Hail the Power of Jesus' Name,
E. Perrosset; Eternal Father; Strong
to Save, W. Whitting; Holy, Holy,
Holy, Lord God, Almighty, Heber ;
Guide Me 0 Thou Great Jehovah, W.
Williams; There is a Fountain Filled
With Blood, Camper; Lo, He Comes
With Clouds Descending, C. Wesley;
At Even When the Sun Has Set, H.
Twells; Awake My Soul and With the
Sun, T. Ken; Hark! My Soul it is the
Lord, Camper; All People That on
Earth Do Dwell, W. Keble; Brief Life
is Here our Portion, Bernard of
Cluny.
Jesus Shall Reign Where -ea the
Sun, Watts; Jesus the Very Thought
of Thee, Bernard of Clairnaux; Hark,
Hark My Soul Angelic Songs are
Swelling, Faber; Jerusalem, My Hap-
py Home, Jerusalem the Golden, H.
K. White.
Oft in Danger, Oft in Woe, H. K.
White; Come Let us Join Our Cheer-
ful Songs, Isaac Watts; Thy Way,
Not Mine, 0 Lord, H. Bonar; Father,
I Know That All My Life, A. L. War-
ing; Come Ye Thankful People, Come
Alford; Onward Christiaan Soldiers,
Baring -Gould; I Lay My Sins on Jes-
us, Bonar; 0, for a Closer Walk with
God, Cowper; 0 Worship the King, All
Glorious Above, R. Grant; Brightest
and Best of the. Sons of the Morning,
R. Heberer; As Pants the Heart for
Cooling Streams. Tate and Brady;
Sweet Saviour Bless Us Ere We Go,
Faber; Hail to the Lord's Anointed,
Montgomery ; Pleasant are Th y
Courts Above, •Lyte; Great God! What
do I see and Hear, Ringmault; There
is a Land of Pure Delight, Watts; 0
Timely Happy, Timely Wise, J. Keb-
]e; Christians Awake, Salute the Hap-
py Morn', John Byron; Prayer is the
Soul's Sincere Desire, Montgomery;
Saviour Again to Thy Dear Name we
Raise, J. Ellerton; The Church's One
Foundation, S. J. Stone; Soldiers of
Christ Arise, C. Wesley; Weary of
Earth and Laden with My Sin, Rev.
S. J. Stone; Christian Seek Yet Re-
pose, Miss Elliott; 0 Day of Rest and
Gladness, Wards•worth; Christ the
Lord is Risen To -day, C. Wesley; 0
Paradise; 0 Paradise! Dr. F. W. Fa-
ber; I Need Thee Precious Jesus, F.
Whitfield; Safe in the Arm of Jesus,
Mrs. Van Altyne; 0 For a Heart to
Praise My God, C. Wesley; Hark the
Glad Sound the Saviour Comes, Dodd -
ridge; Come Unto Me Ye Weary, W.
C. Dix.
My Faith Looks Up to Thee, Ray
Palmer; There is a Green Hill Far
Away, Mrs. Alexander; Before Je-
hovah's Awful Throne, Watts; 0
Jesus, I Have Promised, J. E. Bode;
The Son of God Goes Forth to War;
R. Heber; Not All the Blood of Beasts,
Watts; I Was a Wandering Sheep,
H. Bonar; 0 God of Bethel by Whose
Hand, Doddridge; Peace, Perfect
Peace. E. H. Bickersteth; 0 Come All
Ye Faithful (translated by Dr. Alf,
F. Oakley, 1802-80); The King of Love
My Shepherd Is, H. Baker; Through
All the Changing Scenes of Life, Tate
and Brady; Take My Life and Let it
Be, F. R. Havergal; While Shepherds
Watched Their Flack by Night, Tate
My God and Is Thy Table Spread,
Doddridge; Jesus Christ is Risen To-
day, Anon_; I Could Not Do Without
Thee, F. R. Havergal; Jesus Lives,
No Longer Now, C. F. Gilbert; Come
Thou Fount of Ever Blessing, R. Rob-
inson; As With Gladness Mem of Old,
W. C. Dix; 0 For a Thousand Tongues
to Sing, C. Wesley; Saviour Breathe
an Evening Blessing, James Edmis-
ton; Sweet the Moments Rieh in
Blessing, James Allen; Let Us With a
Gladsome Mind, Milton; 0 Happy
Band of Pilgrims, Dr. J. M. Neale ;
Days and Moments Quickly Flying,
aE. Caswell; Jesus Calls Us O'er the
tumult, Mins. Alexander; Glorious
Things of Thee are Spoken, J. New-
ton; 0 Lord, How Happy Should We
Be, J. Anstice; Tell Me the Old, Old
Story, Mrs. Hawkey; Lord, I Hear
of Showers of Blessings, Elizabeth
Codner; Sometimes a Light Surprise,.
Cowper.
The old saying that a man might
well be indifferent as to,who made
the 'laws of the nation, so long as he
was permitted to make the ballads
Would have greater force to -day if one
said hymns instead of ballads. We be-
lieve that Christians are united more
by hymns, perhaps, than by the Bible
itself, of which there are several ver-
sions, and eouee'rning whose precise
meanings theologians continue to
'rage. We doubt if there is in all re-
ligioue 'worship a thrill comparable to
that of a congregation singing a hymn
like Coronation, for example, or 0,
Come Ati Ye Faithful, or Holy, Holy,
Holy. In them the noblest of music
is happily married to the loftiest poe-
try, and the singing in unison adds a
dramatic Bower which, so far as we
are coneerrned, .ie no to be, found alga.
where among niatee inv miens, ' lVkt,
admit that in the past there have 'Nen
. onie pretty .ghastly' tltinge rltasgtie
PLANNING PARTY MENU THAT
IS "DIFFERENT"
Do you sometimes long for a party
menu that is different? The most
competent hostess is occasionally puz-
zled to know what to serve. Perhaps
she is thinking of her club that is t>
meet at her house some time soon.
Or she may be planning an engage-
ment party for the nicest girl she
knows. Or the time may be rolling
around to have a good old-fashioned
house warming for her friends.
If the club meeting is in the after-
noon, there is the delicate problem
of not seeming to skimp and yet not
to offend with portions that are too
large. Something light enough not
to spoil one's dinner, something just
enough out of the ordinary to lend
a special distinction to the occasion,
is what is needed. Club luncheons
served in the late afternoon are not
to supply nourishment, but more to
promote sociability and, therefore,
should be light, dainty, pleasing in
flavor and always served in small
portions.
An effort should be made not to go
to extremes in choosing a menu, but
rather to put one's energy on details
of preparation and serving. If one
serves unusual and expensive foods
it is embarrassing to guests who are
soon to be hostesses. Perhaps they
cannot afford expensive foods and do
not have the time to give to prepara-
tion of elaborate menus.
For an announcement party the ap-
pointments and decorations must not
only suite the mood of the guest of
honor and her friends but the food
chosen must also be in keeping with
the spirit of the affair in both taste
and color appeal.
When the occasion is that jolly get-
together of friends one must have
good food. Yet such dull things as
ease of preparation must not be for-
gotten by the hostess who wishes to
derive every possible pleasure from
the event.
Preparing a delicate feast is an art,
but one not too difficult to master. We
need to serve foods that are attractive
to the eye and soothe but do not
satiate when eaten. Lt is far better
to have a few foods well prepared and
beautifully served than several that
have been slighted in preparation.
In general our guests remember ourr
party longest by the foods we. serve.
At all events the ideal party neces-
sarily includes ideal food. This is a
natural human weakness. When we
were children a ,panty was a flat fail-
ure without "good eats," and the bet,
ter they were the more successful the
party. And our ideas do not change
much in our mature years. Just think
of the receptions' that stand out in
your memory. In nine cases out of
ten we remember them by the food.
Men and women alike are voluminous
in their praise of good things to eat.
Knowing this, every hostess should
take pride in selecting and preparing
food that is sure to please. And the
only way to make it different is to
put one's individuality into the plan-
ning and preparation.
The secret of making the prepara-
tion and serving a party food a de-
light is to plan the menu carefully
and then work out every detail of
preparation so that a large part of
the work can be done ahead of time.
Only last minute details should be left
until just 'previous or just after the
guests arrive. It takes a kitchen en-
gineer to tarry out such plans, but
nt'any wesnen can with remarkable
ease serve quite a number of people
with to assistance' in preparation
however much • she may feel the need
ofsome help for cleaning up and re.
a ' angihtg sfter the party is aver.
?perhaps you ate looking 'for some
'Banished. by Krusehen
suffered for same years free
a bad stomach. I used t feel very
miserable after meals. The doctor
advised me to take Epsom Salts, but
it did me no good. I decided to try
Krusehen and am now taking it, and
have done for the past .L2 menthe,
and I am very glad to tell you that my
stomach is now in perfect order.
I feel as young in spint as I was 20
years ago, thanks to Krusehen; ' (W.B.)
You know how badly au engine
runs when it gets clogged up. It's
the same with your body when your
gastric—or digestive—juices fail to
flow. What you need is a tonie—
Nature's own tonic—Nature's six
mineral salts.
You get all these six salts in
Kruschen. The first effect of these
salts is to promote the flow of the
saliva and so awaken the appetite.
The next action occurs in the stomach,
where the digestive juices are en-
couraged to pour out and act upon the
food. Again, in the intestinal tract,
certaineof these salts promote a further
flow of these vital juices which deal
with partly digested food and prepare
it finally for absorption into the
system.
new ideas in food to serve the next
time you entertain. If you are serv-
ing your club at your home and you
are in a quandary as to what to serve
those twenty or twenty-five people,
menus 'I and II will give you just the
ideas you want. Or perhaps they are
just what you want to turn over to
your caterer or to some one else who
will prepare the food under your di-
rection.
'Club luncheons may be served ex-
pediently on trays ( the inexpensive
kind). These can be set up in the
kitchen) for each person with the sil-
ver, napkins and food and when pass-
ed it gives each person a place for his
cup, saucer and 'plate. Usually such
service is limited to two courses but
a .great variety of food may be secur-
ed. Coffee, tea, wafers, sandwiches,
candies and nuts can be served from
a large table arranged in buffet fa-
shion.
Open faced sandwiches may be
served at the elaborate tea or recep-
tion or as the first course of dinner,
when they are called canapes. To
make open sandwiches, slice bread
about one-quarter inch thick. Remove
crusts and cut into diamonds, circles,
or other fancy shapes with a cooky
cutter. Spread with creamed butter,
then vary the toppings as your fancy
dictates. The open sandwiches are
made as follows:
1. Place the caviar in the centre,
then a ring of mashed egg yolk blend-
ed with mayonnaise, and add finely
chopped . egg white moistened with
French dressing.
2. Cut a slice of tomato to fit the
circle of bread. then a slice of hard
cooked egg, and on top place a thin
slice of cucumber.
3. Anchovies surround a mixture
of chopped egg and green 'pepper.
Spread for other open faced san--
wi'ches are: Anchovy paste and
chopped hard cooked eggs; caviar and
finely chopped onions; snappy cheese
with pimento strips; jelly and nut
with a cream cheese border; chicken
paste with chopped pickle and sardine
paste and hard cooked egg.
Checkerboard Sandwiches.
Cut graham and white bread into
crosswise slices about one-third of an
inch thick. Spread with creamed but-
ter, then a mixture of two-thirds cup
cream cheese, 2 tablespoons milk and
one-half cup finely chopped nuts or
one-third cup well drained crushed
pineapple. Beginning with a slice of
white bread and alternating the white
and graham slices lay together sin
slices spread with the mixture. Pres
firmly together. Trim crusts from
edges neatly so as to form a perfect
sandwich cube. Cut the sandwiches
into one-third inch slices.
Have ready another sandwich cube
in which the bottom layer is a slice
of graham bread and each slice had
been spread with a mixture of olives,
nuts and mayonnaise. Cult this into
one-third inch slices. Alternate layers
from first and .second cube. Wrap firm-
ly in a slightly dampened cloth and
keep in a cool place. Cut in one -halt
'nch slices to produce checkboard af-
fect. Yield: One loaf which makes
12 sandwiches.
Chicken Rolls.
1 cup chicken (from breast)
1 cup tongue
1 teaspoon celery salt
Few grains cayenne
2 teaspoons anchovy mixed to a
paste (may be omitted).
1-2 cup mayonnaise.
Chop meat and put through a food
chopper. Add seasoning and mix well.
WIT AND WISDOM
Some one stole the pigs from the
jail farm at the Sault. They'll be
caught as, the pigs squealed on them.
—Stratford Beacon -Herald.
Music needs a Messiah. Every con-
ductor in the world is crying aloud
for a new composer worth fighting for.
—Walter Damrosch.
The prosperity of a country de-
pends on resources of charity, not on
resources of natural goods.—George
Russell.
•
R should like to live another forty
years, just to do a few more things.
—(Commissioner Lamb.
It would be a good thing for every
country to have its desert --a place
for meditation and fasting. — Mr.
Vance Palmer.
The woman who dates bey letters a
week , ahead gives her husband time
to mail them.—Kitchener Record.
We are no calamity crooner, but
our advice is to look out for miniature
hockey.—New York World.
One nice thing about radio is the
artists nevem worry over rain keeping
the audience at home. — Kingston
Whig Sttundard.
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