THE BEE: OMAHA. WEDNESDAY. MAY 10.. 022. (The Omaha Bee MORNING EVENING SUNDAY. t IHt tit rt'SMSHINO COM PANT , B. BKfcWER, Ceaeral Kiuiw ' MEMBCI OF THE ASSOCIATED PHtSS TV. AaiaU M Mrk 1M UN It mt. M r4ii4 MUM iiHnin uriiu4 m iiu hi. me ela. b'.l u euUiV4 kuw. All rtl ef HVtHxtim ef Te Aim Ik 4uil BuMe f Clm i.'ie. m riMiMe iiimh, m iivviiiee .utiiia. M tm mt rmwiw u mwwif aaeiM a, ereuueiioa. A r The ae circulation of Tk Oman Bae for April, 1922 . Daily Average .....72,390 ' " , Sunday Average ...70,505 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY R. BREWER. General Mihiv ELMER S. ROOD. Clrculatles Mwiw U an cukKiikW hater lei 4lh Say ef Mey, It 22. (Seel) W. H. QUIVCY, Nelsry FeMIe BEE TELEPHONES Prlvt Breath tuhtnit. A.k for the Itosertmenl or Par.oa Wanted. For AT Ill Night, Calls After 1 P. M l Editorial 1000 Peeartraent, AT lamia 1021 er U. - 1 OFFICES '" Main Offlee ITth and Farnam C Bluff. 1 Scott St. South (Ida 4911 I. Jilh It. N.w York 2a fifth Ave. Washington 1 Ml 0. BU Chiracs Stager Bids, farls. Franca 110 Rue St. Honor j - Settling With the Soviets. ( . rr.oipf ct at Genoa appear a little more en couraging, if latest reports are to be relied upon. The committee are working with representatives tjC.t'i .soviet government, hoping to arrive at a composition whereby the conditions of the sev enth article of the agreement as prepared my be made acceptable to both Russia and Belgium. If this can be achieved, and an understanding reached with regard to property of foreigners seized and "nationalized," the jest is a matter of detail. - - - - However, the soviet demand for a loan of 3,000,000,000 gold roubles is much nearer the amount required than the 300,000,000 gold francs proposed. Sixty millions of dollars is a pitiable sum on which to undertake the industrial re habilitation of, a country .as t vast -and. as thor oughly disorganized as Russia; the billion and a half proposed by the Russians is only a starter. However, it is possible to start the work with the' smaller amount, and allow the Russians to accjimutate as they go along. The restoration of ihe-country is not to be accomplished by magic . Belgium's stake in Russia is far greater than is generally known. M. Jasplr, discussing this, hajdi ' '. ,. Belgium invested 2,500,000,000 francs, gold, in Russian industry and possessed-361 factories, . including blast furnaces, class factories, elec tric .street railways, cloth mills, water works and electric light plants. We used to produce iX. Russia before the war 42 per cent of the foindry output of the entire country, 48 per cent of the steel rails, 75 per cent of the chemi. ; cal products, 50 per cent of the glass, table ware and 30 per cent of the window glass. - No other country is so prepared as is Bel gium to restore Russia if the latter returns to the former Belgian proprietors their old pos sessions. Money will again pour into Russia. -Belgian industrialists already have a billion . friges laid aside to restore their industries ..' le: . .'.J- ti Wssia is not and will not be a "quick" asset tovcivilization for many years. Its resources are vast and unquestioned, but, as Mr. Hughes ex pressed it, the country is "an economic vacuum. Immense sums of capital will be poured into Russia over a long period before definite results areobtained. These things are realtized, even by . the Lenin-Trotzky group, and when the fact is admitted and the work is begun, the world will bL. the better. The bolshevik experiment has faiUd, and it is only a question whether the in evitable will be accepted at Genoa, or if it will be. adjourned to another conference.. '- "-' pom reached the highest pul sines December, Nations buying mote goods in Amrrk in March of tin jear than in the corre.poiidmg month of a year ago arc Japan, Germany, Den mark, Spain. Sweden and Columbia, There has been no failure of export demand, but at lower prices, it i pernuiti to que.nou the en- thuiiattic view of the Harvard re.nrch bureau and to anticipate a gradual lowering of inter. rational trade somewhat nearer prewar levels. Ethics for Business Head of Big Bo. ton Firm Outline His Single Cede. '.Economy at the State University. ""Chancellor Avery's announcement that the University of Nebraska U under compulsion of reducing ' its activities ' because of the cut made in the appropriation for its support comes asa routine statement, y At 'the special session of the legislature a reduction of $346,372.15 was mfcde in the university budget for '-the coming year. This naturally requires Jhat the business of the school be carried on on a narrower mar gin It means that certain' expenses incurred dvjrlng the inflation period-will have to be re duted or abandoned; it does not mean that the general scope of the work of th great university - vr$t he materially lessened. .Chancellor Avery resents imputations that his administration of the school has been unduly ex travagant,' and meets certain specific criticisms with statements of fact that-show a divergence beftWeen allegation and truth. He declares his intention to proceed to put the university on the op'erating basis provided for by the appropria tievrr, cutting his garment according to the cloth. S&ne saving wilj be effected by dismissal of em ployes, by the partition of work among those wto remain, and in other ways, to the end that HOte change will be noted in the course of the several colleges, v Only, three ot the ten are so . ."TStfebraskans have a great pride in the state uni versity, and are now" as always, willing to sup port it liberally. While this is true; the people aris- entitled .to substantial returns from the in stitution, in the way of solid education for its stftdents. Trimming, away certain , of , the : less tssential methods will. no.t materially .lessen the KOtjeral usefulness of the university, ahd will tend tfi'solidfy confidence in the university and its management. j, - . S.-' T America's Foreign Trade. J Phenomenal is the only word to describe the fojfeign tradtof the United States after reading ily -analysis by Secretary of Commerce Hoover. Iifcspite of all that is heard of the poverty of Europe, it is still buying more toods in America than in the normal days before the war. - (;Great Britain's total of imports and exports is 107 per cent of that of 1913, but America tops this with a percentage of 164. Statistics of trade ar ba$eJ"oa: prices; not tonnage, and the decline in f. the i value.' of '-"exports" that "has befallen since 1920 is deceptive. Thus, although exports to Central Europe show a decline in value in 1921, their volume, as distinguished frorri valuet was , i , j ' 1 u . 4t. : . ITODauiy couMUCiaoijr iimii 111 .iiic picviuua year. ; . . - The Harvard economic service now comes out with a statement that exports have probably passed their lowest point and that imports are now increasing. Figures are quoted to show that in March the value of exports -was higher than for any month since October, 1921, and that ira- "Self-Determination" in Missouri. Ths late democratic president of I lis United States is engaged In his favorite patime, that of dictating to states, not whom they shall select lor places In congress, but whom thryhll not.' He did not have much success in getting the people to adopt hit Ideas, but lie has succeeded in several cie In di.placing democrat ho did not bow to his imperious will and accept his dogma without question. Oue of hit notable achievements in this direction wss the uproot ing of Senator Hoke Smith, supplanting hurt with the delectable "Tom" Wataon. Other demo crats of independent mind and staunch moral courage have alo felt what it means to displease Woodrow Wilson. As far ss "Jimmy Reed if concerned, The Bee is not particular who beats him, so long as another republican is elected from Missouri. If, in the pursuit of his private vendetta, Mr. Wilson can aid in the election of another trpublican sen ator from Missouri, the result will be accepted without much comment Yet his method of ap plying the doctrine of self-determination appears to be consistent; he is in favor of it to the limit when it suits his ideas; otherwise, he wilt do just what he is doing now, thrust his influence for ward to secure his own will. Senator Reed probably is a marplot; he lias forfeited his claim on (he Wilson element of the democratic party by resolutely opposing certain acts of the late president; he did receive at least one letter Irom Mr. Wilson, commending his course and acknowledging his help. His fol lowing in Missouri is not negligible, snd, as was noted at the time of the San Francisco couven tion, the democrats may need the votes that will be alienated by the casting out of the senator at the instance of the former, president. Rcpub- icans can well afford to watch the progress of this little family row.' : Byrns and the Dawes Report. Representative Byrns of Tennessee has sur prised nobody; jie called for a detailed report on the work of the budget director, and when it was furnished him he disputes its accuracy. Such tactics are characteristic, the common practice of partisans, and, pretending to preserve the credulous public from being deceived, Mr. Byrns seeks to practice just such deception. When he statea that the republicans have not reduced taxes, he' ignores the fact that 2,500,000 heads of families got a direct reduction through the 1921 law; that the democratic nuisance taxes were all abolished, and that in many other ways the pub lic has felt the relief afforded by that law. It is rather impudent to tell the small taxpayer that e did not get a reduction when he knows he id. The increased exemption to heads of fam ilies means $20 to each. This is not a great deal, perhaps, in the eyes of a congressman who does not think in any sum less than a billion, but it does cut some figure with the little fellow whose annual income just about touches the point where $500 means, the difference between taxation and exemption. ' The other great, stubborn fact is that it will cost $1,615,668,650 less to run the govern ment for the 1922 year, the first under Harding, than it did for the 1921 year, the last under WiU son. To paraphrase Shylock's remark to Bas4 sanio, until Mr. Bryns can rail Jhe total off the tabulation, and change the record made, he but. offends his lungs. . '' v A Public Forum in Omaha.. The need of a public forum has been called' to the attention of Omaha by one of its minis ters. There is not the free interplay of opinion here that is so necessary to the full consideration of current problems. If properly conducted an open forum could be made, a great force for the mental and physical readjustment that " is re quired by the post-war world. In many other cities such meeting places for discussion have been provided by the churches. In Boston private benevolence established Ford Hall, which is dedicated to this purpose. , It is true that the morbid nature of much mod ern thought is due in part to the lack of airing-. A public forum does that it opens the windows of the mind and lets in the fresh air and sun shine. .. , The mother of two New York girls has ap plied to court for permission to increase the in come of each to $24,900 a year. She lists their needs as follows: Share of rent for city and two country homes, $3,000; clothing, $4,000; traveling expenses, $5,000; education, $2,400; stables and horses, $3,000; sports and country club dues, $1,500; food and miscellaneous maintenance, $2,000; entertaining and social duties, $1,500; doctors and dentists, $500; automobile and up keep, $2,000. Her explanation that this scale is in keeping with their station in life entitles the young women to public congratulation that with all their fine blood they were not born into a poorer branch of their family. 1 - ; Machine made ideals seem hardly possible, and although Secretary Denby announces that the navy cadets are to have the ideals and char acter of Lincoln inculcated in them, he is apt to discover that the environment is too much for his success. Does he want all these young sail ors running for the presidency? ' If Representative Byrns is really looking for extravagance, we suggest that he audit the books covering the period when Newton D. Baker was secretary of war. " ; V .The porter of a club car has. amassed $100, 000 from tips while no doubt many of the men' who handed him a quarter are in the poor house. " ' Nebraska's newest newspaper, the Craig Radio, certainly isn't afraid to give its age away. Something like naming a boy Woodrow. A republican administration never did please a southern' democrat from the time of Abrahamr Lincoln. France may not want Peggy, but it is wel come to her as far as America is concerned. The prospect for cherry pie is getting better every day. Mr. Wilson knows who is giving the show. Kdard A. lileiit, president of William rilene'i Sans company ei H"ion. aJdrt4 the American Academy of I'titttital and Jwial S.riflirm at ll.llalftlii 1uat,4j.u bit iki-, being "A Simple Cd of Buint fcthlea" As a simple uriiien code he prpnoed (he following I, a Dunne", In order to have the nsht to succeed, mu.t be of real service to ih com- munny. 2. Keal aervlra In butiueis eoiul.la In mak. ing or aetling nierchandme of reliable quality for the loweat practically pokiblf price, pro. vided that merchandise it nude and sold under jut 'condition. Mr. Hlene tarefullv coii.idrrrd the rlrmrnl of hU problem, as to what constitute service and lowest practically poible price, hit con clu.ioii bring mmiiied up in thu fashion: j 'tiring a lifelong experience in retail di tnnution, my view on the Urtorf that go lo nuke up real service, and their relative Im porunee. Iive changed a number of times, but eaci; change lias brought me nearer lo the con clu.ion that no real service can be rendered ex rept as limine. s make the necettaries of life more and more accestible to the consumer. L e., makes prices cheaper and cheaper. The greatest reward of busmen in the past have gone to financial leaders. In the futuresuccess will de pend not so much on finance as on the ability to lead large numbers of employes so that they will produce successfully and cheaply. The basis oi sucn success is Harmonious conditions. It should be axiomatic that the merchandise imit be of reliable quality, for a lowering of prices through the substitution of inferior nier- tnanoine is not real progress. Purely we need not (iweii on tins point of the creed. "Finally, the nronoted rode calls for nier cltattdie made and sold under 'iut conditions. II one serve the community at the expense of any portion of it he has not added to the sum total of the community's welfare, but hat hern merely the means of depriving some of its mem- tiers ot oenents lor tne sake oi distributing tnem to others. If a merchant handles merchandise that has been made under 'sweat shoD condi tions, under padrone systems or by underpaid or overworked people, he is sinning ethically as well as economically; for either he is benefiting Mmsell, or he is letting the rest of the conimuu ity benefit, at the expense of those workers. toually. a manas'cr treatment of his em ployes must be just. This is not the place to enlarge on the various methods that have been developed, chiefly during- the last ten years, to ensure justice and pleasant relations inside the factory or shop. .Too much thought and planning can not be given to creating good relations be tween employer and employe, but in the en deavor to improve these relations the fact should not be lost sight of that such work is not an end in 'itself but merely a very important factor among the means for attaining the true aim of business service to the community. "I am in honor bound, as a decent citizen. to treat my employes as well as I know how. If I am to require of that city that it send my em ployes to my store in the morning tortihed by education and health to do my work. I have as sumcd by that very requirement that duty of sending them out at night at least not deter iorated, and if I have any sense of honor I shall want to give good measure and try to send them out, so- far as lies in my power., improved phy sically, financially and morally by their working hours. ' 'Now. of course, this is a. hard thing to do and, in fact, is not generally accomplished. But the failure to do it is always paid for indirectly and is more expensive and more onerous than the doing. ' Employes made friendly to their employers; through just treatment and good con ditions, are much more likely to be useful and profit producing employes than are those who work, under bad conditions. Moreover, good re lations between employers and employes leave the managers free for their proper work of plan ning and administering the growth and success of the .business. - 1 We have been admonished to love our neigh bors as ourselves.' Our real neighbors in these days of city life are not at all the people who happen to move in next door to us: our nearest neighbors are the people -with whom we spend most of our waking hours. And with whom, do we employers come -in more continuous contact than with pur- employes? . .When once . our" thoughts run along this direction we see that there are many additional reasons for recognizing our employes as our nearest neighbors. . With this consideration ot my employes as Tny nearest neighbors and with the welfare of the business also urgim? me on, 1 soon tound myselt going outside of my store walls into city affairs. I was forced to associate myselt with groups ot other citizens who were trying to make the city a better one for my' employes and myself to live in. This is justifiable; indeed, becomes essential, once the fact is recognized that our employes are our neighbors. We can not let our neighbors pass in a rainstorm .without offering at least a share of our umbrella, and when my employes came in wet from bad street car service I felt that I was only trying to be a good neighbor when I undertook to help reform that service. I therefore participated in the organization or a franchise league which for many years was in fluential in bettering the local service. The same relationship in civic affairs forced me to help consolidate and reorganize. the va rious business associations ot the city. It lea me to helo create a City club, where employers and employes and the friends of each could meet and learn to understand each other, following this same impulse of- duty to my neighbors I finally came naturally into national and interna tional, work. ; ' . '- ., As I look back I find that each of these was, in itself, worth the time and effort it. took, but, as my vision grew from thtse experieSces, I began to see that it was all a means to the big end, to the end of real service which, for a busi ness man, is to enable people to buy cheaper and cheaper. This insight came late with me, and I am going to dwell on it because I find that it conies late with most men. . The world is pretty well agreed now that. after all, the greatest progress will come from the greatest freedom to all men. While definite gains may be made by autocratic cohtrol of busi ness vet. in business' as in srovernment, our ex perience has shown that democracy is the safest road, and in spite of all its weaknesses it is the dominant political creed of today. Democracy is based on freedom. Freedom is not an eagle screamintr on a era, as we were tpld at fourth of July celebrations at an impressionable age. The fundamental basis ot freedom is tne margin nipn have in their income over their outeo. .No man is really free if he does not have more than enough -with wh'ch 'to purchase the necessaries of life for his wife, his children and himself. If a pair of shoes for the baby costs a day s work and a pair for each other member of the faimlv costs from a dav and a halt to two days of work, a suit of clothes or a dress costs from five to seven days' work, monthly rent costs six to ten days' work, and so on, then the man who reauires the work of every available day in the month to provide food, shelter and clothing for himself and his family is not free. There was a time when it cost a considerable fraction of a day's work to procure a drink. of water; today, in the cities at least, water is so cneap mar in this particular item men are free. "Under a code of ethics that requires business n sell rheaner and cheaper, the necessaries of life will be more easily obtained, and gradually the so-called luxuries of life will become more and mnre available for less and less hours or days ,of work; and thus men will become freer and freer. "The results of selling goods cheaper and cheaper show in the reduction of the number of 'hours of a day's work... Within a generation tne working hours have gone down lrom sixteen to eitrht. There are enough indications and pos- j sibilities of further reductions" msight to make I r (Continued on Next Column.) , - How tti Keep Well r ta w. a. Ivans Qvaatiaaa aatwamiM fcrlixM. aaaitaiiaa) a4 ataa)tia al diaaaaa, sukaillM ta Dr. g.aa ay nwiwt ml Th Sm, out k aa.va.a4 araaaHr. aoaiwl la liamatia. oka, a aaaS aaaVaatad aaxl.aa I aanlaaae. Dr. gtaa .mm aaaka 4Mata Bar araat riaa la tsAvieval Sia.t.aa. A44a iailaa a aas el aa Baa. Caerrifkll lltL HERE'S YOUR BLOOD TONIC Why la il Ittat at iMa aaxn f lha ar . hanaa for ereaita"? That qui at be a reason. Tlire la a rat.n. T say dial the ute or eppanie calls for than, do nut any anything more than do a "I hones for eraana." We muai go further up the creak to fliii the aprmj. Wall, some ay we u4 the vita minaa lhay contain, and eapacially the vitamin which cures scurvy. All winter we nave bean laituif a lull rAUKh skinned, a Utile pale gummed a litiia painful In th juiiua, e linl at-url1. In conaaquenre, In the sir!nsume we "none for treses, llioimh we knnw ret w hy. The BviaMiai tell ua Hut th milk of th rows fed on dry food and Inter food generally la low in thl vitamin. That mother's milk doe nt contain It unlee the mother eats vegetable and fruit. On th other hand, th rich mltk and th yellow butter from cows on rraeh, eraen era la rl-h In It. liut. important thia l. it la not th only reason for "honing for green." Cornea thl spring weather ann find u pale. We have been mo mut'h Indoors this last six months and we need Iron, Wall, eating spring vegetable will give It to ua. We get It from eating radlahea. Eng lish peas, onion, ana eapeclally from eating nire mea or green mu tard greens, spinach, turnip greena. dandelion green,- lettuce, catbbag and mtlad generally. Kellogg tell us that 1 ounce of mustard green a dy will furnlah ue all the Iron w need. Hlndhede, who explained the won derful health record of the Dane during the trying time of th world war ita due to their diet, eay that a diet of bread, potatoes and green give .one about all the roods he need. The peasant Jan Is supposed to have reduced economic and at the same time efficiency producing eat Ethics for Business (Continued from Preceding .Column.) It not Impossible that In time five hours work a day will be sufficient to provide a living for a man with fumlly. Thl doe not mean that man will work only Ave hour. hut rather that he need work only five hours for a mere living: many men under uch circumstance will work eight or ten hour at their vo cation, spurred on by the desire to put their children through college or to satisfy other desires, i It will also leave the workers free to have an avocation besides five hours for necessary' work and Ave hours (or tht work to which they would give their whole time if they could af ford It. Personally, I have alwaye thought that preacher and teach ers Would do better work' If they followed their professions only part time and some other vocation the rest of the time. This Idea has been accepted in some schools. ; "I dare not follow this line or thought out into Ita ramifications, attractive 'as they appear, lest I be thought a dreamer instead of the shopkeeper that I am. Along this line, however, I believe lies the so lution of many of the pressing eco nomic questions ot today which seem - so hopelessly insoluble to many thoughtful citizen. It lies In making the products of business available at ever cheaper prices, and so permitting the great mass of the people to enjoy the Tun fruits of modern specialization and stand ardization. Mr. Kord has proved that this Is not merely a philan thropic Idea. The producer or the merchant who grasps the' truth of this thought will in the end win a reward which is fairly ' his and which goes far beyond the dreams of the man who is in business lor the profit alone." . .. in to the nth plae. He live largely en fiah, rl' and greena. r it may be that In the aprlng day w sr In need of lime and that nature Is urging the appetite unenn. clously to aak for that mineral. We have been catching cold easily for several mom he, or our nrvs are on dg both held to be symptoms of lara: or inn raianr. . What's the answer? Greens and milk. ' . Lime grains per ounce: Fad root S : Muatsrd ............. 101 . Hpina. h 1ST Water crras 1.1 S Turnip graans l.lt Bom food especially rleh In lime re: Muatard, turnlpa, chaw, col larda, cabbase and endive. Thnreau waa fond of eating "puaaly" proper nam. puraUn. Kellogg ays that In th lime of Charlamange this weed was a favor It food. A to all of these fend elements. It I well to remember how much of them th vegetable lose In th rook ing procea. Th heat leaaen om of the vitamin and th cooking water erh out om. And thl last fart Is th reason "w hon for pot llcker." nd. ys Blnis, who adorn a downtown barber shop. "( certainly does hon for pot llcker." Blnce we must cook many of our vegetable, why not erv thm with th Honor or serve the liquor as well a the vegetables? One reason for cooking la to make the eslluloa of vegetable more usable. But beware of the changea mad by cooking vegetable with soda. W get a little constipated In th winter, and one reason for th craving of vegetable In th aprlng I because something somewhere tell us w need th cellulose they contain. And. finally, maybe the baby has stopped growing and needs a little fat soluble A vitamlne. Asaln turn to June milk and vege tables. Come one. come all, and partake of or Doe Tak'e Blood Purifier th best and only spring medicine good fresh vegetablea and milk! Sleep Convulsions. . H. L. writes: "Three times In the last two years I acquired convulsions in my sleep stiffened out and etared at peopla without recognizing them. tossed round nae a maniac ana breathed hard. "After one or two hours of auch action I woke up to find that I had bitten my tongue in aevaral places' ana my oack acnea severely. 3ly folks were unable to revive me on each occasion for less than an hour. Urine does not show uremic poison ing or nephritis. I drink a little im moderately, but on each of these oc casions I want lo bed perfectly sober. "I this epilepsy, do sou think? Th last eanvutaion waa two nights age and all my mueel t h. REPLY. The symptoms point to epilepsy, A!w) .Ud to kVnr, W. P. write: ''gome year ego you war kind ne-ugh te put Hi writer Into communication with lr, X! Uriel, then stationed at I'orto Klre, In th United Hut health aervire, through whom serum wss secured for treatment In a re of apru. A bcirlologit prepsred ubjunt batch of thi varum, which were ud with complete aucce.a, "We now report entire rcory of a ca of sprue of many years' aland Ing. and that th patient was bl m pans uceaafully an eaaminstion for life Insurance." Noted Educator Dies Peoria, III, Msr 9. William Hawley Smith, nationally known educator and author, died here yes terday following an illness of severs) weeks, during which time he has been confined to his bed. He was 76 years old. KARL h. k. BURKET &son , Ketaellabed ISIS FUNERAL DIRECTORS Dee Want Ads Produce Results, Jy.ywsTf1ty : m fr Bar ewai T bWaue, Itwa rear (rear te Jack- aMni,wlaafl0C. Aak far JaHaa at tka eea fiaaWla aai ' ariak eerier. Mjmn inOnma. , 30thfrY8tmu Just; one flavor but that the best. Polks like Yucatan for its delicious minty taste . . . for its fine and honest quality v that's why we say "No fancy wrapper just good gum" VW" ADAMS lfeliSgJ&lMl Chewing' Gum American Chicle Co. o From Ohio we hear: "1 decided to bake two cake at the tame time, using Royal Baking Powder in one, and another powder in the other. The cake made with Royal waa so appetizing and delicious, so finely grained and wholesome that in comparison, the-other cake was not a cake." Mrs.G.P.Y. BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure Contains No Alum Leaves No Bitter Taste Strut for Ntw Royal Cook BoohWi FREE Royal Bddnf Powder Co, 130 William St, New York SOLID! 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