Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, December 07, 1893, Image 2

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    FREELAND TRIBUNE.
PUBLISHED EVERY
MONDAY AND THURBDAY.
TliO??. A. BUCKLEY,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One Year $1 50
Six Months 75
Four Months 50
Two Months 35
Subscribers are requested to observe the date
following the name on the labels of their
papers. By referring to this they cun tell at a
glance how they stand on the books in this
office. For instance:
orover Cleveland 28June94
means that Orover Is paid up to June 28, 1894.
Keep the figures in advance of the present date.
Report promptly to this office when your paper
Is not received. All arrearages must bo paid
when paper is discontinued, or collection will
be made In the manner provided by law. A
bluo "X" on the paper is a reminder that your
subscription is due.
FREELAND, PA.,DECEMBER7,IB93.
An exchange puts it tkiß way.
"The man who gets mad at what the
newspapers Bay about him should re
turn thanks three timeß a day for
what they know about him but don't
Bay."
The woman who makes many sacri
fices that she may contribute some
thing to convert the heathen too often
wears a hat to the theatre that causes
a good Christian to use language (hat,
it will take any heathen fourteen or
fifteen years to learn.
Three men in Kansas City commit
ted suicide in rapid succession and all
with carbolic acid. The first one
having used it explains why the
otherß did, for crime of this kind
runs in ruts as do crimes of other
kinds, and as do accidents.
The proposition to make military
training a part of the education of the
school boys is certainly better calcu
lated to inculcate a manly feeling
than the encouragement of the semi
prize fighting foot ball game whicb
has become BO popular within a short
period.
It is s&id, and those who saw it are
supposed to know, that the finest
quality of chewing gum is made out
of old rubber boots and gossamers.
Now, when chewing gum think cf
this, and we have no doubt that it
will add to the pleasure of this fash
ionable indulgence."
r There are certain families living
1 foiu generation to generation without
having a newspaper in the house,
which is a great mistake. Every
family should have a newspaper in
the house to get posted of what is
going on in our days throughout the
length and breadth of the land.
M. Lepine, chief of the police of
Paris, begs the daily press of that
city to refrain from publishing the
pictures of anarchists. He says that
vanity is a powerful motive among
these people, and if newspapers cease
parading them before the public their
crimes will grow less in number.
The alleged lightning rod agent I'B
at his old trick—inducing farmers to
sign a contract for rods on his place
and then have some one later ilush
the contract on the farmer in the
shape of a promisory note for a few
hundred. With some people the
older a trick iB the bet' er it works.
The Philadelphia Ledger wants
Philadelphia to own and operate its
own electrio light plant. This
shows that the Ledger, if some one
does not frighten it by calling names,
has at least occasional glimmerings of
common sense on economic questions.
If some one had been indiscreet
enough to hint that municipal owner
ship of electric light plants would be
a socialistic innovation, our truly
good contemporary would have pos
sibly been frightened into denouncing
the innovation.
A New York tariff organ, in men
tioning the fact that the bank state
ment issued on Saturday showed an
increased of deposits of more than
$12,000,000, volunteered the informa
tion that this aggregation of idle cap
ital was the result of the anticipation
of tariff tinkering. A few months
ago the same organ and others of
that ilk were vigorously explaining
that the currency famine of the banks
was due to the same bogy. It's a
poor organ that can't work its racket
both ways.— llecord.
There is consolation in the thought
that some of the coal barons take a
lively interest in the spiritual welfare
of their miners, and are always ready
to supply them with tickets for Y. M.
0. A.. entertainments and afford them
opportunities to listen to pious advice.
It will be admitted that this is
thoughtful and considerate of these
Christian capitalists. So that they
may not fail to get dividends on their
inflated investments it is necessary
that they should make the miners
live in a sort of hades in this world,
but it will have to be admitted that
they afford them a chance for heaven
in the next. — K. of L. Journal.
Try Fackler's home-made bread and
yolls—baked fresh every morning.
HINTS TO THE COOK.
Poiiita to Be Observed In Prepar
ing Birds for tho Table.
How to Buy fiuino—When Maryland Can
vaiibacks Arc the Best Why Feath
ered Game Should Be Kept Three
Bays Before Serving.
| COPYRIGHT, 1893. |
H| ||E lives long- who
~ B I lives well." To
livo well, how
ever, consists
neifcher in Jiv * n k r
JiH | expensively nor
/ mV, iluxuriously. But
it does presup
/ { pose, first, that
\ I I Imjl ' the head of her
,f own household
and kitehen,
and second, that the cook is not one of
the devil's sending. You must buy
with judgment, which means buy the
best, and show your economy in your
scientific cooking and prevention of
i waste.
I It is important to know how to buy
I game as well as how to cook it. t4 Any
feathered game," says the great Sa
varian, "if eaten within three days
after it has been shot has no particular
flavor, lacking tho delicacy of a fowl
and not having as 3'et acquired a flavor
of its own. Tho proper point is when
decomposition commences. It is then
tender and sublime, partaking at onco
of the flavor of poultry and venison."
American epicures will possibly pre
fer their game cooked before "the
point of decomposition commences,"
but it is an indisputable fact that game
is better not only for having been
hung a moderate length of time, but it
is also better for having been hung in
its feathers. In the case of plucked
game the contact with the air neutral
izes some share of tho aroma. Place
spices inside the bills of game that is
to be hung for any length of time,
(lame that has been overkept may be
determined by tho dry and shrunken
legs.
Baked Quails. —These are much bet
ter for first being "plumped." To do
this, place them in a baking pan with
slices of pork tied over their breasts;
put a half cup of hot water over them,
cover with an inverted pail of the
same size and steam for ten minutes on
top of the range; then bake twenty
, minutes in a quick oven, basting well
J atid frequently with butter and water.
' Trim the crusts from some slices of
bread, fry in hot butter and place a
• b!.-u in each slice. Accompany with
' jelly and a salad of cresses with French
dressing. Potatoes a la neige or a la
Paruienne, spinach, tomatoes, baked or
stewed celery are the usual vegetables
served with quail. With baked quail
or partridges, a bread sauce is consid
ered a sine qua non in England. To
make this, thicken a pint of boiling
milk with fine, sifted bread crumbs;
Beason with pepper, salt, grated nut
meg and a good-sized piece of butter,
i With tills send to table a plate of
1 fried crumbs made by dropping
crumbed bits of day-ohl bread into
very hot fat; they should brown in
stantly and be lifted ont at once with
a skimmer, drained on kitchen paper
and transferred to a hot dish. Place
' beside each bird a Bpoonful of the
1 white bread sauce, another of the
* brown fried crumbs and one of rich,
s red currant jelly. The combination is
r as pleasing to the eye as to the palute.
I Cutlets of Quail. —These malto a
pretty and easily prepared game ,
course for a company dinner. Make
two fillets from the breast and at the
small end stick a bone from the leg;
flatten to the shape of a cutlet with a
rolling pin, season with salt and pep
per, dip in melted butter, roll in
crumbs and saute in very hot fat. Al
ternate these with triangular , croutons
of fried bread around a mound of
green peas, beans, stewed mushrooms
or potatoes a la Parisienne. A more
elaborate way is to make a pint of
broth by stewing the carcasses with a
slice of pork and an onion. Thicken
with butter and flour, color with a few
drops of Tournade's kitchen bouquet,
add the mashed livers that have been
cooked tender in this broth, let the
sauce get cold and dip the cutlets in
this before frying.
Bisque of Quails. —For this delicacy
you rnußt be thankful to Francatelli,
et apre* Jut a moi for simplifying the
recipe of tho great chef for use in the
ordinary kitchen, such an array of
"tammies," saucepans and saueos as
he calls for being enough to strike ter
ror to the heart of the most willing
cook. Clean six birds, making four
small fillets from the breast of each;
lay these aside while you break up the
remaining portions of the birds and
fry them lightly in a little pork fat.
Cover with three pints of veal broth,
add a pint of minced mushrooms, a
cupful of rice, a minced onion, a sprig
of parsley, a bay leaf and a pinch of
thyme; simmer gently for an hour and
a half, drain in a sieve and press tho
rice and other ingredients through as
far as possible, using the back of a
wooden spoon. Put a spoonful of but
ter in a saucepan, when melted stir in
a spoonful of flour, and when smooth
turn on the strained broth, stirring the
while. Meantime cut the fillets into
pieces half an inch square and fry in a
little butter. Drop them in the tureen
and pour the bisque over. For extra
occasions three dozen little force meat
balls may also be added. To make
these, reserve half the fillets, chopping
as fine as possible; soak and squeeze
out of cold water an equal weight of
stale bread. Put this in a saucepan
with a tablespoonful of butter and
stir until thp bread leaves the bottom
and sides of the saucepan; add the yolks
of two beaten eggs, the chonped
quail, seasoning to taste and as much
broth or white sauce as will moisten it.
Drop small quantities of this on a
floured board and roll into balls the
size and shape of a small olive. Drop
for two minutes into boiling water; lift
out and lay in the tureen.
Quails Braized with Peas. Truss
half a dozen quails in the same way
that you would a fowl for boiling;
place them side by side in a stew pan
with half a pound streaked salt pork
cut in tliin slices, two or three stalks
of celery and some parsley; cover with
weak broth or water and simmer close
ly covered for three-quarters of an
liour. Dish the quail in a circle plac
ing" them breasts outward; fill the cen
ter with canned peas heated, seasoned
and drained. Skim the fat from the
broth, of which there should not be
' more than a pint, thicken and color
ami send to table in a boat. Braized
In the same way, but stuffed with
stone olives, mushrooms or truffles, they
are called a la perigneux.
Perhaps never, unless you are a
hunter yourself, will you know the
delights of quails a la
cendre. I first partook of them 011 a
California ranch, cooked and served by
the brown-eyed hunter lad who shot
them.
Dress and draw the birds; put the
livers inside; roll them in thin slices
of fat salt pork and then in well but
tered white paper; cook in hot wood
embers as you have baked potatoes
after a bonfire during your childhood;
serve them on toast with a tureen of
good brown gravy.
Partridges should have the breasts
larded and be baked (if they cannot be
roasted) in a quick oven for twenty to
twenty-five minutes. Dish up on dry
toast, garnish with cresses and pass
tart jelly or spiced plums with them.
The drippings in the pan maybe thick
ened and seasoned for a brown sauce,
or you can serve them with a celery
sauce or on a puree of celery. Either
of the two latter is especially nice with
boiled partridges.
The famous canvasbaclt ducks of
Baltimore come from Havre de Grace
and owe their superior excellence and
ilavor to the wild celery on which they
have fed. They are not In their prime I
until the middle of December, by
which time they should weigh from six
to six and a half pounds the pair. The
mode of procedure in cooking canvas
back, redheads or mallards is the same:
Pick, singe and draw the 'birds, put a
pinch of salt inside and roast rare. An
overdone canvasback is no better than
the commonest wild duek. It is a com
mon fault of the American cook to kill
game with kindness, that is with cook
ing.
The ingenious manner in which the
"baited mallards" from the smaller
lakes of Minnesota and Wisconsin are
fed renders them of such superior ex
cellence that they may be substituted
for canvasback almost without fear of
detection. Corn is spread daily on the
hanks of the lakes and day after day
the birds return to partake of this
mysteriously-sent manna, until, at last,
like human epicures, they fall a prey
to their love of good living, being cap
tured when fat enough. To l>e sure
that thoy 'have not hung too long, or
been side-tracked on the way east, Ree
that their eyes are bright and the webs
of the feet soft.
Orange is tho very epicurean sauce
which even the common people receive
gladly, when served with this bird.
Skim off every bit of fat from the
gravy in the pan after baking; thicken
with a great spoonful of flour; dilute
with a pint of broth and squeeze in
the juice of two oranges adding tho
shredded yellow rind previously boiled
for ten minutes to extract the bitter
flavor.
Salmi of Partridges.—The econom
ical housekeeper should understand
the mysteries of n salad, for there is
no nicer way of serving the remains of
! yesterday's birds. For a company din
ner it will be well to roast the birds
the day before expressly for this
purpose, in order to use only the
choice parts, but the manner of
making is the same. Cut the meat
from the birds in the neatest possible
pieces and lay it aside while you boil
the bones, two small onions,a bunch of
herbs and a pinch of cayenne, skim tho
fat from this broth. Jhicken and strain.
Simmer in two dozen mushrooms for
ten minutes, lay in the meat and let it
get hot through; lay each piece of
meat on a small, diamond shaped
crouton and pour the sauee over all.
For a very swell dinner there is noth
ing nicer than a garnishing a la Mont
gUm. Proceed as above in every partic
ular except that you do not add mush
rooms to the sauce. After you have
dished the croutons and fillets of
partridge, pour over them a garnish
made as follows; Cut fine a pint of
mushrooms; add two ounces of beefs
tongue, two of truffles and two of
white chicken meat, all cooked and cut
in dice; season with salt, pepper and
nutmeg. Now add two ounces of but
ter and a gill of veal gravy and heat
by tossing over the fire in a saucepan
without allowing it to boil. Pour over
the dish and salmi, turn the sauce over
all.
Fillets of cooked game heated for a
moment on a broiler after being
dipped in melted butter are delicious
served on small squares of fried mush.
And now before ending this gossip on
game ending it, not because the sub
ject is exhausted, but because the pa
tience of my readers may be, let me
just hint of a game salad. A portion
of cold game, too small to use in any
other manner, may bo so served. Cut
the meat small and let it stand in a
mirande of plain salad dressing for an
hour before serving. Then tear up some
crisp lettuce, put in the salad bowl;
add the meat and cover with a mayon
naise, garnishing with crumbled yolks
of hard boiled eggs, the whites cut in
dice and stoned olives.
AI.ICE CHITTENDEN.
A Ixmp Can*.
A German inventor has produced an
electric cane lamp. The handle of the
cane contains an incandescent lamp,
the two poles of which are connected
with the plates of a battery. Below
I this is a small chamber to carry the
| battery fluid. When it is desired to
use the lamp the cap is taken off and
i the cauc incliuod so that the liquid it
| contains comes in contact with the
j electrodes. A current is thus produced,
| that will, It Is asserted, keep the light
going for au hour.
For Her Sake.
"Clarice," ho said, in a voice that was
full of emotion, "I lay my fortune at
four feet. And," he muttered, as an
after thought, "it is no slouch of a
fortune, either."
"The fortune is all right, but you are
very young. It will be many years be
fore I am a widow."
"Clarice," and his emotion almost
choked him, "that shall be no obstacle.
For 3'our sake I will do anything."
"How can you overcome the diffi
culty?"
"I will (more emotion) I will smoke
cigarettes."—Washington Star.
Bather.
Lovo unto his bosom pressed her;
Hovering angels kissed and blessed hor;
Morn In robes of splendor dressed her:
Roses formed a couch to rest her:
Whlto doves gave their down to nest hor;
Music murmuring winds caressed her;
Jersey skeeters feared to pester.
And no babe can beat or best her—
There's your bloomin' rhymes for Esther.
—Atlanta Constitution.
He Didn't Lose Anything.
"Dear me, I ate cucumbers for din
ner and I can taste them yet," ex
claimed a man noted for hispenurious
ness.
"Well there is one comfort about it,
and that is you are getting your mon
ey's worth," replied his clerk.
"That's so," replied the cucumber
eater, with a bright sunny smile, "I
didn't think of that."—Texas Siftings.
A Fatal Error.
Borrowes —Nellie, hand me iny um
brella, will you? It has commenced to
rain.
Mrs. B.—l lent your umbrella to Mr.
Sweetfern last night.
Borrowes—What in thunder did you
do that for? Didn't you know it was
hi#? —Puck.
A Young Philosopher.
Toddles Papa, I know why the
bleed comes out when I run a splinter
in my toe. It's because my toe Is al
ready full and it can't hold any more,
so the splinter runs it over. Isn't that
the reason?
Papa—Yes, my son.—Harper's Young
People.
No Tlmfl to Lose.
Mrs. Billus (leisurely packing her
trunk) —What are you in such a hurry
about, John?
Mr. Billus—Why, blame it, Maria,
I've got to shut the lid of that trunk
down and lock it, and the train's due
in two hours and fifty minutes.—Chi
cago Tribune.
Deforc the Venn# of Milo.
Smithers (reading sign: "Hands off")
—The poor idiots! Do they think any
one could look at that statue and not
know the hands were off?—Demorcst's
Mngazine.
AND HE WAS RIGHT.
blickey Simpson—My, ef dis ain't
uice! Not er soul in de house, an' t'ree
lubly pies an' a big ham. lickoy, ol'
boy, you's goin' ter have de greatest
time yer eber had in all yer life.—
ludgo.
A Cure for Vanity.
A mirror may be— as some one lias Bald—
Of vanity tho sißn. and yet I'm sr.ro
They're every one of them so truthful that
'1 hey should be known as vauity's best cure.
—Harper's Huzar.
Knew n Thine *■ Two.
Little Dot —Why isn't there any milk
this morning?
Mother—The milkman says his cows
tre drying up.
Little Dot—Oh, yes, of course. They
is goin' to be dried beef.—Good News.
Knew Ills Place In the World.
Old Lady (severely)— Why don't you
newsboys keep yourselves clean?
Boy—Hull! Wot's the good of a fel
ler a feelin' above his occupation?—
Life. '
He Did Ills Rent.
Mother—llorrors! How did 3011 tear
vour clothes so?
Small Boy—Ti\vin' to get over a
barbed-wire fence without tearin' 'em.
-Good News.
No Dlaputln.'f Her.
Lawyer—l'm sorry, hut hearsa3 f won't
io here. We must have evidence which
no one will dare dispute.
Client —Heavens, man! My raotlier
in-law saw it!— Truth.
Real Hone of Contention.
"Come, Gerald, forgive mo for nyv
•ruel words."
"It's not your cruel words; it's the
price of 3'our bonnet." —Forgot-Me-Not
The Only Way.
Judge—Discharged! But don't let
me see you here again.
Graduate O'Taff—'Tis me wud be
sorry to see yer 'oner resign!— Life.
The Only ProfnmlKy.
Spatts—There is some tiling very pro
found about Codling.
Bloobumper—You allude to his igno
rance, of course?— Judge.
Tit for Tat.
Clerk at tho Desk —This is a bad
half-dollar, sir.
Jones—That's all right. I had a bad
dinner, too.—Life.
Skim ploy's Coinpensnt Sons.
Bessie—That 3*oung Mr. Sldmpl *y
has over a million.
Kitty (looking over him) —Well, he
needs it!— Vogue.
A Comforting Thought.
"A few million years hence tho sun
will give out no more lieat."
"Well, most of ue won't bo in need of
heat. "-Lite.
WORD HISTORY.
TEA is a Chinese word.
(JKASE is of Russian origin.
GIN was first made in Geneva.
ACIIK formerly meant any field.
VILLAIN was formerly a farmer.
PILLOW lace is made on a pillow.
CANDY was first made in Candia.
GUINEA fowls came from Guinea.
FIIIKZE first came from Friesland.
PECK was once only a poke or bag.
LEMONS originally came from Lima.
FLORINS were first made in Florence.
HUZZY is a corruption of house wife.
APOCRYPHA means hidden or spuri
ous.
MAGNETS were discovered at Mag
nesia.
TULLE was Invented at Tulle, in
France.
CANARIES came from the Canary
islands.
GILLYFLOWER is a corruption of July
flower.
TABOO and tattoo are of Polynesian
origin.
SARSANET was first made by the
Saracens.
FAREWELL means, may you fare or
travel well.
BROADCLOTH took its name from its
unusual width.
FETISH and zebra are from a dialect
of South Africa.
NAMING THE STATES.
VERMONT is French (verd mont), sig
nifying green mountain.
VIRGINIA got its name from Queen
Elizabeth, the "virgin queen."
DELAWARE derives its name from
Thomas West, Lord de la Ware.
MARYLAND was named in honor of
Henrietta Maria, queen of Charles I.
MASSACHUSETTS is an Indian word
signifying "country about the great
hills."
THE real name of Connecticut is
Quon-oh-ta-but. It is a Mohican word
and means "long river."
NEW HAMPSHIRE takes its name from
Hampshire, England. New Hampshire
was originally called Laconia.
RnoDE ISLAND gets its name because
of its fancied resemblance to the Island
of Rhodes in the Mediterranean.
NEW YORK was so named as a compli
ment to the duke of York, whose
brother, Charles 11., granted him that
territory.
NEW JERSEY was named for Sir
George Carteret, who was at that time
governor of the island of Jersey in the
British channel.
MAINE takes its name from the prov
ince of Main in France, and was so
called as a compliment to the queen of
Charles 1., who was its owner.
FRESH FACTS FROM EUROPE.
. No LESS than gallons of
beer were imbibed in Europe last year.
CUTTING off the hands and feet as a
punishment was practiced in every
country in Europe but England two
centuries ago.
THE paper money Issued by the first
French republic fell to less than 1 per
cent. A pair of boots cost 7,500 francs;
a pound of butter, 750.
A LAW has been enacted in Germany
which requires that all drugs intended
for internal use shall be put up in.
round bottles, while those for external j
use shall be put up in hexagonal bot- '
ties.
IN an out of the way nook in tlWi
British museum the sightseer is eon
fronted by a dust-covered object which
at first sight would be taken for a gi
gantic millstone. But it is not. It is
one of the most sacred oriental relics
in existence—the tomb of Alexander
the Great.
STRANGE BUT TRUE.
THE most extensive mines are tlinse
of Saxony; the galleries have 138 rrntle*
of length.
THE Chinese language is spoken by
the greatest number of people, over
400,000,000.
THE deepest coal shaft in America Is
at Pottsville, Pa. In 1885 it had reached
1,570 feet
THE longest river is the Mississippi
and Missouri, considered as one; about
4,800 miles.
THE oldest library is that of the Vati
can. It was originally founded by Au
gustus Crnsar.
THE highest bridge is near Bradford,
Pa. It has u span of 2,051 feet and is
801 feet high.
THE lowest body of water is the
Dead sea, nearly 1,800 feet below the
level of the sea.
EDUCATIONAL NOTES.
THE science of geometry is ascribed
to the Egyptians.
THE first magazine for the blind was
printed by Rev. W. Taylor in London
in 1855.
PRINTINO in raised characters for the
use of the blind was first done at Par
is in 1780.
THE Israelites learned surveying
from the Egyptians, who had practiced
it for ages.
THE first school for the training of
the blind was established at Paris by
Ilauy in 1784.
THE first regular effort to Instruct
the deaf and dumb was by Pedro de
Ponce, a Spanish monk, in 1570.
JEDGE WAXEM'S PROVERBS.
THE Amerikin eagol can't rite hlu
name.
MOST party platforms is ramshackly
in places.
SOME statesmen ought to be faimua
fer ther efferts to be.
IT'S a long time between eleckshuns
todefeeted candidates.
UNITED STATES senaters has ther
weaknesses like human bein's.
IT looks, sometimes, ezef the palajuro
uv our libbertics wuz In the hands uv
monopperlists.
WHKN you and a congressman that
don't like to read his name In the nuse- i
papers pint bU*t out.
CASTORIA
for Infants and Children.
"Ontorl* is so well adapted to children that
I recommend it u superior to nj prescription
known to me." H. A. ARCHIH, M. D.,
11l So. Oxford Bt, Brooklyn, N. T.
" The use of ' Castoria 1 is so universal and
its merits so well knowu that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easy reach."
CARLOS MARTYN. D. D.,
New York City.
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church.
THB CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STRRRT, NEW YORK.
I I CURB THAT '
Cold i
II AND STOP THAT 11
ii Cough, ji
i N. H. Downs' Elixir] |
II WILL DO IT. '
II '
| | Price, 25c., 50c., and SI.OO per bottle.) |
j | Warranted. Bold everywhere. \ I
| . HI ITS?, JOENCOH ft LOSS, Propi., Darlingtcn, Vt. { |
Sold at Schilcher's Drag Store.
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE niVVtp.
Do you wear them? When next In need try a pair*
Best In the world.
#2.50
; lf you want a fine DRESS SHOE, made In the latest
sty les, don't pay $6 to SB, try my $3, $3.50, $4.00 or
$5 Shoe. They fit equal to custom made and look and
wf iar as well. If you wish to economize In your footwear,
do so by purchasing W. L. Douglas Shoes. Name and
jprlce stamped on the bottom, look for It when you buy.
W. L. DOUGLAS. Brockton, Mass. Sold by
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