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VOL. XVII.
PEERY, GEOEGIA, THURSDAY APRIL 14,1887.
NO. 15,
Watches, Clocks, jewelry, Sewing Ma*
chines, Gnns,Pistols; Locks, and 1
ture of allkinds repaired inbes'
promptly. Gold Rings made
Price and quality of work guar
give satisfaction. Respectful!}
F. A. Jo
Sept. 30—tf. Perry, Ga.
. Renew your subscription now.
ffiiiiihs aMrfLipiiimi
A FATAL MISTAKE..
Flunkeyism.
Monroe Advertiser
| The Need of a Good Collection
! Law.
What Makes a Town.
The Cleveland (Ohio) Press,
of February 23.d, 1883, pub
lished an account of a fatal
surgical operation wh ich caused
a great commotion among med
ical men throughout the whole
country, Dr. Thayer, the most
eminent surgeon in. Cleveland, •
pronouncing it scandalous. It
appears that a Mrs. King had
been suffering for many years
from some disease of the stom
ach, which had resisted the
treatment of all the physicians
in attendance. The disease
commenced with a slight de
rangement of the digestion,
with a poor appetite, followed
by a peculiar indescribable dis
tress in the stomach, a feeling
that has been described as a
faint “all gone” sensation, a
sticky -slime collecting about
Ono Effect of tii© Dead Head What the United States is Doing.
— j Pass. \ ——
It has been said, and truly, too, • —- - i Eemorest's iiaga&ne for At>m.
To any one who closely watches j Albany sews and Adverts. that labor is the backbone of pros- j New Orleans state. j The feeling is very general that
j the daily events and current hap- 1 "When the Georgia Legislature perity, and that whenever capital 1 Nearly all the prominent news-j were a great war to take place in
' penings, and takes cognizance of meets in July next there is noth- i s bo employed as to create an in- papers in the country have a col-. Europe, the United States oould
' the sayings of men, it is quite clear: ing that it could do that would be flux of skilled labor, prosperity umn which is set aside for the — L - £ ——» li ‘-
that the spirit of money worship of more certain and lasting benefit ] an d a steady growth to a, - comma- : publication of railroad news, but
is getting hold upon the people . to the pepple of the State than to:pity or city is an assured fact— - u -~ J -'~- -- 1 — l i ' 1 "‘"
almost. ywhere. And strange! enact a good, straight-forward col- Borne Courier.
the teeth, causing a disagree
able taste. This sensation was
not removed by food, but, on
the contrary, it was increased.
After a while the hands and
feet became cold and sticky—
a cold perspiration. There
was a constant tired and lan
guid feeling. Then foil owed a
dreadful nervousness, with
gloomy forebodings. Finally
the patient was. unable to re
tain any food whatever, and
there ivas constant pain in the
abdomen. All prescribed rem
edies failing to give relief, a
consultation was held, when it
was decided that the patient
had a cancer in the stomach,,
and in order to save the patient’s
life an operation was justifi
able. Accordingly, cn the 22d
of February, 1883, tho opera
tion was performed by Dr.
Vance in the presence of Dr.
Tuckerman, Dr. Perrier, Dr.
Arms, Dr. Gordon, Dr. Gunner,
and Dr. Hailiwell of the Police
Board. The operation consist
ed in laying open the cavity
of the abdomen arid exposing
the stomach and bowels. When
this had been done ah examin
ation of the organs was made,
but to the horror and dismay
of the doctors there was no
cancer to be found. The pa
tient did not have a cancer,
vs hen too late the medical men
discovered that they had made
a terrible mistake; but they
f-ewed the parts together and
dressed the wound that they
had made, but the poor woman
sank from exhaustion and died
in a few hours. How sad it
must be for the husband of this
poor woman to know that his
wife died from the effects of a
surgical operation that ought
never to have been performed.
If this woman had taken the
proper remedy for Dyspepsia
and Nervous Prostration (for
this was what the disease really
was), she would have been liv
ing to-day. Shakes Extract of
Boots, or Seigel’s Curative
Syrup, a remedy made ex
pressly for Dyspepsia or Indi
gestion, has restored many such
cases to perfect health after all
other kinds of treatment have
failed. The evidence of its
efficacy in curing this class of
cases is too voluminous to -be
published here; but those who
read the published evidence in
favor of this dyspeptic remedy
do not question its convincing
nature, and the article has an
extensive sale. U
■
it is that the stronger this hold
grows, the greater apparently be
comes the poverty of the people
with a few exceptions. The desire
for money, and to obtain money,
is almost universal. Indeed, ’tie
difficult, somewhat, to find'an indi
vidual whose attention is not en
grossed with the question, “how to
make or obtain money.” Now,
the getting of money, when it is
done legitimately, is right, proper,
and even laudable. And when,
money is rightly used, and for
praiseworthy objects, it is a great
blessing.
But it is not of money making
that we would write. In addition
to the spirit of money worship
there is also manifested among a
great many people—shall we say
nearly all—a disposition to pander
to those who have money; in oth
er words, a kind of bowing down
to those who are considered or
classed as “rich;” a looking up to
and courting the favor of men,
simply because they are rich. This
spirit is manifesting itself in a
greater or less degree among all
classes, in all departments, and
even in our legislative and con
gressional halls.'
-And if there is one species of
flimkeyism upon the face of the
earth that is more deserving of the
disgust and contempt of all right
thinking people, than any other,
it is that of pandering to a man
simply because he is rich.
Special courtesies are often ex
tended to, and much parade made -
over, persons not because they are
Christian heroes, statesmen or.phi
lanthropists, but simply because
they are rich. A man may be
rich, and yet possessed of no re
deeming trait. He may be rich
and exercise no benevolence, but
use his money to oppress the poor.
Indeed, his riches may have been
obtained through a species of
brigandage that strips him of all
honor and integrity, and renders
him an unfit associate for the vir
tuous and good. Then, are we,
simply because a man is rich, to
pander to and coquette and honor
him? To do this is but to under
estimate true merit, true worth
and true manbo d, and to beget a
spirit of flunkeyism worship that
is unworthy a noble and a brainy
people. To do this is to but con
fess a weakness that ill befits an
independent people.
If we would accord to any man
preferment, honor, praise and ad
oration, let it be done upon his
true merit, evidenced by the . cul
tivation and exercise of those high
er, nobler and grander traits that
are within; bv his continued devo
tion to, and furtherance of, those
grand prinriples which tend to
morally elevate and happify hu
manity.
This bowing, cringing, pander
ing and acknowledging all alle
giance to the rich, is not only con-
teptible flunkeyism, but a subver
sion of Those grand principles of
magna-charta, upon which our lib
erties, as freemen, rest. Away
with it—and let honor be accord
ed to whom it is due.
lection law. Such a law would
remove the great barrier that now
stands between the people of the
State and foreign capital, and
would not only make money easier
to obtain, bat would reduce the
rate of interest.
It is the man of limited means
who has to borrow, and not the
money lender,-who stands most in
need of-a good, healthy collection
law. The man wh > has money to
loan in Georgia can, with the ex
ercise of an abundance of caution,
find reasonably safe investment
for it at a high rate of interest.
If he loans it at alb he will, nine
times out of ten, exact usurious
interest, for the reason that, under
the operation of our defective and
uncertain collective system, capi
tal is timid and: the demands of
the borrowing class are always in
excess of the supply of money that
the limited number of lenders
have on hand or are willing to in
vest, "in view of the uncertainties
•and delays of the law.
A majority of the farmers and
business men of Georgia arc money
borrowers. Any law that would
have a tendency to increase the
supply of money and reduce the
rate of iterest would, therefor?, be
greatly to their benefit. A good
collection law would accomplish
this for them just as certain as
cause produces effect. Whenever
it became known that the laws of
the State required the payment or
just debts, and made the debtor’s
property liable for his debts, then
capital would come here for in
vestment, and a man could borrow
money to,the extent of the_ value
of his property, at a reasonable
rate of interest.
Under our present system a man
has to be comparatively rich to
have any credit. The poor man
who is compelled to borrow not
only has no credit, but has no col
lateral. He may have a house and
lot or a farm, but thi3 is not good
collateral to the extent of any
thing like its value. It is hard to
foreclose a mortgage and sell prop
erty under the laws of this State
whenever the debtor undertakes to
fight the claim or avail himsels cf
the la-.v’s delay, first under one
It takes people to.make a town,
and as people have physical neces
sities that must be met daily, it
requires money to procure these
physical necessities, and to ob
tain money they must have daily
when the interstate commerce bill
goes into effect and the free' pass
is no longer issued, the railroad
column will begin to dwindle.
-The newspapers will suddenly real*
ize that railroad news is not of
much importance* and the puff
mill will cease to run. For many
employment at Some kind of busi- ’ y ears the newspapers and railroad
ness. To create business then j men have exchanged courtesies in
makes a demand, for people who the most charming manner, corn-
labor. So the last analysis of the
whole subjuet is that manufactur
ing enterprises, mills, factories,
marble works,: shops, railroads,
founderies, iron works and things
of this kind must be in existence
to supply, lucrative employment to
the people who live in the town.
Otherwise the people who cannot
find employment will not move to
that town, and enforced idleness
will cause others already there to
move away in order to secure work
to make money to buy the physi
cal necessities of life. Then the
great need of Marietta is indus
trial and manufacturing enter
prises that will give lucrative em
ployment to men and women.
This done, these men and women
will have money to patronize the
dry goods merchant, the grocer,
the furniture dealer, the shoemak-
ev, the butcher, the coal dealer,
the doctor, the lawyer, the school
teacher, the farmer, and all other
lines of business which men fol
low. This influx of population
will make demands for homes that
will put the lumber dealer, the
carpenter, the brick mason, the
painter, the tinner,-etc., all to work
to supply houses for the laborers
and their families, and a genuine
boom will then be inaugurated m
fact. Increased population and
increased wealth will go baud in
hand. Increased property gives
more taxes. This will enable the
city to build better bridges, nicer
sidewalks and streets, water works,
better eduipped fire department,
gas or electric lights for the
streets, and many improvements
that will give beauty and elegance,
comfort and convenience. This is
why we urge the inauguration of
small industries and manufactur
ing enterprises. Let us work and
co-operate together to secure them.
The above. from the Marietta
i Journal can be applied with full
pliments going out from one and
free passes coming back from the
other. The newspapers have given
every railroad man in the country
occupying a position above the
grade of a candy butcher, a mili
tary title. Generals, colonels and
majors have been manufactured
by the thousands out of the raw
est kind of material, and there are
enough of them in the United
States to-day to officer the com
bined armies of Europe. Presi
dents of roads are all generals,
thanks to the press, and yet not
one in a hundred ever saw a day
of army service. They wear the
title, however, proudly, because
they know that during the war
they were noted for their general
absence from the field of battle,
and thereforeAntitled to the rank.
It has been customary for the
newspapers to speak of General,
Colonel or Major Blank as “that
genial and gentlemanly official
than whom there is none more
competent in the railway service,”
etc., bat all of this will end in the
free pass. General Blank will be
shorn of his shoulder straps, and
known only as Mr. Blank; and if
he wants to see himself in the pa
per as “the genial and gentleman
ly,” he will have td pay a cold
blooded avertising clerk forty
cents a line, and write his own no
tice. In other words, aside from
the description of wrecks, the rail
roads will have jo pay for all- the
advertising they receive, and when
the newspaper men wish to travel
they will either have to buy a tick
et or borrow, a time card and
walk.
not avoid some sort of entangle*
ment, Hence tho appropriations
passed by congress for guns, forts,
torpedo boats, and fortifications.
The people do not want to fight,
and they are reluctant to spend
Vast sums of money on armaments
which they hope never to use.
Then they are afraid, moreover,
that this clamor as to otu* danger
is in the interest of contractors,
who would like to handle some of
the government money. But it is
certain that the vast body of our
people look with apprehension
upon our exposed sea-coast. Prop-
ty to the amount of $5,000,000,000
is, they say, at the mercy of any
nation that has a fleet They recall
the fact that in 1812, in an era of
sailing ships, Washington was cap
tured by the British and our Cap
itol burned. Cortez and Pizzorro
conquered Mexico and Peru, coun
tries that had done the Spaniards
no harm, but the cupidity of the
latter was excited by the fact that
those nations were unprotected,
and had an abundance of gold and
silver which could be seized.
China was always a peaceful em
pire, living within itself and avoid
ing foreign intercourse; but its
people were unwarlike and de
fenseless, which fact was token ad
vantage of by Great Britain and
France, two of the foremost of
modern civilized nations, to con
quer and plunder, this rich and
populous country. It is these con
siderations that have led to a feel
ing that we should not be open to
iDsult and probably to spoliation
And so it comes about that the
United States, without a wish to
trespass on other nations, and
with no love of fighting, is busy
ing itself with armaments, fortifi
cations and war-ships,
r R WARNING.
All parties are hereby Trained, unuef
penalty of the law* not to give employ
ment to Adolphus Johnson and Zilpha
Roberts, colored, they being under con
tract to work -for me during 1887, and
have quit mv service without cause.
H. N. FEAGIN. .
Houston county, Ga., March 29, 1887,
GEORGIA—Houston County:
J. W. Marshall, administrator of the
estate of George Tookej of said . county,
deceased, has appliedfor dismission from
his trust:
This is therefore to cite all persona
concerned to appear at the May Term,
1887, of the Court of Ordinary of said
county, and show . cause, if any they
lDtbe
granted,
have, why said application should" not be
Witness my official signature tliis J ant
20,1887.
J. H. HOUSER,
3m. Ordinary,
GEORGIA—Houston county:
D. H. Houser, administrator of the es
tate of W. H. Honser, deceased, has ap^
plied for letters of - dismission from • said
trust:
This is therefore to cito all persons con
cerned to appear at the May term, 1887, of
tho Court of Ordinary of saidconnty,and
show cause, if any they have, why told
application should not be granted. **
Witness my official signature this Jans
27,1887s
J. H. HOUSER,
3ms Ordinary.
Georgia—Houston County!
Mrs. C. B. Means, widew of Fs Ns
Means, of said county, deceased, has ap^
- - juasaUg
plied for 12 Months support for
and four minor children, from the fe state
of said deceased:
This is therefore to cite all persons con*
r-enied' td appear at the May term.
appear
1387, of the Court of Ordinary of said
county, and show cause, if any they have,
why said return should not be idle wed
and made the judgment of this court.
Witness my official signature this
March 31,18S7s J. H. HOUSER,
4t. Ordinary
HILLIARD INSTITUTE
-J
FOBSYTH, - - GEORGIA.
In order to further and- personally ad
vertise its superior advantages in either
IRREGULAR COLLEGIATE OR BUSl-
„ NESS COURSE,
oners, for this Spring only, to give a
Special Course cf 13 Weeks, i- Either De
partment, for $50.09,
which_ includes Board, Books, W;
David Dudley Field has written
a paper on the subject of nomina
tions for office; which .carries the
principle of primaries to extreme
length. He proposes that every
voter express his choice of candi
dates at the same time he regis
ters to qualify as a voter. By
this means the | choice of candi
dates, and practically of office
holders, would not he left to any
•little handful-of men.
All Men are Not Bad.
Neither are all
unreliable. This is proven by the
the
pretext and then another. ,
It has already been said, the | force to Perry,, and every ocner
borrowing or debtor class is Wge- jl° ca fod towi^in Georgia.
5y in the majority in this State.: Tlie Araeri(UTboy who has
For this reason legislation in fa* J learned that George Washington
vor of this class has been popular; couid n J te]1 a lie mnst not forget
ever since the war. j his German brother, who also glo-
But our legislatures have made a jrifies a ancestor. Bis-
mistake. lne policy that, has been • ra arck w ben only a lad proved his
pursued has had a tendency toj We for tratll and ^ ur p ge by
oppress rather than benenfc the: promptly owniug up to his father
debtor. It has had the effect^ of ■ was he who broke the statue
shaking .confidence and making , 0 f H eTOQ l e6 inaparkatKniephoff,
capital timid. It has deprived the ■with a stone thrown by him at' a
man of small means of all credit bird.
and confered it upon the man
wealth who does not need it
of
The Spring Months.
A New York surgeon says he
can take a man under 40 years of
age and so alter his facial expres
sion by the use of the knife and a
little paint that his own wife could
not identify him. Many a man
It is proposed by the New York
Herald to make Alaska a penal
colony for occupation by convicto
from the states. The idea meets
witn some favor, especially by the
friends of labor, who see in it the
true solution of the labor prob
lem. Just how the Prison Re
form Association will take to this
new dodge is not certain. It is
suggested that it would fijrnish
employment to the army, but the
scheme is fraught with too many
objections ever to become praeti
cable.
Washington, O., comes to the
front with a ;case which, perhaps
has never had its parallel in this
Country. Jacob.Hibble sued John
W. Hines to recover possession of
a lot of land. The plaintiff, the
defendant, and the fifteen witnes
ses in the case wore all deaf mutes
The interpreter was also a deaf
mate. The attorneys, one of
whorli was Gen. J. Warren Heifer,
wrote out their questions and
passed them over to the interpre
ter, who propounded them to the
witnesses by signs. It is said the
attorneys nearly went mad be
cause they could not use their
tongues.
Chattanooga is considerably ex
ercised over the recent valuation
of property by the -tax assessors.
The men who own real estate there
have discovered that there is' a
wide difference in the taxable val
ue and the worth of the property
—a horse of quite another color,
Are nndondtedly the best in
which to purify the blood and
ap in the morning in a similar
a condition, and the disguising, pro
cess is less painful.
this time the body is most suscep
tible to the beneficial effects of
Sarsaparilla. The feeling of de
bility, languor, and lassitude, j gj nce prohibition went into ef-
caused by the changing season, is fect in Baleig’u, N. .&, the 'largest
President Diaz, of Mexico, in
a late official message, dwelled at
some length, upon the importance
of friendly relations with the
United States in the interest of
Mexican commerce,
Astonishing* Success*
It is the duty of every person who
entirely overcome, and scrofula ^j oon in the city has been turned has cssd Boschee’s German Syrup
and all humors are expelled from a gho0 £ a ^ 0 ry, which to let its wonderfal Qualities be
the blood by the pawerful reviving e ] more person s than a u the ^ nowa fco $0 Mends in curing
and purifying influences of Hood’s d _, m , _ - : -M Consumption severe Coaghs,Croup
Sarsanarilla. . aram _snop a rn .lie city. . j Asthma, Pneumonia,, ami in fact
n - v m-v.- TJTWPc- „ all throat and lung diseases. No
Do not delay Take Hood s : The Cotton Seed company, cap- person can use it " without irame-
Sarsaparilla now. It is made by itai stock $500,000, has been or-. diets relief. Three doses will re-
C. L Hood & Co., Apothecaries, ganized at.Yicksbnrg. Misa The liev^any Case, apd we.consider it
Lowell, Mass. Sola by all drug- company-has four.machines erect- L fo e duo> of all-Di aggislt^ to rec-
gists. 100 Doses One Dollar. jed for cleaning cotton seed shd
con*
bot-
learn
wffl soon erect four more. Each t .] e , as 80,000 do^en bottles Were to whom I have recommit
Ad old-time Washington bar
keeper gives some interesting
facts. He says that Stanton conld
stand more liquor witbont showing
its effects than any one he ev< r
saw, Lincoln liked a mild whis
key punch with plenty of sugar.
Seward drank claret; Johnson was
fond of Tennessee whiekey; Hayes
liked whisky., but drank but little
of it when in the white house. In
Columbus Rutherford used to be
one g£ the “boys.” Garfield could
stand almost as much stimulant as
Stanton. Arthur’s drink was
brandy and soda, Thera is only
one teetoler iu the present cabi
net, and that is Garland Whit
ney’s liquor bills are very large,
owing to his liberal hospitality.
Altogether, there is not half at
much barroom drinking at tLS c-api-
tal as there was twenty years ago.
A man*s action is only a_ pictim-
book of his creed. He does, aftei
all, wbat he belie ves.
2&o->i tzcsileat-
J. J. Atkins, Chief of Police .
Knoxville, Tenu., writes: “My
family and I are beneficiaries oi
youl* most excellent medicine, Dr.
King’s New Discovery for cqn-
sUmption; having found it to lie
all that you clai m tor it, desire f •
testify to its virtue, My fr-idn-d
GEORGIA,—Houston County.
R. L. Barfield, executor of Mrs. M, 3,
Christmas, of said county deceased, had
applied for Letters yjfJ Dismission from
said trust.
Tnis is therefore to cite all persons con*
cerned to appear at the June Term, 1887,
of the Court of Ordinary of said county
and show cause, if any they have, why
said application sliouft not be granted.
Witness ray official signature tnis March
7th, 1887. J. H. HOUSER,
3ms Ordinara.
PLANTERS
Will find r it to their interest to come
and see us before marking arrangements
for the year. We have a large stock
of
CORN, MEAT, FLOUR,SUGAR,
COFFEE, LARD, OATS,
and everything in
First-Glass Groceriesi
That we will sell 'at- the lowest'Cash
prices, or on time on good paper.
B3T*. First-class facilities for handliig
COTTON, and satisfaction guaranteed.
Call and see us.
DAVIS & BALKCOM,
65, 67, 69 Mulberry Street.
MACON, - - GA.
Oay and Night
During au aente attack of Bronchitis, d
ceaseless tickling in the throat, and art
exnausting, dry, hacking cough, afflict
the sufferer. Sleep is banished, and great
prostration follows. This disease i3 also
attended with Hoarseness, and sometimes
Loss of Voice. It is liable to become
chronic, involve the lungs, and terminate
fatally. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral affords
Speedy relief and cure in cases of Bren*
chilis. It controls the disposition to
cough, and indaces refreshing sleep.
I have been a practicing physician for
twenty-four years, and, for the past
twelve, have suffered from annual attacks
Of Bronchitis. After exhausting ail the
Usual remedies
Without Relief,
I tried Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. It helped
me immediately, and effected a speedy
cure.—G. Stoveall,M. D., Carrollton, Miss.
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is decidedly the '
best remedy, withiu my knowledge, for
chronic Bronchitis, and all lung diseases,
—M. A. Bust, M. D., South Pans, Me.
I was attacked, last winter, with a severe
Cold, which, from exposure, grew worse
Lungs.
and finally, settled, on my Lungs. By
night sweats I was reduced almost to a
skeleton. My Cough was incessant, and I
frequently spit blood. My j
me to give up business, or l'would not
live a month. After taking
dies without relief, I was ft
Cured By Using
two bottles of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral,
am now in perfect health, and able ter
resume business, after having been pro- 1
nonneed incurable with Consumption
S. P. Henderson, Saulsburgh, Penn.
For years I was in a decline. I 1
weak lungs, and suffered from I
and Catarrh. Ayer’s Cherry Pi
stored me to health, and I have t
long time comparatively vigorous.
Case of a sudden cold I a!wavs r< '
-the Pectoral, and find speedy
"i, Rutland^ Yt.
resort ti
Edward E. Curtis,
Two
TWo years ago I suffered from a s _
Bronchitis, The physieiau attending
became fearful that the disease w<
minate in Pneumonia. After ti
ous medicines, without benefit, _
prescribed Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral,
relieved me at once. I continued U
this medicine a short time, and was <
—Ernest Colton, Logansport, Ind.
,.*'s Cherry Pet
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lov
praise it at everY opportnnitv.”
Dr.Eins’sNew '
Count your resources, _ has a capacity for ten tons. They sold last year, and not onS case
what you are fit for, and gi,e -up erect more machinery this • where it failed reported!' Such a
wishing for it; learn what you can summsr j ^ an - 0 il mill, " medicine as the German Syrup {Consumption- is
use 0 f. Dr, do, and dp it with the energy of a cannot be too widely known- Ask j cure? Coughs. Colds, BroncLi
Material, and use of Intrumeuts. Our Harter’s Iron Tonic- for dyspep-1 man. ! The peculiar purifying find. about it StUUple | Asthma, Croup ajid e-
Faculty is complete. Health and facili- -tLartei s> .non ionic ror uysp p J ° bottles to try, sold at 10 cents, i of Throat, Chest
ties unsurpassed. Write for announce-' »a, rheumatism, scrofula, jaun-j xf X cu Want a Good Article bauding up powers ^of Hoods Regular size, 7o cents. Sold byj Tri
ment, or specimens of work in any g£gg& torpid liver, and general | ^ Plto ToBACW ^ your deBler for Sarsaparilla makes it the very best all Druggists and Dealers, in the! Wrights
V. E. ORR. Principal, weakness. Kip.” medicine to take at this season. United States and Canada. Ga.
Sold by all Druggists, nice $1; »ix t
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