Grey Review, 19 Nov 1896, p. 7

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# 3y * ie 0 ;# Doputy-Borgiium' w“.fl-Ofloe-“ ';;;r: h_o;:ul‘s & m. to 4 p. m. â€"A bag of flaxseed worked in water for some time makes a good wash for vo_n."®s1 paint ‘and keeps the paint Handâ€"made Waggons In the old stand. All hand. made shoes. Also Horse Bhoeing Shop, dressed to Laxrasx P. 0. will be promptly aitended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. 8, Township of Bentinek. DAN. MeLEAK, DAN. *‘County of Grey. Sales attended to promp aad at reasousble rates. Residence Durbam Ont Has opened out a firstâ€"class » Lauder, Loane arrangod without delay. _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. NRNEEX TO LOANsetlowost rates of Interest t ~® ons door north of 8. #sot‘s Store Durharo Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. NOTARY PUBLIC, Commissioner MONEY TO LOAN. p34mmSTER, SOVCITOR (IN SUFREME COURT BUSINESS DIRECTORY. tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Gr;i. Residenceâ€"King 8t., Hanover, Jabbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN MeFARLANE, Firstâ€"Class Hearse. JAMES LOCKIE, Of the Best Quality Cheaper THAN EVER. BSUZSR of Marriage Licensee. Aucâ€" UNDERTAKING Promptly attended to. JAKE KRESS, 2 Aay person who takes a paper tror She post office, whether directed to hi name orancther, or whether he has sul soribed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If asubsoriber orders his paper to b: stopped at a certaintime, and the publishe« continues to send,the subscriberis boun: to pay for it if he takes it out of the pos offkce. This proceeds upon ke groun: hat a men must pay for what he uses. 1. IH asy parson orders his paeper disco: vinued, he must pay all arreages, or th publisker may continus to send it until pa; mentis ade, and collectthe whole a ovi whether it be taken from the office or no! There can be no lega) discontinuance urt paymentismade. We cal) the lyocl;iâ€"ntonuon of Po masters and subscribersto the fellowing s nopais cfthe rewcpaperiaws : Fire Insurance secured. OFFIOE, overn Grant‘s Stom« Lowern Town, G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thoma: ICENSED | of Grey. [IOENSED AUCTIONEER, for th WOODWORK HUCH McKAY. MISCELLANEOUS. JAKE KRESS Furniture . L. McKENZIE, in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of still to be found in his Old Stand oppesite the Durham Bakery, for sale cheap. Newspaper Laws. DURHA M LEGATL AUCTIONEER for Co. McLEAN. All ecommunications adâ€" McFARLANE John A. Munro ; C1€., ‘ DRY EARTH ON THE FLOOR. The poultryâ€"house is more easily cleaned in winter than in summer, as the cold freezes the droppings, renderâ€" ing them easily swept up, and shovâ€" eled, but this will depend upon how RENOVATING PASTURES. Prof. C. S. Phelps says that some of the cheaper forms of fert ilizing materâ€" ials may be economically used on pasâ€" ture lands. Airâ€"slaked lime has â€" a chemical and physical effect not repreâ€" sented in its direct value as plant food. It will destroy an acid condition of the soil, check, the growth of moss, and enâ€" courage the activity of bacteria which convert organic nitrogen into the availâ€" & nitrates. Wood asbes, bone and coarse manures may often be used to good advantage. After a season â€"of droughts, which frequently kill out the better kinds of forage, grass seed, and clover should be sown very early in the spring. If the land is smooth enough, the seed may be partly covered by harrowing. Even where this is not practicable, much of the seed will gerâ€" minate, owmgheto the naturally moist condition of the ground at this season of the year. LIMBURGER CHEESE. The curd is made by the aid of renâ€" net in the usual way, then cut up and placed to drain in a perforatel box lined with a linen elothb. When â€" the whey has drained off, salt, parsiey, tarâ€" ragon and smalil onions mashed into pulp are added, and well mixed with the curd. It is then put into moulds and left to drain for thirtyâ€"six to forâ€" tyâ€"eight hours ; then the cheese is takâ€" en out of the mould and placed in a wellâ€"aired ~room, at a temperature of 65 to 70 degrees F., on an osier hurdle covered with wheat straw, where it reâ€" mains for six or eight days. It is then salted and placed in a cellar upon shelves covered with fresh straw. The salting is repeated after Lwo or three days, after which the cheeses are mereâ€" ly turned from time to time. Once a month the cheese is brushed over to remove the mold, and in three months the cheese is ripe. The proper way to feed apples to cows is to have them ripe and sound; green or rotten apples are not good food for anytbing. The cows should never be given a full feed of them at first, or given them on an empty stomach,. At the first, the cow should have no more than two or three quarts once a day. I have heard of nume\rous‘instances where cows have broken into orchards and eaten their fill of apples, and have been made sick, in a few instances have died as the result. I also knew a case where a man ate an unreasonable quantity of baked beans, and it killed him. Now the one case no more proves EEat ripe apples are not good cow food than that baked beans are not good human food. I do not think there is any better food for milch cows than ripe, sound apples says a correspondent of the * Rural New Yorker." Iam aware that the prevalent opinion is that apples have a tendency to make cows sick and dry them up. As confirmatory of this, The company compiled a list of the farmers and market gardeners in their district who were ready to forward produce direct to the consumer. This list was freely circulated amopg Lonâ€" don consumers, who corresponded with the farmer chosen, and received proâ€" duce fresh from the farm delivered at the door without the aid of a middle man. ‘The railroad company also made: suggestions whereby extra labor and‘ expense might be avoided by packing produce in suitable boxes which the company supplied at lowest cost. Moreâ€" over the company circulated twentyâ€" five thousand copies of a pamphlet on the treatment of poultry when they found that the demand for that line of produce far exceeded the supply. It is not possible that the railroads will take such an advanced step in this country without the aid of some outside influence. The farmers would do well to undertake to push the experiâ€" ment along one or two lines of railâ€" road for a test case. ‘The transaction should be direct with the railroad comâ€" panies with no added cost of an extra officered company who would be likeâ€" ly to take the lion‘s share of the proâ€" fits. ‘The express companies do much of the delivery now required by such trade, but their charges are too high. The railroad company could do it much cheaper and more direct and satisfacâ€" tor. No doubt the farmers are much to blame and many changes need to be inaugurated on lines other than tranâ€" sportation, as when market gardeners pass with wagon loads of fresh proâ€" duce through consuming districts and then offer their material in a locality where the ordinary consumer hardly cares to go and bear the discomfort of selection with the added cost of delivâ€" C The system brought into operation by the Great Eastern railway enabled the farmers along its route to send produce by passenger train into Lonâ€" don and suburban towns at the reducâ€" ed rate of fourpence for twenty pounds, and one penny additional {or every five pounds or part thereof up to sixty pounds. ‘This includes free delivery to. the consumer if within three miles of the station. A correspondent writes to the " London Times," that the result has exceeded all expectations and that the average number of boxes sent unâ€" der these special rates is about five thousand per month, which failed to supply the demand. Every farmer ought to be interested in experiments which have been made during the past year by the Great Eastâ€" ern railroad company of England to bring the farmers and market gardenâ€" ers into direct communication with the consumer. & RAILROADS ~AND AGRICULTURE PRACTICAL FARYMING. APPLES FOR COWsS ‘sdal way, then cut up and rain in a perforatel box a linen eloth. When the ained off, salt, parsley, tarâ€" small onions mashed into " * 2C Celly Uused on pasgâ€" irâ€"slaked lime has a hysical effect not repreâ€" rect value as plant food. an acid condition of the growth of moss, and enâ€" tivity of bacteria which EiE SW dn dlltiecn /) 1. Jt man manufacturers, Without wishing to rob M, Sauria of the posthumous glory which appears to be the only reâ€" ward of his i.ugemii(y, patriotism comâ€" pels us to claim the merit of being the real inventor for one af our own naâ€" tion, ‘ Mr. Walker of Sitnater., 2 DX Cld °o ifaren Aualy chemical might furnish a far more satâ€" isfactory means of kindling a fire than the old flint and steel. _ He set to work upon the problem, and his exâ€" periments and those of his friends were attended with success, A . year or two alterwards M. Micolet visited Austria, and gave the djscoverx_away to Gerâ€" man manufacturers, Without wishing to rob M,. Sauria. of the posthumous Was Beâ€"Savria, the Frenchman, _ or Walker, the Englishman * France, says the London Chronicle, is about to honor with a statue the man who did not invent lucifer matches. In 1880, it seems, M. Micolet, professor of chemistry at Dole, in the Jura, was illustrating before his class the exploâ€" sive properties of chillorate of â€" potash, wihen it struck one of his pupils, Charles‘ Sauria, by name, that a combination of _ phosphorus with the detonating] Wege e o on o c in o 3 3 t W\ w NO MORE COMPLAINT about its work than did my eyes when seeing, ears when hearing, or heart or lungs when breathing. 1 have not had the sick headache once in â€"fortyâ€"five years. a mouthfu‘ is taken,. After weighing and measuring my food, and noting the effect upon my stomach, I arrived at the quantity and quaity of food adaptâ€" ed to a hea‘thy system. I found that when I followed that my stomach made _ "In relation to the ‘healithy quanâ€" tity‘ of food, I became satisfied that most peop‘e ate too much. _ \WVhen I came to decide on the quantity that my system meeded, I first let my appetite decide; but it soon occurred t omy mind that my appelite had neither reason nor judgment, and, therefore, was not comâ€" Fetent to direct in the matter,. _ The ate Dr. Dio Lewis, of Boston, gave me a valuable rule on this Vsixbjécfl,flwhi'cifi was to decide on the quantity before be considered to come within that catâ€" egory. The un‘leavened bread is placed at the front of a‘l healthful food, on which, the Doctor declares he lives well at a cost of 871â€"2¢. a week. There are mo other two things, he alleges, which enable one to accomplish so much work, either mental or physical, as will this bread and oatmeal porridge, the latler ggade after the fashion of hasty pudâ€" ing. Just how much can we eat on an 87 1â€"2¢. a week basis# Dr. Grant says we can get all we need, all that we ought to consume, if we wish to maintain our bealth at the proper standard. He tells exactly what to do in these words: These articles are never permitted to pass Mr. Grant‘s lips: Flesh, fish and fowl, pies, cakes, tea, coffes, sugar, sait, ginger, mustard, pepper, and all spices. In short this dietarian uses no seasonâ€" ing in any food, un‘ess a little milk can 1, Eat hea‘lthy food; 2, consume a bea‘lthy quantity of food; 3, eat in a bea‘ltbhy manner; 4, eat at healthy times. Of course the first question that arises is how to correctly interpret these prinâ€" cip‘rs. Healthy food, according to Mr. Grant, is included in the following list of eatables: Upleavened bread, made of Grabham mea‘; porridge, made of oatâ€" meal, beans, peas, and the various kinds of fruits, including figs and dates; Engâ€" lish walnuts; mild new cheese;raw eggs in milk. The bread is made by stirring ‘ Graham meal and cold water, till the combination is about thick enough fot‘ GRIDDLE CAKES, and is then baked in castâ€"iron gem pans. The question of diet has been decidâ€" ed by him after profound study. The correct idea he believes to be based on four principles. They are as follows: A Boston Minister Who Lives on 8] 1â€"2 Cents a Week, If all men were like Rev. Miles Grant, of Boston, the question of economics wou‘ld be quickly solved, for he knows ho wto live at 871â€"2¢. a week. Rev. Gramnt makes one of these peculiar comâ€" binations of fact and theory that are rarely found. He invariaby practices what he preaches. In practice he is a vegetarian; in theory, he is one of that interestng sect known as Adventists, _ but t A } The fall season is the best time to begin whitewashing the poultry houses. The main point is to use whitewash plentifully. If applied boiling hot, it ends lice at once. Add a gill of carâ€" bolic acid to each bucket of whitewash, and have it thick. Put on two or three coats, both inside and outside, and then sprinkle it freely, if necessary, on the floors and even in the yards, with a wateringâ€"pot. l come frozen and adhere to the wood, requiring cconsiderable scraping for their removal. INVENTOR OF MATCHES, WHITEWASH FOR CHICKS. A GASTRIC ECONOMIST. I guess that is the truth you wash it ? Hay Fever and Catarrh Relieved in 10 to.60 Minutes.â€"One Short Puff of the breath through the Blower, supâ€" plied with each bottle of Dr. AIF“W" Catarrhal Powder, diffuses this owder over the surface of the nasal passages. Painless and delightful to use. It treâ€" lieves instantly. and permanently enres Catarrh, Hay Fever, Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Tonsilitis, and Deainess,. For sale by all druggists, 1 than storms or quicksands, vpoverty I quicksands, povert chains.â€"Hannah More. poverty "ol 33 )C _ iA Peeriess remedy for Pal. pitation, Shortness of Breath, Smotherâ€" ing Spells, Pain in Left Side and all symptoms of a Diseased Heart, One dose convinces. For sale by all druggists. E Mio s ol d k t ind L2 Cont oo ace in 30 minutes, and speedily e cure. It is a peerless remedy pitation, Shortness of Breath, Heari Disease Relieved in 30 Minutes, â€"Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for â€"the Heart gives perfect relief in jall cases of Opâ€" ganic â€" or Sympathetic Heart Discase in 30 minutas ~ anA éeraaAlite, (â€" 24 416 £2,000,000 a year, although, : despot, he can command the of the whole nation. The Czar of Russia owns in fee simple 1,000,000 _ square miles of _ cultivated land, and has an income of more than 9 nan n 2 20200 Arg C Rheumatism Cured in a Day.â€"South American Rheumatic Cure, for Rheuâ€" matism and Neuralgia: radically cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon _ the system is remarkab‘le and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disappears. _ The first dose greatly benefits, 75 cents. For sale by all Druggists Ba.nklgv, why is it that they money dust? . Relief in Six Hours.â€"Distressing Kidâ€" ney and Bladder Diseases relieved in six hours by the "South American Kidâ€" ney Cure." _ ‘This new remedy is a great surprise and delight on account of its exceeding prompiness in relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the ruinary passage in male or female. It relieves retention of water and pain in passing it a‘most immedâ€" late‘ly, If you want quick relief and cure this is your remedy. Fell luxury ! more perilous 10 cts. Cures Constipation and Liver I[Is.â€"Ar. Agnew‘s Liver Pills are the most perfect made, and cure like magic, Sick Headache, Constipation, Biliousâ€" mess, Indigestion and al Liver llis. 10 cents a vialâ€"40 doses. JAPAN‘S PUBLIC STORY TELLER. Public storyâ€"tellers still earn a good livelihood in Japan. In Tokio alone 600 of them ply their trade, provided with a small table, a fan and a paper rapâ€" per to illustrate and emphasise the mints of their tales. JOYOUS THANKSGIVING. Thanksgiving, unlike Christmas, is not especially the children‘s day,. It is a time for the reunion of families, in lwm’ch. of course the children are inâ€" cluded, but they do not occupy the chief place, as at their own festival. But we all desire to make the special holiâ€" days bright spots in the lives of the children. The peculiar features of each shoulid be emphasized so that as they come round in after years they will bring with them something of the old childish joyousness, which no lapse of time can who!lly deprive ‘them of if their havye been surcharged with it in early life. Piles Cured in 8 to 6 Nights.â€"Dr. Agnew‘s Ointment will cure all cases of Itching Pilps in from 8 to 6 nights. One app.ication brings comfort. _ For Bind and Bloeding nlgiles it is peerless. A‘so cures Tetter, Salt Rheum, Eczema, Barber‘s Itch, and af eruptions of the skin. 85 cts. An Inventor Who Skins Tin From Scray Iron by Electricliy. ‘An inventor is about tihe last perâ€" o | son in the world who can afford to 5. | take things for granted. :A singular h|case of . futility of invention arising it | from the neglect of this truism has . | been brought to flight by the recordâ€" ,, |ing of a recent patent for removing e | tin from scrap by electricity,. As sheei : tin has from $ to 5 per cent of pure , | tin, if all the scrap could be collected and have its tin taken off, an economâ€" ical process for the purpose would be valuable, Tin is a very expensive metal, â€" worth say $400 a ton, 1 , | scrap tin is worth $5 a â€"ton, $500 worth would contain $1,200 worth of tin, and | the iron or steel would be worth conâ€" | siderably over $500. The presence of tin | makes scrap tin useless as iron, but if |it is completely removed the _ scrap can be worked up into good quality iron. _ ‘The consequences is that the skinning of scrap has exercised a greai fascinauon for inventors for _ years. One inventor proposed to dip the scrap in baskets into fused caustic, and this was tried on a small scale. If old tins were used it also melted out the soilder and corroded labels and varnâ€" ishes so that the tin under them could be removed. The resuwlting stannate of soda, being a marketable chemical, was to be sold, but the scrap com'uu% out of the bath had a good deal o caustic sticking to it, and the process ’l:e:'ame foo complicated. Th» stannate thickened the caustic very quickly, and it could never be turned out _ pure enough to be a commercial article, Afâ€" ter awhile, electricians took up _ the matter and tried all sorts of electroâ€" lytic meuhods for many years with inâ€" '] different success. _ At last, however, an ingenious electrical process has been devised and patented, and the tin can be stripped off perfectly and deposited just where it is wanted., _ But now that everything is ready for effective | G work it is found that there is _ pracâ€" tically no scrap tin to be had, and the inventor has had all his trouble and|b expense for nothing. _ There were supâ€" | c posed to be thousands of tons of scrap T tin wasted every year; but in reality the makers of large tin goods sell their| 41 clippings to people who do emaller work, and finally the scrap is distribâ€" uted in such a Avay that it cannot be| V collected profitably, For sale by all Druggists For sale by all Druggists cause it 18 & QUITE A LAND OWNER AN EXPLANATION VALUABLE INVENTION. so easy to blow it speedily effects . as he is a he resources Why don‘t to youth or call an For sale k *K‘rti ..l..c..duu €CIVQ CChlres are _ kept ful and strong. What dheu: is more distressing than Indigestion or dys epsia? Some -im;fle remedy may b&‘&en to cause relief for the moment. Nervine is an indisputably successful remedy for the woret cases of indigestion, because it reaches the source of all stomack troublesâ€"the nerve cenâ€" mainâ€"spring is kept in runni with 20 izflvidul, he rem fect health only when the n y3 3° _ , 1 C.ors are not fgee from this kind of thing themselves. The poor paâ€" tiemt has to put up with a good deal of experitienting. The discoverer of Southb Armerican Nervine tales too serions a view of life to i)la{ pranks of this kind. E:"doel' not think that these human Cures at the Nerve Centres and Thus Cures Permanently. A Wonderf{ul Specific in All Cases of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Kick Headache, Nervousness and Generail Debility. Has No Equal as a Spring Medicine. There is a great doal of uncertainty in the mcothods adopted to remove disâ€" ease. Dociors are not fgee from this kind of thing themselves. The poor paâ€" tiemt has to put up with a good deal of experitienting. The discoverer of South American Nervine takes tom sorians o ord. POINTS THE WAY TO PERFECT HKEALTH In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valeable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2 W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjomâ€" ing Town plot Durham. ~ FOR SALE The‘ EDGE PROPRRTY. Mortgage taken for jeirt purchase money. The Great Health Restorer of the entury, Nickness Cannot Cope With It. I'!as Cured the Worst Cases on Recâ€" er Bouth American Nervine The late Oliver Wendell Holmes once said that his idea of perfect happiness, was when four feet were on the fendâ€" er. During the latter part of his life a friend, coming in and finding him in a dejected state of mind, asked, ‘" What is the matter, my friend ?" Mr. Holmes looked up with a look of sorrow and said: *‘ Don‘t you see? There are only two feet on the fender now." How much of the bappiness of marriage reâ€" lation is suggested by his idea, so touchâ€" ingly expressed and the pathos of after time ! It seems startling to think how much ma{ be, perhaps unheedingly,done by ourselves, to destroy our fireside happiness. UNLINE ANY OTHER MEDiCINE When a South Sea Island mother wishes to chastisse her child she seldom resorts to slapping, and slippers, of course, she has none. Instead of using the forms of punishment customary among civilized mothers, she pulls the child‘s bair, or bites some part of the body, generally the fleshy part of the arm. In wandering about the villages one sees many children bhaving on their bodies sores produced by wounds inâ€" flicted by their mothers‘ teeth. When 1 mother wishes to caress her child she deftly draws hber thumb across its eyeâ€" brows or cheek or gently seizes its cheek ‘ between her teeth. The rubbing of . noses is also a mark of affection among the Kingsmill islanders, as it is among‘ the Maoris of New Zealand. | by McFarlane & Co., Wholesale sOUMH SEA ISLAND WOMEN. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Onts U ThA dor tnnicteliiincs. Bs iA . 1. is kept in running order FIRESIDE HAPPINESS. ual, he remainsa in perâ€" when the nerve centres The moral is plain, eimple / understood. If you would not disease, then rm“ will take So ican Netvine. which will mot In the spring of the year \ est suffer from gemeral Jeb blood, through negleet, kss \¢ poverished, and tgo whele eT® out of order, We speak of epring medicimne. Nervine t®® exbausted vital forcea that * this tired, don‘tâ€"care, playedâ€"©! able cox;gitlon, No one can ta tle of ervin’ at this geaso! year without diseage quick!y & to abounding hedtf. + How many systems ar through nervousness. A s give ease, but it will not troubles. Nervine has cur perate cases of nervonen other medicine anywhere #o for the same reason thi digestion. The nerve co ranged, or there would be nervousness, Nervine : strengthons the norve tissn Its marvellous powers in ci kind. Agents for Durham a! tres. Indigestion exists vital forces have becom are weakened. Nervine nerve centres, from wh forces, removes the cau tion, and then builds up : pletoly. pierest allowed on ravin;s | tu: tyd upwards, Prompt aiuont o. anafforded curtomers livinp at a A gemersl Banking by,; wued and collections ma ts received and intoy, 4 A._ Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba and Encland. Anitobs W. F. Cowan, OAPITAL, Auathorized RESERVE FUXxp TERMS; $i per year, m “"‘h CHAS. RAMAGE Edlwrgpmm StandardBank of Camy REVIEW OFFICE, ;3 AFR 8T., |DUREANX, THECOOKSBEST FRIENY ds CREY rany . 18 POBLUSED may ' Thursday! Morning DUIN N 6R 5 BAE & $R y l .| tm PQOWnNC GENTS in all DURHAM AcENCy Head Office FOR TWENTY LARGEST SALCE im Canapa. SAVINGS BaÂ¥r _ Presgident. Paid up J‘ KELLY te beos an ta ke principal «Toronto Allowed CGep trife w th Awt whe with rife i rebs FRDSRet 4 he ze h# raa 40 4 t f " wat LARS ‘ points i .Unlpt: Stt $2,000,09 l,% fl P. Re. Managyg ©Very faat Bc fal ANT 1B The om Agent, *d Draty the #1% $ &%e'rn:c n;mui' C Hood‘€ tj;: Hoc Maj Medical value in n bc thean in any o more dos More curative More sk§!, more oc facture. Jt More but frail evide possibly c it "was at this ie es on going t the old man lay and â€" thorough It theretore came was absolutely noth man with the crim except that he had i had not noticed :%i‘l from the tra he man who hal gu‘tnu by name) w could re[;: to ;Ey | the smoki he a. he had emn’ :%not do, nsL| was empty i was D wi drew out W OM glig bt The guard could aor cuniirm the n guard) bhad excha: with a companion â€" St. James‘ Park sta off fur the 1 left 1. the & l1tU as S helped which neck 11 mer ® "" . ing of # prifies puman thi! a long WeY Son. In V on Amh‘ ome Distric He had, bhe agammiito qproRs) 1 d _ th thing W tered & 188 On {6* T Sarsan; pETECTIY t that he ha irriage with t evidence, how com wondert monials. COUA 0 ral ; desery did. the nig 1TH He i Anin h. or a MUR or Caraboa '.r‘cl'fl" ay, 4 Ticke! K4 is 83 14 we 110. A AQ nc Din w i Ni C« O

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