Europe Must Decide Fate of loner City. Commanders in Pekin Con? clude to Spare Sacred Quarter. London, Aug 27, 4 a. m.-The latest news from Pekio indicares that the situation there is unchanged. The imperial city i? still invested, but bas no: yet been occupied. The allies, .wheo the last message left, were still refraining from aggressive action, needing instructions from their govern meets. An attack from 30,000 B)x?rs wa3 ' anticipated ; and to meet this, the ?hole American force and the British artillery, according to a dispatch to The Morning Post frota Pekin dated Aug '18, were moved to the outer city wali. The Boxers were reported coming from the south Geo Dorward, in his report of the engagement outside Tien Tsin Aug 19, when the Americans. British and Japa? nese signally defeated a large force of Boxer?, killing over 300, says, io a dispatch dated Aug "?0 : "Tbc lines of communication near Tien Tain are now free from daoger. The enemy bad been treating the villagers badly Several decapitated bodies were found aear their camp "The villagers aro now flocking to Tien Tsin at the rate of about, a thou Band a day As there is not moro thao a month's food supply, there is every prospect of a famine shortly." This declaration that a racine is? imminent in consequence cf the ioade auacy of provisions for the horde3 of refugees at Tien T? in ad:s a now element of peri! to the situation. Shanghai advices say that the report nf the capture cf Emperor ?waag Su by the Japanese was err;: a ec ns. It was a case of mistaken identity. The Pekin correspondent cf The . Daily Telegraph wiring Aug 19, reas serts that the empress dowager Soi westward and adds : "She oas a bodyguard of 1,500, &r.? as the rucuntai?ou? character of tbe country would prevent artillery follow? ing, it is believed that she wiri no: bc pursued." This correspondent reports every thing quiet ca tho da?e cf his dispa'ch, but a telegram to tbs same paper from Tien Tsin dated Aug 24. asserts" that a thousand Russians, Germans and Japa nese bad pushed forward from Pekin with the intention, it was assumed, of pursuing the fleeing empress dowager. At a conference of ministers and gen? erals held at Take Friday it was de cided, according to Tbs Daily Tele graph,"to refer the fate of the Forbidden City to Europe. Tien Tsin dispatches to Berlin dated Aug 23. say : "The Japanese troops are in possession cf the wall aroucd thc innermost p2rt of the Forbidden City bu: have not yet made their way to the imperial palace owing to lack of government instructions Lieut. Gen. Linevitch, commander or the First Siberian army corp3, cabling to St. Petersburg under date of Aug 16, says : "There a?-e no longer any Boxers in Pekin. They were driven out today by the French and Hussians, whose flags are hoisted over the imperial city The empress dowager, the emperor, the heir apparent and the whole court, have fled to the province of Shen Si.r Li Hung Chang, accordiog to a Shanghai dispatch, dated yesterday, bas once more postponed bis departure fer the north. The Japanese have landed more blue jatket3 at Amoy, where order is main? tained in f pite of the great excitement. The Shanghai correspondent of The Times, wiring Au*. 24. says : "Li Hung Chaog has received a mes sage from Pekin that the Japanese alone will occupy the imperial palace The Japanese government has renewed its assurance that it will protect the persons of the empress dow22er abd the emperor. "Mr. Morgan of the China iniand osissioo. who has arrived here from Si Ngaa Fo, reports that 37 foreign mis? sionaries and 30 converts ca7e been massacred at Tat Yuen bu. "The Japanese government bas noti? fied Earl Li tba: negotiations will bc impossible until plenipotentiaries ac ceptabie to the pokers are appointed Japan suggests the viceroys of Nan Km and Wu Chang and Earl Li if these are appointed and China espress.es a willingness ?J make full indemnity. Japan is ready to assi>: :D the utmost.'" The Politische Correspondecz of Vienna, often employed as the mouth pieoe of the Russian foreign cSce, as Berts emphatically tba: Russia h%s not declared war against China and decs not contemplate taking such a step alone. The Cologne Gazette, in an article which is said to forecast Ger? many's attitude regarding compensa? tion, claims that the necessary judftu zticj can bo secared by increasing the maritime cusioms, the powers assum ing complete control of China's fioancs, including the financial administration of the provinces ALLIES MARCHED THROUGH PALACE Paris, Aug 25 -Gen Frey, com? manding the Fgranhs from there ur d ;r-date of Aug 20: "Toe allies have driven the Boxers from all the points they occupied. The allies are camped outside tbe imperial palace, which was occupied by some soldiers of the regular Chinese army. The generals decided to march the in? ternational foroes through the palace doors, which were afterwards closed. RUSSIA ORDERS MEAT. Chicago, Aug. 26 -Armour & Co., I have received an order from the Rus? sian government for 6 000,000 pounds of "beef on the hoof' to feed the sol? diers of the czar ia China. This is the largest order of the kind to the history of the Chicago meat trade. Opticos ? are said to have been taken upon every j available ship io the carrying trade on ! tbe Pacific, lt will take 5,000 fatten? ed e;irr'e to fill the order. The cattle wtli tu; from San Francisco via Hawaii ana Japan. REPLIES FROM THE POWERS Washington, Aug 26 -It was stated tonighi that several ' strag? gling replies" bad been received by the United States to thc notes ad? dressed to our ambassadors and min isters abroad on the Chinese question for their guidance in obtaining the views of the governments to which they are accredited on the settlement of the Chinese problem. Officials decline absolutely to indicate the nature of the representations made by our representatives to the foreign governments, or to say whether the replies thereto are satisfactory or not Acting Secretary of State A dee was at the White House for a short time tonight in conference with the president He announced later tht I there were no dispatches from our j representatives io China to make public and no prospect cf any to? night. ARMED CHINESE APPEAR IN VICINITY OF PEKIN Pekin, Aug. 19 via Taku, Aug 24. -Armed Chinese are reported to the southwest and westward A well entrenched force bas b->e;i loeat ed by tho Bengal Lancers in a village four miles to trie southwest. It is j believed that the best Chinese leaders are in command. Detachments of the allied forces j were cut today reconnoitering and j looting ! The Imperial City and tae Forbid den City are under close guard by the international authorities This morning a thanksgiving ser vice was attended by the members of the British and American legations, the missionaries and the marines RUSSIA IS PUSHING HER AD VANTAGES. St Petersburg, Aug 2G.-Gen Gro dekoff. commander or the Amur gov eroment, reports under date of Aug 24 that Kam Ni and Reha Tehan have been occupied by the Russians. The Chiuese sent an emissary to Gen Rennenkampf proposing a suspen sion of operations, but the Russian replied that he was unable to cease hostilities. The Chinese Situation Viewed Prom Standpoint of Diplo? macy. London, Aug 28, o 50 a m -The allies. resuming aggressive operations, h ?ve taken the district west of Pekin This statement, based on Chinese authority, ts cabled from Shanghai. From the same place comes the further statement chat Li Hung Chang bas wired the empress dowager at Hsian Fu requesting the arrest of Prince Tuan aod the disarmament of the Boxers, in order to give bim an opening for negotiations with the powers. "Evidence bas been received bere," says the Shanghai correspondent of The Standard, "going ;to show that Gen l'uog Lu was tho real au'bor of 'be ar'i foreign outbreak-the empress dowager, Prince Tuan and the others all having been persuaded by him to take art extreme attitude, while he s oo? a-ide and awaited develop? ments." The American refugee missionaries io Amov, according to the Hong Koo* ! correspondent of Tho Daily Mail, are j anxious to return tc the interior ; but j tie L'nited iStateii oon>ui ins forbidden ? them to do so and urges them *.o go to j the Philippines or to return ro I Am2rica. j Saangbai advices to The Datlv News j say that coa-ular opinion there looks j upon Japanese action tn the laoding of j troops at Arney, despite the protests of . the consuls, aa similar to that of j Russia at Nt'tv Ch wang, the wholc j iodinating a tendency to the partition j of thc em pire. i "Russian journals a?ree," sa^s the j Moscow correspondent of The Staad ; ard. "tbat it is impossible to dpa: v.iiz Cnioi io tbe f-pirtt of revenge, as j suggested by Emperor William They j beiievo that methods less drsstic cac j Detter accomniisb thc ends of Russia in ! M ancnutia Thc question would be ! satisfactorily S? tried to Russian minds by the seizure of the northern pro? visoes" CASTOR ?A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of ! Chinese Speculations. I War Not Declared by Russia. - I Washington, Aug 26.-Russia. \ Germany and Japan have not de \ ciared war upon China, either sepa j rately or in concert. This statement j is made upou authority of the highest character What those nations may do within the next 48 hours or within the next fortnight, is a question which no cue in Washington is prepared to an j swer j A brief dispatch from Chefoo cou I veying a rumor current there tbat j Russia, Germany and Japan had i joined in a declaration of war upon ; China aroused some interested com j ment among Washington officials and j among diplomatic representatives of foreign governments resident here In neither official nor diplomatic cir cles, however, was the rumor taken seriously No information of such action has reached either the depart ment of state or the iegatious of the governments primarily interested That fact alone is accepted in officiai circles as a sufficient refutation of the rumor Officials of the war and navy de? partments were at their desks early today, but up to the hour of closing for the day not a word had been received from Minister Conger. Gen Chaffee or Admiral Remey Since the dispatch from Consul Fowler was received late last Thursday night the department of state has received no advices from any source in China, except a brief cablegram from 31 in ister Conger inquiring how he sbouid route messages The text of the dispatch, which it was explained was j very brief and purely administrative : io character wa6 not made pubiic ? Tho war department has received co J dispatch from Gen. Chaff:?, knowe to [ have come directly from hue. for aeon* j a week. Cablegrams signed ..Gh*ffeer ; have been received, bur a* th^y cou j taine? enly lists of casualties, ir. ts as I saced the? were sent bv some suhordi ?nato enc?: m *jreo ??-.^-.*."; S nama ; From ??o o din;.vi sr.urce has the cenar* i men* ! carne-*, of che departure of 40 ! Americans tram rt ?ID for I ten ?. .*;a, , ; as reported io a rpeeial dispatch to -? London newspaper under date of Au_r ?19 * * ^ ; j In the absence cf oficial information j from China or from United S'ate? cf j ? tigere there, interest todaj centros in | the diplomatie phase of tho existing trouble. The rumor of a declaration of war by Russia is explained may bavs j grown cut of ib3 operations of thc j troops of the czar in the protection of I the southe aster n frontier of his emiire, ' or i: may have arisen from the reported ! statement cf the Russian commaodci of ! the Russian forces io Pekin? that his j j government was at war with China and j j therefore hs ma^t prohibit commumca-j tien with she Chinese. Neither the j operations of Kassia on her frontier nor ? the prohibition by a Russian genera! of commuoicatios with the Chinese would ! constitute, it is said, a declaration of J war by Russis. No g?nerai by a mere j ! dictum could declare war Even his i {statement that his government had de j j ciared war would not make it so. The understanding among Washing- j j ton officials of Russia's action is that j j thc empire ?as declared too (bree . provinces on its southeastern frontier in a 6tate of siege This is altogether different from a declaration of war. It corresponds to a declaration of martial iaw by Great Britain and to a snspeo sion of the right of babeas corpus by the United States. It is a supercesHon of civil by military authority It is pointed out further that Russia has two objects in her present operations tn China-the rescue and protection ot the foreigo ?egatiooers and tho protec tion of her menaced frontier. The avowed object cf the other powers is simply the rescue and protection of the legationers and other foreign subjects Ia carrying oat her second object, j Russia has seized New Chwacg. Tbi> : was done to obtaio a base cf operatises I j from which the frontier could easily j 1 be reached, precisely as Taku wa? j seiz?? as a baso of operations by the i aillos in their operation? against Pesia. ! Whether, in the event cf a declara ! j tion of war by ene or more of rho j j powers in China, an invitatio?) would j j be extended to the Uoited States to j retire from China, as intimated in the j dispatches from Chefoo, is open io i doubt, and it is decidedly problematic ; cai, it is said, whether the invitation j would bs accepted, even if it were j tendered QUIETEN* AKRON. Akron, O , Aug 26 -Sunday pass? ed peacefully in Akron, and unless something unforeseen turns up, the original plan ol dispensing with the services of the military cn Monday morning will be lived up to. Fuuerai services were held this afternoon over the remains ci little Rhoda Davidson, who died Friday from a wound received in Wednes day night's riot She was held i*; her mothet's anns, the carriage in which thc parents were driving having been wedged in by thc mob in front ot the city bi liding M.s Davidson insists mat she saw an officer fire th*- fatal shot The funeral services were held from the Davidson home and were attended by a large crowd, which filled the house and ?awn and overflowed into the street There was a great deal of feeling expressed, but there was no excitement or iniiamed utterances of any kind. Washington Letter. McKinley's Hold-on Policy in China. Washington, Aug. 27 -if Mr. Mc Kinley has co understanding with the powers operating in China, his actions are difficult to explain. Although advised by some of the longest headed men in his party, including the U. S minister to China, to take advantage of the opportunity to withdraw our troops from China, now that the American citizens who were in peril are safe, and leave those nations which are hungry for Chinese territory to se'tie the ^quab ble among themselves, be bas declined to do so. Several days ago, wheo it wa* announced that all the troops now on thc way to China would be sent to Manila, it was thought that he in? tended to follow that advice ; but with io forty eight boura it bas been om cially announced that the troops in China would be kept there, and since then, the significant announcement was made that the troops which would go to Manila would not go to take the place of volunteers to be 6ent home, but to reinforce them, and that no troops are to be sent home until further notice. If that doeso't indioate an in? tention on the part of Mr McKinley to play a further haad in the Chinese game, what does it indicate ? Now that it has been authentically announced that ex Senator Gorman, now at Saratoga, will return to Mary? land about the mindle of September and take an acttvc part, in thc campaign ? until election day, those republican--. I wbo have c-ceo active!? circulating ? stones of n?> lukewarmness towaras j Bryan and Stevenson mus: feel that j they are very clumsy liar.*. It has j ni:ver brm doubted in Washington I that Mr German would do his fal! ; duty towards tao narry ?nat. as- boncr I ed bim if? thc past and tba: :. !jk?:v t:; .' honor htm in the furtire, j Evidence con tit nea to multiply shew I i:-? thar Ii linnie will be roc; iisri; %ciii have a i I greater influence in thc undoing of thc ! republicans thar, any of the other j issues. There is a big German vote in illinois, especially io Chicago, aec thc Gcrma-'S, almost to a man, are opposed to thc imperialistic policy of the present administration. There is also a very bitter factional fight among Illinois re publicans, and although it doeso'": come much to the surface, the feeling is so strong that il will bc impossible for them to make a progressive and harmonious campaign in the state Opposition to -he trusts wiii a??o lose th? republican ticket a good many votes, and w::h the labor troubles in Chicago and ail the suffering that has resulted from them, the republican orator--, will find it d fficult to convince the working? men there that thc couatr? is blessed with an over-abundance of prosperity '; Th3t the democratic leaders are thoroughly posted on what the repub j iicau8 are doing and are meeting every republican move, is made ap-1 parent by the following remarks of one of them : "Against the pros perity statistics which are being manufactured by tbe census bureau, we will place some hard facts which indicate that many classes of men | who have to depend on their labor for a living are not prosperous Take for instance the anthracite coal j miners The coal trust bas cut dows the number of work days so ? that miners are expected to live on j three days work a week This means ! that they can barely exist. In New ! England some of the cotton milis are shut down and others are running on j half time. T?ie silk mills of New Jersey are running on short time, and one cf the big silk manufacturing companies has, within the last week, gone into bankruptcy. We are look ing for the 'scare' which the republi cans have intimated they will give the country, that attention ma}' be cailed to the money question. It may come at any time, and the smali volume of trading in Wall atreet indicates a iear there that a money c'^u ?ze may be impending When ; the west begins, the moving of its i crops and calls upon the east for i money to do it with, and if ccinci dentally, a Russian or any other European loan should be placed, . making drafts upon our gold puppiy, ; a very little artificial encouragement ! would produce ?he 'scarce' which I I think the reoubneans contemolate.*'* PopQiar Shirt Waist Idea, ! Every v.ay thc shirt waist idea is ! growing tn popularity. Because of thc j extreme hot weather of ?be past week, ; the membership cf the shirt waist or coatiesa brigade hu> increased at least 25 per cent. A young man-and soo;e older mer: - tn .. ua's- costume j is ny ti;) means an ut;u-ua! occurrence, j Now converts to tr:;; tad are bring made j every day. h ?9 predicted that, if the j brigade continue- to increase io tn m I ber ship, when thc eea.-oo opeos tu sf i summer coats will bc a thing of the 1 past -Gr ten vi Ile N ws Good bamiDocks cheap-oetter ones for a little more-at H. G. Oeteeo & Co's. ?Famous Mason and Dixon's Line. The legislature of Marylaod bas appropriated a som of mooey for the j resurvey cf Maxon and Dixon's Hoe ! and the restoration of tbe landmarks, j many of which have been removed i contrary to scripture This work will I be done by the state geological commis? sion io connection with a commission appointed and paid by the state govern? ment of Pennsylvania and by the United States geologicai survey. The original running of Mason and Dixon's liae was done according to the terms of the final agreement between the Calverts and the Peons, concluded io 1760 after protracted negotiations There was a conflicc in the grants of Maryland and Pennsylvania The Pea 03 had friends at court and Calvert was finally coerced into conceding everything Peno demanded, and th?3 concession cost him the richest portion of his domaio. The line between Marylaod and Pennsylvania was begun in 1760 by a commission appointed for that purpose The proprietors of the two colonies became impatient at their slow progress and agreed to engage Charles Masou aod James Dixon to complete the work. Both Peon and Calvert were in Londoo at the tims, and they there eogagad these two men, whose names have become so famous io connection with this historic line, for so many 3 ears the dividtog line i between the free states and the sia^e of j the union. The two surveyors arrived in Phila delphia Nov. 15tb, 1764, and began their survey eariy the following spriog Through the forests they cut a "vista" i ei^ht feet wide and sec up a stone ai I thc end of each mile. Every fifth ! stone was larger than the other.- and ; had on ibo north side the arms of j Thomas and Richard Penn and on the | * south face the arms of Frederics Lord j j Baltimore. O ie cf th:->e is preserved j ! in Baltimore by th? Maryland iR-.tcri | i cal soctetv, a:;vi "jme vet stand in their crigmwi ?.'.?ces and are cared i.~r c-y toe : j?Uvborit?1 . bc intermediate ?*. c ' - ! j ere s mailer and bav? tee !e::er "P" on ! ! the north and *'M" 02 the south face, i The removal of ms-ny of the histori? j i i and marks h;-* "eft the lou nd arv line ? ' between Maryland and i^nnryivanu in ! ; doubt tn places, and it ii to remedy j : this, as wei: as to perpetuate the ! hl-toric line, tba:: the legislature ha? ; i provided for tr-is resurvey. i Boers Ar9 Still Fighting, j i i j j London, Aug 23.-The following I dispatch was sect today by Lord Rob j crts : "Belfast, Sunday, Aug 26 -Eogag j ed thc enemy the greater part of the j day orer a perimenter of nearly 30 ' miles. Littleton's division and two ! brigades of cavalry, ail under Buller. I operated southwest of Dalmanurha j French, with two brigades of cavalry. ; moved northwest, or Belfast, driving j the enemy to Lekenvly, 00 the Belfast ! Lydeoborg road. As soon as French j reached Lekeoviy, Pole-Carew advarc j ed from Belfast in support and the i enemy, in considerable strength, I opposed Bailers Poie-Carew advance I He brought three long range and many j other guns and many pompons (quick j firing guns) into action. The firing, j until dark, was hot; and persistent, j Buller hopes bis casualties wiil not exceed 40 Pole-Carew bas not yet reported The Boers are makiog a determined stand. They have a large number of guns, the country is well suited for their taciios and is less favor able to cavalry than any we have hitherto worked over " IF LOVE BE ONE. Tae skie-? are black, tbe winds are bold, Tb? road i3 rough aod long ; But wbar are clouds and stony ways Y?"fcen besrts are foll of song ? And two tbere be wbo wei's life's path Unheeding winds or weather, And miadicg but your merry sprite v.Vho bicds their hearts together. All PF?53 are smooth, ai! days are bright, Wnb biro for guide and sua : And three -ire always company if Lava be oae ! Tbe read is saaooth, the wind is soft, Tbe ?ky is clear o'erhead ; But what are pleasant ways aed days To '.hos? whose hearts are dead ? Ano wt?' is ..eng that Sile the e*rs But oap. no farther gc ? And what ia light trie.: pyes cao se? But souls can cerer kaow ? Ab. two :herc be that v.sib lila's path As though they walked ;.Ione ; For two are 1 ever company if Lr.ve be gone ! -Harper's Magazine. -?STEW -H OISTE Y NEW C??'B ?iuNEY in pound sectloos, j 15c prr section ; 7 sections $1. EXTKAUTEI) BONEY (or strained asl soroe prefer .?> ca 1 ;t) of ibis sca?ou s ro??ke | now rwady Vessels sent to roy reeideace wil? ; be filled ai 2'-^. uer quart. Maj 8 N. ?. OSTEEN. ? China's Aoti-Poreign Feeling. Dr George B Smyth, president of the Anglo Chinese college aft Foe Chow, gives an explanation of the causes of anti foreign feeling in China to the readers of The North American Review for August Ic the mass of literature about Chinese affairs, it is refreshing to read a die passiooate statement of the facte which show the Chinese side cf con? troversy which piaced a single nation in opposition to the whole world, and in giving 6uch a statement DJ Smyth shows cieariy that the western nations are largely to blame for the antagonism which now con? fronts them in the Celestial empire. Formerly it was not so, and cen? turies before the Manchu conquest of 1644 Europeans including Christian missionaries, were gladly received ic China by emperors and people*. Marco Polo was cordially received and held office in the empire, and at that time there was an archbishop at Pekin and Christian religious cere? monies were tolerated there. The Portuguese traders who west to China in the 16th century were gladly received, but were followed by adventurers whose acts of "murder, rapine and constant appeals to force" taught the Chinese to be? lieve that Europeans were little bet? ter than pirates and murderers The Dutch and English advenurers had a share in blackening the name of Eu? rope in the east, and the Spaniards, who took possession of the Philip? pines m 1543, murdered the Chinese colonists in those islands when they became so numerous as to threaten the sovereignty of Spain in the archipelago. This bad impression made by ad? venturers from the western world was taken advantage of by the Man? chu conquerors They were oniy about one fortieth of the uative Chi? nese, and feared thc interference of foreign power?, who might erjggcei to the natives that they were toe numerous and too strong to sumibttc alien domination by the Manchus. To prevent such a resuit the Manche sovereigns closed the ports cf China to the world aud encouraged the idea that all outsiders were barbarians Tbose port8 were only opened by war, nnd every step in the inter? course of other nations with China has been takeu by force in the face ol opposition by the authorities. By the outrages committed by Europeans \ ?3 late as two years ago, when villages were burned by the Ger? mans and defenseless natives were shot down by the French the feeling was intensined In 18S4 a French ?eet entered the Min river, anchored ten miles below Foo Chow to fright? en the Pekin government into paying an indemnity for alleged complicity in he!Ding the people of Tocquin ic their fight against the seizure of their country by France, and when Pekin refused, the French admiral cpeDed fire on the Chinese fleet, destroying lt and killing 3,000 Chinamen The corpses of those Chinamen, victims of the French barbarity., floated on the tide toward the city, and for day6 it was hardly possible te cross the river without seeing 6ome of these ghastly remiuders of foreign brutality Add to these causes of popular, fury the fact that the native China? men, when they become Christians, are not tried by Chinese courts, but can appeal to consular courts, and it appears that there is natural ground for the present anti foreign uprising These feelings are not only fanned to a flame by the Manchu govern? ment, but are increased by the influ? ence of the local mandarins, wbc know that under a foreign adminis? tration their profits through cfBcia? peculations and squeezes of the peo? ple would be stopped. Thus it appears that the anti for? eign conflict is an irrepressible one. based on age long bitterness which will make it hard to govern the country under foreign rule Lieut Cordua Executed. / London, Aug 25 -A special dis? patch from Pretoria dated Aug 24 given full details of the execution oe Friday of Lieut Cordua of the Trans? vaal artillery, convicted by a oeurtmar cial of breaking his parole in plotting to abduct Lard Roberts and kili British efneers Cordua walked fearlessly to the garden behind tba jail. At bis own request he was not bound and sat in s. chair with folded arm*. He reid Caps B.robard, commanding th? fincg party, that be was ready and 10 buMets struck bim. The body was buried near th* spot where tho iieatenaut fell A CLEAR HEAD; good digestion; sound sleep; a line appetite and a ripe old age. are some of the results of the use of Tutts Liver Pills. A single dose will convince you of their wonderful effects and virtue. A Known Fact. 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