Newspapers / Lenoir News-Topic (Lenoir, N.C.) / May 20, 1885, edition 1 / Page 2
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- . J I THE LENOIR TOPIC. . . SCOTT, Jr.f Eflitoranfl PnMster. WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1885. Entered at the Post-office at Lenoir as second-class matter. Subscription price, $ 1 .0 O. J3F Advertising rates reasonable. tSjP'All bills for advertising fpay- Able weekly. J i 81680 copies mailed May 1 13. Postmaster-General Vilas in a confidential circular to several Dem ocratic congressmen from Virginia and Ohio, in which States important elections are soon to take place, confirms the j enerall y accented opinion that President Cleveland's cautions policy is designed for the good of the whole country and that there is and will be less partisanship in his administration than jn any the country has had for many years. "Wo complained of the "spoils sys tem" as practiced by the Republi cans and we do not desire to see it adopted by the Democratic party. As Secretary iBayard said in f his speech at the j complimentary jban quet, to Minister Pendleton in jNew York the other day, "the people of the country are anxious and ready for civil service reform and now is the time to give it to them." "ihe' people will uphold the President in any wise and equitable policy he may pursue. In this circular letter the 'postmaster-general says that he is ' janxious te weed out of the postal service all postmasters and other officials who have been active parti sans and to replace them with jfirst class Democrats who will not use their offices for political purposes. Any postmaster who was editor of an offensive Republican newspaper,. a' stump speaker, member of a polit ical committee, officer of a campaign club, organizer of political meet- ings, whose office has been made headquarters of political work such postmasters must go and the Postmaster-General thinks one fourth of all the officers in Ohio and Virginia will be turned out. These will be replaced by good Democrats, who must, however, as soon as they enter upon their duties cease -to be active partisans. Of cours the Government cannot take from a man, just because it employs him, his right to vote and to express his opinions fearlessly ; but it cati de mand that he must take no active part in politics and must not use his office as an engine to boost either party. This is the civil service re form that the Democratic party will teach the Republicans. We see it stated in some of the! papers that Collector Dowd has giv- en orders that no man who drinks whisky need apply to him or to any of his deputies for a position n the" revenue department which he pro poses to run on business principles. This is a good start-off and we pre dict for Collector Dowd that, if he keeps on in the same pace, he will, give satisfaction not only to the gov ernment but to the people. We be lieve he will. If he fails to do so we shall be first to cry out against him. We are under no more obligations to keep our eyes closed against frauds in the revenue department under Democratic rule than we were when it was run by the Republicans and our eyes are open. We expect to have a different kind of service from the kind we are used to. Illicit dis tilling will go now, but revenue offi cers will not be travelling politicians any longer. .That ishe difference. y" Last week there was an article in The Topic concerning the grave of the late Albert Sidney Johnston at New Orleans and giving the eloquent inscription upon tne tompstone. The lines were written by jdhn B. , S- Dimitry. To be sure the body : of the great Southern hero was buri ed there and the monument (placed over his grave, but in 1866, wel think it was, the Commonwealth of Texas, which General Johnston had adont- i ed as his State, sent a deputation of :- its citizens to New Orleans and had tne bones oi ner cnerisned . son ex humed and taken to Austin where they were re-buried. At Galveston Gen. Sheridan, the General jof the Army now bat military commandant then, refused to allow the citizenso ' march in a body behind the hearse containing the remains of the great " soldier because it would be doing honor to a rebel ! Sheridan is a- shamed of it now. - j Three appointments lately made ; met our unqualified approval. We , refer first to the appointment by Goyernor Scales of Editor Shotwell to be State Librarian and then to : the appointment by President jCleve ' land of Editor S. A. Ashe to be " postmaster at Raleigh and of Col. ' Haci C, Jones to be XT. S. Attorney in the Western district. They are three solid, sterling men who will wear well and wash well. There is nothing of the two-faced politician about them. - They are men of pro nounced character and of su'eh force as to compel respect from their fel lows. We are satisfied when, such appointments are made. STATE TOPICS Asheville is talking about aline of street railway. ; j The merenrv was four deerees be low freezing in Yancey on the 11th. - i Thfl Trsa convention will be held at Smithville on the 17th of June. Marion is behind hand and -will not hold her iriunicipal election un til the 23rd. ' H ! The Episcopal Convention! for this diocese meets in Asheville1 next Wednesday. Capt. S. A. Ashe, editor of the Raleigh News and Observer, has been appointed postmaster of Ral eigh. I J. B. Bostic and 1). l)j Suttlo have lately given without pay to the town of Shelby six acres 6f new streets. At the sale of the property of the late G. M. Wilfong in Catawba last week, corn and wheat both Drought $1.15. Married in Newton, May 13, Mr. Will R. Rankin, of Greensboro, to Miss Kate Gline, daughter of M. M. Cline, Esq., of Newton. Jonrdan Hanev. aged 20. ian in- y o , mate from Cleveland county; of the Morganton Insane Asylum, hanged himself on the 28th of April. ' I , ' In Jones county corn has been more plentiful during the pajst win ter and Spring than usual and hog cholera has been less -prevalent on account of more generous feed. . i Those who -are entitled tb pen sions under the disabled Confederate soldiers bill must file their applica tions with the Board of county commissioners before the first Mon thly in July. j ",- In Shelby last week two justices were trying a case of assault .when a difference of opinion as to the law occurred. The lie was passed and, but for the interference of outsiders a fight ! would have ensued, j ' In Monroe on Monday f last week Logan, negro barber, met his dusky sweetheart walking the street with Malloy, colored waiter at Brown's hotel, when he 1 began shooting at Malloy and killed him. Logan escaped. New Berne places her dependence upon garden trucks and sh$ , pays greater reverence to peas than Dur hany to tobacco. The New York steamers go off daily loaded! down with crates of peas, potatoes and early vegetables. Our esteemed contemporary, the Winston Republican, comes to us in new type and is very much improv ed. One of the joys of our life is the weekly perusal of its Statesville letter, in which the writer deals out his licks at random hit or miss. The two young men, EasLqii and Jarvis, who were arrested upon sus picion of having thrown the dynam ite cartridge into the house jof ill fame m Charlotte, were up (before Mayor Johnson and released by rea son of lack of evidence Against them. J Near Leicester, Buncombe county, Philetus Sluder, who was about to be arrested for threatening to' kill a deputy sheriff who was trying to make the arrest, shot at the deputy. The bullet missed its mark and struck Carr Sluder, a brother of Philetus, killing him instantly. , Last Wednesday there was a big show of fine cattle in Raleigh. There were 150 head of Jerseys, Devons, Durhams,.&c, mostly from the near vicinity of Raleigh, col lected together in the fair grounds and quite a crowd was in attend ance. At 11 o'clock there was a procession through the streets and the drove of cattle was very impos ing. It is'esti mated that the cash value of cattle wasf over $15,000. Memorial day was observed at Raleigh by appropriate services on the 11th. Col. Alfred MooreJ Wad dill delivered an eloquent eulogy upon; Gen. Geo. ... Anderson at Tucker Hall, after which the crowd adjourned to the cemetery and cov ered the graves of the Confederate dead with flowers. At NewBerne the Confederate monument was un veiled, the memorial services, strew ing of flowers ,&c.. were nerformpd and Cant. Ham O. Graham deliver! an address upon the subject of Gen. j. oonnston l'ettigrew. j I . rvu "vr ... xT i i n" J-iic iicn tuii xmu niin SCUOOH Will begin July 1 and continue) four weeks, llie following is the facul ty : M. C. S. Noble, Superintend ent City Graded Schools, Wilming ton, N. C. ; Edward P. Moses, Superintendent p Graded School, Goldsboro, N. C. ; W. A. Blair Su perintendent High Point "Graded School ; Henry Houck, Deputy Su perintendent Public Instruction, Pennsylvania ; J. P. Blair, Haver ford College, Pennsylvania ; J. A. Foil , Associate Principal Catawba High and Normal School ; ! Miss Nellie Cook, Principal Union Grad ed School, Wilmington, N. O. j WESTERN CORN. A lot of Western Corn & Meal just received, and will be sold for cash oxly, at Courtney Bros. A No. 1 one-horse wagon for sale very low at Cloyd & Nelson's. ( TIMELY TCPISS. The status quo remains in the Russo-English affair. - During the past year the expenses of the American Tract Society have been $382,241. i Wm. H. Cullingsworth, a promi nent tobacco manufacturer, has been niade postmaster of Richmond, Va. : . ' . The consolidated fund bill of the British Government for $55,000,000 has passed the British House of Commons. j . - Gen. Komaroff reiterates his for mer version of the Penjdeh affair, so that it is a question of veracity between him and Sir Peter Lurasden. One of the significant signs of the times was the "Congress of the Churches" held at Hartford, Conn., last ; week. The spirit that actuated the members '. of the different de-. nominations taking part in it was a desire to bring together the various branches of the church in a closer union and fellowship ; to advance their amenities furtner from the condition of an armistice and nearer to a brotherhood. WATAUGA COUNTY. Continuation of the Chapter of Raws and Gossip from the Uonntains begun last Week. On Monday, May 1, the voters of Stoney Fork township gathered to gether at the voting precinct and, by a vote of 50 to 2, voted whiskey out of the township. On Monday of court the owners of several fine stallions in the coun ty -and there is much fine stock in Watauga had their horses out upon exhibition. One of the finest was the Kentucky thoroughbred of Cof fey Brothers He is a strawberry roari, glass-eyed in the left eye and one of the ! most perfectly formed animals we ever saw. The Coffevs have also a very large Durham Bull, three y ears old, and weighing 1,800 pounds. On Monday and Tuesday Prof. .Cushman, a traveling veterinary surgeon and one of the most perfect talking machines that ever went through the mountains, lectured upon the horse, sold a farrier's book and taught a class in the art of sub duing unruly horses. He made a Eublic exhibition of throwing a orse down easily and without dan ger.! Whether he was a humbug or not was a vexed question much dis cussed between the "outs" and the "ins," the latter refusing to disclose any of the secrets which the profes sor disclosed to them. The hearing of evidenco in the Clark reference case before Capts. Coffey and Lovill, on Thursday, drew as large and as interested a crowd as was at court during the week. W. P. Clarke, a young En glishman of the Rugby Colony in Tennessee, who professed to be an analytical chemist, sued! the Union Mining Company, which- worked the Flannery silver mine on Beech Mountain and the Gragg gold mine on the Grandfather and of which Dr. J. T:Stewart was the superin tendent, for 560 days work as a chemist at $5 per day. j The com pany contended that Clarke's analy ses were'made upon speculation and that if they resulted in the sale of the mines he was to share the pro ceeds. He received $560 of which $200 was deducted for board. Capt. E. F. Lovill, who obtained his Jicenso to practice law at the last j term of the Supreme Court, was sworn in by Judge Avery. Col. Calvin J. Cowlesj of Char lotte, and John A. Boyden, of Sal isbury, were in Boone on business before the court. j Rev. Mark S. Gross, the Roman Catholic priest in charge of. the churches at Charlotte and on the Western road, came to Boone Mon day and preached in the court house Tuesday night,! on the subject of Paradise and Purgatory. Mr. J. W. Greene, one of the most progressive stock raisers of Beaver Dams, sheared, a week or so back, 10i lbs. of wool from a year ling Cotswold buck and 9 lbs. from a 2 year old ewe. l i Died, May 3, at Sands, Mr. Wm. Gragg, aged 74 years. Mitchell County News. The furnace at Cranberry is at work and is turning out pig iron from the ore in a hurry and the lit tle narrow gauge railroad to John ston City is kept busy hauling the pig away, - j. Work has been resumed in the way of taking out the ore, although nothing is being done in the tunnel and ! down in the shaft. The top surface has been peeled off on the side of the mountain near the mouth of the tunnel and the rich ore at the top Of the PTOtmrl ia Vifn'no- Kloof or! and blown to pieces and run through the furnace. 1 - Gen. Wilder'a $100,000 hotel with 200 rooms which he is building on top of Roan mountain is fast ap proaching completion. It has three fron& Ea3t 200 feet, South 160 feet andiWest 140 feet, and is three sto nes high with a basement for a bill iard saloon, dancing hall and Kin dergarten. Miss Bate, a niece of Gov. Bate, oi lennessee, has been employed to teach all the children of guests, free of charge, in the Kindergarten de partment. This is a novel scheme. The furnace will also be located 1? 6 basement from which heat wiube conveyed to every chamber on the register plan. The dining room .wiirbe 42x60. u A hydraulic 1J?TCQ wat rom a spring f fee below and will convey it to The hotel is connected rpkne., with Roan Moutaih station, 12 miles away. There are 500 acres of kvel Knd on top of the mountain j an I a r . o track half a mile around is boing made." , ." A saw mill and planing machine are at work on top of the mouutuin and the lumber for the hotel is bing sawed out of the native balsam. The engine will be used on an inclined tramway that is to be bnilt froni lop to bottom for the conveyance to and fro of passengers and provisions. The Cold Snap. The uuusually cold weather for the season of Monday of last Veek did some damage to early garden vegetables and the frost bit down peas, potatoes. and corn but they will all come out. Thy Yadkin suiTeivl worse than any other pari of this county. In Mitchell, Watauga and Ashe the thermometer registered below 32 and there was ice, but nothing was far enough advanced to be hurt. ' Store Scene. Young Lady I wautauicedrtss. Thank you, I think that is very pretty; I'll take a dress of that. (To the merchant.) How many yards will it take ? ' Merchant I don't know, I have never had to buy any. Old Gent. It takes about 14 yards for my wife; Mekchant (To young unmarri ed man standing near. ) Tlow many yards will it take for your wife ? Young Man About 12 yards, I think. ' Young Lady Well, cut me off 12 yards, then. X. Y. Z: Lecture at Rutherford Rutherford College May 13. To the Editor of The Lenoir Topic: f Please announce that l)r. Bayes, of the Hokton Conference, the re nowned preacher and lecturer, will lecture in the Rutherford College Chapel on Wednesday night, the 20th Jnst. Subject : Courtship. Admittance fee, 25 cents. The pro ceeds are for a charitable purpose. Let all the young people come. It will be a grand treat. R. L. Abernetiiy. Our Hudsonville Letter. Hudsonville, May 16. To the Editor of Tlie Lenoir Topic: We are having fine weather and the farmers are making good use of their-time. i Our place is improving a little. Mr. "Hudson's new house is nearly completed, r Mr J G Adderholt is going to build him a new house as soon- as he can get ready.! He has moved his steam sawmill to our place this week and has it now in running order. ; j Mr A T Lyda has been in ill health for about five weeks but we think he is improving now. j Last evening, May 15, at about 5 o'clock our old friend and honored citizen, Mr. Rufus Hartley, depart ed this life for the better world. Hu leaves a wife and two sons to mourn his death. The funeral will take place at Sardis Church grave yard, tomorrow at 10 o'clock. We extend sympathies to the bereaved friends. Y. N; Z. To the Citizens of Lenoir and ill Persons Concerned. Lenoir, May 15. It may not be generally known that there is a sanitary law in our State, the operations of which are intended and designed to mitigate and remove as far as it can be done all sources of disease, more especial ly those arising from the nse of im pure water and air, as well as from stagnant, fermenting, decayingslums and exposed and improperly located privies, etc. " These potent sources of disese wc have reason to fear are to be found more or less on every lot in town. The latter, especially, have rendered a residence in some of our houses al most intolerable. Such a statu of affairs cannot, must not continue. As a public health officer it becomes my duty, in conjunction with our Hon: Mayor "and the town Board of Commissioners, to investigate to what extent these violations of our sanitarylaw may exist, and institute at once, measures for our safety. It this matter, we have every reason to expect the prompt and hearty co operation of all our citizens. With out this, much trouble anI damage may ensue, both at home and abroad. T. M. Vance, A. A. Scroggs, Mayor. Sup't Pub Health. Attend the Normal. Risden, May 13. To the Editor of Tlie Lenoir Topic : . I wish to say through the columns of The Topic, to the teachers of Caldwell county and friends of edu cation in general, that the Normal School will be held in Boone, and I think it is the duty of all who intend to teach to attend the Normal School, and prepare themselves for the great work of developing minds. I know there are some opposed to the Nor mal School. There are some that are opposed to every thing, that is for the development of our ; country. The reason why they oppose it is because they, are ignorant. They are imprisoned in their ignorance. Their ignorance is . as' a ; wall built around them high and impenetra ble. This is a progressive age, every thing is in a progressiye attitude. We should at once arouse from our lethargy, and no longer submit to the galling yoke of tyrannical ignor ance. We as a nation must educate or we must perish by our own pos terityeducate the rising generation and our American institutions are safe neglect and they are in jeopar dy every hour.. Now, in order to educate the youth of our land, the teachers must be educated, j Now, teachers, are you going to go to the vr i oi i - i . i your- selves for your great work, you going "to let this golden lunity pass unimproved ? or are oppor- Do we not need competent teachers fco teach our public schools ? Yes e need men who will stand abreast With the foremost in the cause of education. W. M. Francum. Letter from Cove Creek. Sugar Grove. May 14. To the Editor of Tlie Lenoir fopic: The weather still remains jcold and the farmers are behind with their work. Some are done planting, while others are planting ajnd some are rolling logs. j We had a big frost and freeze on the 1 morning of the 11th. which killed all the beans and other vege tables that were up in the gardens and I think it killed most of the fruit also. - j I will just say to the readers of The Topic that bid Cove Creek Church is still alive, and im a flour ishing condition. With a member ship of about 100, and witbi Rev. J. J. L. Shearwood pastor. And our Sunday school at the same place is also at Work. We have am average attendance of about 75 jscholirs, John McBride is superintendent, T. P. Adams.lassistant, D. -Fj Horton, clerk, F. P. Mast, Treasurer. -. j ' ' ' ' . !' . xf Y. Z. - k House Tumbles.) i, ; , ' j OastonU Gazette. j The three-story brick building on Trade street, in Charlottet occupied by-Hammond & Justice,! hardware dealers, uiuiblcd down jyi'sterday, making a complete wreck. In ex cavating5 for a cellar under the ad joining property, where I Sehiff & Uro. are rebuilding lie fcioru that was burne'd some time ago, the workmen took away the earth to within three feet of the wall ' which caused at to crush doun. The book keeper received warning, which he communicated to the others in the building,1 and all the own pan ts de serted the house before ft fell. Clin riot t Democrat. Just as we were about to go to press falling buildings and walls so damaged the Democrat Office Build ing that we had to abandon it for the ! present. That's all we have time to say now. i 1 p. m. ThursdayMay 14. J H. C. BOYL.IN, Watchmaker and Jeweler, LENOIR, n. c. Up aUira over Martin's Hardwire St re. All work guaranteed. - Begistered Jersey Bull. Mr Fin registered Jersey Bull, GOVERNOR JARVIS, Will stand for the sesnon at my stables at "Marr'a Grove," 2 miles West of Lenoir, at tlie following rates for a saaaon : Heifer Cali-, fS.OO ; Bull Calf, f 1.00. E. P. MILLER. M M0ETG AGE SALE. Om the 25th day or Mat, 1885, at the court flonae door in the town of Leuoir, ' we win sell at public auction, for cash to the highe-it bidder, a certain tract of land in said county, lying on the waters of Gunpowder creek the miles snd bounds of which are vet forth in a certain mortgage, deed, to un made by John Mull and wife, and registered in BookN, pages 308-9-10 of th record of Caldwell courty, in the office of the Register of Deeds, by rirtue of which deed this sale is usde J A. MONTGOMERY, Apra 1,1485. . W. 8. HALLMAN, Mortgagees. A CAE load of Buggies. Hacks, Plstform-Spring Wagons, Phaetons, and Road carta (with or without tops). At our Stables in Lenoir and Hickory. We will take in exchange for tliese vehicles Horses, Cat tle, Corn, Fodder or Wheat. Wc ark also agents for the Piedmont Wagon in Caldwell county. Agents also for the Kellt Wheat Dsill, Hab vemteb. Hat Rake and Feed Cuttib. - A oak load' of "Anchob Brahd" Feitilizer for Tobacco, and Piedmont brand for corn and cotton. . wbiob we will sell at Hickory prises, freight added. Wanted A or 8 Good Horses. A vol of Berkshire Pigs ready to take away In a bout two weeks. Abexnethy a hABTLEi. - Xand Sale.. As o.imniiwaioner appnointed by the Superior court of Caldwell connty, I will, on Monday, the 35th day of May, 1885, at Lent in Caldwell county, offer for sale the following land in Caldwell county nnder decree of said ourct: Fifty-one acres (51) of land on the Yadkin River and kunwn as Lot .No 4 in the division of the lands of William Haigler, deceased. Terms: 20 pr ct. cash, ballance in 6 months with approved security at 8 pr ct. interest Title retained nutll purch e money in paid. Dated at Inoir, N. C. April 3 1885. M. . SHELL, OommiBioner. North Carolina -Caldwell County. Superior Court Spring Term 1885. Malinda Palmer vs. Joseph Palmer Et Ala. Action to set aside a deed. It having been made 1 to appear to the satisfaction of the court tlial Joseph ! Palmer one of the defendant in this case ' a non i resident of this Stnte. It ia ordered that publication be made for six succesHive wetks in the Lenoir Topis a newspaper puolished in Lenoir, Caldwell county,' North Caro1ina,HUtumon8ing the said Joceph Palmer to offer at the Spring term of this oourt to be held the 4th Monday in May 1885. Then and there to answer or demur to ihe complaint which will be filed with the clerk of the court on the 1st thret, days of the term. And the said Joseph Palmer will take notioe that If he shall fall to offer and plead or de mur at the said time and place, the plaintiff will pray judgment. M. K. SHELL, C8.0. EDMUND JONES, Attorney for Plaintiff. : NOTIOE. Having qualified as Administrator of Wm. Shell, deceased, I hereby call upon all persons owing said Wm. Shell, to maks immediate payment to me, and upon all persons having claims against said Wm. Shell, to present then to me within 13 months from date, or this n itice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. 8. H. OXFORD, Administrator. Dated at Lenoir, N. O., the 24th day of April 1885.' C A. Oillxy, Attorney, . I NOTICE I I will offer for sale, for cash, to the highest bid ber, at the court-house door, in Lenoir, on Monday, May 35, It being Monday of Oalawell Superior ooart, J. A. Bolch, interest In forty seven acres of land, more or less, lying on the waters of Freemason creek adjoining the lands of Morgan Smith, James Craige, et al, to satisfy executions in my hand for collection, Issued from Caldwell Superior oourt, in favor of R J. Bush. M. H. TUTTLE, Sheriff. . Lenoir, K. ft, April 30, 1885. NOTICE. Notice la hereby given to Susan Triplett and Au gustus Triplett that on the seventh day of May, 1885, a special proceeding was nstituted in the Superior oouit of Vatauga oounty, entitled O. J. Oowlea ad ministrator, "de bonis non" of N. Triplett deo'd, gainst Amanda Triplett, Lswton Triplett, Carson Triplett, Coiumbus Triplett. Augustas Triplett. Mar shall Triplett, Sammel Robbins and Ellen Bobbins, for the purpose of obtaining an order to sail the lands of N. Triplett, dee'd, for the payment of the debts of said N. Triplett deo'd. and that the said Lftwson Tripiett and Augmstna Tripiett are required to appear at the offioe of the 8nperior court clerk, of Watauga county, on the 35th day of July, 1885, and answer or to demur to the oomplalnt of the plaintiff now on file In said offioe, witners my hand tula v enth day of May, 18H8. JOR B. TODD, Clerk Superior Csurt, Watauga oounty. "New Goods . ; 3STei7 Goods!! Spring is here and with it Comes our We have not time to particularize and for the present content Ourselves by calling your, ajten- - tion V to one of j . the largest and hand somest stocks 6f goods ever brought to this market. When in ITeed of any thing .from a of To a Suit OP CLOTHES, SEWING JACHINE OR COOKING S Come and see us and sre Will do our best to please You both in Price and QUALITY. . V" .-. -L Come one, Come all. Respectfully, CLOYD AND NELSON. INFORMATION. CD o 3 CD 0 O m v CD 0 O P c 0 0 CT5 O 3 HP 3 G HI ca P Pi mm' to o o . s.S i3j o CQ 0 irj 0 1 ! Watch This Column for F. WIESENFELD'S NEW ADVERTISEMENT. i-o-l- Are Received 4 I Watt Plows, SEWING MACHINES, 9 Always on Hand. EespectfuUy, F. Uiesenfeld. H L - '. ! ; i U.J, .! ' 4
Lenoir News-Topic (Lenoir, N.C.)
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May 20, 1885, edition 1
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