Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / July 23, 1923, edition 1 / Page 1
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y . - ! A VOLLtV—NO. 50 -!* t * ' Wm)beLoad3at Buie Tuesday P. M. Third Car-Load Shipment This Year —These Owned by Mr. H. B. Ash ley—Farmers invited to See How Hogs Ar^ Shipped. A solid carioad of hogs raised in Robeson county will be loaded at Buie tomorrow afternoon, and will be shipped from there to Richmond, Va., where they will be sold by their own er, Mr. H. B. Ashley Jr., who lives near Buie. ^ Thiy is %he third solid car to be shipped fropt Robeson county, two others having been shipped in the ear ly spring. Mr. Ashley owned several hogs ju the first shipment and was very well pleased with the price re ceived. Mr. O. 0. Dukes, county farm demonstrator, will have charge of the loading and. all farmers interested in the raising pf hogs are invited to be present and, see just what steps are necessary for proper shipment. tUMBERTdw NEGROES VICTIMS OF GAS PIPE EXPLOSION. Left Lumberton A Few Weeks Ago To Work In Pennsylvania Steel Mill—Higher Wages And Better Living Conditions Induced Them To Leave The South And Go North —Several Killed In Explosion. The remains of two colored men, Dan Singlet&ry and Mack Bullock, who left'LuMberton about 4 weeks ago, and who were instantly killed by the explosion of a gas pipe In a steel mill at Woodlawn, Pa., on the 17th, arrived Kern Friday and interment was made (hying the afternoon in the Sandy wove cemetery. The colored men were young, being 25 and 26 years respectivly, and had been recently, employed on one of the farms <% Mr., A- W. McLean, leaving a few weeks ago for northern points where they wpre induced to go on ac count of mjhpr wages and better liv ing conditions that have been so briiliantly described to the negroes of the south recently. A detailed account of their death cannot be fo(pid in any of the north era papers Mining to Lumberton and it is impossible to give the direct cause of their death except that they were* a%&333**ot burned to death when the gas pipe exploded in One of the big steel mills of Pennsylvania. Ac cording to meagre reports several: other southern negroes lost their! lives in the accident. tOBACCO BROUGHT TO CO-OP WAREHOUSE THIS MORNING.! Mr. W. L Lovett BtingB in First feed of Primings and Gets (6 the Hundred—Schedule of Advances. . Mr W. L. Lovett of Lumberton R 4 brought the first load of tobacco to the locaL Tobacco Growers' Co Operative warehouse this morning. The load weighed about 150 pounds, consisted entirely of primings, and advances were made to this member at approximately $6 per hundred. The schedule of advances publicly posted in the receiving warehouse is as follows: wrapprs, $25 to $32.60; leaf, $2 to $21.50; cutters, $11 t6 $22. 50; 1 'gs, $2 to $9; primings, $1 to $8. All (b- above prices are based on the hundred pounds. There is a lower scalp to the above prices for some grades of damaged tobacco. Fine Crops—Not Much Sign of Wee vt! Mr. R. G. McCormick of Fairmont R. 3 was among the visitors in town Friday. Mr. McCormick says he has the best prospect for a cotton crop he has had in 4 years. His to bacco and other crops also are fine. He has just finished curing his third ham of tobacco. Corn, potatoes and all other crops are fine in his section, Mr. McCormick says. There hes rot heen much sign of damage by the hoi! weev& and Mr. McCormick does not think the**e wiii be if the favor able seasons ho!d. He /s:?ys he is go ing to plow his cotton, wli'ch he has ^een cultivating frequently, up until August 15. Large Cotton Factors Unabie to Meet Obligations. Augusta, Ga.. Julv 20 (Associated Press.)—Barrett and Company, re futed to be "th- worlds largest cotton factors," with headquarters here, an nounced tonight that they were un able to meet their obligations amounting to approximately $1,000, 000. A committee composed of New York, New Orleans and North and South Carolina bankers, representing part of the creditors, was in confe rence tonight with a view of working out som^ plan cf liquidation for the preservation of the company's assets and the best protection of its credi tors. —The condition of Billie Hodges, small sotCof Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Hodges, who has been critically ill at the Thompson hospital since last Wednesday with tetanus, is more favorable today. Mr, Clayton Hall of Boatdman spent Saturday night and Sunday in Lumberton. Mr. W. C. Barnes of R, 3, Lumber ton, was among tha visiters in town Saturday. 1 BoU Weevii Meet ing at Maxton Jviy 2S Expert WiM Diacnoo impfoved Me thoda of Fighting the Weevii—A Meeting That Prontiaee to bo 0n< of the Beet of !ta Kind Ever HeM As stated in Thursday's Robesonian an important meeting for discussion by experts of improved methods of fighting the boii weevil will be held in Maxton Wednesday of this week. The importance of this meeting is well presented in the following let ter to The Robesonian from Mr. J. G. McCormick of Wilmington: "After considerable effort, we have finally succeeded in enlisting the soil improvement committee of the South ern Fertilizer association in work in North and South Carolina against the boll weevil. The first meeting in North Carolina will be held on the morning of Wednesday, July 25th, at Maxton. Dr. J. N. Harper is direc tor in charge. He is a man of sound learning and wide experience, and was, for a number of years, director of the South Carolina experiment station at Clemson college. His staff is also composed of men well quali fied for the work committed to them. Their sole purpose is to render ser vice of cost to the farmer in connec tion with the problems which he has to solve. "Representatives of the State and aiso of the Atlantic Coast Line and Seaboard Air Line engaged in similar work will also be present and lend their assistance. Upon the whole, the meeting promises to be the best of its kind ever held anywhere, pro vided it has the support and co-op eration of those who, for their own good, should be most vitally interest ed in its success. -A large * atten dance is one of the most important factors. We believe you will find it worthwhile to attend, and we trust that you will not only do so, but will induce your neighbors and friends to do tikewise, and that you will also give as much publicity as possible to the meeting. Personally, we are in terested because we believe that the proposition is a vital one! to all of us, and we know of no better means of solving it than that which it is now sought to employ. If we show the proper interest, this work will be en larged and improved in the two Car olines T*nd it is 'up to us,' so to to speak, to do our part to get the benefit of it. So. be sure to remem ber the time and place, to-wit, Max ton, N. C., July 25th, 1923, ten o'clock in the forenoon. Be on hand at that time end have as many others as you -an thee with you. Go out into the 'highways and dedges and compel' them to come." Typhoid Clinics Free tyohoid fever and diphtheria clinics will be held at the following ntaces and dates named below: Tuesday. July 24th—Fairmont (Dr. Ricks' o(hce) 10 to 12 a. m.; Row land Drug Co., 2 to 4 p. m. Wednesday, July 25th—Broad Ridge school 11 to 12:30 a. m.; Or nm 1 to 2:30 p. m.; Bamesville 3 to 5 n m. Thursday, July 26th—St. Paul 9:30 to 11 a. m.: Parkton 11:30 to 2. Friday, July 27th—Saddle Tree 1: 30 to 3 p. m.; Back Swamp 5 to 7 p. m. ORRUM OCCURRENCES. Bv Rosada Israel. Or-um. July 14 (Dated wrong, held several days after mailing or delayed in transmission, as it was not re ceived until July 21)—People in this section are busy barning tobacco. The 4 junior classes in S. S. will giye an entertainment at the church here next Thursday afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock. Cakes and ice cream will be served.. The writer especially enjoyed the East Lumberton news letter publish ed in the last Robesonian. Hope they will write often, the letters are very interesting. Mr. Eugene Williams af the Park ton section was a visitor here Sunday. Miss Dorothy Bullard of Bolton is visiting friends and relatives here. Mr Sam Carter spent Friday night here visiting friends. Sorry to report little Forest Branch ill with whooping cough. All the farmers around here have fine tobacco crops, and the majority belong to the Co-ops. Glad to report Mrs. Jasper Walters much improved since our last writing. Mr. Roscoe Kinlaw and sister, Miss Alice, of Lumberton R. 2, spent Sun day visiting at the home of their un cle Mr- J P. Prevntt. Mr. A. L. Lamm of R. 4. Lumber ton, spent last Sunday in this section. Best wishes to The Robesonian. Formed Famous Mexican Bandit Chief Shot from Ambush. Chihuahua City, Mexico, Juiy 20. (Associated Press)—One hundred troops under command of Genera! Eugenio Martinez arrived at Parra! tonight to hunt for assassins who killed Francisco Villa, his secretary, MigUel Trillo. and three men who were with them near Parra! this morning. MT. G. W. Williamson of R. 4, Lumberton, was among the visitors in town Saturday* Drunken ipdian Carve. Up Hi. Wife. Lattie Brewington, on a Ng Drunk Up Rennert Way, Reaented Effort# of Friend Wife to Quiet Hi*—He is Sobering Up in Jaii and Sayo He Does Not Remember a TMng Aboot !t. Lattie Brewington, Indian, cut Ms wife in severai places and otherwise beat her np in genera! !ast night while he was staging a Mg drunk on the public road m front of hia home near Rennert. He is in jail here part ly sober, and his wife is suffering greatly from serious wounds. . According to Sheriff R. E. Lewis, who was called to the scene, Brew ington was staging a big drunk with some other men about 8 o'clock and using the public road near Ms home for their congregating and loud curs ing. His wife went out to them and tried to get her husband to corns to the house and go to bed, the mention of which made him exceedingly an gry. He proceeded to assault her with his fists and finally stabbed her seriously in several places. Neighbors hearing the screams of the woman ran to her assistance and carried her to a nearby house, where she was treated by Dr. Claude Poole of St. Pauls. Rural Policeman Lacy McNair was called and rushed to the scene, where he found Brewington and placed him under arrest. He had in the meantime 'phoned Sheriff Lewis, who, with De puties A. R. Pittman and A. H. Pre vatt, went to the scene. When ar rested Brewington was still very drunk and still in the road. Hp was brought to Lumberton and placed in jail and states today that he does not remember a thing about the af fair. Thg other men who took part in the drunken brawl have not yet been! ****irehended. ISLATIVE COMMITTEE REPORTS $86,000 DEFICIT; AUDITORS FIND $796,000. Difference Due to Note of $710,000 for 1921 School Deficit—State Has Run Behind 3319,000 Since First of Year. News and Observer, 20th. Counting taxes levied but not col-' lected as assets, the State had a ficlt of $477,194.75 on Decern 1922, which had been increa $796,468.13 by June 80, 1923, a ing to the revised balance sheet of audit of the State's finances wl was made public yesterday by tjhe vestigating committee of the General Assembly. The commi disagreeing with its auditors on item of $710,000, found for its figures a surplus of $232,805.22 the end of the last calendar year a deficit of $86,468.13 at the end the past fiscal year. The report n that Treasurer Lacy's books bala exactly. We went yon for a customer. Open at 6 a. m. Close 10 p m. PROMPT SERVICE FULLER'S SERVICE STATION Comay Sal an! Chwstalt Sta i ne report aner six montns oi ! vestigation by a staff of audit numbering eighteen at one time ... presented to a vocally happy Govl nor and a silently smiling Couhcila State yesterday afternoon at 2: Only the report of the commit goes to the public at this time, lengthy report of the auditors . back to New York in order that revisions made since the report brought here in completed form Tuesday of last week may be writ into it. The report will be available to press sometime next week and at request of the committee, Scretary ] State W. N. Everett will have 1, copies printed and distributed members of the last General Ass bly and everyone else that them. In the meantime all that is kno about the recommendations is they have been adopted by the Council of Stat State Treasury B. R. 1 Auditor Baxter Durham, partments will be directly the changed system of booxxeei will immediately install the systems. The committee has commended the firm of Price Watt house and Co., which made the aud be employed to supervise the n< system and keep it going It is stal ed that under it, the deficit or surpl as the case may be will be availab at all times. —Mr. W. E. Bell, The Rob sonian's chief linotype operator, It yesterday for the home of his pa ents at Apex on a week's vacatia —-Misses Ida Fenegan and Evel Stafford of Latta, S. C., are of Miss Lillie Epps at the home her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. Epps, Cedar street. Miss Epps at her guests, with a party of friend, spent Friday afternoon at Whit Lake, returning +**-+ * ' Mr. and Mrs. W. R. McGill daughter and son, Miss Eulalia ar Mr. Leon McGill, returned last nig! fvfmi Wrightsville Beach, whc reek-end. They ms McGill's car. Judge Sinclair Ac cepts Challenge of Ku Khot Klan Fight Against Lawless Organization Claiming to be Above Courts Will Continue Until Supremacy of Courts is Completely Vindicated— Taliaferro Defense in Contempt; Charges Collapsed When Letters Written by Detectives Were Pro dnced. ONE OF MOST INTERESTING CASES IN WEEK OF SENSATIONS i After Judge N. A. Sinclair in Su perior court heTe Saturday afternoon had found H. L. Taliaferro, confess ed Ku Klux detective, guilty of in timidating certain witnesses for the State in the famous flogging case which had just came to a close, and had imposed upon him the maximum fin^ allowed by the statute, $250 fine and 30 days in prison for each of the three counts, and after counsel for the detective had given notice of ap peal to the Supreme court, Mr. T. L. Johnson ashed the judge to reduce the bond from $5,000 to $2,500. In denying the motion, Judge Sinclair said that a deplorable condition exists in Robeson county and in certain other sections, that a secret organi zation has arisen which holds itself to be above the courts and its mem bers beyond the reach of the law. He declared that so far as the court was concerned he accepted the challenge thrown down by this iawless organi zation and that the fight would conti nue ""til the supremacy of the law was completely vindicated. No mat ter what other men might do, he said, he had taken a solemn oath to ad minister the law and this he proposed to do not matter what organization or individual was involved. His honor therefore denied the motion. This case was taken up immediate ly after the jury in the Lawson-Hedg peth-Brogden case had retired and wan interrupted for the "not guilty' verdict of the jury. Immediately af ter the verdict was rendered many of Hhe large crowd in the court room lieft and so missed one of the most interesting and important develop ments of the week of sensations. ; The case was conducted for the te by Mr. R. C. Lawrence, Mr. E. -itt reading the answers to the , It was charged by the State -liaferro had approached Mrs. Purvis and Mrs. Mary Watson, Ining witnesses in the flogging te former at Rock Mount and ^r at Laurinburg and later at ieville, under the name of Mey d Logan, representing himself detective employed by the De tt of Justice at Raleigh to as getting up evidence. He wa? d with having made veiled , stating that he was afraid < Ku Klux Klan, and did not to die, and to have intimated Mr. and Mrs. Purvis might get their home place, which had sold under mortgage, if this were dropped. several allegations were denied answer read by Mr. E. M. Britt. . claimed in the answer that Ta-1 -o was employed by the imperial of the Ku Klux Klan at Atlan ferret out the perpetrators of crime, who were said to have ted clothed in helmets and robes klan and to find out who enter e klavern of the klan at Fair and stole therefrom 18 robes .elmets. This zeal on the part of lan was said to be in line with sstions made in The Robesoman ther papers that if the Ku Klux was not responsible for rhe fe it should help to run down ml criminals. idavits were submitted from the and the chief of police ol inbnrg to the effect that Talia had visited Mrs. Watson at dace as a detective of the klan. set forth in the answer that .To had been cordially receiv Mr. and Mrs. Purvis and that /e assumed names in order that .detective he might work under It was farther stated that he 'ears old and had had some experience as a detective, hav orked for other organizations being employed by the Ku in.*an. ig the recital of these answers .erro sat in confident compo apparently wei! satisfied with and the way things were go [But his composnre ieft him a inates iater when he was plac sn the witness stand. When .ence calmly walked over to asked him if he recognized ietters, written on the sta of the Lorraine hotei of Lum he was knocked a!! in a heap, he nor his attorneys knew ^at was on the cards at ail was evident at once that the _ had collapsed, aferro was obliged to admit Jte letters were written by him, Here was nothing left but for the " pass the sentence, i first of the letters was written erton on June 8 and was as Job to Judge Grady, dear friend: Well one mors all will be over I hope to vantage and you will be in ths jr I arrived here last nigh! in the country all day and a eoM ttail and leave fm ..-... 1 Five Men Taken To State Prison Today Lake Britt and Fonr Othero Go Caatody of Offirera to RaMgk Be%in Sentencea of Varyhtt i^en^tha. Lukg Britt, who Last week sub mitted to a charge oi second degree murder in Superior court here for the slaying of E.R. Shepherd and who was sentenced to ten years in the State prison by Judge N. A. 8in ciair, !eft this morning in custody of Deputy Sheriffs A. H. Prevatt and J. H. Carper for Raieigh to begin serving his sentence. Four other prisoners sentenced by Judge Sinciair were taken by the pf ficers this morning, these being Jeaap Seiiers, white, who plead gouty to an assault with deadly weapon and trespass, and who received an inde terminate sentence of not more than six years and not less than iouy years; Jesse Oxendine, Indian, who was found guilty of murder in the second degree for killing Vick Bul lard, and who received an indetermi nate sentence of from 10 to 15 years; Braxton Purdie, negro, who was found guilty of murder in the second degree for the killing of Mateo Horn, white, and who was sentenced to thity years; and Charlie Pugh, white, who submitted to a charge of larceny of an automobile, and who was sen tenced to two years. Fayetteville tonight where I am in hopes of flushing my victim and get a confession out of her aa to who it was that framed her to accuse the men she did. "No Wiii, I won't he there over three or four days anyhow, just long enough to hear from you and I will ciose this case up and return at once. 1 did not have time to write yon or in fact you would not get it in time. But I ieamed here that Evans waa willing for a receiver (proviso) the same staff was kept to work from Savage down. Also Judge Grady had been offered the job by Dr. Evans. But the judge refused. Now had I gotten this dope in time possibly it would have helped you a little. Any how, you will not need it. "Now, I wiil be at, Fayetteville, N. C., care LaFayette Hotel. So let me know how everything js and haw SCO* for me to go there to assist in youy great work of cleaning out the crooks. Answer at once, with^best, I remain your, Itsub, (Tally) The last word of the letter "Itsub" is made up of the initials of the ritualistic words used in Elan cor respondence, these words being "In the Sacred unfailing bond," I. T. S. U. B. "iWGT of His Arrest. The second letter was dated in Lumberton on the day after the ar rest of Taiiaferro on a bench warrant and is a# follows: "My Dear Friend Will: Undoubted ly you have read in the papers that they have landed me in jail here on a bench warrant Well, of all tha damnable frame-ups and lies I never heard before as they have got me charged with. I was getting too close behind this Solicitor and his deed* and that is the reason they framed me. I phoned Savage as soon as they arrested me that my bond was $5,000 and also phoned E. F. Randolph, the acting Grand Dragon and he in turn got in touch with Atlanta and $5,00^ was sent post-haste by wire. "My lawyers say they cannot do anything with me as it is only a mia deamor, not to exceed $E00 fine And two years on the road if guilty. I think that is a whole lot for two old prostitutes to swear away a man's iife My case is set for 12 noon. Mon day, the first case on the docket, I understand. Now, they did not run me out of town- But I am here to help the Klan break that damn gang up that broke in the Klavem and stole the robes and whipped these two old bats. This is the worst frame-up I ever saw. Of course, similar to your own, oniy mine was from the outside and your& on the inside of the organi zation. I do not know how long I will remain after my case is settled. So let me hear from ydu, Captain, by re turn mail, how everything ia. ! wM try and fix the letter you want toddr but I am too damn nervous to wrifs now. So let me hear how everything is. Yours. Itsub Tally," How the letters came into the pos session of Solicitor McNeil! remains a mystery. That ia something thgt kluxers in Robeson, if there are any, wouid no doubt like to know. It waa not possible to find kluxer with a fine-tooth comb during the famous trial last week. Some 10$ m$n swore on the stand that they are npt members and had never been, and maybe there "ain't no such animal." But anyway the public wouid iike to !t is hardly prpbabie, however, that the secret will* ever come to tight. Solicitor McNeil! knows how they came into his safe some two weeks ago, bat he isnt telling. Bat since it was possible to spirit from klan headquarters in Atlanta tetters written to Man otRcial*. wht knows bat that it also has been pos sible to secure other papers setting forth the activities of the klan in this coanty and giying the names of members, if any? That is a matter for speculation. Jost hew much do the authorities knbw? the S3 Cotton Market Beyaftel by J H. Bantam* M!d<Hkty cotton )s quoted on the toca! <*arhet today at 23 cents the pound. hems of Local News —Bom, to Mr. and Mm. R. 1. Wal ters of Bostrdman, at the Baker sana torium Thursday, a dacjhtei^ —Regular eommunicstion St. Al ban's lodge No. H4, A. F A A. M, Tnesday evening at 8 o'clock Work in the third degree. —The condition of Mr. G. E. Raneke, Sr., who has been iH at Ms home on Seventh street for severe! days, is much improved today. —License has been issued for the marriage of Miss Janie Dalton and Mr. Rosier Riggan; Mias Elizabeth Mortimer Groom and Mr. John Lae Tatnm. —A bedding permit has been is sued to Mr. S. F. CaMweM for the erection of a 5-room bungalow on North Cedar street to coat approxf^ ssateiy $3,500. —Charity Bames, colored, Baek Swamp township, R. 3 from Lorn barton, has some cotton that is act ing in a way that paaaies her. It is erackiqg open and showing dried-up insides, —The iadies' Weaiey class of Chest not Street Methodist church will ho!d a picnic at the Goat ciub Thum day afternoon at 5 o'clock. AH mem ber of the clasa are requested to meet at the chnrch at 4:46 before leaving for the ddh. —Leander Locklear, Indian, plead gailty to carrying concealed weapon# snd a nuisance charge in Superior court hare Saturday and was fined $60 and coats in the first case pad prayer for judgment was continued in the second case upon payment of eoata. —Mesers J. Dickson McLean, Z. A. Thompson and F. Erte! Carlyle snd Dr. S. L. Whitehead spent day at Wrightsvi lie Beech, the trip in !b. McLean's car in hours and thirty minutes from Lam to the ferry this side of Wil r. and Mm. A. E. White and Mr. and Mm. Ire B. Townsend ex pect to ieeve tomorrow ht their autoe for the mountains of the western part of th*^ State. They wHl visit Mr. John French, who has been upend ing some months at Biaek Mountain for his health, and also will visit various other places in the moun tains. —It was stated in Thursday's Ro beaonian that Mr. and Mm. EL M. Bames and eMMbum left thatf^ mom where they wouldRhpsnd two ^ card dated at MwynesvHle die Mat and received heTe this morning from Mr. Bames, states: "Arrived hare ysterday. Had fine trip. The weather and temperature here fine. We ere nicely located." —The gasoline tank on one of the pressing machines in the establish ment conducted by Jack Edmond on Fourth street overflowed Thursday afternoon, the gasoline igniting. Several gallons of gas were burned but with the use of chemieals from the fire department the Games were quickly subdaed.Very little damage was done other than the partial de struction of two coats which were hanging near by. —Miss Sarah Carlyle, who left Lumberton about a month ago to join a party of classmates and tea chers for a trip to Porto Rico, writes relatives here that they are having a wonderful time. They are taking a course in Spanish at the university of ^ Pnwfvt TUn Mantra* and aw* a! Porto Rico at Rio Piedras and are al so making sight-seeing trips out from there, making the umveraity their headquarters. AH the native people are very nice and hospitable, according to Mias Ceriyle, and they are having a very pleasant tiip. They have also met a number of Americans since being there. They expect to be away another month. members of the invisible empire are pretty we!! known and are not so in visible as they imagine themselves tobe. And since letters written to Man headquarters find their way into the safe of the solicitor, it may prove a comparatively easy matter to find out who wrote the threatening let tors, purporting to come from the Ku Klux, to Judge Sinclair and Mr. S. McIntyre^ -the latter also being in tended for Solicitor McNeill, which were mailed in Lamberton last Fri day and were published in The Rob eaonian Saturday. Taliaferro was arrested at the Lorraine hotel here on July 3rd on a bench warrant Issued by Judge Sin clsir, charging intimidation of State's witnesses. He spent part of the night in jail and was released about noon the next day on $5,000 bond furn ished by Atlanta headquarters of the Ku Klux Klan. E. F. Randolph of Warsaw, alleged grand klaliff of the realm of North Carolina, delivering the bond to the sheriff in the form of a cashier's Check on the First National Bank of Warsaw. Taliaferro has been languishing in jail here sin^e Saturday afternoon, as the former bomd won# pot hold after his trial- and the apppal bond, had not boon forthcoming up to nod#
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
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July 23, 1923, edition 1
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