TO A TOmmTrfK3. Iltiiiilf mrm JTiWc JVo. 5;8. rarftoroif-, (JM-ecom&e County, X. CJ Saturday, June 13, 1835. Jof. XI No The "'Ihrbnrough Press," BV fl KO KG K HOU'AUD, , published weekly, at Tien Onllarr and V "f'ti Ctnfi per year, if pai in advance ! Tirrr Hollars, at the espiratiott of ihe 'ilwcripiio" vear. For any period It (fun a yrar. Turn!;-five Cents p.-r month Si'isiribeis art at liberty to discontinue at av tune, on eiviuu notice thereof ami ,'v;,i" an ear those re-"tdin at h dis ceniust invariably pay in advance, r jv' responsible reference in t vciuily . ' ilvei tiein-'iit, nol exceeding lt lines, be i'ise ted !,t ( reuts ttie In st inser ,,,, ami cents each continuance. i,on cer ours at that rate f'nretriy lrt lin--. jvertineiit nnist be nmrUed the nnui jr n': insertions required, or they vyillbe ..,iiiiiuied tm i I otherwise ordei.d, and (ilH.-ged accordingly. .e'tfrs addressed to the Kdinr nnst he , j,,, pod, nrthey mav not he attended to. ' Jlarfin Van Eur en, PF XCW YORK. rpROrOS AL "r publishing the Bi" r of this l i t i it qii is li cti citizen. wiose cailv habits ot study, perseveianie hmI appl'catiot'f united with his uptight as a man. and In unwavering demo ' ,. r ;, 1 1 c principles have propelled him n mrl. fi'01'1 ,lie ""'"hlest walk, to fiil ina ,iV important st tions in his native state, j; h , in Ihe c,'"'ra' ernnieiil. IV Y -i an'tering ,r ,nP caue of the people, ivv !iave raised him to 'he second office j i lofir pirt; and if I mistake not the Ainei ; IfAii character, he is ilei'med still further I (o rfreive thr ir confidence, by ! in pla ! c,,l bv ihem in that chair now filled by the i i'-nstn his Jackson, ilh so much honor I.t himself. ' r,e w.irk will make a neat volume ol i, move dun H P"?es, from the most a ;t''i-i:tiO sources, including liu SfKLCH en the Revo'.ulionarv claim of the ; worn soldier?, whose toil and suffering se ; fLir-"I 'tie independence of our country. 53" The links ill be ready for delivery prior to the adjournment of Conjr; bnnl after the maimer of the Biography I ct R M- Johns n. pib!ished ty me. Ihe rnc-t'i he 3 dollars for 12 i oiies, cr ;"0 j cc'iK sirii: !. Itif varion diwfnratic friend iuto j ha-e haiiristnii prospectm tny fall, will - five additional cirrnl ii.n othe wcik by ! otiiftiiunff uch subscription as miv In oJertd, a return the sutne t the publisher. JVM. EM MOSS. T.V?.shir,j)' Citv. I'H. Books for 1 25. i JTIHE tbi-teen number of Waidie's ?e ? i p( t Ci rul iMo Library, now issued fir the year 1S'1. contain the follow inj j vn!ua'!e and eniertaining- book, tor Ihe vrv sinsll .miiu ol VI yvith the addi lion d advantage of bein received in all jarii of the l iiion by mail, at newspaper po;ta:e: 1. T' " adventure of .Taphet in search nf a Vatiii r. by the author of Peter Hm p, kc. 2 J onirs' Landscape Annual for I' .li; fip WW of tirauada. bv Thomas Koscoe, !;. 3 Letters and Essays in prose and tt--. iy Itirhard Saarp. 4 Barring O it, from the lite of a Sub editor. 5. Antinin. t!ie Student of Padna. 6. lie Fa-h on-ahie Wif. f'nfacL. ; io-:ih! Uuslvmd. by Mr.Opie. 7. '1 laditions of the American Yar of Iir!pe i:rb'n e. Travel info Bokhara, and a voyage. i1? Inrlus, by Lieutimnt Burnes. 9 1 1"1 iege of Vi- nna. i historical ro mnrp, hy Malarne Pirliier. lr Travelling Troubles. II My f'ousin Nichol i. a humoiou fe''.fn nj Bhrkwnod's Magazine. Of ihe ah'ive oi k there i prepririnr, fr Prepared, fer puhliration by the hooksel-N-r . T.u.het, Sharp, 's Leit.-r' and Kfsaye, O 'ni's TrawN. th- S'.ee of Vienna, and ' r'.v f-'"iM Nicholas; these alone will cott Pucha.rrs more lhan a whole year's sub i,tioi, to the Circulating Library, to tnsM of 54 number including two sup l.fments, n ; addition to this, the Jour nn f f BellfR Lettre, printed on the cover 'he LihiHry, contains, weekly, one 'ur'h as much maiter as the Library 'Mf; thus fonning the cheapest publication "'yen this chea; era of period cals. ii!ie' SeUct Circulating Library hav ln; laeri lonS established in the good opin of the public, and sustained ns it is bv JiunprfceileiiiMt amount of patronage, no '"n the part of subscribers can now be ertamed tt fie publisher will not -OTifly with ! iM p;, t of the en2aginent. -"'"cripti,,,,, t0 ,he Library $5 0 in G" e. or in clubs of five, $4 00 each. in, V , V10'1 Fo,i" a,", Companion to : -p'-t.tC nculatine Library, commenced r'' first of January, '1835, beinx a MPr"'tot 'be best articles in the English t t MXin?s, omUiiie! wiih original matier, ! lirl"('liiel to club, of flve, at go o,, eachf . 0""hv.d.,Hl Mibscribers who take the 'Ih p Museum of Foreign Literature, Sri- Ait. at Ct", O'i i..i... . . -'until ai 1 1 e. same oflice. UMM WJILDIE. V CI 'iiut street, Tbiladelphia. HiSTOItV 01 TUB Kehnlccc Jxsociation Ti;T.r fj-' r i KLISHED,o.l f,r talent tl.e ir ,'r "At.B. ) (;. ; of ,he Kthukec Bap:i,t A?so. l Jl,T rise to the pre- n,,f ( Llder Joseph Bigp-uider !; 'tlV'vlw f c-in..i!,eo (consisting i'ul; ':,.J?S'lU:i William Hv- i i Ke arJ' u1 brethren Tho H) US. Joseph U. Ii?St atuJ Cushion V, a,' i1IJl,c,",,'' ly the Ansoi iiuiou " n'i. ni.a i . , .. . llemnauls UemnanU! Jt lUW.AT VAttlF.TY of Remnants ol Zf everv descript ioo of Goo,!s, w ill be Sold at fin If t he ir value.. J. IV ED DELL. 0th Feb.'l3.". lo the AfMcted. (It V'S invaluable Ointmenf for the cure of w bite swellings, scrofula and other tumours, sore lejs and nicer, and fresh woniMU, sprain, bruises, swell- ins and itiflantiipitions, &,c. &.c. Il -ckwith' anti-dyspeptic pill. Www ami's genuine tonic mixture, a per feet cure tor ii;ue and fever. The above valuable medicine may be h:d wholesale or retnil on application to J. W. Colten, Agent (or Tai borough. 1.35 Commentary on the liible. THl' Subscriber having been requested t ai t a asciu ir uns uiguiy iuer' estiu firs ; w.,ik, iiitort'is the p,il)lic that the 1'fit Xtto Yorker will continue to pi e o.nme run be seen at his office, ' serve the general character w hied ha 1 1ms where subscriptions will be received, i far secured it the approval of a steadily l'he fust volume is a specimen of the exe- ;lnd rapi.lly inert asinj patronage, and it cution of the work, editorial and median- ppi l.irity coimn, nsm ate with the sphere ical. It is to c ontain ail that is valuable f it circulation, 'l'he peculiarities of its in the writing of those great lights in the 1 plan were adopted alter much reflection; ( htistiaii (.'lun ch, Henry, Scott, Dod and we ha ve not learned that its prouuueul dridsje, Gil!. Admn tJliik, Patrick, l'o d, ' fea ues have faded in a single point to re bowth, li-iider, and others: the whole de- c-ive approbation of its patrons and the .signed to ad'estnnd comlviuation of the public. 1 lie paper will continue to be hi advantage of ibe best B'b'.e i:oui mental ie. ranged as foil -w : On the whole, it is believed all w id admit I. Littrary Department Embracing the that tie woi k i what ii bus ' r-en tioiionnc- ' whole .niter foun of the ap-r, and pre. ed to be a credit t tin- countiy; a..d the Kentms: twelve ample coluiiin ol Keviens publishers and ed.lor and their ch rrt-rs fa: nmre J tiMt every eli'ott to make it. b th in the pledge tbenieU es id t lirf can do n shall b put f rt!i litriarv and u e- wni-!f"i'l Pr!, lasti-iy useful. .u'i un thv a liberal (uhimnI. Hut t -uiaii ,h lu so epeniive an eoteipiiie, the uv price fixed for th work r q hi , s tia i: l.ould have an extensive sale, and i (il- islu r would tell a arr.i'it;' 1 i- pi i -cuiii-T the w.rk without a larc s,.' sri.p i n ' and tiowev -r mi opnl ir st.ch h oure may ne in rejf.irtl lo ordinary oik. no hesi a li n i felt in l t b"! 1 1 to it in th case. o inaiiif'-s'lv n . es-ry aiul pn er l hev appeal in confidence to the religj.xi public, and to a'l, who tvUh to si e it circt lale f. r thrir names and patronage. There is a li ; t is I eilifi' n, difierinc in no rrepect from the neial enitum exi ept un j the rdiiian e ot Isaplism, in relerer.re to ; nient alone d the kNew i orker pi e-int whirh 'he It, v. Joseph A. Warne, Kit ft or an anomaly in ihe b story d (he newspa of the Baptist edition, make the l.dlow in per press of th I'liiou. Our plan eiuhra remark, viz: A'i that was promised in the tes the collection of every important item Baptist editi.ni, as such, was that whatever ol p..tical intelligence whatever he its a a found in the voik as published for haracler and bearing in the laii!:iia?e of Pcrdobapti - t penera ly , wnichdid not cor- ... i 'respond with the views it Baptist, should be removed, anil the mature! views ol ed iieu' ralitv betc u the comeimini par l heir own hesl wiiters substituted. It is . tie, opinions and sei lional divisions exist confidently bl'eved tlial no point con-, nerled with what i peculiar to the Baji- j list denomination, has been ' ft nnunrdeii; and when i' i c-nsideied t!ift on no poim but those do Bapiis's iblTei frrn Henry, Sc 'It, Doddiidce, i:c. there can ! leiaicely a doubt but tliat the lenomi- natimi in cih-mI ill feel that they bae now a Cooimenta r , in the reading of which they aiesuie to find what v, ill tan the flime of love, and satisfy the appetite for truth, ai.d this vy iihont ttiat diminution of iheir enjoyment with which they weie accustomed lo meet in reading the author, arising out of Iheir diiTi reiit yiews of a tin Utian ordinance. Terms. Ttie work will be comprised in five volume, averaging not b'S than 8(lO page per volume, loyal 8 vo hand somely printed on fine paper', and well h.niud in sheep, and letleied with double tides, at 3 d dl 'i per volume. 1 In re ' elections, ic. kc. since us establishment, will be several engravings, fmntispieees, . wit b mutual deference and w i: Ii entire Con vignette tides, and several neatly engraved vicli"ii of absolute certainty, maps, with other illustrative wood cms, : III. llcntral Intelligence Consisting of &ic. Copies bound in extra ciU. spiing Foreign and Domestic New, Literary backs, S4,oO; plain calf, 3.7". CEO. HOWARD. Varei, in b. is:r l'he Silk Culturist. HK Kxecutive Committee of the Ilart f.ir.l (' iv Sillf Sorietv. have com. menced a.nonthlv publication, called the they Have at a.iy accomp.is.M-,, am! . es Siik Culturist and Farmer s .Manual. pectf.dly invite the patrons of Am. rican The obiert of the publication is to dis- Hcratine examine Iheir journal and srminate a thorongn knowle.lge of the ci.l- J-Jg' ht it in be Iron, what ,t . tivation ofthe Mnlbe.ry Tree, in all When it . considered that no periodical varieties The reaiine of Silk Won,,, of I.ke character lor original. ty nnd yar.ety The production of Cocoons and the Heel- ' of literary contents, comprehensiveness of ing of Silk, in the mol approved method. H"". amount ol . natter weekly The imporlaiice of this knowledge will a,,, presented, has ever been a-tempted in his pear from the fact that the nett pr. f,. of ;o.".iry a. a le price than three to five land devoted to the culture of Hlk. i ; dollar, per annum, the pnb.shers trust double, if not triple, to that derived f on, h.v id not be deemed presumpuiou in any other crop wind, can be put upon it. I expressing the hope that their jou, ,,al w.ll It is also a fact, that everv mode, ate tar. i ,, can rai.e geveral hundred dollars ! woithofSilk without interfering w ith ,,s ordinary .itrricultnral operations But order to avail himself of this facility to obtain competency and wealth, which our soil and climate havegive.i him, he must posses himself of information on ihe sub jectfor without it his attempts will be Iruitless. It is, therefore, the object of the Committee to diffuse this information as eitensively a possible, and at the cheaps est rate. The publication will contain a complete manual or directory from so vying the seed to re. ling the Silk, together with such facts and experiments, as will enable fanners to raise iiVk anu pir,)ir i km market, without further knowledge or as sistance. It will also contain interesting matter on agricultural suhjects in general. TERMSThe Culturist w ill be publish ed in mouthly numbers of Eight Quaito Pages, at Fifty Cents a Year. Io sub, seriplion will 'be received unless paid in Advance, and for not less than a year. Subscribers received by F. G- Comslock, Secretary, Mailford, Conn., to whom, also, Communications may he addressed,, which, if post paid, will be attended to. 1 U&rifcrd, April, 18;J5. Caution. X the 21st iit. the Subscribe! ovivo a Vrti.. II I 4... tyi . v. u ouir ji I ijiiii, iui S'.i5t (vvi'jjfSsed by J)sepl Hruwn,) payab lt January next to James K. Uarmati, ol Martin couniy, for the purchase of a hoise saiti horse being of rio accotml, I hereby lore warn all persons fiom trading for saitl Note as I do nol intend to pay the same unless compelled by law. L ElV IS PURVIS. M 25, 1835 22-3 Thc-JYew Horkcr. Saturday, the, 21st of March, wn issued the first iiumhcr of the second volume ot Till: NLIV TOllKKK; and the publishers trust this early announce-d men! will atnaci the seasonable attention -H' ih.e lm mav choose to couunence lhir tin ! r it n t Ih il liA ot New Publications, original and selected Tales, f.s a- -, Poems, i;c"idoies, ice. ii.'-. Tiieo'iginal conti bullions to ibis depart men: aie r Kulaily and pi - mpdy paid lo-; I and in a Id.lnm to l!i- many flin ts who .'.live favoi d o villi aniclei ilui'in-,' the ' ; ast w-iir, -iud whose euy w.ll runii ( lo f.uic! U'' columns, we nave the putm , ise of slifi u' tioin otht-is whose name irealieady 1 ell known to their country men v b not parade these names, as i the fashion of some: but v e ( onfidentlv up; e;,l to the experience of ti e past year , atirdia mi earnest ol our zealous, un tiim and we trust not altoielher uusnc i es fui exrriion to render the literarv character ot the ..New Yorker infeiiorlo ti:at of no journal of its class in this country. II. I'-liticul li!eV.irtnre. In this depart-1 . Idtoi ical record, mid with the strictest re- o;rl lo the pi enervation ot a umpiestion- jog in the country. The Kditor itlers; with a ptuod s it islarlion to lee lacf, that throughout the past year, he lia presented a minute and circum-iautial account of all : ,e election which ttnve taken place in the several Male, luring an eminently ardem j a,Mj veiled canvas, without once incur i rin tlie ci usure or even the exeepliou of , an v political j on nal. And. whi; he re-1 serve to hiin-elf the right uf commenting j briefly but tieely on the toic of ihe dav,j and of ofT.ii ing such sngesiions as the a- j pect of the times ma v seem to require, he vt hold hi-nell pledged that such re- mark sh II no1 in'ei fere, in any material degree, with the view, 'he doctrines, or the prospects of any political pa-ty. lie cherishes -the confident expe ta'ion. that lU- files of the New Vorker will hereafter he referred to for the limb of any contro veiled statement regarding the reu is i f! Item. Statistics, brief Notices of the Dra ma, ice. However it mav be the foi tune of others ) to obtain the confidence and pitmnage of j the public, on the credit of prospective i,n prr. yeinents and future excellence, t he pub lisher are content to rest their chum to public consideration distinctly on what ' ''" e the lavor, ol ihe pal. cms of Ame. .- can liteialtire G RE ELY & CO. Office 2io. 20, Nassau si. New Yoik. CONDITIONS. The New Yorker will be published every Saturday morning on a large imp rial sheet of the best quality, aiVI afforded to patrons in city or country, at TWO DOL LARS per annum, payable in advance The experience of the past yea, admonish es us to regard the advance payment from disiant subscribers as an indispensable condition. When, from peculiar circum stances, payment is delayed till the expiry lion of the quarter, filly cents will be add ed. Any person remitting ten dollars, free of charge to us, shall receive six copies fot ono year, and in the same ptopoclion for a larger number. Fust Maters and others are" respectfully requested to interest them selves in our behalf, with the assurance that the best possible terms will be afford ed them. April 1, 1835. Printing neatly executed, AT THIS OFFICE. Wheat. We learn from all parts of the State, that the Wheat frop was never so unpromising as t is at present. In some places, they say they will make little more lhan the seed. Many calculate that there will scarcely be more than a third of a crop made in the State. The earl' wheat lias been ctit short immensely short first by the hard winter, and then by the fly which has also injured the latter wheat. Richmond Enq. 'CCTThe story of the discovery of a larjie Diamond in Prince Edward County, Va. proves to be a hoax; and a much more par donable one it is, than "some o thers which have been played off on the Editors of the Richmond Enquirer from the same county of several . marriages, none of which had taken place. We no ticed a similar hoax in the last Italeigh Register, from Chapel Hill. Such things are too cruel, and the sporting with the name of a female too ung ntlemanl y to be tolerated. An example jdiould be made of the offenders. Obs. liiblc Si.cie.tij. The receipts of ihe Rible So i"iy the past year, have been $ 1 Oo'.SOG, being "$12, 1U5 more than the receipts of the preceding years. The issue of books has been 17,703 Bibles, and 7f,5o3 Testaments. CrA New York paper says: "During the last three or four months, probably about eighty or a hundred foundling- children have been picked up or dropped down at doors and stoops in vari ous parts of the city.'' CGl'he two blacks, who were recently convicted on their own confession in Alabama, of mur dering two white children, a boy and a girl, were sentenced to be burnt to death, and the execution in that awful form immediately look place. U. S. Gazette. OCThe Steam-boat Majestic burst its boiler on the 13th ult. at Memphis, Tenn. by which forty persons were killed! CCThe Planter's Hotel at New Orleans fell to the earth on the night of the 14ih ult. There were about 00 persons in the building at the time. About 40 miraculously escaped with life, many of whom received not the slightest injury. The remainder were buried in the ruins. C? Major John Biddle is the President of the Convention, now in session at Detroit, to form a stale constitution for Michigan, Ohio. The Governor of Ohio has issued a proclamation, sum moning the Legislature to meet on the 8th proximo, to take into consideration the controversy now pending between that State and the Territory of Michigan. EdsrefieUU C. May 1G. An Inquest was I'.eld a few davs ago, on the body of n child about 10 years of age, the daughter of Hnmmruid Kichardson, of this District. A negro man, the pro perry of a Mr. O'Connor, is charged with having perpetrated upon her, the blackest and foulest of all acts, and then murdered his victim. his trial He is in Jail, awaiting Carolinian. Another horrible murder. A most atrocious murder look place a few days since in Connecticut by an Italian or Portuguese: a boy, 2 years of age, it is said, had tantalized the foreigner, and trod upon his toes, lu revenge, while the lad was milkii?'! a cow, he struck him down with an axe and mutilated his body in a most shocking manner cutting open his heart, severing both legs, &c. Suicide.- young girl in New York, recently p,,t an end to her existence, by drinking half a pint of laudanum. The cause of this act, was disappointment in a love affair. An uncommon Occurrence. A mare belonging to the Estate of Philip Brooks, deceased, of Prince Edward, on the 1 1th April, had four Colts. Two of the Colls died immediately, but two ai now living; they were seen by a large number of persons. (LWe learn from a gentlemen who has recently travelled through Virginia, that the gold fever which lately prevailed in thai state has been followed, as are most such fevers with the chill c disappointment. Most of the works are abandoned, and that t'jo, after the expenditure of sever al hundreds of thousands of dol lars. Fven those which are worked produce in the aggregate but a meagre profit. It is straiijre that the gold mania which impel led the original settlers ol Vir ginia, should after the lapse- of so many years be revived; but by no means strange that it should be attended by a similar disappoint ment and loss. A. I". Star. GTTlie British cruisers off Sierra Leone, have captured within a few mouths past, as ma ny as three or four vessels, con taining near 2000 slaves. (lA white woman and a mu latto female, in Richmond, Va. both died the same day in conse quence of a fit of passion. Expunging Resolution. It gives us pleasure to learn, that thtt gmat champion of the people, Col. Benton, will be found at his post at I Ik; commencement of ihe next Congress that one of the first measures he will brin" forward, will be the expung ing from the Senate Journal the resolution of the factious majority of that body, censu ring President Jackson. Wash. Globe, ffA resolution passed the Connecticut House of Representatives, on the 23d ult. hy a vote of 129 to 79, instructing their Senators in Congress to vole for expung ing ihe condemnatory resolu tion of the il. S. Senate, pass ed 20ih March, 1834. Submarine JJescension. Ctpt. L. iNorcross, whose singul.-ir invention of an In dia rubber dress was exhibi ted at. the exhibition of the American - Institute about a year since, was to descend in the same at Newburyport, AT I I . II luass. on I'ritiiiv last, ne was to walk on the bottom of the river, and remain under some 20 or 30 minutes. A noble Reicurd. Some years since, 51 r. Joseph Wood, of Trenton, N.J. he roically saved the life of a son of a Mr. Jones, of Eng land, who had fallen into the Del aware from a steamboat. The grateful parents of the child long pressed munifi cent rewards upon Mr. Wood, out he invariably declined their presents, satisfied with lie consciiuiMiess of hav.no; done a noble deed. Mr. Jones recently died, since which event Mr. Wood has received due notice, from the agent of Mr. Jones in this country, thttt he has thus be come, by the will of the de ceased, heir to twenty-seven thousand pounds sterling. Slavery in Missouri. Se veral of the leading Missou ri papers are advocating the gradual emancipation of the slaves in thut State. They propose that the Convention, which has been called for ihe purpose of re-modelling the Constitution, shall provide, thai all such blacks as may be born before a given time shall be slaves for life; that ihose born after a certain pe riod shtill be slaves for a tjiven number of years; and thai I hose burn at a period more remote shall be free at heir birth. They p;.ce tile question entirely upon i ootids ol" expediency. Nat' Jut. OA negro bey belonging? tv Cfipt Potter, was, found m board the -chr. Butler, at '.be New Inlet, bound for F til Uivet, tnd rea iy lor sen, on the 15. h inst. After an -xatniriai mn before the ma gistraies, Capt. Carter was admitted to bail, and the mate and two seamen to pri son, until the Fall 'Perm of our Superior Court, for want of security; ajid one other seaman also detained in pri son as evidence in the case. Wilmington Press, Kidnapping We learn from the Greensborough Pa t riot, that a gentleman from Patrick county, Va. lately offered for sale, in Salisbury, a free mulatto child! On dis covering an acquaintance, as he vae parading the streets in the notable character of a speculator, he made his bow, retired, so far as not to be heard frqm when looked af ter. RaL Reg. Beck with's Anti-Dyspeptic Pills. In order to sup ply the gradually increasing demand for these pills, it has been found necessary for some months past, (says the Raleigh Register,) to em ploy constantly about twenty hands, in the different stages of the business, who have been able to furnish, daily, 40,000 pills! Post Office Robbery. Wil liam Gwvnn Jones, the Edi tor of the Baltimore Gazette, was a few days since, arrest ed at the Post Office, char ged with the act of purloin ing letters therefrom. On his examinat ion before Judge Glenn, he fully admitted the charge, and ascribed the act to a ruinous course of specu lation. Tbis individual (says the Baltimore Patriot) lna enjoyed a considerable share uf the, confidence of thii community and has been but very recently attached to (he editorial corps, ot which. w5 regret to find he has pr. vea himself to be so unworthy. , i . t (;. IV 1' '' r i J; 1 1 ': t, 'ii : I' 1 " ii V I 8 Ii- I '! ; i j

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