CONCORD
TIMES,
J. Sherrill, Editor and Owner. r PUBLISHED TWICE A. WEEK. $1.00 a Year,7n AdyinceT
7 ,ume XXII. m CONCogiD, nJc., May 5. 19Q5. Number 9Q.
r . i V i I i W
tash
is nt.
high y.
Write k
fertilizatic
tion that k
-ttton to produce
-4 fibre.
Ne books on
' Informs-
the
farmers. &.
Write now v
to the
OERMAN UU. .
New York
B. I. WOODHOTJBR,
President,
a W. 8 WINK,
Cashlsr.
MARTIN BOG SB,
Vice-President.
W. H. GIBSON,
Teller.
Concord, N. 0.. Branch at Albemarle, H. 0.
Capital, $ 50,000.00
Surplus and UndiTided Profits 80,000.00
Deposits 850,000.00
Total Resources 435,000.00
Our past suocess, as Indicated above by
figures, ; quit, gratifying, and we wish to
assure our friends and customers ot our ap-
reflation e their patronage and cordially
lvlte a continuance of the same. Should be
S leased to serve a large number of new cus
mers. holding ourselves ready to serve you
in any way const' t with sound banking.
' "" 7TOK8.
. S. Young, I,. J. Foil,
. Corl,Juo. 8. Enrd, J.
m.
JEWELRY
DIAMONDS
WATCHES
and a
complete line
of the
GENUINE
1847
Rogers Bros."
Knives, Forks,
Spoons, etc.
Ryes carefully examined sod
properly fitted to the heat grade
ol giaaaea.
IW.CCORRELL, Jeweler.:
Safe Prompt Liberal
THE
C01I NATIONAL BASK.
OaDiUl Stock, 1100,000
Stockholders' liability, 100,000
8urplus aid undivided profits, 85,000
.Assets, 850,000
"Voar Easiness Solicited
4 per cent. It . lercst paid on time certificates
J Ml ODKLL, President.
w l. LILLY, Vice President.
D.'b OOLTKAMK. Cashier.
L D SXILTKANB, Asst Cashier.
j u.' laKNDKlX, Book-keeper.
i
Q. O. Richmond.
Thos. W. Smith.
6. 6. RICHpOND & CO.
1882 1905.
insuranoe
Fire, Life, Accident, Health, Em
plovers' Liability, Plate
Glass, etc.
Penn Mutual Life, Phila., South
era Life and Trust, Greensboro.
T.".. T ;fi. Prmtrnot. see Thos. V
Smith. Thanks for past favors,
Kear room v.iiy iuu
PAPOOSE POPCORN
A Hew Seed Discovery for
FORAGE POULTRY POPPING
A subscriber to the Southern Ag
riculturist secured the seed from
an old indian in Northwest Tex
as. After experimenting with it sev
en years he wrote that paper : With
good ground and care it will make
from 50 to 100 bushels to the acre,
and planted thick and cut stalk and
it will make more Bleed ana better
feed than anything I ever saw. The
old Indian said poultry fed on it
would ner have the cholera. I
have not lost a fowl with cholera
since I have been raisin it. It aUo
pops beautifully." This article
brought hundreds of requests for
seed, and now only a few bushels
are left Send 10c for a 3 months'
a i t ixMntinn in Snn t h pro AcTl-
ITUtsl UUn-i tpi ava r -
cuituriat, 39 O. P. Bidg.. Nashville,
T.-n.. and you will got 100 setd by
tvrn msil. also details of $50 prise
aeed-growing0"test.
UstS BHtrtl SOJ li! "its-
In time. Pote n "
11 &
W 1UBB Flo.
V I M Repairing
Hp ONE ItPB ON STREETS OF
CHICAGO-SHOOT OH CUB
OR SUSPICION.
Fighting; Was
Savage,
flea
Being
shot Down ss4 frealen or KlekeS
Nearly to Death 1st the Heart of
te HiiIhh section ane 1st the
-.assiee er Ladlea. Who Were
--leal to Fleo for Their Lives
'mr Unmercifully Beaesb
- S. The death of one
m ' t scores 01 others
was th. -U Of to-day's
fighting by... and team
sters and their t, . on the one
side, and the po..- ,1 non-union
men on the other. - There were riots in
all parts of the city. Men were club-
bled and atoned almost to death within
s square of police headquarters, and
five miles away men where shot down
in the streets. At a hundred places
between these two extremes of dis
tance there were assaults and fights in
the streets. ' Non-union men were
pelted with stones, bricks and every
other conceivable sort of missiles. They
were dragged from their wagons, beaten,
clubbed and stamped upon.
The jighting to day in the streets
was even more fierce and savage than
that of yesterday. The strikers and
their sympathizers attacked the non
union men at every opportunity, assail
ing them with bricks, stones, clubs,
knives and any and every other offen
sive weapon upon which they coma
lay their hands. The fighting occured
in the heart of the business section of
the city, men being shot down within
200 feet of the retail store of Marshall,
Field & Company, and clubbed nearly
to death at the corner of the Audi
torium Hotel in plain view of hundreds
of ladies whq were compelled to run
from the mob to save their own lives.
In many instances men walking along
the streets who had no active connec
tion whatever with the strike were
assailed by hoodlums, who beat them
first and later accused them of being
strike-breakers. A notable instance
of this kind was that of Rev. W. K.
Wheeler, pastor of the Ninth Presby
terian church, who, while passing the
corner of Despising and Adams streets
on his way to the Pennsylvania depot
was attacked by three men, who
knocked bim down and beat him un
mercifully, until the timely arrival of
the police saved him from further in-
ury, Mr. Wheeler mansged to hold
one of his assailants until the police
could arrest him."
William Miles, a colored waiter,
bile at work in a lunch room at
Adams and Sangamon streets, half a
mile from any former scene of rjoting
during the strike, was also a victim of
the strikers' fury, although he had had
no connection whatever with the
trouble. He was accused of being a
strike breaker, was pounded on the
head with a billy, knocked down and
trampled on. Miles was removed to
the hospital, where his injuries were
pronounced severe.
As far as known, but one man was
killed during the day, Charles Beard,
struck on the forehead in a tight near
the Auditorium Hotel. He died of a
fractured skull at a hospital where he
bad been taken
A partial list of the injured foots up
thirty-two,
, A. S. Utley, floor manager for Mont
gomery, wara company, wno nas
been active in the interest of Ward or
Company since the commencement of
the strike, was attacked by three men,
who, he thinks, had been following him
for several days, while passing s vacant
int in Oakenwsld avenue, Ihe men
knocked him down and kicked him in
a terrific manner about the head and
face. He knocked one of them down
with a billy, snd the others rsn.
A crowd of 800 negroes imported
from 8L Louis were being escorted
from the railway depot to a lodging
house. At Lake street and Michigan
avenue a crowd of 8,000 persons at
tacked the negroes, many of whom
were armed with stones, pieces of coal,
Ryd&la's Stomaxh Tablets.
INDIGESTION
Causes belching, gas, or wind in the
trn1ihf heartburn, sour stomafh, etc
Rydale'i Stomach Tablets GtlfC Rye' Stomach Tableti
digest all kinds of food and prevent fer
mentation, and the lormauon 01 gas ana
acid in the stomach. They never fail to
win lrw4 emt svm
Indigestion and uyspepsia. 9
Mr. R. K. Jnne. buyer foe Parker Brideet, whose kn department ; store
ttth 8t and Penn. Aw., Waahlnetoa, D. C, ritea us. under date of Apnj Mh, M, M
Uwt February, one year aeo. while In New York on busineM for my firm, I caught ai erere coU
which laid me up fnreeraiweeka. and left m. weak and nerrous. My physical could not gvt
at the cause. TneiiSt'resrriptlon. did little or no (rood. As my apneuiw was poor andmy food
did not di weluTdeckled to use Rrd.le's Stomach Tablets. A tr.d swiml me they were a
good dyspepsia medicine. After taking a few doses. 1 tfran lonal that I waa,
IhsTe need two bo, of these tablets and bae gained pounds and never felt better in mjlif
R vdale". Stomach Tablets cured me and I recommend them most beartllj to "ifleren 'I""
Indigestion .nd a general run down oooditioa of the system. Kydales Stomach Tablet, an
manufactured and guaranteed by the
RADICAL REMEDY COMPANY. Hickory. N. C
D. 33. JTOIENBON.
black-jacks, revolvers snd stout hickory
clubs. When persons in the crowd be
gan to throw stones, sticks and bottles,
the negroeegjharged, repeatedly making
fierce uw of the hickory. A dozen or
more shots were fired, ant) it was re
ported that several men had been shot.
A running fight between the negroes
and the mob on Michigan avenue en
sued, the negroes attempting to make
their way to their lodging quarters on
the nortS aide, of the Chicago river.
The negroes massed together, kept
their formation and pushed onward
until Bush street bridge was reached,
followed by the mob. Carriages snd
pedes trains were caught in the swirl
and menaced by the crowds. Among
the vehicles wsa an open carriage occu
pied by H. H. Kohleaat.
Mr. Kohleaat was compelled to sit
in his carriage and witness the ne
groes fighting against their assailants.
The strike-breakers fought on until
the north side was reached. There
they were met by police and taken to
the Northwestern Storage Company's
warehouse, where the battered and
weary strike-breakers were finally
safely housed. During the riot on the
bridge, Frack Curry, a white man who
was leading the negroes, was struck on
the head with a brick. Curry was
made unconscious and was carried into
a building nearby, where his wound
was dressed.
In the hesrt of the fashionable shop
ping district, two trucks driven by non
union teamsters and guarded by forty
negroes, armed with stout canes, had
a stormy time. Tin cans, pieces of
coal, iron bolts, lumps of lime, old
shoes and fruit were thrown at the
colored men who again used their clubs
freely.
The fighting at this corner was kept
up for ten minutes, when the police
dispersed the crowd.
Let It Soak la the Gronnd.
Newton News.
Saturday afternoon the train from
Morganton brought in one of our col
ored citizens accompanied by a valise
containing several jugs of the poor
man's friend, and as the two hit the
ground one of the jugs gave up its liquid
bliss. The stuff made aittle pool and
another thirsty darky began scooping it
up with his hands and drinking thereof.
Where upon the man of the grip said
unto him, "Hey, dare, niggah, whut
yo doin'J I paid fur dat licker let hit
soak in de groun' 1" Thus do the arro
gant rich lord it over the poor.
How to Ward Off old Ace.
The most successful way of warding
off the approach of old age is to main
tain a vigorous digestion. This can be
done by eating only food suited to yonr
age and occupation, and when any dis
order of the stomach appers take a dose
of Cbamberleiu's Stomach and Liver
Tablets to correct it. If you have a
weak stomach or are troubled with indi
gestion, you will find these Tablets to be
just what you what yon need. For sale
by M. L. Marsh and D. D. Johnson.
Peculiar Bug; Bald to Be Destroying
Boll Weevil.
Waco, Tex., May 2. Charles How
ard, of the Entomological Bureau, De
partment of Agriculture at Washington,
has been notified of the discovery in
Falls county, Texas, of a peouliar bug
which is distroying the boll weevil.
The insect was found on a plantation
near Waco.
At a meeting of Mecklenburg farmers
in Charlotte Saturday, reports from all
the townships of the county save four
showed a reduction in cotton acreage of
26 per cent and a reduction of 31 9-13
per cent, in the use of fertilizer.
The Wilmington Messenger says that
people are paying one hundred dollars
an acre for trucking land in that section.
A few years ago much of that land
would not have brought one-tenth of
that sum.
Work on the construction of the big
tunnel through Lookout Mountain was
started Tuesday. The contractors ex
pect to complete it within 18 months.
The tunnel will be 3,500 feet long.
DYSPEPSIA
Cainta Cramps and pain in the stomach,
sick stomach, sic.
digest the food snd rest the stomach.
They stimulate, tone the digestive organs,
and cure dyspepsia in its worst forms.
STBIKE-BBEAKING AS) All OCCU
PATION.
Charlotte Observer.
A new business under the sub is
strike-breaking, and Mr. Jsmes Farley,
who has an office in New York is cred
ited with having originated its The
World's Work for May has an interest
ing article about him and his business.
He has been a hotel clerk, a bar-tender,
a policeman, a detective, street car
conductor and motorman, has finally
settled down as a strike-breaker, and
has been in thirty-five strikes and lost
only one. He has 85,000' men enrolled
and receives from 25 to 100 applications
every day. He is in constant commu
nication with 7,000 or 8,000 men and
when a strike occurs and his anrvices
sre enlisted he calls on so many as he
needs to break it. He handled the
recent strike on the New York subway
and the price of his success waa equal
to the annual salary of the president of
the United States. He takes no case
in which he does not believe the em
ployer is right. He has no special lik
ing for employers and no prejudice
against unions his occupation is a cold
matter of business with him. In any
case he takes he charges 15 per day per
man and pays bis men from 12 50 to
(3 50 per day the difference represents
his profit.
The article upon which we are draw
ing is interesting of itself, but its
chief interest is in the suggestion of
how many different ways there are to
make a living.
A Trip to a Star.
Philadelphia Bulletin.
"Let us suppose a railway to have
been built between the earth and the
fixed star Centauri," said the lecturer.
"By a consideration of this railway's
workings we can get some idea of the
enormous distance that intervenes be
tween Centauri and us.
"Suppose that I Bhould decide to take
a trip on this new aerial line to the
fixed star. I ask the ticket agent what
the fare is and he answers:
'The fare is very low, sir. It is
only a cent each hundred miles.'
" 'And what, at that rate, will the
through ticket one way coBt ?' I ask.
" 'It will cost just 12,750,000,000,
he answers.
"I pay for my ticket and board the
train. We set off at a tremendous rate.
"'tiow last, 1 ass tne uraaemau,
'are we going ?'
" '8ixty miles an hour, sir,' says he,
'and it's a through train. There are
no stoppages.'
"'We'll soon be there, then, won't
we?' I resume.
'"We'll make good time, sir,' says
the brakeman.
" 'And when will we arrive V
" 'In just 48.GG3.000 years.' "
Wronaed.
"Madame," said the floorwalker, "I
will be compelled to detain you for a
few minutes. I saw you steal a pin out
of that tray you were looking at a mo
ment ago."
"Steal!" the lady indignantly replied,
"I want you to understand, sir, that
you have no right to accuse me of steal
ing. My family is rich. I am a per
fectly ladylike kleptomaniac. There,
take back your old pin!"
'I Thank the Lord!'
cried Hannah Plant, of Little Bock,
Ark., "for the relief I got from Buck-
Ipn's Arnica Salve. It cured my fearful
rnnnins- sores, which notning eise
would heal, and from which I had suf
fered for 5 years." It is a marvelous
healer for cuts, burns and wounds
Guaranteed at all druggists ; 25c.
Rural Delivery Grows.
P. V. De Graw, the new fourth assis
tant postmaster general, reports that
there were 29,ti96 rural delivery routes
in operation April 1 against 24.5G6
June 80, 1904. The department has re
ceived petitions for 4,521 other routes,
of which 1.0G1 have been authorized
and will be doing business within sixty
days.
A Dlaaatron. Calamity.
It is a disastrous calamity, when you
lose vonr health, because indigestion
and constipation have sapped it away.
Prompt relief can be had in Dr. King s
v T.ifei Pills. They build up your di
gestive organs, and enre headache, diz
ziness, cohc, constipation, etc. ixuuxau
toed at all druggists ; 25o.
A German editor accused the minis
ter of pubjgs worship, education and
justice of gObling. The editor was
nrosecuted for libias The minister ex
plained that he only played the Ameri
can game of poker, which was played
h msnv of the best Americsns, ana
was not gambling. The Court took his
view of it, and the unfortunate editor
had to go to jail for a year.
During the past year three hundred
and fifty five new houses have been
built in Wilmington one for every
work day and every Sunday except ten.
RAID 3-CENT LODGING HO USE.
Police Find IS Women Asleep on the
Floor. 0
New York Times.
Fifteen unkempt, ragged women,
whose ages ranged from forty to sixty
five years, were arraigned before Magis
trate Moss in the Tombs Court yester
day morning as the result of a raid
made by the police of the Oak Street
Station on a woman's lodging house at
4 James Slip. All received sentences
of three months in the workhouse on
charges of vagrancy and disorderly con
duct. The house raided, an old three-story
brick, which in times past was a build
ing of consequence, is now run as a
two-cent lodging' house for women.
The lodgers are women who live as best
they can. The police say that for two
cents each woman received a space al
lotment for the niht on the sawduBt
covered door. Some of the neighbors
complained to the police that the wo
men in tile place at night became so
disorderly that no one could sleep.
Acting on these complaints, Captain
Hodgins and Detectives McGee and
Ray on Saturday night descended on
the house.
When the police entered the place
they saw & boy of about six years
propped up in the corner ot the room
asleep. During the round-up of the
women the boy disappeared. The po
lice got the boy's mother, one of the
youngest of the prisoners, who said Bhe
was Bridget Finn.
The woman who kept the place was
in court. She admitted that sometimes
the women drank, but she insisted that
a cheap place was needed, and declared
that the women who had been arrested
were working women.
Is Beauty Only Sain Deep t
Beauty is only skin deep, but the
forces that create beauty are as deep as
the fountain from which they flow,
when the Blood is charged with impuri
ties Beauty disappears, when the blood
is pure Beauty blossoms in face and
form. Ry dales Liver Tablets keeps the
Liver healthy and the Bowels regular,
prevents the blood becoming ladened
with bile and waste matter, make the
skin, clear, eyes bright and beauty more
than skin deep.
Irian's Unreasonableness
is often as great as woman's. But Thos.
S. Austin, Mgr. of the "Republican," of
Leavenworth, Ind., was not unreason
able, when he refused to allow the doo-
tors to operate on his wife, for female
trouble, "Instead," he says, "we con
cluded to try Electric Bitters. My wife
was then so sick, she could hardly leave
her bed, and five (5) physicians hud
failed to relieve her. After taking Elec
tric Bitters, she was perfectly cured,
and can now perform all her household
duties." Guaranteed by all druggists,
price 60c.
I3J.00 PaclOe Coast.
Tickets on sale dally, until May IS, Chicago to
San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Tacoma.
Meatlle, Victoria and anconver viathel'hicaKO.
I'nion 1'acillcand North Western Line. Corres
pomlingly low rates from other points. Daily
and jiersonally conducted excursions in Pullman
tourist Bleeping cars from I'hicjtKo to Portland,
Han Krancisco and Ias Angeles without change.
Double berth only S7.00. Fast trains, choice of
routes. Meals in dining cars ta ia carte). Book
lets and folders sent ostpa)d on receipt of 4
cents in stamps. All agents sell tickets via this
line. Address J. K. Hrittain, (ien'l AvX. Pass'r,
Dept. 900 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
Mother Cray's Sweet Powders tor
Children,
Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse
In the lilldron's Home In New York, cure
feveilshness, bad stomach, teething disor
ders, move and regulate the bowels and de
stroy worms. Over SU.UUI testimonials. They
never fall. At all druggist, 26o. Haftlple free.
Address AUen 8. Olmsted, Leltoy, N. Y.
Are Yon I slug Allen's Foot-Easet
Shake Into your shoe. Allen's Foot-Ease, a
powder. It cures corns, bunions, painful,
smarting, hot, swollen feet. At all druggists
and shoe stores, 25 cents.
To Get
15
m
v " 1 11 1 en
We are very proud of all ourNew Spring Stocks of furniture
prices are so fair that our trade is crowing larger every day.
this year. What say you ?
Life
Fire
. Health
Accident
Plate Glass
Insurance
Surety
Bonds
at Rock Bottom Prices
in the most reliable com
panies, and big bajgains
in
REAL ESTATE
SEE ' '
JNO. K. PATTERSON,
Office up stairs at Postoffice.
Court Calendar.
May Term, 1905, of Cabarrus Superior
Court, before his Honor, M. H. Justice,
Jndge. The Civil Docket will not be
called until Wednesday, May 10, 1905,
of the first week of the said Term of
Court, and the cases set for trial will be
called in the following order :
Wednesday, May 10, 1905.
No. 14. Gowan Dusenbery vs. City of
Concord et. al.
No. 17. Martin Canup and wife vs. T.
B. Cline.
No. 18. Fisher & Foil vs. J.F.Lowder.
No. 22. Truman Chapman vs. Lippard
Yarn Mill et. al.
No. 28. J. F. Lowder vs. W. D. Foil
and J. W. Fisher."
No. 27. E. A. Furr vs. W. Reece John
son.
Thursday, My 11, 1905.
No. 28. S. F. Harris vs. Odell Mfg. Co.
No. 29. O. A. Misenheimer vs. W. J.
Cook and T. D. Maness.
No. 81. I. G. Eury vs. Esther Eury.
No. 82. Jas. A. Houston et. al. vs.Jno.
W. Moore et. al.
No. 84. R. T. Honeycutt, Adm'r vs. J.
A. Prather.
No. 85. Elani King, Adm'r vs. Jane
E. Coleman and Lou McDonald.
No. 87. W. M. Smith vs. The Concord
Electno Ligtit Co.
Friday, May 12, 1905.
No. 43. J. W. Thomason vs. Oorl
& WadsworthOo.
No. 44. Rachel Fitzgerald vs. City of
Uonoord.
No. 47. Jno. W. Whitaker vs. F. H.
Trammel.
No. 48. J. P. Best vs. White-Flowe-
Morrison Co.
No. 55. L. H. Ervin vs. Yorke Furni
tnre Oo.
No. 56. R. B. Fitzgerald vs. Elam
King, Adm'r.
Saturday, May 13, 1905.
No. 69. The M. Campbell Mill Co. vs.
C. F. and D. A. Lefler.
No. 61. Josephine Boger, Executrix,
vs. Wiley Keen.
No. 62. D. E. Tucker vs. W. M. Smith,
No. 63. J. F. Bost vs. J. W. Tarlton.
No. 70. R. A. Brown vs. So. Railway
Co.
No. 75. W. H.Blume, Adm'r vs. Lewis
W. Misenheimer.
No. 78. F. B. McKinne vs. Corl &
Wadsworth Oo.
No. 79. Brothers and Sisters of Charity
vs. J. F. Boger et. al.
No. 80. North Jersey Nurseries vs. J.
P. Cook.
In the call of the Calendar any case
not reached and disposed of on the ap
pointed day, goes over to be called on
the next day and in precedence of cases
set for the next day. Witnesses not
allowed fees until the day appointed for
the trial of the cases in which they are
subpoenaed.
Oases on Motion Docket will be heard
according to the convenience of the
Court.
This April 28th, 1905.
JNO. M. COOK,
Clerk Superior Court.
PARKER'S
MAIR BALSAM
Clean. uW besotifM fc"-
Can- "'"A-"" "r'.tii1"'-
.T.......
An Opportunity!
Furniture Cheap
We have purchased the entire stock
of Furniture of the late J. T.
Pounds. In this lot were a hun
dred splendid Oak Bed Steads, and
and while they last we have con
cluded to put a price on them that
will move them out in a hurry, and
yofi will have to hurry too, if you
want some of the bargains.
25 Pounds
of good, clean
RICE for $1.00
Arbuckle Coffee, 15
per nound. All other
Groceries
Dry Goods
and Shoes
to suit the trade.
Highest Cash and
Barter Prices paid
for Country Pro
duce. Sec us before selling your pro
duce. I
AN OLD PII IS
"There is never a debt paid so high as
wet weather pays for dry," except when
you consider that
KELL61TY
SURE CURE
......FOR
INDIGESTION!
has paid, is paying, and will pay in
"Jolly Good Health" many times its
cost. So if you suffer with nervousness,
heart-burn, sour stomach, nausea, blues
and other symptoms of Indigestion, the
great destroyer of health and happiness,
and at the same time make a paying in
vestment, get a Dottle of this wonder
ful preparation ; by waitiug longer you
necessitate more medicine and longer to
find a complete cure.
Gibson Drugstore
DELINQUENT LIST
ADOPTED BY THE
Cabarrus Er.? Medical Socioty.
This Is to notiry the public that the physi
cians of Cabarrus county. In order to protect
themselves from Imposition, have adopted
what Is known as the Delinquent List
All peraons owing physicians for services
are warned to make some kind of settlement
of the same before J une 1, 1UU5.
The names of those falling to do so, wUl,
after that date, be placed upon the Delin
quent List, and such persons cannot then
obtain the services of a physician In this
county until their name is removed.
Nothing herein must be construed as ap
plying to charity cases or emergency calls.
This action has been taken by the Cabarrus
County Medical Society; the following physi
cians being members :
W. H. LILLY
L. M. AKCHEY
W. D. PEMHEItTON
J. O. WALK Eli
J. E. 8MOOT
('. H. UAKNHARDT
M. A. FOIL
P. A. HAKK1EU
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