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Tup TRI-WEIILf EXAMINER- - 4 1 .1 : - VOL. I. THE EXAMINER. PUBLISHED TRHVEEKLY AND WEEKLY, BY : NUTTAL.L. & STEWART. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. TERMS CASH IN ADVANCE Tn-Weekly 1 year, - - $5 00 44 6 months, - - - 3 00 " " 8 months, i - '1 00 Y Weetly, 1 year, - - - - 2 00 u mourns. - i v' RATES OF ADVE RTISIiNG. Ten lines, or one inch space to constitute square. One Square, first insertion $1 00 50 'Each subsequent insertion,! Liberal deductions made, by e pecial contract, to large aarertisers. vourt advertisements win oe cnargea za per M A.' J m !! I w cent. Higher than the regular rates Special Notices charged fl than ordinary advertisements. For advertisements iuserted 6 per cent. higher irregularly, 25 per cent, higher than usual rates will be charged. Funeral Nut ices will be charged as advertise ments. The simple announcement of a death or marriage will nVt.be charged. I Address all communications to - ' STEWART. OUR CLUB BATES. - W offer the following inducements to those who, will take the pains to get up Clubs and pcud us the names of Anijual Subscribers, with the subscription price of the Tri-Weeklv Examiner $5,00, or the Weekly, $2,00. CLUB RATES FOE, TRI WEEKLY. I For a Club of 7 subscriber to Tii-Weekly 1 Examiner, a copy of , the samd will be furnish- r 'or a Club of 10 subscribers we willpny in cash, 5,00 15 20, " 30 " 50 " 10,00 15,00 25,00 CLUli RATES F'Cli WEEKLY I . Eur a Club of 7 subscribers! to Weekly Ex miner a copy of the I for one year. , same . will be furnished jEor aClub of 10 subscribers we will pay in cash $ 2,50 O I- - . o,ib 5,00 7,50 xo,-:o 15 20 30 50 Ihcsi rates will be strictly adhered to, and ill "I I 1 the amount promptly paid to plying, with them. any one com- Our Tri-W eeklv and w ee kly Examiner ffontains moVe readinsi matter than any pa tliis part of the price is inugh fpers of the kind published in fr-puntrvyand the subscription power. : I Good, active,, enterprising canvasser ts can fiiiafcci money by' getting up clubs for the J'lc laminer, as" well as do much for the good of It ho' people ancVcwmifry, by aiding to cireu tlatfi much needed -information, sound ioliti- fcal principles, and well selected reading mat ter, calculated and intended to excite enter iprize, encourage industry, and give tone and 'Character to society. The fioljl is open and a Jfair chance is given to all. Who will furnish iusthe first Club? i . I B-' .The name df each subscriber should e given in full, with Post Ofncc, County and - istate. ? - - Address, , I V : ' s u KUTTALL & STEWART. N D: HARRIS, WUOtKSALE AXO "RETAIL PEA LEE. IN" CIMGLASS, AND Kerosene Lamps' nnd Shades, Kline's Eatent Fruit Jai-s, &c ? &c. Store opposite Mansion House,' Salisbury, X. C. DR. GODDIN'S GENTIAN BITTERS Curea CTiUEi4nirFeTer, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Colic, Siek Stomach, Bronchitis, Asthma, I r-vr:; Neoralgift, Rheumatism, &e. I "UNIYERSAL TONICS r A suVe,-satef,n4;reliabte preventive and cure for IaH Malarial diseases, ana an aise oSes requiring a rgeneral tonic impression. j Prepared, only byTpa. N. A. II. fsala Tef Twhcre. ' 1 v GODDIN and for I i" '- JAMES Tk WIGGINS, (Successor to J. H. Dalrer & uo.) rroprieiary Agem la-jxA WKftkale'deaier in Patent Medicines, Norfolk Vireinia. : - " : ' apri:-i4-iy D. T, OiVRRAWAY, -AN nP.AT.fcR, TNT i- GROCERIES, fRUVI&- IONS, HARDWARE, ul.aoo aa CROCKERY WARE," W ALL PAPER, WINDOW ROMPT attention given 'o orderg, and to the sale of Cotton, Grain, Naval Stores, Tobacco, Dried Fruit, &c on Commission. Court SCouso Bx1.ilci.XTa5. ari lly. r. ')!;"? v.'" .1' ' "-NEWBER3T , N.. C DR. C. A. HENDERSON, (ftlC$ ,OX v INNIS , STREET, near Ennisa NUTT.4LL & t ... -' ! i QUE ENS WARE r: Arng cipt. ug203Mw&Wly SALISBURY, v-' BE NOT DECEIVED. Many of the Radical newspapers are mak ing a great fuss and exultation over what they pretend to believe the disintegration of the Democratic party ; and from day to day, we hear of. this paper and that, as having come out in favor of the Republican party ; while they claim tluit to be the only national party in existence in the country. It is unnecessa ry to say to those who are familiar with cur rent political history, that all this is mere rodomonade and clap-trap. There, has not been a day in the calender of the last three mouths that there has not been five declen- sions from the Radical party to one from the conservative or Uemacratic. We mean from the Radical or Republican party as constitu ted for the last four years, characterized by the reconstruction acts of Congress and rep resented by Stevens, Butler, Boutwell, Wade, Wilson, and the rest of that stripe at the na tional capital, and (to descend to small thin) byHolden, Abbott, Laflin, Reade, Touro?e Cufiee Mayo, Watts, -Dewee.se, Friday Jones and Windy Billy Henderson, and other po litical stars of the forty-seventh magnitude in North Carolina. . . The Republican party can only be known and judged of by its acts, and what are these ? Is it necessary to rehearse the ten thousand acts of oppression, the unjust and proscriptive laws, the insults, the robbery, that has been inflicted; on the South in the name and under the sanction of Republican laws and by Re publican officers ?rf Take the features of their policy disfranchisement and the test oath ; The Radical papers are : now declaring in fa vor of the removal of all political disabilities and the abrogation of the test oath ; and the Raleigh Standard, the party organ in this btate, claims, that these features are, and have been, prominent planks in the Republi can platform. If this be true, why has the test oath required to this day, in every South ern State, oi those who hold even the most petty offices in the Revenue, Postoffice, or other departments? They have had unob structed power to carry out the policy of the party on these subjects, if indeed it had been the policy of the party to do it. The truth is, and it is established and ren dered incontrovertible by all the acts of the party, in Congress, in the States where Re publicanism has been in the ascendant, by their papers and their public speakers, that they intend to give the franchise (have'given it) to the negro ; in other words, enforce uni versal suffrage, and, at the same time, to place the iron hand of proscription upon thousands and tens of thousands of the white citizens of the country. The Republican party leaders do not in- tend to extend liberality and magnanimity part of their principles and policy. "AVehave had no intimation that they will do it, but, from their former acts, we have every reason to suppose they will not do it, if they can help it. Proscription, high taxation, favorit ism to bondholders, are the leading features in the Republican creed, and whenever a member of the party, or a newspaper, takes opposition to these, he is an apostate to that party ; he lia. " come oyer" to the milder and more liberal views of the great Conserva tive party of the country. Let no one be deceived, however, by any signs of repentance in the leaders or newspa pers of the Radicals, by any plausible soft talk they may employ. ; Movements are on foot to draw to their support many who, be lieving in their sincerity, and desiring the accomplishment of universal amnesty, may be induced to cast in their lot with them, and thus enable them to retain their hold on the public spoils. The people are sincere, but the leaders are not to be trusted. In this State not a word has escaped the lips of a sin gle leader of the Republican party to induce the belief that he endorses the new platform of the Standard and other Republican papers of the State. Nor do they endorse it. Gov. Holden, to-day, would resist, to the bitter end, the removal of political disabilities from a large number of the proscribed in the State ; unless it were apparent that resistance was" useless. We say again, be not deceived. Yirgini'a yet may lose the fruits of the compromise she made in the recent election. And we have every rensqn to believe that the administra tion at Washington is opposed to every move ment that does not give Radical men and Radical measures the predominance in all things. Raleigh Sentinel. ' TWO MORE; DIABOLICAL OUTRAGES BY NEGROES. Information was received here yesterday that two white girls, aged sespectively fifteen and thirteen years, daughters of a highly respecta ble citizen of Rockbridge county, whose name we withhold for the present, was most brutally outraged on Friday last by ; two black fiend?, the oldest of whom is not more than sixteen years, and the youngest but about fifteen. We were unable to jgether the full particulars of these fiendish deeds, but from what we could learn it appears that the villains waylaid their victims not far from the residence of their pa rents and accomplished their attrocious pur pose. One ot the scoun Irels was captured on Sunday morning; and lodged in jail in Isling ton. The other was still at large Sunday eve ning, but the people of the entire neighbor hood in which the outrages were perpetrated are scouring the country in search of him, and he has probably been arrested by this time Lynchburg iWirt, 24, . Sad Accdent - A Miss Hill, niece of the late Gen. A. P. Hill, was accidentally shot and killed by her brother-in-law, Mr. G. W. Skin ner, at his residence in Washington county, Alabama, a few evenings ago. Mr. Skinner was about to leave the house to spend the night with a sick neighbor, and was engaged in re canninc his loaded pistol, when one of barrels exploded, and th.e ball, from it entered the, side ofthe unfortunate lady, killing her instantly N. C, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 18G9. MAJORITIES. . Alexandies H. Stephens thus replies, in the Augusta Constitutionalist, to Borne of the recent assurnpsions of Greeley touching ma jorities of the people and the right of self government: A majority of the people, overawed and terrorized by a minority ! Indeed 1 If so, what became of this majority when the Con federate armies, which stood between thera and their deliverers, were overpowered? Where is this majority now, even with the sweeping disfranchisement which silences so many of the overwaning tyrants? Why has it not been permitted to exercise the inalien able right of self-government, even with the reinforcement of enfranchised blacks ? Why are so many of these States, till this day, held under military rule, with their whole popula tions " pinned" to very bad government by federal bayonets, under the pretext' of their continued disloyalty? This assertion, as to the state of things in the beginning, is as ut terly groundless in fact as it is utterly incon sistent with the gratuitous assumptions on which the present pretext is based. Is it not amazing, Messrs. Editors, that Mr. Greeley, in the face of the facts for the last four years, to say nothing 0f those of the war, waen, according to his showing, the adminis tration at Washington, in rushing into it, were in " the wrong" I say to omit all mention of the wrongs of the war, its immense sacrifices of blood and treasure, is it not amazin in the highest degree that Mr. Greeley, inthe face of the facts of the last lour years only, should now repeat to us the principles of American independence as his creed ? Have not the constitutions often States, as made and adopt ed by the peope thereof, founded on such principles and organized in such form as seem ed to them most likely to effect their safety and happiness, been swept from existence by military edict ? Have not the people in these ten States, including the arbritrarily enfran chised blacks, been denied the right to form new constitutions, " laying their foundations on such principles and organizing its power in such form as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness ?" Have they not been required and literally compell ed to form such constitutions as seemed most likely to effect the safety and security of the dominant faction in Washington? Is this holding up to our gaze these immu table and ever-to-be reverenced principles of the Declaration of Independence at this time and under the present circumstances, intend ed only as mockery added to insult, and outrage. injury SINGULAR DISCOVERY. A strange geological phenomenon recently a village valley of Mount Dore and that of St. James. A civil engineer had caused a rectangular well to be sunk to a depth of fifty-three metres through a stratum ef hard tufa, winch covers the primitive formation in that district. At this depth, which is insignificant compared to the shaft of a mine, the heat, nevertheless, be came so intenspthat the workmen had to be relieved at short intervals. Their wooden shoes soon got intolerably warm, and thev could not lie down to rest themselves on the hot ground. On the other hand, the appear ance of the tufa denoted that the well had nearly reached the granite. The engineer, on leaving the spot for a while, had recom mended his men to be very careful during his absence, and to content themselves with re moving the rubble, without going further down. One of them, however, in throwing the last shovelful into the skip, took it into his head to remove with his pickaxe a piece of tufa about thirty inches in circumference ; but no sooner had he done this than he saw the bottom of the hole he had made swell up. At the same time a loud rumblinrr noise was heard. The men in a fright jumped into the cage and called to be pulled up ; but they had barely got to the height of a dozen metres when a thick column of hot water, preceded by a violent report, rose up in the air, projecting huge stones upwards. I he water in falling scalded the men grievously. The jet diminished, and the well filled rapid- ly, the poor leilows succeeding, however, in time. In the course of ten hours the well got quite full, and from that time a rivulet of thermal water has been flowing from the spot into the Dordogne. The liquid on arriving there still retains a temperature of forty de grees centigrade Upon analysis it has been found to contain) upwards of twenty milli grammes (nearly half a grain) of arseniate of potash per litre, a proportion unheard of be fore. The Minister of Public Works has sent a commission of "engineers to the spot for fur ther investigation. 0- SOCIAL OSTRACISM. The editor of the Tallahassee Sentinel, though a Northern man and a Republican, was no doubt bred a gentleman. This we infer from his very just and manly view of the whine se4 up by certain Northern people that they are socially ostracised iu the South. He says : " We occasionally hear Northern men sav they are ostracised, because the Southern peo ple do not invite them to their bouses ; and when such remarks are made we can onlv feel a contempt for those who .utter them. Many of the Northern men here are mere adventur ers, who never had entree to good society when at the North. The Southern people are right. Why should they invite to'their homes persons of whose anteeedentg they know nothing? " A gentleman' would not expect it. Again, we have seen Northern men and women who strove to ingratiate themselves with Southerners, with the view of gettingadmittanceinto their houses; and for such we have most soverign contempt. rso gentleman or lady can accept an invitation unless it is unsought and unsolicited. If such are not welcomed to Southern homes, it is as much a loss to our Southern brethren and sis ters as it is to them." From the Gilroy (California) Alroctle. i DrX itrnn,in,. . . i wux -uuiiUiuur.K AKK.MAUKAULE! MUHDEll " Oil, MY BROTH! A 31 DEAD ; ALLAY HAS SHOT AN AFFECTING DK VTIT lUMi ; - . jt. i rT1L iiKr n,rn . 11 Polite and attentiTe. Quests may rely upon gool attention to their erery wnt. In connection with the House is a good 1 Ug themselves at play, the parents being ab scut Albert went into an adjoining room, and was followed by Harry. Albert forbade him going into the room. Harry insisted. Albert told him that if he did he would shoot him, Harry continued to advance, when Albert grab bed a aboUgon standing near him, and pointed it at him, cocked it and fired, the charge en tering the abdomen from the front. The gun is an extra larjre one, stub and twin barrel, and was loaded with No. 7 shot. At the time the gun was discharged Harry must have been within one or two feet of the muzz'e, as his clothes were on fire and badly powder burnt, and the entire charge, waddh-g, and all, passed into him. The boys ran out of the house, and an elder brother of the wounded boy, hear ing the report of the gun and the screams of the boys, ran toward the door and saw Harrv, who was standing at the door, leaning ajrainst it,1 with his hand over the wound. Harry cried out. ' O, my brother, I am dead. Ally has shot me." The brother then tenderly conveyed him to his house adjoining, and summoned physicians immediately. The by who did the 'shooting, it appears, fully understood the situation, and ran off to a neighbor's where his mother had been visiting. The physician came, and an examination satisfied him that the wound was imparted to the almost distracted parents, brothers and sisters. Little Harry lived till half past 11 o'clock that night, when his im mortal soul took its departure from the earthly tenement to meet Him who has said, " Suffer little children to come unto me." It was indeed a trying scene to sec the mo ther at the dying couch of her beloved boy. summoned so suddenly from the endearing presence of parents, bi other? and sisters, and friends. The mother was borne up by the Christian fortitude which alone can support the afflicted during such tryi.ig ordeals, and. upon her knees beside the suffer, she poured out a praj-er to God for her djing .boy that melted the hearts of all her hearers, and caused tears to flow from cyfg unused to weeping.- Harry summoned all his playmates, and as the) stood around his dying bed he called their at- large enough to admit a hen's egg, which spoke to them in t-ilcnt yet potent speech, admonish ing them to the terrible results of shooting a fellow being. lie then sent for Albert, the boy who fired the fatal shot. Upon entering the room in company with his mother, he was told to kneel and ask Harry's pardon, but before the word rould have utterance Harry spoke up and freely forgave him. The deceased was a boyT of ex traordinary intelligence, and was a favorite boll. Hmong his associates and the adults of our town.. THE FOUR GENUINE SERMON. GATES OF nELL A IIAUD-SHELL BAPTIST William Reynolds, of Peoria, is well known a an enmu-uasMC woriter 111 me o:iuuainouuoi c.iuse other He is perhaps better known than any man in the brate, and we give the lul- lowing sory as he tells it, as near as we remcm bcr. The main facts are ail absolutely true He was in the southern part of the State last week organizing Sunday schools, when ho en- countered a Hard-Shell B.iptit neighborhood. The minister settled over the fl ck looked with jealousy upon the movements of he new lights. and finally announced his intention ot preach- injr a sermon against them. Un the fcabbath designated the Sunnday school men gathered in force, when the preacher announced that well"known text 44 Thou art Peter ! and on this rock will I build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. ! After giving Peter a good setting out, the! minister closed as follows, in the peculiar sing- lns tone that is indescribable except to those who have heard it : i" Yes, my brethering ah an' the gates of hell shel not preval agin it, ah I No you d like to know how about these ere gates o hell, ah Well, my bretheriug;, thar air four sates! to hell, ah ! 9 " j44 Thar is, iustly, the Sunday school, system, ah ! That lhar is one gate to hell, ah, whar they bring young men and wimmin together and onder the igee of teachin' od 'em the Bi blethey set 'em hankeriu' arfter one auother ali, and so open wide the gate o' hell ah ! I i44 An' the uext gate o hell is wuss'n the fust ah. That thar is Bible so ci-i-ties ab, whar they put the word into the bauds 0' them as haiut larnin sufficient ah, lur to uuderatan it ah ; .1 1 . 1 : : , ,. r . 1. . an tuis nere, uretucriug, is ouc jui wc wuai Ate, n' hell ah. of which we read about in the r , ' Bible ab. 44 An' the next gate o' hell, my brethering, is temperance societies ah, whar ihey gonte into your house and bust into yer rooms ah, and try to disciver et ye hev anything' ah that is good for the stummick's sake ah. and when they find it they spill it oat on to the groan' ah, an let it all run to waste ah. iSigns of disatisfaction among his church members. Ureatly excited, he continued : I Yis, bretheriog, they do, ah. Thej air boun to bust up all o our bizness, an' an ah, tharby they open another gate o hell ah. These air the men that air, ah, goin' to come among os, aud prevail, ah, agin the rock on which will I foun' niy church, ah. Yis, breth ering, ah. they air sot out to do it ah, an' we most line hands ah, an' war agin 'em ah. that j they shel not preyail, ah NO 3S An the next irate o hell V v..i.- .ABLE ! , c "epuD.iKin party ah., Suns cf ER IE tT, " audiior. Ye?, bretherirff 'MP i erubJlk,n wt htz Set .11 tl 31 h . , niters free ah, and tanked 'em a?io thar mar- inn L- !! 1 it-.. J . ",e liePUD1n party ah. , Sins cf sfers h. n i . . t .1 f!- ' j-'ui iuar .money in eu nc cheeted and robbed the S,,,ih h outeo its oateral ntcs ah, an' the catea o Knit snci not prevail agin it ah." I I ... ' O T ' " w u e ca give the preachers name and ad ress if necessary. The party were too much nnoyed to take accurate netes. But Mr. Ret old himself will vouch for the truth of what re have writter. Truth i tr,nr c iion.Errs III) Jonrmal HOW FARMERS MAY SUPPLEMENT THE CORN CROP. A correspondent of the Hillsboro' Record er gives the following valuable suggestion t farmers in every section of the State where the crops are cut short by the drought ; The corn crop throughout this section of the State is a , failure; not more. than one half, perhaps not one-thinl the usual crop can be expected. What is the dutv of farmers under the circumtances? Can "they by no ' hook or crook," (honest hook I mean.) meet the emergency, ami in spite of their half-filled cribs, still feed their families, their cattle and horscrf, shevp and hog? They can do much, if they will "pull olf their coats and roll ut their sleeves," cease talking about the drought and hard times, and CO to wnrlf in good earnest, as if they were just now begin- ning theyear' work with the brightest pros- pect to cheer iMein. 1 Let them turn ovr lands on the creeks and branches th.it r.m ho plowed where they h. -e harvested wheat or oats and sow in buckwheat half a bushel or three pecks to the acre, and harrow in ; and they will make from ten to fortv, l)u.ch1 t.i the acre according to the quality of the land. It is not too late to sow this week or next week. Should September be a seasonable month the yield of buckwheat sowed now will astonish any farmer who has never sow ed it. I have sowed it 'and I now whereof I speak. Farmers in this section value the Uirnip low. Let me assure them that there is no crop that will pay the Carrncr tetter than the turnip crop. Fed on turnips his cows will yield him abundant milk and butter through out winter. Boil them for his fattening hogs and they will fatten with half the corn. Hw sow and pigs will keep in good condition till spring, fed on boiled turnip3 alone. Sheep are very fond of the turnip (not boiled) and keep fat on them. To make a good yield of turnips the soil must be rich. Therefore let every farmer go to scratching and scraping immediately ; there is no time to loose; still on his premises. Turnips feed greedily on any kind of manure. Don't leave an ounce of horse or cow dung in the stables. Swcrj every dud of ashes from the chimneys; a bushel of soot ia worth a dollar in gold. Carry 11.1 u 1 an the manure you nave collected to your turnip patch. Break the land up; hard or soft, break it up; don't wait for rain. Break the clods, pulverise thoroughly, and when it rains you will be ready to sow. 1 have seen rood turnips raised from a sowing made the 15th of September. Sown the 1st of Septem ber the " Strap-leaped Purple Top" or "The White Dutch," with good seasons, will make 400 bushels to the acre. Don't expect to cet ?eed from vour neighbors when the time to sow arrives : vou mav tail to get them, and 1 don't know but that vou oujrht to fail. Send onc dollar to dollar to Allisnn and Addison, RicL- ra0nd, Va., and vou will cret seed enough to ;ow au acre. In a little village of Mattue, Austria, Schil ler's 44 William Tell " was lately represented1. he manager's son taking the part of TclV t Son. In the apple scene the actor let go the arrow i)Cf,jre taking t ofjt jj" yUjj,long "jh g gool aim aud the child s eye was e bhriekcd aloud and fell in con- Thc anlionc rnn-d unon tha staro w . ven2cance ulK)n manager for hav- . tu.cJ hisson in suci, i place, but the - man rnn for 1 i;jV T, . v. ... p F , i, ano,her 8torv. Seven or eight ce?tunes ago in Norway, tne religious play of 44 The Mystery of tne Passion" was enacted before the king, llaquin. Just is one of the actors vtas about to nail the repre sentative of the Savior, to the cross, the king jumped upon the stage and killed the ex ecu mi - 1 r iL. iL. .f- 1 1 Len intetrupted, precipitated themselves upon tlOner. aiic people, lurious uiai uie ptay uau the stage and killed the sovereign. And thia is how the dynasty of llaquin becawe extinct. A DETKtMiNaD GiRt, Miss Carrie Ketch urn, the young girl who was shot and it was said mortally wounded by her lover, balvadr Collet, . ? in New Orlcans, three or four week since, bi s persistently refused to testify against him. The New Orleans Ricoyune says: 44 She has unexpectedly recovered from her wounds, and on Friday last was taken before the grand jury, and still retard to answer any questions. The foreman reported the facU l the court, and the judge akcd her tt thirty days confinement would soften her obstinacy, when she amid tears answered that she wa? Dot obstinate, but had nothing to say. . The judge fiially told her that he was afna l. if forced to give evidence, 6he would commit perjury to save the accused trjm well deserved ! punish- ; mcnt, and as the grand jury bad requested it, he would discharge her from custody. She was married to Collot on the same evening." o ' Our Best Parlors. Don't keep a solitary room in which yon go bat once a moo th, with your ' parson, special guests or sewing society. ' Make your living-room the house. Lit the plaeo be such that when your boy has goae to distant ' lands, or even when, perhaps, he clings to a single plank in the waters uf the wile ocean, the thought of the old bomeitead obill come to him in his dessulatiua, bridging always light, hope and love. Have no dungeon, about voor,.. 1hou32 no room you never open aj bliuds that arc always abut.' " t 1 1 -1 1
The Tri-Weekly Examiner (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 1, 1869, edition 1
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