Newspaper Page Text
■ 01.
K. H. M’DDMAID,
EIWEWT*
L found at Ins Office, Room No. 3 White-
Houk *, Conyci'B, Ga., where ho is pre
fto do all kinds of work in his line. Fill.
L th made a speciality.
II work Warranted to give Sutisfaclionjtk-v,
t[* thankful for post patronage, he re-
Uly solicits a continuance of the same.
Flmm Slomc
MBTH and JEWELER,
CuNVKKS. GEORGIA
wArhes, Clock, and Jewelry of overy do
yHon repaired. All work done nsatly, and
K : . at lowest prices far cash, and warran-
Jeive satisfaction. Shop: naxt door to
pjßffiee. aug*3lß7B-ly
fwWA'B <(•
HB
IJ6T and WAGON REPOSITORY,
COfYKRS, OEOKOIA.
d|.U.I:R3 IK AND MANUFACTURERS OF
HAND CARTS,
WHEELBARROWS,
||ml VEHICLES of all kinds.
■HiN’ESS, from tlie Cheapest to the
■st, both Hand and Machine Stitch
■ \Ve keep the best
■
lIJVT-M.IDE HARNESS.
I TTse, for CARKIAGES
BtllES, or one Horse WAGONS,
■apply any part of HARNESS on
ort notice.
Alio, a full stock of
Ii XT M B E R
eat variety always on hand, for
' building purposes. Carpenters
lot; true torn would do well to see our
il wholesale rates.
Hidings, Entices, Stops, Strips, etc.,
;ciality, and made of any width,
ness, or shape. Window Sash—
■d and glassed—Blinds and Doors,
r white or yd'low pine.
|0 suitable lumber for Coffiiic. Wc
fs keep in stock Burial cases and
!ts of various sizes and lengths,
infants to adults—all at very low
;s. Coffin Hardware generally.
i our facilities, we propose to make
ib of any style, from the plainest to
nest, cheaper than we possibly could
ml alone. Give us a trial and
PATENT WHEELS.
Mi, Spokes, Rims, Bodies,
■p. Shafts, Poles Dash Frames,
■fts, Springs. IRON in great
Screws and Dolts of best
■take. Patent and Enameled Leather,
Cloths, Moss and everything a
■rinfmer needs. Full stock of best
Hi'iage Paints, Varnishes, Oils, Colors,
and Paints generally. NEW
■ CARRIAGES, BUGGIES
BbWAGONS always on hand, in great
fariety, and can make to order any style
lr quality desired. Old ones Repaired,
and Trimmed at short notice,
living rates. We buy the best
■etial, and having suitable machinery,
■fable to turn off work with neatness
constant devotion to our Busi
■*>, Honest Dealings with our Custom
Faithful Mechanics, and
le manufacture of Reliable Goods in
we hope to merit a liberal pat
from a Generous Pdbhc. Thank-
HKyoo for your past favors, we will be
to see you again at our office on
■pot Street, near the Geo R li.
I Respectfully,
Downs & Langford
p. M, Lee* m, W,
■ ibitUGGIST AND apothecary ; j
Centre Street,
■'VERS, GEORGIA
—Dealer in—
■ ' MEDICINES,
I CHEMICALS
I I P*Uie, 7 amt Fancy Toilet articles,
■ RULE WINES & LIQUORS
■ Medicinal use.
■ Trusses and shout
■'bcines of a n t- h A Seeds - Patent
p "-
■ the gsemjcentenkiaTlra
to the Centenn^ f i >rmation as to ,;iest routes
Summer Ke
addreM P R ,n country
p ess B. w. WRFVw
I J -Passenger AgentKennesaw^’ute,
I Atlanta, Ga
The Last of the Summer.
BY MART LOWE DICKINBON.
I see them again, m,V oWu hill-lands.
The mountains 1 used to knew
When my shadows were falling westward,
And my days were all aglow
11 ith the sun of long ago.
I have no need to remember
The picture of each old place.
For the touch of young September
On Nature’s familiar face
Has given the old-time grace;
The grace of the day when sunshine
Creeps softly and slow towards the woet,
The Iniru,nameless „hade, scarce shadow,
1 hat holds a dim promise of rust,
That marks its own hour as tho best 1
A grace which tho dying summer
Threw like a mantle down
On mountain, and held, and woodland,
Where living she wore her crown—
The crown in the dust laid down.
It hangs o’er the hillside forest
In many a misty fold,
And the life is gone from their greenness,
And the mountains look blighted and cold,
Like strong men suddenly old.
The tender gi een of the grasses
Is changed to a lifeless grey;
I have seen the velvet cushions
In places where penitents pray
That looked like the fields to-day.
Indeed the whole earth seems a temple,
Where, the notes of praise between,
An undertone of sorrow
Echoes in aisles of green
For a dead and discrowned queen.
And the gay and glorious autumn
lteluctant comes to reign,
As if she shrank from startling
With light and joy again
This vague unspoken pain.
But a •irimson banner flying
From one lone maple tree
Gives to the wind a promise
Of glory that will be—
When the summer shade shall flee.
The woods may burn With color,
And the sun the hill-tops kiss.
From their royal robing
My heart a charm shall miss,
And no day be like this.
I shall open Unite eyes to the glory,
I shall join the harvest praise,
tint T on.rm/vf. onvry nvAr
Into tho gayer ways
What died in the summer days.
Is R. B. Hayes a Know Nothing ?
From an interview) between Judge Stul
lo of Cincinnati and a Reporter of the
Ghaeago 1 imes.
Reporter—Wl.at do you know, Judge,
of that charge made against Gov. Hayes
of his being in open and avowed sympa
thy with the so-called American Alli
ance ?
Judge Stallo—Well, my answer to
that shall be siruply a narration of my
own experience with the charge. It was
not entirely new to me when I used it,
but being anxious to learn the truth, I
waited till some response should come
from Columbus. Finally we got it in
the shape of a general denial lrom Mr.
Lee, the Governor’s private secretary ;
and it strvck me as singulat that Gov.
Hayes, being a lawyer should think of
coming before the public with such an
unsatisfactory rejoinder to a very im
portant charge. Several days later meet
ing Col. MarVbreit, the Governor's par
ticular friend, I called his attention to
this damaging irregularity. I told him
that if the Governor wished me to dis
believe the charge he must come for
ward over his own signature and deny
the accusation in terms. I would then
be forced to believe him. That was
some days ago. I have means of know*
iug that Col. Markbreit went to Colum
bus at once, but, so far, the Governor
has not authorized the denial xve de
mand.*
Reporter—Then you mean to believe
that Gov. Hayes personally endorse the
principles of that alliance till he comes
forward personally and denies it?
Judge Stallo—-Most certainly I do.
Asa lawyer I can do nothing else.
— -
Look at it as we will, advertising car
ries with it a certain moral influence.
Most people cannot resist the impression
that a man who advertises a large stock
of fresh goods, is more likely to have
them than one who does not do so. Ad
vertising has at least one good chance in
its favor.
A large number of Indian tribes have
consented to occupy anew territory
which the government has assigned
theuv
It is now iwenty-nit*e years since the
Mormons first settled in Utah.
Parasol-holders is the Saratoga name
for young men who part their hair in
the middle.
CONVKKS, GA„ THURSDAY, OCTOBER It*. Into.
The Colored People’* ApDeal.
We find in the column ot ihc New
York Herald the lollowing letter from a
colored man in Savannah :
'Jo the HdHor of the Herald:
In the name ot humanity, philanthropy
and Christianity, why do not the friends
ot the colored people of this striked city
come to their rescue ? We arc depen
dent on the whites for something to
eat, and almost altogether tor medical
assistance. II they do not relieve ns wo
must die. tho Northern people,
our political and religious advisers and
sliepards, should send us bread and phy
sicians, and not leave it all io the Dem
ocratic whites here. Yours, ifcc.,
Charles Parker (Colored.)
The colored people of the South will
discover from the experience of their
brethren lu Savannah that the professed
friends of the colored people at the
North will give very little, indeed, to
the relief of their real wants. Their
“‘political and religious advisers and
shepards" will show them precious little
of “humanity, philanthropy and Christi
anity.” The money raised in the North
for the yellow fever sufferers eoirn s
mostly from those warmhearted beuevo.
lent people who have never made many
professions of their philanthropy. It is
intended for the relief of suffering whites
and blacks alike. The money sent from
Southern cities meant fur the relief of
suffering whites and blacks alike. The
gentleman who have charge of Us dis
tribution in Savannah apply it to the
necessities of both races. Asa matter
of fact, the bulk of the colored population
in Savannah, well and sick, was support
ed by the white people of the city from
the breaking out ot the pestilence until
their own means became exhausted.
Their wants are now receiving careful
attention. The “professed philanthrope
ists” usually give everything but that
which is most needed, money. General
Butler and Mi. Wendell Plnliphs gave
the colored people of Savann ill the
Fifteenth Amendment and the Civil
Rights bill, but they will not give them
a dollar to keep them a ive from perish.
iug by,disease or starving to death. In
axmtrartiit vnu jeais ago, wnerf civuiun
time w r as coming on and the Stale was
considered close, General Grant prompt
ly ordered rations issued to the, colored
people who had been deprived of work
by the overflowing of the plantations on
the Tombigbee river ; but the State of
Georgia is hopelessly Democratic and
the President has no rations to give to
the starving negroes of Savannah, The
Republican orators in the North, in the
East and in the West are begging the
people to vote for Hayes and Wheeler,
in order to avert the utter extermination
of the colored race in the South, and
they harrow up the feelings of their au
ditors by describing the cruelties practi
ced upon the “poor blacks but they
have not a word to say for nor a cent to
give to the “poor blacks” in Savannah,
many of whom are fever-stricken and
all of whom are dependent upon charity
for existence.
The Pope’s Heath.
Pio Nouo’s physicians are again
alarmed as to the health of their august
patient. In spit* of the mental energy
whiah carried him through fatiguing
audiences, his feebleness of body increas
es, and the oedema ef the left foot and
ankles is such that he maintains the
standing posture with extreme difficulty,
and only tor a short time. The symp
tmos of general senile dropsy are suffici
ently threatening to cause much uncasi
ness to his medical advisers, foreseeing,
as they do, the inefficacy of measures
which rarely succeed in less tried con
stitutions. On Thursday, the 14th, in
reply to the congratulatory address of an
Irish deputation, he delivered a Latin
discourse, in which his usual distictness
of utterance was so impaired that many
of his words were inaudible. Hie bon.
homie, however, continues, ar and wl ile
lie amuses by his vivacity lie gives evi
dence of an amount ol vital resources
peculiarly gratifying to his physicians.
His Cardinal Secretary suffer* severely
from arthritic pains, but still more so
from ischuria, and Prof. Mazzoni, the
distinguished lectuer on clinical surgery
at the Sapienza, who saw him the other
day, anticipates the gravest results from
the approaching prevalence of the tra*
montana, and gives no hope of his being
able to survive the winter.- —London
Lancet.
The average height of the American
white man is 67 inches.
Don’t trouble yourself to stretch your
mouth any wider,” said a dentist to In*
patient, “I intend to stand ou'side to
draw your tooth,”
EXTRACT FROM THE SPEECi
OK
HON. GEO. F. HOAR, OF MASSACHUSETTS,
IN THE BELKNAP IMPEACHMENT 1 TRI
AL, MAY 7th. 187(5.
A tUKUIIILi: AUR UfIN.MKNT OF KKI'UIII.ICAN
A DMINISTRATION.
1 lie following were the closing sen
tences of Mr. Hoar’s speech :
My own public life has been a veiv
brief and insignificant one, extending
little beyond the duration ot a single
term ot Senatorial office, but in that pcs
nod I have seen five judges ot a high
court of the United States driven from
office by threats of impeachment lor cor
ruption o’’ maladministration. 1 have
beau! the taunt from friendliest lips, that
when the United Stales presented her
self in the East to take part with the
civilized world in generous competition
in the arts of life, the only pwoduct ot
hei institutions in which she surpassed
all others beyond question was her cor
ruption. I have seen in the State in the
l iiiou foremost in power and wealth four
judges ot her courts impeached for cor
ruption, and the political administration
of her chief city become a disgrace and
a by-word throughout the world. I have
seen the chairman ot the Committee on
Military Affairs in the House, now a dis
tinguished member ot the Court, rise in
his place and demand tho expulsion of
four of his associates for making sale et
their official privilege ot selecting the
youths to be educated at our great mili
tary school. \\ lien the greatest railroad
ot the world, binding together the con
tinent and uniting the two great seas
which wash our shores, was finished. I
have seen out' National triumph and ex
altation tinned to bitterness and shame
by the Unanimous reports of three com
mittees ol Congress, two of the House,
ami one here, that every step of that
mighty enterprise had been taken in
fraud. I leave heard in highest places
the shameless doctrine avowed by men
grown old in public office that the true
v Arj W I null |)C/TtC mioutil \jxj j„
the Republic is to bribe the people with
the offices created for their service, and
the true end for which it should be used
when gained is the promotion of selfish
ambition and the gratification of person
al revenge. I have heard that suspicion
haunts the footsteps of the trusted com
panions of the Prcs dent. These things
have passed into history. The Hallam,
or the Tacitus, or the SisUloudi, or the
Macaulay who writes the annals ot our
time will record them with I is inexorable
pen ; and now, when a high Cabinet oik
fleer, the constitutional adviser ot the
Executive, flees from oflice before'fcliar
gos of corruption, shall the historian add
that the Senate treated the demand of
the people tor its judgment of condem
nation as a farce, and laid down its high
functions before the sophistries and jeers
of the criminal lawyer? Shall he specu
late about the petty political calculations
as to the effect on one party or the other
which introduced hio judges to connive
at the escape of the great public crimi
nal ; or, on the other hand, shall he
dose the chapter by narrating how these
things were detected, reformed punished
by constitutional processes which the
wisdom of of our fathers devised for us,
and the virtue and purity of the found
their vindication in the justice of tho
Senate ?”
To Make Cows GiVS Milk.
A writer who says his cow gives all
the milk that is wauled in a -family of
eight persons, and from which was made
two hundred and sixty pounds of butter
in the year, gives the following as the
treatment. He says:
‘lf you desire to get a large yield of
rich milk, give your cow three times a
day water slightly warm, slightly salted,
iti which bran has been stirred at the
rate of one quart to two gallons of wa
ter. You will find, if you have not found
this by daily practice, that your cow will
gain twenty-five per cent, immediately
unacr the effect of it! She will become
so attached to the diot as to refuse to
drink clear water unles very thirsty, bat
thin mess she will eat almost any time
ana ask for more. The amount of this
is an ordinary water pail full each time,
morning noon and night. Your animal
w ill then do her Lest at discounting jhe
lacteal. Four huudred pounds of butter
is often obtained from good stock, and
instances are mentioned w'kere the yield
was even at a higher figure.’
♦ .
Editing a paper is like carrying an
umbrella on a windy clay. Everybody
thinks he could manage it betfer than
the one tvbo has hold of the handle.
Puffing an Undertaker.
‘l’ve been taking your paper for twen
ty-six years, he commenced ns he reach
ed tho head of the stairs, says the Detroit
Free Frees, ‘and new I want a puff.’
Ho whs a very tall, slender man, hail a
face that hadn't smiled since 1542, and
his neck was embraced by a white era*
vat and his bauds wcie thrust into black
gloves.
‘l've got anew hoarse, a hew stock ol
coffius, and I want a local notice, hi
continued, as he sat down and sighed, hk
if ready to acre tv a coffin lid down.
‘My dear/ replied the man in the
corner, ‘l’ve met you at a groat many
funerals, and your general bearing Ims
created a favorable iinpres ion. You
s;gh with the sigheis, grieve with the I
grievers, and on extra occasions you cun
slic’d folds ot soi’iow, even though you
kt.ow that you cant get 10 per ceiit ol
your bill under six months.’
‘Yes, sighed the undertaker, inslinu
lively measuring the length ot a table
with his eye, and wondering to himself
why ed tors' tables weren’t covered with
crape, with rows ot coffin m ils around
the edges.
‘Death is a very atlenin thing/ contin
ued the mail in the corner, ‘lmt still it is
■in Occasion when one can appreciate a
neat liung. I’ve seen you rub your
ktlUckles against gate posts (mil never
change conntetiance ; I've seen you listen
to eUlegies on men who owed you tor
twenty yea's before their death, and you
looked even more solemn than the be
reaved widow ; I’ve seen you back your
hearse up to a door in such an easy,
quiet way that it rohbed death of hall
its terrors. All this I liavo seen and ap
preciated, but I couldn't wiite a puli' lor
you.’
‘Why not?’ he demand, and.
‘For many reasons. Now you have a
new hearse. Could Igo nnd sliy 1 ‘Mr.
• ' 4
backcloth, ilia genial undertaker, has
just received a fine new beat Me, and we
hope our citizens will endeavor to bestow
upon it the patronago such enterprise
deserves. It rides easy, is handsomely
finished; and those who try it once will
........ u I
‘No, not very well.’
‘Of course I couldn’t. You can call a
grocer or a dry goods man a “genial
friend,’ and it's all right, but you aren’t
genial—you cun’t be. It’s your business
to be solemn. If you could be even
more solemn than you are, it would bo
mouey in your pocket.'
‘That's so,’ he said, sighing heavily.
‘lf it was ac omnibus, or a coal cart,
or a wheel-barrow, 1 could go on and
write a chapter on evtry spoke, but it
isn’t, you see.’
He leaned back and sighed again.
‘And as to ycur coffins, they are
doubtless nice coffius, and yoni prices
arc probably reasonable, but could I go
on and say : ‘Mr, Sackcloth, the under
taker, has just received his new btyles in
spring coffins, ad sizes, and is now pre
pared to see as many of his old custom
ers as want something handsome and
durable at a moderate price. Could 1
say that ?’
Another sigh.
‘I couldn’t say that you were holding
a clearing-out sale, in order to get ready
for the spring trade, or that, for the sake
r.f increasing your patronage, you had
decided to present each customer with a
ehrorno. I coudn’t say that you weic
repairing and repainting, and had the
most attractive coffin-shop in Detroit.
It wouldn’t do to hope that people Would
patronize you, or to say that all orders
sent in by mail would be promptly filled
and that your motto was : ‘Quick sales
and small profits!’
lie put oil a look of a tombstone, and
made no reply.
‘You see, it you had stoVes to sell, or
dealt in mackerel, or sold fishing tackle,
everything would be lovely. You are an
undertaker—solemn, sedate, mournful.
You revel in crape, and you never pass
a black waliiut door without thinking
how much good ccftiij lumber was reck*
lesely wasted. The tolling bell is music
to you, and the City Hall flag at half
mast is fat on your ribs. W e’d like to
oblige you, but jou see how it is.’
‘Yes, 1 see,’ he sighed, and lie formed
m procession and mowed down stairs,
looking around to see if the hearse was
just thirty-four feet behind the officiating
c orgyman’s carriage.
There was a panic among the mothers
at a Centennial hotel recently when the
bill of fare came out and announced
“children pot pie" for dinuer that day.
It turned out, however, to be a printer's
mistake.
♦.
The termination of man—The grave- i
yard. •, ~ '
F. B. PHINIJJY,
SucoaMor to C. If. I’hiniay 4 Cos.
aQTTQJf
Fm'TQS*
AUGUSTA, - - - . G MOltGfAi
liberal Acrancel made on CnntiynmtnU.
. aug‘23 8m
THE ~
National Hotel,
ATLANTA, - - - GEORGIA.
"Ithe rates of board /IjJJ £A at this popular
1 h V tel lmvu hl ‘ ol ' .7) /, fill reduced to $2.50
per day. . For this ■ *w#l/ Vp r j ce offer ac
commodations and fare unsurpassed by any
three or four dollar house in the South.
Come Ithd get ad old Virginia wolcomoi
LEE & IIEWITT,
Pri 1-1(1 KTOrnl.
Kidaej GesjpMat.
Frobably there is no complaint that hftibtl
the human system, whi.h is so little under
:tood ut the present time, as some of the va
ried forms of Kidney Complaints.
There is no disease which causes gitch acute
pain ot more alarming in its rSHflltg thkii when
the kidnoys fall to Secrete the blood from th
uric acid, and other poisonous Sub
stances, which the blood accumulates in itl
circulation through tho system.
If from any cause tho kidnoys fail to per
form tho fun. tions devolving upon thorn, the
cumulations nra taken up by the absorbents
and the whole system thrown into a state o*
disease, causing groat pain and suffering, nnd
vory often immediate death. Hence the Im
portance of keeping the kidneys and blood in
a healthy Condition, through which all the im
purities of the body must pass.
PAIN IN THE BACK.
There is no remedy known to medical sci
ence which bus proved itself more valuable in
eases of Kidney Complaints than tho Vegetine.
It acts directly upon the secretions, cleanses
and purities tho blood, and restores tho whole
system to healthy action.
Tho following extraordinary cure of great
sufferers, who hail boon given up by the host
physicians as hopeless cases, wilt speak* tot
themselves, and should challenge the most pro*
found attention of the medical faculty, as well
mOf those who are suffering from Kidney
Complaint.
THE BEST MEDICINE.
East Mahshfucld, Aug. 22,1870.
Mb. Stevens; Dear Sir—l am seventy-one
wita
stomach. I was Induced by frieUds to try
your YeOitinK, and I think it the best medi
oine for weakness of the Kidneys I ever used.
I have tried many remedies for this complaint,
and never found so much relief as from the
Vroutine. It strengthens and invigorate*
the whole Bystem. Many of my acquaintan
ces have taken it, and I believe it to he good
for nil the complaints for which it is recom
mended Your, truly,
JOSIAII H. SIIEIIMAN.
Boston, May 30, 1871.
PRONOUNCED INCURABLE
H. It. Stevens, Esq-: Dear Sir—l have been
badly afflicted with Kidney Complaint for ten
years ; liavo great pain in my back, hips and
side, with groat dificulty in passing trine,
which was often, and in very small quantities,
frequently accompanied with tdood and excm
tiuting pain.
I have faithfully trid most of the popular
remedies recommended for my complaint; I
have been under the treatment of some of the
itiost skillful physicians in Boston, all of whom
pronounced my ease in cm able. This was my
condition when I was advised by a, friend to
try the Veqitine, and I could boo the good
effects from (the ‘Test doss i iobi:, end from
that moment 1 Loot on impro’, ir.r* until I woo
entirely cured, t, bin - all. I elibuM think,
about six bottles.
It is indeed a valuable medicine and if t
should be able Led .i pvu in the „:ime hay, I
would give a dollar a dose, ii 1 could not get
it without.
Respectfully, J, If. GILE.
361 Third Street, South Boston.
NEARLY IYZNI).
If. It. Sirmti ; Dear Oir—la expt easing
wy thanks to you for ben ui'.ug dsiivjd from
the me of Y'S .'nvxri:, eri-I to benof.t others, I
will .-;t.'.to: —
When eight or nine years otd I was afflicted
with Scrofula, which mode its appeaialhS in
ny eyes, face .uni head. an '. f . a v .ry near
blind for two years. All kind, of upper: tion*
were performed on my ei ;•<, a:i * ,-jj A. no good
result, I'inul'y the disc ,e piir.ci; ally settled
in my body, limbo and feet :d ;• t :. ;cs in an
4>fT <u rated v. ay.
Last Bummer T wc#, from same cause, .reak
in uiy .ipitto and ]:.\WyS, ator it ..as ft times
very hard to i„t*in Ihr nih.j. r c-iug y our
advertisement i-i the Ceinrueroi:'.!, . bor.jfhf m
bottle of VEGETiNE, and c*. mute-iced using
according to tlircotioi i. In iv.o ’ five? days
1 obtain.;' g-reat ij.'e', A'te - t r four t>r
11. o bottler l noticed it had .1 .. v,;ei’ , ll aTect
on the ilc.dy blotcLcr, of. > ■ body and
lags. I still r.eci '.'v.ui sttd i i humor
ous sores oni after a-iof.er U : .a] rod until
they were a'l got ;, au.l X attribute the cure of
the two Ji.jeu.jOe tj Y .Vjj...... r ' nothing
e.se.
If lam ever en'eetcd with tnyd.iu., of (ha
kind ogajn X ..hall toy TEatriNU, ..a the ..nly
reliable remedy. Onen.oreacoe’t ir j thanks,
and believe ate to be. Vary m - catfuliy,
AUSTIN I ..rttOTT.
Dec. 1, 1872. No. 35Crane f h, Cinch'..Ohio,
Diseases of the Nldneys, A lad. or, eto., are
always unpleasant, and .at 'inter .ln-y become
the most distressing and dangerous disease*
that can affect the human ,C.etn. 'l2c.A di
seases of the Kidneys aric from Impurities in
the blood, causing humors which ; etile on
these parts. Vkostins c.eoii any known
remedy in the whole world for sleamdag' and
purifying tho blood, thereby causing a health/
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