The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, October 01, 1896, Page 7, Image 7

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    I
Oct. i, 1896
THE NEBR SKA INDEPENDENT.
THE BIG BOND DEALS.
BRYAN'S SCATHING ARRAIGN.
MENT OF CLEVELANDISM.
Tfca Administration That la Now rials
d by Mark Bu ana Cons pane"
Want Another ful Ukt ItPacs-laini
' Taka Hoed. '
Mr. Bryan said to ten thousand peo
ple at Milwaukee:
Since the public officers are elected
to carry out the will of the people, it
is essential that the public should
know two things. First, for what poli
cies does a candidate stand? Second,
will he carry out those policies if elect
ed? While thee may be things
in a platform with which you cannot
agree, and things out of it which you
would like to see in it, it is necessary
that the candidate should believe in
the platform upon which he stands. I
believed in the principles of our plat
form long before it was written in Chi
cago. We have suffered some desertions.
Why? Because the paramount issue of
the money question. It is easy enough
to hold a party together when a plat
form means nothing, but when any
party stands for a great principle, ft
must expect some people who do not
believe in it to leave it.
My friends, this great money question
has been forced upon the people, not
by the advocate of free coinage, but by
the gold standard people. After the
election in 1892, a money combine was
formed for the purpose of repealing the
Sherman law. They did not take the
democratic platform and live up to it,
but they took one sentence which de
clared for the repeal of that law and
demanded its repeal. They said the
law was a make-shift. What 1b a make
shift? Something that will do until
we get something better. The demo
cratic platform declared for the repeal
of the Sherman law and the free and
unlimited coinage of gold and silver.
The money interests combined to re
peal that law and leave nothing in its
"place. They claimed gold was going
abroad. Did they stop it? No. They
started an issue to furnish bonds. They
had $80,000,000 issued, and then had
$50,000,000 more issued, and then en
tered with the Rothschild contract
My friends, while. the administration
entered into this contract, I want to say
that all the leaders of the republican
party were in favor of it
The republican party did not de
nounoe it in their convention. Now, I
want to say that it was the most in
famous contract ever entered into by
any nation. That contract employed
oertaln firms in London and New York
to look after and protect the govern
ment's interest They purchased the
good will of these people. When you
purchase the good will of any person,
it is because you admit you are in his
hands. I am not willing to admit that
the government must purchase the
good will of anybody. I am not willing
to admit that 70,000,000 of people are
permitted to govern themselves by the
aid of any syndicates, but that they
will govern themselves in spite of
them. ,'; ' -"v '.
I am not surprised that the members
that syndicate are opposed to the
mocratic party. I believe that the
mocratic party can get along with
out them. I believe that they ought to
be treated as any other conspirators.
A man said to his sons: "Don't go into
the retail business; go into the whole
sale business. That is respectable."
This applies to you. If a man at
tempts to do the government a small
injury, it is contemptible. If it is a
wholesale injury, it is respectable.
Mr. Bryan then told the story of the
successive bond deals and the plan to
again issue bonds to a private syndi
cate which was defeated, and how,
when the bonds were sold in open mar
ket, the president of that syndicate
paid more for them than he paid at
secret sale. Mr. Bryan continued: .
What does it mean? It means that
the people who would pose as the
guardians of the treasury would rob the
people. This fact did not excite the
indignation of the officials of the gov
ernment, and a short while later the
chairman of that syndicate was present
where an official of the government
was the honored guest at a banquet. If
we believe in equality before the law, we
cannot make any distinction between
the man who takes $500,000 and the
man who takes $100.
Now, they talk of honor of the gov
ernment I believe that the honor of
the government can be better maintain
ed by 70,000,000 of the people than by
' beginning with a handful of financiers.
The republican party does not denounce
the bond syndicate. The democratic
party does.
The Grip of Gold.
- Chicago Special. -Five assignments
were made in the county court today.
They are: The Chicago Iron and Steel
company; Harry M. Hosick, wool mer
chant; Chicago and Western Soap
works; Louis Sibers & Sons; Geo. O.
Bertie.
On ,the 14th inst three other prom
inent failures occurred in Chicago, and
yet the business men in Chicago say
we must preserve our country's honor
and continue for another four years,
the present prosperous era, by electing
McKinley to continue and carry out
Preside at Cleveland's financial policy.
But the people are now thinking for
themselves, and by their ballots in
November will decide they have seen
enough of the prosperous gold standard
era. ' '
' Perennial Lore and Biennial Banco.
If the laboring man was perennially
loved Instead of being biennially bun
coed by the politicians, he might be
hanir-yet. Chicago Dispatch.
THE RAILKOAD MEN.
WANT NO MORE GOVERNMENT
BY INJUNCTION.
Whatever Differences They May Haso
a to Tariff and Flnaaea. . TJhay Are
. Determined ' to Vote Against Injunc
tions A. B. U. l"rocln motion.
National Democratic . and Silver
Headquarters, Chicago, Sept 23, 1896.
With a single exception, the Chicago
"newspapers" did not regard the re
cent proclamation of the American
Railway Union as of sufficient impor
tance to deserve mention. The one ex
ception was the Chicago Record, which
published the address in full, and
thereby demonstrated that it was will
ing to perform the common duty of a
daily newspaper.
Every American workman should
read and study this address. . It makes
no difference whether or not he be
longs to a labor union. In plain, can
did terms it throws a flood of light
upon the attitude now assumed by the
great railroad corporations.
In scores of small cities you will find
a mail car, which once in a while is
used as a "trailer" to a trolley train.
In other Instances a slot Is cut In the
side of an electric car, and it thus be
comes a United States mail car and the
little trolley road becomes a part of
our national postal system. Do you
know why this has been done? Here
is the reason: Whenever the street
car company gets ready to reduce
wages which will be just after Mr.
Mr. McKinley is elected, if such a cal
amity ever happens they can do so
and by a"n Injunction restrain the men
from quitting work. If they quit .work
"they interfere with the United States
malls." Do you -see? This is called
government by injunction. It is an
other name for white slavery.
There is nothing imaginary about
this. It is not something which may
happen. It is something which has
happened and which will happen again
unless the American people put a stop
to it by defeating the men who are
spending millions to elect Mckinley,
with a cry of sound money. If you like
the scheme vote for it Here is the ad
dress issued by the men who were the
first victims of a government by in
junction: Address to Railway Employes.
To Members of the American Railway
Union and all employes in the Unit
ed States:
Greeting: The undersigned, consti
tuting the board of directors of the
American Railway Union, desire to ad
dress you upon a matter of momen
tous import In connection with ' the
great political campaign now in prog
ress. You have no doubt been struck
with the unprecedented activity arid
astounding tactics of railway owners
and managers In this campaign. High
officials are going up and down the
lines addressing employes and warning
them against the frightful conse-
quences of free silver coinage. Round
: houses, depots and shops have been
' temporarily changed into political
J wigwams. "Sound money" clubs have
Been organizea ana employes intim
idated to join them. Circulars and
campaign documents are being deliv
ered to employes with their wages, and
in many instances employes are given
plainly to understand that their con
tinuance in service depends upon'their
supporting the gold standard candi
dates. In this proceeding, the money
question only is permitted to be dis
cussed, and only one side of that.
Now, what of all this? The rail
road managers are overwhelming em
ployes with predictions dt frightful dis
aster which will follow in the wake
of free coinage. Wages will be cut in
two, they say, thousands will be
thrown out of employment, and the
country ruined. This one issue is forced
; upon employes to the exclusion of all
others. Their minds are not to be di
verted from the free silver calamity
a single instant. It is to command
their united, ceaseless and terrified
gaze to the very election booth, so that
by no possibility may the discovery
be made that "sound money" is only
a pretext for deceiving and hoodwink
ing employes, and that railroad man
agers have a totally different motive
for transforming the corporations they
represent intoMiuge Republican ma
chines in this campaign.
The money question has been in
American politics in all its various
forms since the foundation of the gov
ernment. When have railroad corpora
tions organized, drilled and openly
commanded their employes to vote the
company's ticket? Never before to an
extent that would even remotely com
pare with their brazen activity in this
campaign. Employes have yielded up
everything, and now they are to be
stripped of their votes and deprived of
their last means of protection against
oppression and. in justice.
And now, we ask, why thl3 unheard
of activity on the part of railroad man
agers for Bryan's defeat and McKin
ley's election? How is it to, be ac
counted for? We appeal to railroad em
ployes to pause and think. The like of
the present situation has never been
witnessed. The country Btand3 amazed
in the presence of such bold, bald and
shameless intimidation. Again, we ask;
what does it mean? What can be its
significance? Why Such ceaseless,
stupendous and desperate efforts to
eontrol an election? Is it on account of
free coinage? No! The. absurdity of
the position is evident upon the very
face of it. That railroad companies
have some interest in the money ques
tion is conceded, but" that they would
turn earth, heaven and hell on that ac
count, to prevent an injury to the
poor employes," Is not only ridiculous,
; but an nault to every employe of com
j mon Intelligence who Is not wholly the
property of, the company.
They have been cutting the wages of 1
their employes by all the means In-i
genuity could suggest and if they be
lieved free silver would "cut in two"
the wages they are now receiving, we
know of nothing in their past record
that would warrant the assumption
that they would oppose free coinage. .
Oh, no; it is not free silver that has
unloosened and enraged this railroad
Moloch. Then, what Is It? Here Is the
answer: The attack in the democratic
platform on government by injunction.
Here is the milk in the cocoanut For
years, railway managers have been
wrestling with the problem of cutting
wages and controlling their employes
generally. But the employes were
more or less organized. "There was
more or less friction, and sometimes
strikes occurred, and these were em
barrassing and expensive. The dread
of a strike restrained the managers
and kept them within uncomfortable
bounds. Something must be done to
overcome these organizations and re
duce employes to submission.
Experimenting began in various di
rections. Finally the right lead was
struck. The federal court would Bolve
the problem. The strike of the en
gineers and firemen on the Toledo, Ann
Arbor and North Michigan was
paralyzed by a federal court Injunc
tion. Other disturbances followed and
were settled in like fashion, until
Judge Jenkins actually restrained the
employes of the Northern Pacific from
quitting the service of the company,
because of a reduction of wages, under
penalty of being adjudged guilty of
contempt of court and committed to
Jail. The railway companies exclaimed
in one voice "Eureka!" The problem
of problems was solved. Hereafter
they might reduce wages, treat em
ployes as they saw fit and they would
have to 4 submit Government by in
junction was now established, and the
managers were supreme,whlle the em
ployes were helpless. How perfectly the
scheme worked, the great Pullman
strike bore haggard testimony. The
federal courts, the federal soldiers, the
deputy marshals, In fact, all the tre
mendous powers of the government,
were promptly brought into requisition
to crush the employes, and it was all
done by the application of government
by injunction. ;There has been sweep
ing reductions of wages since, amount
ing to millions, but there has been no
protest There Is not likely to be any
protest while government by injunction
continues. Unconditional submission 18
the order of the day. Even arbitra
tion is denied, and, in fact, has been
made Impossible. Railroad managers
have things absolutely their own way,
Should employes quit work in a body,
injunctions would probably, be issued
and they would be sent to Jail
without trial. Employes know this,
and however galling the yoke, they
submit They can do nothing else.
Managers are no longer annoyed with
committees. Agreements have been ar
bitrarily abrogated and men reduced to
slavish conditions. -
The election of McKinley means the
perpetuation of government by injunc
tion, the supremacy of corporations,
and the helpless, hopeless subjection of
employes. It will not be confined to
railroad corporations In its enslaving
operations. All other corporations,
trusts and combines will claim its ben
eficent protection, and therefore i all
workingmen, especially those who are
organized, are profoundly concerned in
this issue. '
American railroads consist largely of
British gold and American labor. Gov
ernment by injunction crowns the I
former king, and makes the latter his
subject.
The platform upon which William J.
Bryan stands is pledged to aboli3h this
despotic usurpation of judicial power,
and restore to railway employes their
lawful rights to resist reduction and
Injustice by the lawful means provid- j
ed by their organizations.
The railway corporations are united
and have massed all their tremen
dous powers to crush him. This in it
self is indisputable proof that he is the
friend of the workingmen. In saying
this, the genuine keynote of the rail
road campaign has been struck. It
startles like alarm bells at night.
There is no mistaking the issue. Its
gravity cannot be overestimated. It
Involves the very existence of organ
ized labor, the bulwark and defense of
workingmen against corporate tyran
ny, which, if swept away leaves them
Shorn of every vestige of power, and
totally at the mercy of corporate capi
tal. , '
The one federal Judge who has
proven himself to be immeasurably
above the corrupting influences of cor
porations, who has earned the confi
dence and gratitude of all railway em
ployes for his unyielding defense of
their rights, upon whose fair name
there Is no scar or blemish, Henry C.
Caldwell, has declared that the nom
ination of William J. ' Bryan is the
greatest since Lincoln. We heartily
concur in the declaration of this hon
est, fearless and distinguished jurist
In view of all these facts facts of
tremendous Import which cannot be
successfully controverted we pledge
our united and unwavering support to
William J. Bryan for president, and
appeal to railway employes , and all
workingmen to Join with us In rebuk
ing corporate tyranny which attempts
to wrest the sacred right of suffrage
from employes, In abolishing govern
ment by injunction and in securing
and maintaining every right of citi
zenship vouchsafed by the constitu
tion of our country.
EUGENE V. DEBS,
JAMES HOG AN,
SYLVESTER KELIHER,
R. M. GOODWIN,
M. J. ELLIOTT,
WILLIAM E. BURNS,
Board of Directors American Rail
way Union.
HUETSTHE CHURCHES
EMBARRASSMENT OP THE WORK
UNDER GOLD STANDARD.
Ro. Dr. A. J. Kynatt of Philadelphia
Who Has Charge or tha Methodist
Church Extsnaloa Fund, Baa Been
Seriously Crippled by Disuse of Silver.
Advocates of the gold standard, In
their attempts to array the church on
their side Qf the financial issue, are
promptly met by the managers of
church enterprises themselves in refu
tation of their claims as to how church
work would be disastrously affected by
the free coinage of silver. We take
pleasure in reproducing in this con
nection the following article from the
Rev. Dr. A. J. Kynett, of Philadelphia,
who has charge of the Church Exten
sion 'work of the Methodist church
throughout the country. The article
Is taken from Christianity In Earnest,
which is published by the church for
the special purpose of aiding the
work of church extension.
"Churches Affected by Silver Their
extension work seriously interfered
with." In a heated political campaign
all parties gather all sorts of argu
ments In support of their views. This
is well for an "educational campaign,"
as intelligent people will be thereby as
sisted to right conclusions. This re
quires, however, that when anything
unauthorized or false appears it should
be promptly challenged.
An article, under the above heading,
drawing .the churches in for partisan
uses has been going the rounds of the
papers. We now find it quoted, with
Implied approval, in Zlon's Herald, of
Aug. 26, from the New York Sun of
Aug. 22. It Is too long to quote, but we
feel called upon to refer to certain
passages in it It says:
"The Methodists have about $1,000,
000 which Is used for church extension
throughout the country, under the di
rection of Rev. A. J. Kynett, of Phila
delphia. This money is loaned on
mortgages on church edifices, through
out the country, at a low rate of inter
est Much of this money is loaned in
the west and the struggling new
churches have, through the hard times
which have followed the agitation for
free silver, in many instances, been
unable to meet their mortgage obliga
tions. The result has been that the
work of the church extension has been
greatly hindered, and the mission fund
will have to remain idle to tide the new
churches over this distressing period.
The churchmen have not been at a loss
to place the blame for this condition of
affairs where it belongs, on the free sli
ver agitators. t O course the
proposition to pay one-hundred-cent
debts with fifty-three- cent dollars is a
moral question which might well
arouse the religious element of the na
tion In opposition." -
Similar statements are made as to
the church edifice fund of the Baptist
Home Mission society; also the Presby
terian Board of Missions. The Impres
sion sought to be made is that the free
silver agitators are, by these church
men, held responsible for the embar
rassed conditions referred to.
Those in charge of the church funds
can answer for themselves, or allow
the statements to pass unchallenged.
On questions of fact, as related to
Methodist church extension, I speak of
ficially. In matters of opinion, on
which persons composing the manage
ment may differ, I speak only for my
self. , -
On questions of fact I have to pay
that our treasurer's reports for years
past indicate no great change in the
condition of churches borrowing, un
til within the last four years, and, with
the exception of that period, the diffi
culty alluded to has been of gradual
growth. There Is no' greater acuteness
of the trouble perceptible as a result
of "free silver agitation." The interest
received on loans was greater in 1895
than in 1894 and the same is true of
the amount of loans returned, and the
present indications render it probable
that the receipts of loans returned and
of interest during 1896 will be about
equal to those of 1895, and in excess of
those of 1894. I find, in the facts shown
by the treasurer's report, absolutely
no justification for the statement that
"the blame for this condition of things
belongs with the free silver agitators."
Now, as to questions of opinion, I
speak solely for myself. The difficulty
with our Methodist churches, including
those indebted to us for loans, that !mo
resulted In the serious embarrassment
of missionary, Church Extension and
other benevolent work, arises out of
the great reduction that has taken
place within the last twenty years in
the value of farm lands, and farm
products and the paralysis of manu
facturing and mining industries
throughout the country. Churches in
debted to our loan fund are chiefly in
farming, manufacturing and min'.ng
communities, and of course suffer In
their ability to pay debts or make
benevolent contributions. Whatever
may have been the cause of this great
reduction it has been coincident with
the disuse of silver and the establish
ment of a single gold standard. This
general condition Is, at the same time,
the cause of our embarrassments, and
f the free silver agitation. It is an
outrageous and cruel wrong to accuse
directly or by implication, the great
body of the people thus embarrassed
and seeking relief, with dishonesty, or
with a disposition to repudiate any ob
ligation, personal, corporate, or of the
state or nation. To demand payment of
old obligations in money of a new and
higher standard of value is worse than'
Shylock, for it Is not- "so nominated
In the bond." These debts are all pay
able la "coin" or in "lawful money of
the United States," and the creditor
has no right to demand payment 1
gold. When, in 1893, we were can-
strained to borrow $50,000 to tend
distressed churches, five out of ix of
the money lending corporations to
which we first applied wanted obliga
tions payable in coin. We simply an
ewered, "Gertlemen, lawful money ol
the United States is good enough foi
us, and ought to be for you. We will
give no gold coin obligations." Such
we have never asked, and never will.
"To coin money and regulate its
value" is the constitutional right of the
American people, by them vested in!
congress, and should not be invaded by
private contracts or otherwise.
On questions of policy, or the best
possible relief from existing conditions,
we think and let think. We make no
partisan plea. Our plea is for charity,
thoroughness, honesty and courage.
Neither partisan clamor, nor abusive
epithet, nor self-assumed and self-as
serted honesty, soundness, or anything
of the kind, should weigh a feather
with intelligent and patriotic Ameri
can citizens. The partisan slogan
"sound money," "honest dollars" Is a
bald begging of the question and an of
fense of millions of men as honest as
the sun ever shone on. The intensity
of factional and partisan spirit is true-
ly a revelation of the magnitude of the
issue and of the Interests involved.
The terms and history of the promise
to pay must have due recognition. If
the creditor, after the relation is es
tablished, requires control of gold bul
lion he has no right to ask that coinage
be limited to gold. If the debtor ac
quires control of silver he has no right
to demand free coinage of silver than
existed when his debt was incurred.
The law of immutable righteousness,
therefore, requires that the govern
ment, under which the relation of debt
or and creditor exists, shall "coin
money and regulate its value."
Money so coined and regulated, wheth
er gold or silver or both, Is "sound"
and "honest money" and neither debtor
nor creditor can Justly complain of a
law which makeB it legal tender for
debts. ' "
So far as the administration of our
church extension work is concerned we
shall do our best, under the unavoid
able difficulties, and will give those in
debted to our loan fund the best pos
sible opportunity to meet their obliga
tions. We will most gladly receive In
full payment of principal and Interest
the so-called "flfty-three-cent dollars,"
or any other lawful money of the Unit
ed States. A. J. KYNETT.
HELPING THE CAUSE.
New fork Journal Receiving; Funds for
the Democratic National Committee.
From, the New York Journal: The
Republican National Campaign Com
mittee is a very active organization.
Having no particular substance on
which to rest its political faith this
year, and no candidate of any import
ance to make a noise about it must be
stir itself otherwise.
As one means of attracting attention
it rushes madly into print Any per
son with a political theory not neces
sarily a logical or even a novel one
that seems to bolster up the decadent
gold standard fallacy has only to com
municate it to the campaign bureau
and dicker for a price. The bureau at
tends to the printing of it and sees that
it gets circulated. Thus is the nation
flooded with various appeals to the
ignorant more or less plausible or
nakedly absurd. And, not content with
appealing to the ignorant, this active
organization lays Itself out to ensnare
various c! iss interests and enlist the
sympath'- of the several foreign ele
ments. To this end pamphlets are be
ing printed In French, German, Italian,
and even in Hebrew. That such a
method of conducting a campaign Is
unworthy of a great party and degrad
ing to our Institutions does not deter
these employers of it- All this per
nicious activity must be counteracted
with the force of clear facts set before
the people in a candid manner. And
every contribution to the Journal's edu
cation fund will do something in that
direction.
P. S. The Journal is receiving funds
in sums of from 10 cents up. : The to
tal receipts are added up daily, the
amount Is sent to Senator James K.
Jones, chairman, Chicago, with an ad
ditional check from W. R. Hearst pub
lisher of the Journal, duplicating the
amount subscribed. Thus every per
son sending $1 makes it possible for the
national committee to realize $2. No
matter how small the amount, it is du
plicated by Mr. Hearst !L
The Rotten Undemocratic Administration
The administration will doubtless be
able to stave off another bond issue
until after the election, and then Mr.
Cleveland's financial friends wHl en
joy their last pick-up In that line. In
case the country should vote to con
tinue the bond Issuing policy Mr.
Hanna would superintend the work of
forming the syndicates and apportion
ing the desired things.
Not Afraid of Bryan.
The business firms which are bidding
for the new battle ships are not In the
least alarmed over the fifty-three cent
dollar cry. They have implicit confi
dence In the ability of the govern
ment to discharge its legitimate obli
gations, and well understand that
when the United States is back of a
dollar it Is worth a hundred cents.
That's What It Did.
It can hardly be said that Mr. Cleve
land has bolted from the Democratic
party. The party bolted from him.
New York Recorder.
They Will Bear Him.
Mr. Bryan talks because about 50,000
persons a day insist upon It Memphis
Commercial-Appeal.
Wanted An Acnt
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Work Guarantee! Pri::s
SULPHO-SALINE
Bath House and Sanitariun
Coraer 14th 4k lists.,
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA.
Open at All Hours Day and Ni-Ll
All Forms of Baths.
forkish, Russian, Ron, El::!r!
I
With S pedal attention to the application at
RATURAL SALT WATER BATHS.
vera! tlm9 stronger than ssft water.
Rheumatism. Kktn, Biod snd Nerraas Dls
asas. LlTer and Kidney TroSMes and Ckroale
Ulments are treated aecesatalir.
(gSea Bathing)
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Drop Us o Gr.iL
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l.n.SJUt, J Ur-i rjji Hfc.
uv He enlnved at all seasons la our lam SALT '
IW'lMMlriU POOL, 60x14 ttet, t to 1 test deep, I
tested to anlfora temperature of U degress. j
Drs. M. H. St J. O. Everett, I
Manaslac Pajsldana, !
TO THE
TCI A fFh!
Cbicago,Rock island
. . a.
Pacific Railway.
The Rock Island In foremost In adopting spy
plan calculated to Improve spwd and Rire that
'imirr, safety nnd comfort thit Uih popular
imironaKe demands, lto equipment in tboronghV V
ly complete with Vestilmled Trains. V-
BEST DINING, CAH SERVICE IN THE
' WORLD.
I'ullmnn Sleepers, Chair Cars, all tlie most e!e
gantandof recently Improved pattern)!. '
Its specialties aie '
FAST TIME, ' .
COURTEOUS EMPLOYES,
FIRST-CLASS EQUIPS!" ,
and flrst-clant SERVICE 1
given Vj
For full piirtlcnlais as o TIcsete.MHps, llij! V j
ipply to any coupon ticket airent in the Uiis )
States, Canada or Mexico, or addreus , if
JOHN SEBASTIAN, G.P.A ;
Chic?
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to