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THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON, DAWES-MDONALD | FARM PRODUCTION TALK GRIPS PRESS LEADS POPULATION .. € JUNE 16, 1929—PART 1. the eapita 1th bridges, the Prince f:fi:fim:?fi?-mfi'm”m Emud S|Gns To BE PLACED I missioners have or¢ t: te is lower. In Stat: | s to be placed on Shore the per oupite. wealwn 1 smaller ON COUNTY BRIDGES | wficn'neca “posting.” t the average the birth rate is high- i 1l, county clerk, has | well, inounced. This, Dr. Baker remarks, suggesis ‘The bridges will have the ton-limit of that our tion may cease growing | To-Limit of Carrying Capacity t0 tnejr carrying capacity piaced on the long_before The { igns. tion was taken after one reached. limits of subsistence are | Be Bet Forth as Sateguard | IF%, il “county bridges coliapsed F to Traffle. PIESES. | under a heavy truck. France is utilizing 2,000,000 of ft« | Special Dispatch to The Btar. P 7,500,000 kilowatts of available electri-| UPPER MARLBORO, Md., June 15.— _ French coal mines are maintaining a Acting to safeguard traffic over coun high level of production. UPHOLD AND ASSAIL FARM PROGRAM PTANANDALLE DEBATE FARM PLIN Kansan Lauds Program of Administration—Nevadan Assails It. ____(Continued From First Page) that the debenture clause finally was stricken out. Nobody doubted its ulti- mate defeat, he said, for the reason that members of Congress opposing the President's announced views would not take the responsibllity of going to the eountry with a refusal to concur in an effort to solve the farm blem. He remarked that once the Senate forced the House to go on record with an ex- pression on the debenture plan that body voted against it “with surprising alacrity.” “It is astonishing,” he said, referring to members of the Senate as well as the House, “that men will denounce » measure up to the very moment of the vote and then vote for jt.” * Teslize,” he added, “that the statement casts reflection on a man who gets himself in a parliamentary box.” Pittman’s Explangtion. Senator Pittman's explanation of the final vote in the Senate, which disclosed only eight of all who had fought for the debenture plan voting for the bill without it, was as follows: “In the face of the active and bitter opposition of the President to the de- benture plan, and in view of the con- duct of the House of Representatives, further effort upon the part of the friends of the farmers seemed hopeless and futile, so some of these Senators surrendered their convictions and voted to pass the administration bill in the hope that experience will convince the administration of their error where pledges, reason and logic have failed.” Senator Pittman contended that ad quate discussion of the debenture plan was had before the Scnate agriculture committee incorporated it in its bill. The discussion, he said, incorporated testimony before a subcommittee of Agriculture _ Department experts to whom the President had referred the subject. He cited Senator Borah's a vocacy of the debenture plan, describ- ing Borah as one of the responsible spokesmen for Mr. Hoover during the presidential campaign. Allen Held It ‘Stranger.” Senator Allen’s view was that injec- tion of the debenture plan by the Senate was “surprising.” Agreeing that the plan had been di d in an ear- lier period, he held that the public was “an entire stranger to debenture.” In view of pledges made during the cam- ign, he asserted, the people were g:und to_hold that Congress would fol- Jow the President more closely perhaps than at other times because of the primary emergency of the agricultural situation. Senator Pittman prepared his address in advance of delivery, but Senator Allen spoke extemporaneously, not hav- ing had an opportunity to put his views of in writing for the broadcast. Senator Pittman spoke as follows: Ladies and gentlemen of the radio audience: Through the kind invitation of The Star National Radio Forum, I have the honor and privilege to address you with regard to the reasons for and the ac- complishments of the present special session of Congress. Let us first ascertain the reasons which impelled the President to call the special and extraordinary session of Congress. 1In the first sentence of his message to Congress he said: “I have called this special session of Congress to redeem two pledges given in the last election—farm relief and lim- ited changes in the tariff.” ‘The pledges referred to in the Presi- dent’s message were those made by him and by his authorized spokesmen during the last campaign, in the Republican platform Repul tha blican party pledges stself to the development and enactment | that matter. of measures which shall place the agri- cultural interests of America on a basis of economic equality with the industries to insure its prosperity and success.” The limited changes in the tariff evi- dently referred to changes that would tend to reduce the price of things the farmer must buy and increase the price of the products that he sells. That tariff revision alone could not fully accom- plish such purpose was confessed by the adoption of the program in the Repub- lican platform for farm relief and in the speeches delivered by the Repub- lean candidate to the voters of the country. Progress Is Reviewed. The necessity for a general revision | of the tariff schedules or the raising of | the tariff rates upon the products of meanufacturing industries was not inti- mated in the Republican platform. ‘What has been accomplished so far by the special session of Congress in the redemption of such pledges? Upon the convening of Congress substantially identical administration farm relief bills were introduced in the Senate and in the House of Representatives and referred to the committee on agricul- ture in each body. The Senate com- mittee immediately proceeded with the consideration and study of the proposed legisiation. Twelve hearings were held and sixty-six witnesses wére heard. The so-called optional debenture plan was proposed in committee as an addition o the bill by way of amendment, 50 that it might be utilized by the Presi- dent’s farm board at its option, in the event that the permanent plan es- tablished in the bill should prove in- effective as to some particular crop. Such debenture plan was fully discussed and considered at such hearings. The committee favored the adoption of such debenture amendment. Before action ‘was taken, however, a subcommittee, eppointed by the committee, called upon tgp President to ascertain his views with regard to such debenture amend- ment. The subcommittee was advised by the President—so0 it was asserted in the Senate—that he had substantially at that particular moment no opinion upon the subject, but referred the sub. committee and the committee on agri- culture to the experts of the Agriculture Department. ‘Thercafter the committee on agricul- emre called before it the experts of the Agriculture Department and listened to their testimony. The hearings being closed, the committee voted unanimously to adopt the debenture amendment to the bill, and then, by unanimous vote, reported favorably to the Senate the bill, including the debenture amend- ment. Senate Adopied Debenture. The Senate by an aye and mno vote adopted the debenture endment to the bill, and then by an aye and no vote passed the bill as so amended. The chairman of the committee, on the floor of the Senate, after the adoption of the debenture amendment and the passage of the bill by the Senate, stated that he and three other members of the com- mittee, in executive meeting of the committee, had reserved the right to change thelr minds to vote in the Sen- ate against the debenture amendment if they so desired. b’le'he committee is composed of 18 members. The bill as amended was then placed in conference between the two Houses 10 see if an agreement could be reached. The representatives of both bodies on the conference lgreed upon the elimi- mnation of the debenture amendment and upon the House bill substantially as is was introduced. The Senate, on the 11th day of June, by an aye and no vote, refused to con- cur in such conference report and re- fused to pass the bill without the debenture amendment. The House of Representatives on June ) &3, by an aye and no vote of 250 to 113, *:lmrfl that they would not agree that - debenture plan should bs insluded & the bill #s an amendment Senator Allen of Kansas (right). Senator Pitiman of Nevada (left), who their pledges to the farmers. was signed yesterday, in an address in Th ‘who upheld the farm relief bill which tar Radio Forum last night, and | charged the Republicans have violated Star Staff Photo. overwhelming vote was to be expected. The States whose chief industry is agriculture have a smail representation in the House. A large element in that body coming from the manufacturing centers are opposed to any farm relief. while a still larger element is subservient to the party whip. The Senate finally on Friday, the 14th of June, passed the administration’s farm marketing bill without the deben- ture plan amendment and substantially was introduced in the House. In the face of the active and bitter opposition of the President o the deben- ture plan, and in view of the conduct of the House of Representatives, further effort upon the part of the friends of the farmers seemed hopeless and futile, 50 some of these Senators surrendered their convictions and voted to pass the administration bill in the hope that ex- | perience will convince the administra- | tion of their error where pledges, rea- son and logic have failed. Borah Is Quoted. And what is the bill and what has been accomplished by its ge? Does it constitute a redemption of the pledges made by and on behalf of the Re- publican party? Let us consult the opinion of Senator Borah for an answer to these questions. No one can question that he is a friend of the farmer and that he was the most effective supporter the President during the last cam- paign. He took part in the drafting of the farm plank in the Republican plat- form. He understood and he explained its meaning to the farmers of the coun- try and won their confidence and their support for the Republican ticket. In his speech in the ‘Senate on June 10, he said, “We think we will be able to | show that the debenture is one of the | indispensable steps to placing the farm- er upon an economic equality with the other industries so long as other in- dustries are enjoying the protection which we give them through the tariff.” And further on he declared, “I repeat, as I said in the beginning, the real con- test in this fight is whether the farmer is to be brought within the purview of the protective tariff 'm. If he is quate duties, then he is outside the s and the promises|fem, its victim and not its beneficia; In reply to Senator Allen, he said, do not agree with the Senator upon I maintain that if the debenture plan is essential to placing the farmer upon an economic equality with other industries which enjoy the protective tariff, then our failure to do it would be a profound violation of the pledge we made.” In those words he reasserted the position that was main- tained by all of the advocates of the debenture amendment. Senator Johnson, in his speech in the Senate on June 11, in opposition to the administration bill in the form that it afterward passed the Senate, said: “You may take it that in the days gone by, when the Jardine bill was presented tc the committee on agriculture—and it is the bill that is presented to us today, minus the debenture provision—that bill was repudiated by the committees on agriculture of both houses of the Con- gress, by the Republican party, and by the entire Congress.” Thus spoke Senator Johnson, who ran with Roosevelt, House Passes New Bill. Not an advocate of such bill denied such charge. Similar assertions have been made on the floor of the Senate and no denial was ever recorded. ‘The House of Representatives has passed an entire new tariff bill revising upward hundreds of schedules, What do the Republican Senators, who voted for the debenture and who are the proven friends of the farmers, have to say with regard to this tariff act? I agein quote from Senator Borah's speech. A colloquy took place between the Senator and Senator Edge. Senator Edge asserted that the new {ariff act to a very decided extent increased the tariff upon practically all agricultural products. Senator Borah replied: “Does the Senator contend that the tariff bill just passed by the House would afford protection to American agriculture?” To which Senator Edge responded: “The Representatives of the agricultural States, members of the Senate in 1922, practically wrote the schedule for agri- culture that appeared in that bill.” To this last statement Senator Borah re- plied: “I do not know anything about that; but if the representatives of agri- culture wrote the bill which just passed the House, my conception of protection of American agriculture and theirs 'are widely different. Continuing, Mr. Borah said: “Mr. President, it is not enough that they put duties upon the agricul- tural products; the important point is the protection which they give to agri- culture compared with the protection which they give industries, * * * He (the farmer) is not willing, in order to get those protective duties, to have em- bargoes placed upon manufactured products.” Thus spoke Borah, the ‘“I’i'ud advocate of the protective tariff policy. It is clear. in the opinion of the ad- vocates of the debenture plan in both parties, that nothing beneficial has been accomplished so far during the special session, and that the Republican ad- ministration has violated its pledges to the farmers of the country, in which opinion I respectfully concur, s o INVENTOR OF ARC LIGHT DIES AT CLEVELAND HOME | e DT Charles Francis Brush, Outstanding Figure of Science, Expires at Age of 80. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, June 15.—Charles Francis Brush, 80, inventor of the arc light and outstanding figure as a sclent- ist, humanitarian and philanthropist, died at his home here tonight, A coraplication of bronchitis, which weeks ago and advanced age, was the cause of death. The elderly scientist was unconscious for the last two hours. Mrs. Dr. Roger G. Perkins, his daugh- ter, and Dr. Perkins, her hushand, were with i, £3 theviihad hoen almost con- This sontiy for many dave. in the original form in which the bill | denied a debenture, if is denied ade- iny went into pneumonia less than two |too ROBBED OF 800 BY COLORED PAR 4 1-2 Street Grocer, Sol Snider, Held Up on ¥ Way Home. S 8ol Snider of 418 Oglethorpe street reported-to police last night that he was | held up at the point of a pistol by two unidentified colored men and robbed of nearly $800 in cash. The money repre- sented the day's receipts from a grocery store which he conducted at 229 Four- and-a-half street southwest. He was on his way home when the robbery oc- curred. Snider said that he was driving his automobile and at the intersection of Eighth and Taylor streets another ma- chine in which the two colored bandits were riding drew alongside of his car and forced him to the curb. The men then got out and one of them held him up at the point of a pistol while the other rifled his pockets. Snider furnished police with & de- scription of the men and Headquarters Detectives Howard Ogle and Charles | Weber were assigned to the case. | PROFESSOR ADMITS ' POSING AS HUSBAND OF MURDERED CO-ED| tives discovered that in_ spite of the warmness of the day, s fire was burn- The knife and lyzed for possible At the same time, police privately were questioning the veterinary profes- sor a second time. Dr. Snook and Marion T. Myers, graduate student at the University do- ing corn borer research work, were ques- tioned in the death this afternoon and taken back to their cells for further questioning. Miss Hix's battered body was found on a rifle range near here yesterday. Dr. Snook, former holder of the world record for pistol shooting, was taken into custody at the rifie range. Myers was arrested at a fraternity house after he had called at the undertaking es- tablishment, where the girl’s body lay, and had talked to coroner James Murphy. ‘The girl's friends had told police she recently had been in company with 2 man of Myers' general description, Fraternity Brothers Back Myers. Fraternity brothers of Myers veri- fled his statement that he had been at their fraternity house all night Thurs- day except for & brief time to mail some letters. He denled having frequently | seen Miss Hix recently and added that a warm friendship with her had cooled two years ago, ; Dr. Snook was practicing at the rifie range when arrested. He had s bandage on his left hand and told po- lice he had been hurt while repairing his automobile, His story was that he had been in his office Thursday evening between 7 and 8 o'clock, the approximate time Miss Hix had gone to the university hospital to make arrangements for Summer work at a telephone switch- board to help her through medical school, Before she left she said she had to keep a date and would be back at 9 o'clock, according to Miss Bertha Dil- lon, the girl she was to succeed. That was the last Miss Hix was seen until her body was found. The girl's head bore marks of what are believed to have been blows from & ball-headed hammer and cuts from some sharp weapon, Myers denied he had had frequent appointments with Miss Hix recently, and told police that s formerly warm friendship between him and the girl had cooled about two years ago. Where the girl went after she left the nospital was the chief point of the | investigation. { Dr. Snook told police he had known Miss Hix several years and that at one time she had been a student in one of his classes at the university. He ad- mitted that he had taken her for an automobile ride several days ago. Ex- plaining that he had been negotiating with her to type a book he was writing on veterinary medicine. Miss Hix was & second-year medical student_at the university. was in Bradentown, Fla. Her body was held tonight at an undertaking estab- lishment here pending arrival of her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Melvin Hix of | Bradentown. SRR NESPRIR" CUT VANDERBILT STATE EARNINGS TO 3280,000‘ By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 15.—Surrogate Foley today instructed the executors and trustees of the estate of Cornelius Vanderbilt to reduce the gross earnings of the estate to $280,000. ‘Trustees and executors of the Al- fred G. Vanderbilt estate, residuary legatee, recently had contended that the trust fund was unnecessarily large and asked that the surplus securities be transferred to them. ‘The capital of the fund is $664,703 , Surrogate Foley ruled. and ordered securities in that amount transferred to the Alfred G. Vanderbilt estate. Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt receives an annual payment of $250,000 f the fund and the extra $30,000 ol- {lawed as 2 “margin of safelg.” British Newspapers Devote Editorial Columns to Wish- ing for Great Success. By the Associated Press LONDON, June newspapers of the British capital devote columns of news and editorials to the coming of United States Ambassador Dawes and to his projected meeting with the Prime Minister. ‘This is generally described as a momentous move toward ‘world peace and apparently few events in recent years have so stirred the im- agination of the writers and public. Ambassador Dawes himself is given & hearty welcome to his new post and the purport of most editorials is timat the hearts of the British people go with him to his conference in Forres. Worid Peace Move Is Seen. ‘The Sunday dispatch, speaking of the meeting between Gen. Dawes and Mr. MacDonald, says: “On the success of the joint work that les before them the best interests of two continents depends. The times are propitious. Good will | between the British and American peoples, which ever since the war has Tun strongly beneath eddies of occas- ional superficial differences, is today | more vigorous and active than ever. “There is no lack of scope for defl- nite achievement. The chief problem to be under immediate discussion at ‘Porm, that do! dll’n':nnenl. cries out for wise and resolute handling. We hoi:e;h-t no more opportunities will be ‘The observer says: “Above all, we have seized the chance of wishing the | Ambassador well in the great work to which he is at once setting hix hand Much turns on his first talk with the prime minister. 1Its success will pre- pare the way for a meeting in Washing- ton memorable in the devel ent of empire and in organization of a world order. These are strong words fit for tremendous issues. We believe that a new landmark in history can be set up of the council of three. The mother country and the Dominion (of Canada) co-operating side by side with the Re public can give the world a peace and :m security which it has never before » “Comes at Critical Hour.” ‘The Sunday Times declares: “The arrival of the new American Ambassa- dor on Priday was & momentous occa- sion,” He comes at a critical, but pro- pitidus, hour in the relatios between the two countries.” Discussing the dix- armament problem, the Times says there must be “mutual appreciation of the particuiar needs and circumstances of each nation and of the desire by the other to respect them. If these prin- ciples are observed, the next few months, ‘which will be critica! in world history, may see such work for peace as the world has not vet known.” The Express says: “Gen. Dawes will today, at & meeting which will make the almost unknown Scottish town of Forres historie, invite Mr. MacDonald to a tri- partite conference with the President of the United States and the Prime Min- ister of Canada. This meeting should lead world peace, provided the war ;x?er are not allowed to interfere un- iy HOSPITALS SEEK RELIEF FROM CAR CRASH BURDEN Need of Remedy for Abnormal Charity Work Involved in ‘Wreeks Is Cited. By the Associated Press. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.. June 15.— ‘The need of a remedy for the abnormal charity burden forced upon hospitals in admitling and caring for automobile accident patients was presented before the Protestant Episcopal Association to- day in convention here, by J. B. Frank- lin, superintendent of the Georgia Bap- tist Hospital, Atlanta, Ga. Stating that hospitals generally, throughout the United Btates, are chaf- ing under the burden placed upon them of service without pay to so many vic- tims of aceidents, he suggested that the automobile industry in some way share the burden, as industries do, b of their workmen's compensation law and that there be engineering improve- ments of roadways, elimination of rail- road grade crossings and compulsory drivers’ examinations in every stage. Michigan's idea of using the license fees to defray the expense of accidents, ho believed to. be an approach to the solution of the problem. TWO DROWNED IN SPITE OF EFFORTS OF GIRL, 13 Goes to Rescue of Boy Scout and Master Who Ventured Too Far From Shore, By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 15.-+A 9-year-old Boy Scout and his scoutmaster were drowned at Rockaway Beach today de- spite the efforts of a 13-year-old girl, who was almost drowned herself. Leon Spitzer had ventured too far out, and in answer to his cries for_heip Joseph Sanbafer, 32, swam ‘to his side and began to pull him toward shore, San- bafer, however, was forced to cry for aid, and Pauling Kahn, residing in a nearby bungalow, swam out to help the two, She became exhausted attempt- ing to tow the boy ashore and called for help herself. Life savers rescued h!l’.k but the boy and Sanbafer both sank. . A Little Look, This label on a can of “Murco” Lifelong Paint . .. or on any paint product sold here is a Seal of Quality . .. as a Trade Mark. 1t Insures Satisfaction to paint buyers . . . it is the perienced in the making and marketing of paints notable for beauty and durability. this Summer. N Murphil Co.. Inc. 710 12th St. N.W. 15.—The Sunday Rapid Growth Lessens Need it | for Expansion of Area, Economists Say. | Parm production in the United States | has increased 50 per cent more rapidly | than population since the World War. | ‘This increase has been more rapid than || at any time since 1800, and probabiy | since 1890. Moreover, it has been a« complished despite a' decrease in the | number of farms and in farm popula tion, & decrease in the number of farm animals and a slight decrease in croj acreage. Data for 1927 and 1928 Indi- | cate production is atiil increasing at s || | rate more rapid than the increase in | | population. These facts, together with | | evidence that population growth is slowing up, are cited by Dr. O. E. Baker, economist in the United States Depart- | ment of Agriculture, in support of his | | belief that the welfare of agriculture | | necessitates careful consideration of || any proposals involving an increase in | crop acreage. " | | /It should not be necessary, he be- || | Heves, to expand the net farm area of the Nation during the next decade Nearly all the requisite increase in our crop acreage.” he says, “could be ob- tained by cultivating land now idle in | farms. In addition to this idle land. | our farms contain more than 100,000,000 acres of plowable pasture, as well as Iarge areas that could be cropped if cleared or drained. After 1940 the | country will still have available some | 500,000,000 acres of potentially cultiva- ble Jand, an ares greater than the total | cultivated land at present. Less than half of this amount. would need to be | added to the existing crop area in order | 1o supply a population of 200,000,000.” | Overexpansion Couses Depression, Overexpansion of the ecountry's croj | area, says Dr. Baker, is one of the fun. | damental causes of the present agricul- tural dperession, but excessive stimula- | tion of agricultural settlement during | the last half century was more or less | excusable. No one. Dr. Baker remarks, could have foreseen the coming of the || | automobile and the tractor, which has released a large amount of land for- merly required to feed horses and | mules, nor the increasing production of milk and meat per unit of feed con- | | sumed by the farm animals. Nor did | | any one realize the influence of shiits | | from Jess productive to more productive || | crops per acre and from less productive | | to more productive classes of farm ani- mals. Moreover, he says, prior to the World War no adequate evidence exist- ed of the rapid approach of a station- | ary population in the United States. Facts relating to the trend of produc- tion, the trend of consumption and the || trend of population growth form the | basis of Dr. Baker's analysis of the | long-time agricultural outlook. From a | combined acreage of crops and pastur- age that has remained practically sta- tionary since the war, agricultural pro- duction in the United States from 1922 0 1926 was 13.5 per cent greater than from 1917 to 1921. In production per |capita of the population the increase was about 5 per cent. Increased use of automobiles and ! tractors in agriculture from January 1, | 1920, to January 1, 1935, released from 5,000,000 to 10,000,000 acres of crop land previously required to feed horses | and mules. From 1918 fo 1928 the |amount of crop land thus released probably amounted to at least 15,000,- 000 acres. This land is now used to feed meat and milk animals or to grow cotton. Cites Trend of Consumption. ‘Turning to “¢onsumption, Dr. Baker finds additional evidence that caution || should be exercised in increasing the ares of land in cultivation. At present the per capita consumption of beef, veal and eggs is about the same as at the beginning of the century. Per capita consumption of mutton, lamb and chickens is much less. Consumption of pork per capita is about 10 per cent greater and of milk about 12 per cent greater. Continuation of the indicated trend toward a greater per capita con- sumption of milk and pork, and les- sened consumption of mutton, lamb, beef and veal, would reduce the amount of land required to feed a given popu- lation, for the hog and the dairy cow produce more human food per unit of feed consumed than do other farm animals. Consumption of farm products de- pends, of course, on the aggregate of the population, as well as upon its per capita requirements. It .was formerly taken practically for granted that | growth of population in the United | States would eventually press upon the limitations of the land supply. In re- cent years, however. statisticlans have chown that the United States, and also the countries of Northwestern Europe, are approaching s stationary population. It is calculated that within a few decades the United States prob- ably will be dependent upon immigra- tion for its increase in population, and that a stationary population will be at- tained in from 50 to 75 years at some- where between 175,000,000 and 200,- || 000,000. Since 1920 the birth rate in the United States has declined rapidly, and & rise in the death rate Is expected soon because the population ‘will include an increasing proportion of people in the | older age groups. Since 1915, when the registration area became sufficiently large to constitate a fair sample of the United States, the birth rate has de- clined by nearly 5 births per 1,000 people, or about 20 per cent. “This de- clining birth rate in the United States,” says Dr. Baker, “appears to be asso- clated with the country’s increasing prosperity and per capita wealth. In Thing to for— as well signature of a house long ex- Let it be your buying guide M)ain 2477 THE WRIGHT COMPANY “Low Price” counts only when “Quality” is offered— Compare these specials for all-around value! % Natural Willow Armchair 3-Piece Bed- Davenport Suites Of very good make and finish. Upholstered in jac- quard velour. Lawson- type sofa, wing and club High-Back Porch Arm Rockers 2 $3.50 Crystal Mirrors $4.95 Chairs M o hair s 13£ maple franie. Sturdily made, and tapes- try uphol- stered. Graceful 12x24 size. 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