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erald TNG OCOMPANY Dally (Sunday Excepted) Bldgs 61 Cburch Btreet $2.00 Three Monthe 75c. 8 Month Watered at the Post Office at a5 Second Class Mall TELEPHONS CALLS Business Office .. Editorial Rooms . The ealy prefitable sdvertistag medium City. Circulation books and press vertisera New Britain Matt Associated Prese Che Associated Press is exclusively en titled 1o the wee fer re-publication of all news eredited to it or ot otherwise redited In this paper and also local published therein. Aedkt Buress of Circulation fue A B. C. o & BDational erganisation which furnishes newspapers and adver- tigers with & strictly honest analyi of circulation. Our circulation statistics are based upom this audit. This insures pro- tection agatnst fraud fn pewspaper dis- tribution figures to both nationsl local advertisers. 14 sale Gaily ia New York et Hetaling's Newsstand, Times square; Schults's Newsstands, BEutrance Grand Central, d2nd Strest. The Herald ta o A Christmas bonus appears to be something with & lien to Santa Claus. This is the week when the postal workers wonder how much money there must be in the Christmas greeting card business. FORCED INTO PEACE Those who from the first were of the opinion that Bolivia and Para- guay would ultimately settle their differences around a green table rather than resort to the expedient ot shooting at one another seem to have won the argument. After Paraguay in loud accents told the world she was ready to mediate it took Bolivia just 12 hours to realize that if she now went forward with her dogs of war public opinion *would be strongly against her, the ieague of Nations might denounce her as an aggressor entitled to puni- tive measures, or the *colossus of the north"—which owns almost everything™ in the country—might take serious umbrage and do some- thing about it under the interpreta- tions of the Monroe Doctrine, thc Pan-American Union, or the Pan- American Conference on Arbitra- tion. The cards were stacked so strongly against Bolivia that its wise men seem to have realized that the time to calm the wild Indians of the back country has arrived, and that the fancy army will have to remain all dressed up with no place to go. The war fever has died down over- night to such an extent that the worst one hears about it is that both sides still have their troops “mobil- ized,” but that orders have gone forth to hold everything tightly in check, and if anyone accidentally shoots off a gun he will be sum- marily court-martialed. There was a time when a rumpus in South America would have had much difficulty in attaining world at- tention; especially between two such sixth-rate powers as Dolivia and he fact that the world took such extraordinary notice of the row hetween these two puny disturbers of the peace must indi- cate that our sensibility about this sort of thing is vastly greater than Paraguay it ence was, Bolivia could not Mce the con- demnation of the world. In the days of comic opera desperadoes in South America, when anybody with a fol- jowing and a few guns could start a | shooting scrape, nobody would have paid the slightest seizure of so-called forts manned by nor to the the whatever attention to the six men and a donkey, milling around growth grows down would have been safe to ply the war amid nndel cactus, that and or wap. The gang trade until the last man was shot down whils singing the national anthem. But these are different times. The South American states have acquired stature, they helong, or are invited to belong, to lcagues, and what-not. briskling with conferences Their diplomats, and dignity, are gatherings where register diplomats also foregather; occasion- ally they are permitted to expres few opinions, and that makes them feel important. All of this being mote or less true, they must also play the part of gentlemen and listen to reason whiskers allowed 1o enter social a DISCUSSION Jerome fund of CONSTRUCTI By bringing the £438,000 into view for public discus- sion Mayor Paonessa las done a public service; and though the con- sensus seems to be that the fund is not large enough to take care of con- struction of a home for and leave a fund suflic to maintain it, the possibility is the a discussion of the a way to achieve the desired end. Formation of which bequests might be directed for maintenance of such a home seems to be the most provided. The need for om aged ntly large t may find a corporation to and donations logical suggestion so far it ought to sueceed. such a home as the originally mought to achicve is hu- manitarian and idealistic; it can be hequest made practicable by how it handled from now on. A NEW POLICE CHIE! Purely as a matter of civic duty, |it appears, the Wanamaker firm in | New York and Philadelphia has per- | mitted its general manager, Grover | A. Whalen, to take a leave of ab- sence in order to become the police commissioner of New York City. jmcmdln: Joseph A. Warren. Being police commissioner of New | | York is the world’s most unthank- [ ful job. Reformers have had it, and | with scarcely any exceptions they have found conditions insurmount- | able. The size of the city and the pressure for favors from all direc- tions soon begin to tell. Warren, like |others before him, had ideals when he started but went out under a ;cloud. Whalen, like the others, will NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1928, influence in New Hampshire, but |the senator's constituents may not feel extraordinarily comfortable in | the knowledge that their senior sen- ator is so thoroughly on the outs with the party they vote with 80| consistently. As President-Elect Hoover is pledged to carry out the policies oll Coolidge it must be apparent that when Moses sins against Coolidge he ewise sins against Hoover. | Branded with the anti-administra- | tion stamp—a stamp heretofore re- served for radical westerners— Moses will provide a new angle of | this thing Kknown as politics. As stated at the beginning one wonders whether Moses really represents T is | the President may not have much |is the worst week of the year; but the 60 per cent flop record applies for the scason now half gone, and | it shows no evidence of improving. At this distance the reason is| hard) to seek. Perhaps there are | fewer visiting buyers in town, few- | er butter and egg men mixing much pleasure with a little business. Per- | haps the native New Yorker is tired | of the wiles of the ticket speculators, or perhaps he is put to too much traffic inconvenience in getting to and from the mid-town playhouses. Perhaps the legitimate stage has alienated thousands of former play- goers who have become disgusted with sexology plays. Thousands may | be discouraged at the high prices for admission. Perhaps the advent of sentiment in his state or whether he | the talkics has had a bad effect. merely represents the caustic dispo- sition of Moses. | profits; n nd | Yet Moses must stand high in the cstimation of Hoover if the latter | is inclined to remember post-cam- | paign services. Moses was one of the | carly Hoover men. He pledged the | delegation of his state to the nation- | ! find that public service has its draw- backs. ATE and con- BEFORE THE S After much discussion | siderable delay the relations committee has sent the Kellogg-Briand pact to the Senate. | The vote in committes of 14 to 2 was overwhelming in favor of the treaty, but did not include Messrs. ;Moscs and McLean, who did not ‘\‘otc. Both of these, it is stated, will take thelr fling at parts of the treaty {on the floor of the Senate. | Opinion in Washington scems to }be that the multilateral treaty will | reccive tavorable action by the Sen- |ate, and the President haa been 8o | | assured. | There has been slight opposition to the treaty throughout the coun- try. The press seems to be unani- mously in favor of it. Religious or- ganizations and their adherents have been pronouncedly in its favor. In- deed, it is difficult to locate voices |of opposition anywhere. The wide- spread belict scems to be that the |treaty is a step forward. It certainly represents the most enlightened opinion of the age in which we live. | BOULDER DAM ABOUT SETTLED | TFollowing passage of the Boulder | Dam bill by the Senate, tho House of Representatives likewise has voted in favor of the $165,000,000 irrigation-power project on the Colo- rado river. The President is cxpected to sign the bill promptly, thus end- |ing an issue of paramount import- {ance. The bill when made into law will unleash one of the greatest en- gincering projects in the history of the country. It represents construc- tive legislation, and it is gratifying to realize that Congi has been able to achieve success in relation to a project that controversy in the West, PROHIBITION IN THE CLOUDS | Leadville, Colo., nestles 10,000 feet above sea level. Tt is the highest city in America. It is somewhat iso- lated, too, and there has been a no- tion in the town from the time of its founding that law and order there should be of local manufacture only. It has heen called by visitors as the most lawless town in Amer- ica; but that didn't reform it. To this day it has been inclined to go along in its own way, an oasis in a desert of prohibition. One reads with amazement, there- that the federal prohibition constabulary are attempting to re- form it. The mayor and ten city oflicials have been indicted for countenancing open law deflance; perpetrated while the thermometer registered 15 degrees helow zero—which is something of fore, raids were a “mean average” for the city in the clonds. Tt appears that this former gold | never heard of at least, it look- stree! mining metropolis the prohibition 1 ed that way along 11 where saloons and gambling houses operated wide open. Indeed, they had been closed, the 15th amendment was first pass- Reforming main never even Leadville, Will be an even harder task than re- forming Broadway. Who cver heard of reform in a gold mining town? Unless the federal agents camp in* the town regularly the. situation is looking on the Leadville tucked away up in the mountains near the great divide, sufficiently isolated to take life fit. The town, we take it, will continue rile. Folks who however, quite hopless. By map one finds as the townsmen see to believe in hom don’t like saloons needn't live there, is the epitome of local wisdom. W HAMPSHIRE One is inclined fo inquire whether of New MOSES € the people Hampshire are pleased and proud nator Moses in his new role of chief obstruction- ist of the cral tr serted the administration’s multilat- Now that Borah has de- irreconcilables, Johnson ifornia has become pliant, teed of Missouri 1 M tiring from is ime duck, n of Connecticut is re- politics, there remains only Senator Moses as the gentle- man who doesn’'t take his politics from the White House, the leading Republicans or from elsewhere. The outlook is that before President Coolidge leaves Washington he will stamp Moses as the chief opponent of adminis ation measures having ite do with foreign policy. Obviously, | Senate foreign | has created l)}\llcr‘ when | | al convention when almost all other | standpat Republicans were still for | Coolidge. He was active in the con- vention for Hoover and was chair- | man of the notification committee. Moses has been laboring in vain |80 far, however, as Charles Michel- |son 1n the New York World ably | points out. Acording to this writer, | here is a list of the disappointments | [that have come to Moses during the | past campaign and to the present: He wanted the nomination for the Vice Presidency, and was ruled out {by Hoover’s word that the second man on the ticket must come from |the Middle West. He wanted to be| Chairman of the National Commit- tee, and was stood aside for Dr. | Work. He wanted to be Eastern | manager of the campaign, and Work announced—and Work never made an announcement of that sort with- | out consultation with the candidate | —that there was to be no Eastern | manager, 80 Moses went through the campaign, working mightily, with no title, and no clearly defined field of actlon. He did not disguise his sentiments as to Dr. Work, and they labored apart. Both counciled with Hoover, When Hoover was elected, Moses was mentioned as the probable suc- | cessor to Senator Curtis as majority leader in the Scnate. Even then Hoover showed no sign of favor and | Moses gradually dropped into the background in that race, which is| apparently going to be won by Sen- ator Watson of Indiana, who fought Hoover up to the convention and | sald harsher things about him dur- ing the Indiana primary than did the Democratic campaigners. | With this background it is not hard to visualize Moscs as pretty | well outside the breastworks dllringJ the coming Administration. Moses has Hoover's In spite of all that tried to do to further | fortunes, there is the inescapable conclusion that the two | opposites on public questions of moment. Hoover has never been an isolationist; indecd, many voted for { him because they valued his knowl- cdge of foreign affairs. Hoover was Ifor the League of Nations when | Moses and Lodge were fighting Wil- son on this issuc. Hoover has been | for the World Court, and now is for |the multilateral treaty. Moses is | against them all. | Two years hence Moscs comes up for re-election. Michelson ventures the opinion that he will fare well— that is, be re-elected—because the | people of New Hampshire arc rather “proud of their brilliant, cynical senator.” If this is true then it | more evidence that the people like | their senators or representatives to ;“\10 something,” to “be lin Washington;" and this not neces- | arily along ilnes in conformity with the popular will, but anything to raise them above the average. Thus the people of Idaho re-clect Borah what men are is prominent regardiess of he about—just 80 he ballyhoos; and the people of Missouri used to re-elect Reed regardless of what he stood for, just ®o he raised ructions and advertised the state ballyloos To the people of New Humpshire their senior senator gives promise of being an advertising adjunct. The majority of Republican voters in New Hampshire may favor the Cool- idge and Hoover policies, and logi- cally should oppose any senator who is “outside the breastworks;” but let their man be of sufficient stature to | advertise nation and he can go back to Wash- ington till he grows old or dies. That was the case in Massachusetts with Lodge. who got re-elected in the 1y State at a time when prevail- the state throughout the ing opinion was opposed to Lodge's opinions, but Lodge got the reputa- tion of being a great man regardless of his opinions. Deinocracy works that be- cause it is & part of human nature fo recognize politi whole, it a credit democracy that this is so. 1 brilliancy. On the is rather to GLOOM ON BROADWAY Doctors of the drama along the gay white way are busily enguged New the worst in years; why 60 per cent of the plays produccd since August I have been failures; why hundreds of theatrical folk are without engage- attempting to explain why th York theatrical scason has bee ments; why the hookkeeping of the producers shows a crimson glow on the wrong side of the ledger. The week before Christmas always The 25 dark theaters show no more than half of those still lighted up show no profits. Yet we would not be surprised to discover that a new theater 1is to be built after the holidays; or perhaps sev- cral. Fc ots and Fancies It seems to be a rule. The faster he travels, the less reason he has to get there. Big game in Africa knows how | the ladies will make Wales fecl. | John Gilbert is a perfectly darling | tor, and we hope he got a dozen compacts for Christmas. | Modernism: Eggnog without fl\o} 1og; Santa Claus with cotton whis- kers; Christmas tree made of paper. | Once a man borrowed « money to | { meet a payroll on Saturday; now he | lorrows a gun to meet it on a side street. 1f only the oftice force could sec | the “dominating personality” of the boss sneaking in at the kitchen door to avold solling the living room rug. | Uncle Sam can understand the ef- | forts of Bolivia and Paraguay to con- | trol their rivers. He also has a few | that won't stay at home. | It a man is horrified by a tale of | Mors head hunters, he can put down the book and gaze fondly at the but never together. | antlers above his fireplace. [ A “no parking* sign iritates' cverybody, but especially the movie | magnate who throws away a good cigar to show his learning. Americanism: Sixty million pcople | muttering in unison: *“I don't scc how they can afford it. | AND SOMEBODY ALWAYS GETS 'EM! As in Yuletide days gone by Jack Horner searched his Christmas pie, So politicians far and near Scck for plums this time of year! TOO SOON!? lor—Why don’t you make some home-made movies of your wife? Wheeler—I'm going to wait until T can make home-made talkics and then I'll get a real likeness! MARCHING SONG OF THE BAR- BER COLLEGL STUDENTS! By Oliver F. Rrunn Have you felt a slight appalledness at an ever-growing baldness? Do you pay the regluation shaving rates? Then in your wildest manner cheer our gay barberic banner: We're the Barber College under- graduates. In our daily classes we perform upon | the masses, But the proletariat Is not our goal NIX! NAH! We're the embryonic friskers of the | nation’s proudest whiskers— SHAMPOO! HULLABALOO! BAY RUM! RAH! RAH! In the almost present future we will | be prepared to loot your | Purse for tonic baths and singeing on the side. And we'll give prolonged massages to the owners of garages, But cven then we won't be sat- town with it all? Innes—No; they left most of it at ‘ney stopped to the garage where have their car fixed —Mrs. L. G. Earnshaw (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction For- bidden.) QUESTIONS ANSWERED question of fact or information You can get an answer to any governor, His address is Honolulu, Hawaii. Q. Is there anything that will brighten tarnished metal fringe or cloth? A. Alcohol applied with a sponge is recommended. Q. Why is the driver of an au- tomobile called a “chauffeur”? A, There is no good reason why this is so. It is a French word and literally means “a fireman”. The only explanation is that when automobiles were beginning to be | produced commercially in this coun- try French terms were applied to them. The term chassis for the | trame and working parts of a motor car was taken from the French word: for frame. Limousine is |also a ¥rench word which in that language means a windflower or anemone. Q. Why are gold and sil |milledgaround the edges? A, To keep the coins from being | worn or chipped. ! Q. What Is the food of terrapin? A. Vegettable food, fish, reptiles Remember! If Your Husband or Sweetheart Smokes Don't Fail to See - “JIMMY” He Carries Largest Variety of Sinoker’s Requisites in City. ' A Few Suggestions; ~—SMOKADOR —ASHLESS STAND —LIGHTERS ~—LEADING BRANDS ver coins by writing to the Questioz Editor, N Britain Herald, Washington Burean. 1323 New York avenue, Washington, D. C., enclo:ing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. All ner- and other amphibians, Observations PIPES —BEST MAKES POUCHES =—NONE BETTER HUMIDORS In Al Sizes other questions will receive sonal reply. fidential.—Tiditor. Q. Was the late Oscar ship of New York state? A. No. Q. Are the pole skunk the same animal? A, Yea They names for the same animal. Q. tris go down with the ship? until everyone olse is off? A. Captain Carey went with his ship, the Vestris, the launching of the life boats. but after all isfied. Though we cut a legal light or trim | a lightweight fighter, Will our strangle-hold on fame consist of that? POOH BAH! We're the country's only res’-dents who will slap the chops of pres'- dents— SHAMPOO! RUM! RAH! HULLABALO! RAH! BAY “Just three wecks old,” said the | proud mother in the Balkans, “and | ready he can bend his finger.” trigger | Men are stupid creatures of course, | | but you never see one spending $400 'to keep warm from the knees up and deliberately freezing from there | | ! down. | “I have scen the unemployed with | their feet ou the ground.” Yes, but | |it's even more frritating to see them | with their fect on a desk. Household hi An old | frock with the shoulder straps re- | moved makes a nice lamp shade. When you observe the size of the | stork’s bill, it Is casy to understand | why a new infant yells. How it would flatter a slain crim- | inal to know how many unsolved | | erimes the detectives give him credit for. Correct this sentence: I got (he | dictionary and proved T was right,” | ®aid she, “but 1 did it humbly so as | not to hurt John's feelings.” Publishers Syndicate | Copyright 19 25 Years Ago Today | ‘I'he city has agreed to compromise the settlement of one bill for coal in the schools hut will resist the other until it comes to court. “A Citizen” writes the Herald and asks if the hospital is a public ot a private institution and why it is nec- exsary {0 obtain permission from a doctor to be admitted even in an cmergency. He claims that in a re- cent accident the victim was kept at the police station 35 minutes be- fore the ambulance wonld come znd | that when it did arrive it had no | blankets. | Fountaln pens for eight Herald | coupons and 69c. We have an ample supply on hand for all our reader New Britain High school defeat Meriden at basketball here yesterday | by 17 to 15. It is not generally know, but there {is a room at the police station that has never been nused. 1t was original- intended for use as slecping «quar for night officers who were to testify in court the next morning, but it has never been put into ser- viee, The democr for a mayoralty candid: have to consider Mayor Bassett for reelection and the following as pos- sible new as ints: Judge Roche, T, H. Brady, . K. Hart, and W. L. Damon. Orson F. Curtis can have the republican nomination hands down if he wants it. 1f not, there Mr. Sloper, J. A, Trant, and L. are casling about o and will ctorics will make only brief s this year, The shutdowns for Christt some for the day owyyv and others | trom Thursday to Monday. The stores are opcn each night this week and have arranged to close on ‘hristmas d The Christmas trees appeared in the park yesterd zns Trading Co. has purchased a lot 32x145 feet on Main strect from William H. Hart and | will erec: a business block on the site at so; future time, Quite rze number of Polish 1esigents 1eft fown during fo past week to scck work in the coal re. he Sove gions of Pennsylvania, but for every | one who leaves there are two who rome in, according to Station Agent | Williams. | ! dance | | Shopping Made Easy THIS THING CALLED— Bobby: what is virtue?” “The moth ball of —Henry A. Courtney They once asked for divorce and the custody of the child . Now they ask for divorce and the custody of hubby's fortune! “I'a.” said the youthful the family, “does Santa Claus make all those foys himself?™ “Why,” said his father, “T—er— never heard of his having any as- “And yet, pa. affer mature consid- cration T am forced to the conclusion that he must have. I grant vou that he has an entire year in which to make the toys. and we may assume for the sake of argument, that he is aided by the most effective labor- saving machinery. Yet, when we onsider the enormous cutput, suf- ficient to satisfy, or partially saf fhe demands of the youthful popula tion of a large portion of the globe, the conclusion seeis irresistible that Santa Claus employs a large force of operatives.” “I am obliged to admit the force of your argument,” said his father. “But now a serious question arises. it not possible thal these em- ployees. influenced by the trend of the fimes toward consolidation, should organize ihemselves info a labor wnion and, having presented demands which Santa Claus, al- though # most liberal znd generous emplover, as we may readily believe, will find himself ur to grant, that these employees, T sav. should srike? Migit not our junior pop- ulation {hus find themselves, some | Christmas, maybe this Christmas, confronted by terrible emer- geney " “It would, indecd, seem #0.” rald his father. “May T ask if you have discovered any remedy for such a situation?” “Not yet, Is said the youth. “The problem & one that demands more attention than T liave been able to devote to it. Buf, although T am or- dinarily inclined fo tak: a conserv: tive view as {0 {he right of interfer- ence in labor disputes, yet in such an emergency T should almost be willing 10 accept the principle that the para- mount inferest of the juvenile toy- consumer would justify compulsory arbitration!™ DOUR v — Let's talk about he weather? Jerry—Sure—whether you'll me or not! | ~—Harry I, Bartels GARAG N! Conley—"They {ell me the bank s robbed of every cent last night. Innes—Yes. I the kiss Conley—Did the robbcrs get out of are off, he may save himsclf, | possible. In what state are the Indian | Rescrvations in the Uhited States? Indian ervations in New York, Florida, | North Carolina, Mississippi, Minne- Da- kota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Wyoming, | 1daho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, | . Arizona, | Denver ...... There are | and Q A. There are federal R North and South ota, Towa, | Wisconsin, . Michigan, | California, Washington, |Colorado and Montana. state reservations in Virginia | Maine, Q. | pay for Manhattan Island? |is its value today? A. Unaigned requeats can- not be answered. All letters are con- Straus ever a candidate for the governor- | cat and the are different Did the captain of the Ves- In case of accident is a captain com- pelled by law to stay with his ship down It is an | unwritten law of the sca that the captain shall stay aboard to direct He must be the last to leave the ship passengers and crew How much did Peter Minuit | What | l.os Angeles . Peter Minuit is said to have | Other Gift Suggestions Too Numerous to Mention for Southern New England: Partly southwest winds, shifting to north- | & Quali Partly cloudy in south; light snow | flu Ity mke smll Thursday partly cloudy and some- Tel. 1399 winds. over the Southern states and the peratures arc lower in nearly all and Minnesota. it in temperature, Washington, Dec. 19.—Forecast cloudy tonight; Thursday fair and | § . ) somewhat colder; moderate to fresh | § J'mmy s west. Forecast for Eastern New York: in north portion tonight; colder in |4 SRS = north and west portions tonight; 0':,',:‘”‘“;" ROFEL clivery Anywhere what colder; moderafe to fresh southwest shifting to northwest Conditions: Pressure remains low over the Lake region and high Far W some cloudiness still prevails in the lake region. Tem- portions of the country with zero or lelow in portions of Nevada, Utah Conditions favor for this vicinity | fair weather and not much change Temperatures yesterd: Hi zh 41 46 48 Atlanta Atlantic City .. Boston . TNuffalo Chicago Cincinnati LITTLE Detroit ... LATES Duluth ‘ Hatteras . Kansas City .. | Miami . Minneapol | obtained title to Manhattan Island |New Orleans {in 1626 for barter to the value of The assessed value of was Norfol 'about $25. | Manhattan realty $7,785,110,325, Q. meaning of the name Hodges? A. | meaning “son of Roger". is Teutonic in “strong counsel”, Q. {the position of Director of {United States Veterans' Burcau? A. DPresident Harding. Q. What in 1927 try? A. About 110 pounds. Q. low old is Herbert Iloov Is he a blonde? A brown hair. Lover”, | voard starring | Davies, Q. Do shipowners charge helping a vessel in distross? e {out _an {by the [ niman | Vestris, | tressed S0 8 rescue ships life. as fn the for case of vessel or its cargo, ther hope of | damages assessed against the ship- owners. Q. territory of Haw he be addressed? A, Wallace R ‘Mickey (Himself) What is {he nationality and | Northficld, 1t is a British family name Roger | &t. origin and means Washingion Who appointed Col. Forbes to | the is the average weight jcarricd by race horses in this coun- |, He is a blonde, and has light Of what nationality is Jet ‘What is her latest pic-| | She Is French hy birth, Her | ‘ln(r'x( appearance is in “The Card-- | Marion | for When a sinking vessel sends there is no charge saving the | but for salvaging the dis Whe fs the gavernor of fthe | aii and where can | New York ... New Haven . Va. . Nantucket .. vt | Pittsburgh Portland, Me. Bt Louis . 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