The evening world. Newspaper, March 22, 1907, Page 1

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feta nad found letters in the injured Th the” some | TEsuLts ED PRICE ONE POLITICIAN FOU TG Al ETA BRIDGE $ SohnP. Kelly Unconscious |! There with a Frac-. tured Skull. IAGENT OF THE MUTUAL. Wrote Millions of Dollars of “Insurance, According to iu an Official. ‘John P, Kelly, a former member of 6 Board of Education, promintnt po- ally in the John C, Sheehan antl- many fight, and one of the oldest bend dest of the Mutual Life Insurance pany's staff of agents, was found the middle entrance to Brooklyn ridge carly to-lay by one of the ridge policemen, and was removed by. Burroughs Ye Hudpon Street Hos- tal. He js in a critical condition, Ing from a fracture at the base of skull, 2) A clot of blood formed on Kelly's hand the surgeons dectted thar the nly chance for) recover; and even then a bare/one, was to operate, The fig. man was plicod on the table, acd for two hours late this afternoon nis sed under the knife. The formation weag removed, but the doctors said his \onditions was sul} critical, SoMr. Kelly had been dining with PWrooklyn friends and waa on his way Rome when he met with the accident, ‘According to the statements of police itnesses, Mr, : the top of the steel-capped stairs ‘Fheading irom the upper_eection of the H bridge to Park Row, and fell head first yOown tio steps, It tw auld that he Rurned several xummersaults, and Betrvek the stone sidewalk on his head, The fall was seen ky m score of men I women. “Excitemént “prevalred™| wand theatregoers bound for Brooklyn homes atopped to rubberneck until the Gludson Street Hospital ambulance earried Kelly away. _ treet, brothe: ving munsuwne { Hudson Hoapitad to-day and Sgnade the identification. Kelly lived at No, 121 East Ono Hun- (fared a flecpth street, The Identi- ‘Mficntion of the man-was mnade nt Hudson YBtrect Hospital by a_brother, J.B. Uasetley, after the poljce and hospita! ‘0, % Nassau sireet atid No. % atroot, and one addressed to Kelis; with the Qne Hun-} ot address. it that -1elty sted to live more than a and the recovery ot! ‘eonsciotsnesd was-not likely, | Solicitor of Big Insurance. Kelly, sith several other Mutual Life gents, occupled an office on the Liber- Fy street side of the buliding.; He had jbeen connicied with the company for fabout eoventrén years, and was consid- fered one of the best agents of he ny, zoliciting \to a larg Se ree Stout ta yeate NS WR ‘superintendent of the Harlem Branch of Sthe: Mutual Life.aith an oftce..on.One {Stundred and Twenty-ffth streot, ‘Alter apending ten yeare—there—he. w@ought a broader fleld of activity, re- {gned=the-Hartem"Superintendency ant became connected with the firm of C, “tH. Raymond & Mutual Life agents fn the financlal section. ‘This {a the firm which became in- qwolved in the insurance Investimation by reason of the connection with it of the McCurdy family, and when the bual- neat of this firm had een practteally xposures, Kelly, in company with.a number of other jagents, formed what was known as the} Home Officesranch, with offices In the fhomo bullding. This was not a regu- farly organized branch, but simply 4 Goint office foro large numberof men (Mealing directly with the company, Written Millions In Inaurane, Thomas C, Bell, Agency Supervisor of ec Mutual Life Company, expreased uch regret at learning of Kelly‘s rious condition. Ho said Kelly waa doubtedly one of the very best men isonet with the comphny, who, while ‘with the company tad written millions Wf dollar in pollcler. During tho days of the Sheehan ‘Democracy, Kelly was qne of the moat prominent adherents of the antl-Tam- ‘many Jeader and a big factor in the fac- tion of the Democratic party, During #ha.campaign which ended tn the elec: Hon of Mayor Low, Kelly was a strong ‘randidite for one of thecommissloner-— Ships v4 the Mayor's disposal, ie did jot Jad this appointment, but In. 3202! ithe Mayor appointed Kelly ong of the} PRembers of the Board of Education, | Mich be! hejd for about four year: ving the board in 1903. . He was a member of the Board ;dur- the timo of, {to reorganization, when | NUMBER, SUND. MARC: several Horough Boards of Iauca;| full pease: te leans best. Americas | 2+ artists were ipgolved and untied in’ the the Kelly lost hia balance |* When Louts Castka, who said he rep- (TION CENT ‘FRED BELASCO’ § WIFE DIES AND THE SHOCK KILLS HIS PARTNER Strange and. Sudden Deaths of Actress Juliet Crosby and San Francisco Manager Qccur Withi no an Hour. ——— March ANCISCO, wife of 8AN Fred zar Theatr, a 2 ‘under th dat udder roo. Te ab died of the! stock, . Belasco's partner, Juliet Crosby, as she Belasco stock company, was a strikingly handsome. blondé, and | , been on the stage for about ten ye: Her first appearance ‘on any stage was’ made at theatre, when he produced * Born,” a play of Chinese David Belasco brought to | i «| was known In ber ju: Mre, New York after seeing it at his brother's house. that} The wedding of Fred ‘Belasco und INMet_ Crosby wan romantic, They met when she camo under his tultion at 4 school of acting he conducted on Market t, In San Francisco, wedding was secret for severai weeks. during which ime Mias Ctomoy appeared ‘at the Alcazar’as usual. After the announcement the couple went on a ort’ honeymoon trip, but Mrs, Belasco resumed her stock work on thi (She created the part of Madaine 10 Buttery tn thé Wei ne Alcazar time ghts azo. A ‘red Iolasoo, ax indicated above, Is a he theatrict} Belasco opened {ts doors for the uake tree sinco the eart Fred n busine and Mr. Mo c sev eatres iu em both in, the earthquake and 7 e Alcazar ls the onl house und ylasco and Moyer manageme: present time. g the By at the Davie patch brotherts w Lerten announcing fe and Mr. deapece Moyer tits uf cant ad details. 1 JUDGE SENDS GAL STRIMER TO THE WORKHOUSE Companions Attacked; Policeman When He Went to Arrest Her. Magistrate ‘in Court Cornell, to;day ‘sent Mary Scbwarts, | Jaader of the atriking girl cigar-packers of tho Great Bear factory, Eaat Sev- nifd atreet, to the workhouse for (ive Give Tor again Tkding at assautt on the girls who wanted to work. He had warned lier yesterday that he | would commit {f she was again | brought before him. [When Cour arremt her at her home a number of her followers attacked him and ripped) hs uniform, Mary was carrying her brother's fourteen-month-old child when | arraigned, and the Magisirate, after: accusthg her of holding the chUd to invite morey, committed her for. five days, ft ent renented the International Cigarmakers Union, told the Cour: that Mary wis ata meoting at the tlme of the assault Magistrate Cornell ordered him from | the court, saying Jt was such as_he Tos the k1Ms to ikke WOU. | Se'ma Noland, of No. 344 East Seventy- | fourth street; Birdie Kunan, of No. 67 | East End ‘avenue, and Handah Knab, of No, 615 East Seventy streot, returned to CouIt to-day under the protection of} Private Detective Byers and after ahow- Ing |fregh marks of conflict told of .their added woes, When Birdie Kunan summoned Mary Schwartz and Emma Schway yesterday the Magistrate let them go with a! Errning: | Birdic'd—eiar—witnese— Selma Noland,.xho is the forewoman at the factory, Selma was returning frecn—work—ligt: might~ when ehe~ Pye + she Was sec apo by Mary Scaware ol # nalt-donen irl pleketa, who > Blapped her er watst trom ir and reduced her coat to ribbons, About=the mame =time BirdeRunan'y and Hannah Knab were’ attacked by other girin, but they Tan away, as Bite dle was sill weak and courtplastered | from the previous encounter, ‘They ran Into the home of Josie O'Neill, at No. 36 East’ Seventy-fourth street, and when Joale went outdoors to araeh| away the pickeix ehe was #0 ‘badly beaten that she had to be carried into the houxe. She was reported confined to her bed to-day eateries from—the ‘assault, THOUSANDS ON LINER HELD AT QUARANTINE. | Because of Suspected Smallpox the ‘Penn sylyania Must Be Thor- oughly Disinfected, Hecause the health officers found a case of suspeoted smallpox in the ateer- age, the Hamburg-American ner Penn- sylvania, which came up the Narrows this afternoon with the large number of 2,002 Immigrants on the ‘third-class) Passenger list, hak been detained at Quarantine and must remain:there with all_on board until some time to-morrow, ‘The patient ts a child of German par- ents who were coming from Hamburg. Dr. Doty ts gong through the stesrade thoroughly, fumigating every part of It occupants” of the compar. ch the child was taken-\ih be mimoved to-night Tatamd tor pbeervatan, fate, tore ouer te Hottman ‘The Pennsylvania has 17 fit eabinl® passongers. nll of whom! must remain on ‘board until the liner In released Ls quarantine, i ei nEW. YORK HERALDS EASTER ~ ‘ Yorkville } a pon—the—tiind—feon FIRE IN SCHOOL SCARES PUPILS AT LUNCH ROUR There- Were Only Fifty in Building and They Hurried Out, Thero waa a providential ttle fire In 107, In West Tenth this af- ternoon—providertial in the sense that Piiblic ScHool No. street, near Greenwich street, it hemmened during the noon Intermis- ston when there were only a few child ren fn the bullding:‘ The damage was small, but the excitement in the nelxhé borhood wus great and there was very “Tottcoman~Hetty—went40 irre sturty in —No:—-107dhuring tho ation neon session, The school is a primary for boys and All of the 700 puolls but possibly “had _xone to thetr homes for hunch. Those remaining were eating luncheon the Vaflous class rooms. Half a dozen were in the room of Miss Cary -Ft-43-mupponed-that one of these dropped a lighted mateh Into a waste basket. At the sight of the -binzo the children scréamed and rushed for the door, —Ed- win Stone, the janitor, happened. to be on the third floor. He saw the smoke, and without hesitation smashed the glass over the fire alarm and pulled the spring, Stone with a hand grenade—tho only hand grenade in-she-whole—butiding— and two teachers, Miss Evans-and Mies Gilmartin using cups of water, extin- guished the blaze before the firemen arrived. The children tumbled pell-mell out of tié buliding, but the few teacti= era on hard managed to control then “was tom an-oxtentthet-seved-them-from-tr--sacketa had heen landed at Celbu and Jury a3 Aira heir usta rush. PAOIFG LINER A WRECK ON. THE ALASKAN COAST Little Hope for North- western, Formerly Ori+ zaba, Plying Here. SEATTLE; Wash., March 2—The steamship Northwestern. formerly the Orizaba of the Want line, on the At- Jantic, les a wreck-on the eoth end of Im Touchy Inland, on the south- western coast of Alaska, : Tho vessel will, no doubt, be’ a total lots, as sho flex in an exposed condi- tion, The Northwestern sailed from Seattte Murch 10 and reached Valdez a few days Jater, going to Seward. Wadnes- Gay cho Nocthwertern sailed from Seward for Vaniez, en routé to Seattle, rl was wrecked yesterday afternoon, JOHN OLDENBUSCH KILLS HIM- SELF. John Oldenbusch, aged forty, of No, 43 Gecond avenue, committed suicide ing himeelt at his home. ‘work, and despondent, “This government ‘reports that of March 18 an army of five thousand}. ~}Suyadoreans and 1,000 Hondurans. commande by Gea. Presa, a Sa) 1 000 TT IN BATTLE: VICTORY FOR) NIGARAGUA Joint Army of Salvador-| eans and Hondurans Routed in 3-Day Fight. 20,000 FOR NEW ATTACK. Nicaragua Prepares to Follow Up Victory With Great Force of Men. WASHUNGTON, «Maren 22.—The State Department recetved the fol ow- ing to-day from Jos D. Oliv 3. the American Consul at Managua, > gua: ‘ara- ean, attacked the Nicaraguan’ yang: near Namasique, Honduras. *” The battle lasted three ‘days, resu! ing In the complete rout of the Balva- doreans, who lost 1,000 killed. “Nicaragua has 2,00) troops at the front and will commenoe an immediate attack on Choluteca and Tegucigalpa.’ Senor Corea, the Nicarazuan Minister. | has recived a cableecram from his cu ernment contizming the prean report to the efect that the Nicareznan navy Nas ured the important Uonduranian Ibean port of a. The navat Yoagels are now on their wav to Pucrto Cortes, where thoy-nrobably. will répeat thelr success at Celba, and as Trujillo has fallen into the hands of Nicarnevans practically the whole -nortti ‘const of Honduras now 1s in their possesston, The cruiser Cateago, which has heen | patrolling the Pacific sido of the Jethmus and Central Amerina, haa gone from Acajutia, BSatvidor, to Acapulco, in Mexico, a thourand miles northward ‘This voyage is inate necessary from the TACT TAT SON is scare ta Central” Aree fea and cannot be obtained at reasonable rates In suMictent quantitics for @ larwe NAVAL versel,, The movement for agth, and Assistant Sec te Bacon to-day received calls from Senor Calvo, the Minister from Costa Fuca, and Senor Corea; the Nicaraguan Minister, It 1s understood that he strongly. impreased upon_cach, of these callers the wisdom of speedily terminating the present state of war- fare in Central America, as {t promises to Involve all of the other republic: and is almost certain if prolonged to lead to the presence in their waters of European naval vessels, with possible Intervention tn behalf of their own citl- zens. ‘Senor Corex afterward” visited Senor Creel, the Mexican Ambassador, who has gone to the limit of his powers In the endeavor to induce the belligerent republics to accept the good oflices of i Mexico and the United States in bring- Ting: about pen It_in_ evident that Senor. Corea is about to transmit to the Governtnent at Managua some represen- tations for Hs consideration. It became known in Washington to- j day through Inte despatches that blue- Is Intervention Trujillo, Honduras, under orders from Commander. Fallam,--commanding-.the- American gunboat Marietta. ‘The greatest reticence was maintained by department” omctutsretativs tothe decision which led too thts action; “ant even after it had become noised about that American Jackies had“been put) ashore at Honduras the Acting Secr tary of the Navy, Mr, Newberry, de- nied any! knowledge of It, Not until after Mr. Hoot, the Secretary-of State, had had two houra’ conference with President Roosevelt, was {t possible to obtain a confirmation of the report. ‘The ‘Marietta is a comparatively smal) gunboat, but the Paducah Is in the im- mediate vicinity, and the cruiser Chi cago {a also near by. In tho absence of omclal statements Aw to the object of the landing of blue- jackyta, !t was nsserted that It could be prompted by but one of two causes, Either the nayal commanders on the sceno had reason to belfeve that Amer!- can Interests were not ‘being properly cared for or great unrest on the part of forel@n governments occasioned by the disturbed state of affairs in Central America had jed to our intervention ‘as a means of preventing aggressive ac- tion by. foreign powers, ee NEW ORLEANS RESULTS. FIRST RACE—Dorothy Duncan (9 to 2 and 8 to 5) 1, Ellesmere (4. to.1 for place) 2, J. Sidr: 3. Time, 14.01 25, | SECOND aaceZLits Foster, (11 |to 6 and 4 to 5) 1, Finesse (5 to 1) |fr place) 2, Antoine 3, Time, | {n489-5. The BudInees enterprises sold through Sunday World Wants are ueuall “Bal t Ahis afternoon. Ha did hie turn subse- ly gala In. eves : |HAMMERSTEIN’S SON” ‘OFFERS $35,000 PURSE TO GANS AND NELSON FOR A FIGHT JULY 4 ; sa ‘Billy’? Nolan Imposes Goldfield’s Conditions, but It Is Likely that the Lightweight "Champion Will Agree to Them. BAN PRANCISCO, —March—22——They—“Btity\— Nolen trmista upon gettin following dlypatch was received to-day | what he wants, ignoring the fact that trom Los Anj “WILL glye ai content betwee oH E Mg. acting for Joe Gans, has offered to fight at 133. pounds ringside Gane and Nel- | stripped wend to divide the purse any won on duly 4. Wilt depomit | way Giat Ne ‘The Battler's #10,000 to-m woowith the | inanager tnaleta tat the Gokifeld ar Ker Dank and post b Mele must He demands above of the parse an soon as articles | all clive that. fighters welgh 13% pounds are nluned, at the ringside with Mghting togs, It ts thowsst Myely that Gana wil YAAKEES WIN ATATHLETICS. FHCLAND Rhodes Scholars Com- pete in Oxford-Cam- bridge Field-Sports,- 0 piese for cleon seen fit gover ANEYS DDL HIGHLANDERS. ARE SWELTERING DOWN IN MACON. Griffith’s Bunch Run ‘Into Real Hot Weather ~ on Trip. 7 LONDON, THE BATTING ORDER. - New: York -—— Hoffman, ef. Keoler, ¥ March 22.—The annual Ox- ford-Cambridie field aporta took place Jat the Queens Clu here this Afternoon: A-springlike weather and with a big. crowd present. | t Xo fewer than seven sf Mhodes scholars were among the Ox- P lapoeie abe onlan competitors, including uM. 13 Runeaner tc iietnow = cinerea Patience, 6%, Young, of South Dakota, in the long Thomas, c. Harnioh, c. and high Jumps, both of which he won Doyle, p. Clark, p. Inst year; Albert M. Btevens, of Yale, in the hammer throw, for wh. —BY-BOZEMAN- BULGER. Tp eso competed IM WED Schutt, of S octary Sarent ena ENE) Cornell, in the half-mile run, which he MACON, Ga., March 22.—The dozen | Just failed to capture tn 193. and W. |W. ‘Thayer, of Harvard, who waa in the second string of Oxford's hammor- came hero into” a sweltering | Higtilanders who to play | Macon ‘to-day ran : spelt of weather and even defare the throwers. _ 2 park was rowched the fatire crowd) P.M, Young, of ‘South Dakota, won | tho long Jump; ~distance, 22 feet i4 inches. He also won the tich Jump with 6 feet 81-2 Mehes,"; Stevens, of Yale, won the hammer- throw. Distance was 10 feet 9 aches. Oxford won the contest by 81-2 to 11-2 points. : All told the American Rhodes achol- rs took three firsts, the long and high \ Jumps in which Young repeated his | victories of 194, and the hammer throw, looked as if it had come out of the hot) room’ of a Turkish bath, The thermo- meter registered.) dexrees at 2 o'clock and the heat wan almoat unbearable. Grimth brought four pltchers along, one to be used in the Gutfeld Catcher Klenow again played second base, The New York playera spent the | morning If @ troliey~along--tie—qualnt most inter= old streets of Macon. Th esting alght they, hundreda of mulepatanding in middle of | the-mincst G6ii1g—out of Abel wagone - and the coun, 4 David Harums stand- ing around. wilting 40. trade hor Doyle and Augie will work to-day and Clarkson und Marger to-morrow. u DONLIN WILL JIN GIANIS SUNDAY Wires McGraw for Transpor- tha half-mile run. Oxtord. wine were the halt-mile, quarter-mile, and three miles run. Cambridge only took the hurdles, Tho OO-yart’ dia: esa es eee wAR a t8. EREMON WINS THE ‘GRAND NATIONAL Twenty-three Weight, torses Started tation from Chicagoto ; ‘in the Great English New Orleans. Steeplechase, LIVERPOOL, March 22,—~The Grand (Boecinl to Tq Reentnw World ) BAN ANTONIO, Tex., March Donlin will join the Glants at leins probably Sundey, He has ‘wired McGraw from Chicago to send trans- portation from tnere to New Orleans, und the Glanta’ manager did so. All the boys are vlad phat Mike has dedl- to return to the fold, || National Steeplechase of 3,000 noverelgnn, for five-year-old and upward, ‘about four miles and S66 yards, was run at the Liverpool spring meeting to-day and won by Stanley Howard's Eremon, Tom Wat was second and Patla ‘Twenty-three horses nitoly decided Tio gets the #40) Increase for which he remo “made all the running and has en holding out, by six longths, The petting previous ‘to the start was $ to 1 against Eremon, 100 to 6 agalist Too West, and # to 1 aginst Pate lander, FINED §2 BY JUDGE. | —— —— ie | Ing. cross driving ‘and other things to, s teeth, Mled his face ng like gasollne and turned Mr. .wammerstein was next station holding “Young Man Expectorated-on Station Floor After Visit to Dentist. im: loose. fiscovered on tho antl eXpectorated upo: Willlam Hammeratein, son of Oscar, | the floor. wich, was pleneieutlyuctered performed briefly on the ''L'! station at! marked with tobacco ules staina, Police: Fifty-ninth street: and) Columbus ave- | man | Henry pat tos of the | Hi nue, and.in the West Side Police Court | Squad, hi on hand while Schutt of Cornell, vas third int” and looking to tho appointment of a commission in lunacy. Declares That When He Said He Would Bring Them to the Attention — of the Appellate Division He Meant - It Only in Hypothetical Sense. THAW CONFIDENT THAT ‘HE WILL BE PROVED SANE, His Wife, Mother, Sister and Counsel, Wha Have Visited Him Almost Daily in “the Tombs, Will Be Among His Best Witnesses. HOW JEROME EXPLAINS HIS ATTACK ON THAW COUNSEL.| “In our first discussion of this lunacy proposition (here was moré; or less heat. ‘The strain had been very great on all of us, and we were all laboring under considerable tension. As I stated ta the | Court, I did not mean to charge that counse had done anything un- } professional; but that I simply meant to stand by whatil said, which was put in a hypothetical way. “In that talk I did not mean to charge Mr. Hartridge with any unprofessional conduct of any kind, neither do 1 now. If my te marks have been'so construed, then I have been unfortunate in my method of expression.” s\n Al Blas When Justice ‘Fitzgerald, with pointed emphisis, called upon Dis- trict. “Attorney Jérome to-day in open coum for any proof that he might have which would serve to back up his charge of unprofessional conduct against’ Harry Thaw’s lawyers, the District-Attorney delivered himself of a practical confession os his inability fo make good his own: imvassiongs words. : In a short speech Mr. Jerome admitted that he could not. sub- ‘stantiate with any facts his threat of dragging Thaw's counsel before the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court when the trial of the young » millionaire is ended, either by a vettlict of. the jury or by the decision of, acommission-ttimacy, Jerome sought to excuse his heated accusations of Wednesday by interpreting his statement_as a purely hypothetical one, based_upon-yery— uncertain contingencies. i His confusion visibly increased. when Clifford W. Hartridge con- founded him, as the Justice had done yesterday, by quoting to him his own-words to. show that Jerome-had-had still-another-chance to-get-at the condition of Harry Thaw’s mind as far back as a-month ago, At that time he was laboring with all his might. to send to the death chair a man he now declares he has belleved since February 18 to be an irre- sponsible lunatic, ~The relatives of Thaw filed in from the Side ‘Justicearrived, Josiah Thaw, the half brother, and Re fa, detective-adviser, leading the way. Mrs. William. Thaw came next, then” Evelyn Neshit:Thaw,-then-the-young-Countess-of-Yarmouth,-prettiest of all the Thaw stock, and' last, Mrs. George*L. Carnegie, All four were dressed in the garb that they worn in all their-appearances about the Criminal Courts Building. The yife sat between the mother and the titled sister. Mrs. Carmegie took a chair in the front row next to the: datk| Spanish- looking. half-brother, THAW MAKES HIS APPEARANCE, Just behind the jurors Thaw walked in from the rear nursing his big winter ulster in his arms, = Thaw. did not glance toward the women as he passed them, but as he settled himself tn his chair he looked back over his right shoulder and caughthis wife's eye, There was an instantaneous interchange of smiles and glances. The prisoner had lost all of the nervousness which followed on the sudden breaking off of his trial Wednesday, and he watched the court proceedings with his old-time Indifference, : The court-room was only a third full, Delmas was not present. Neither ” was Gleason of the unruly tongue. All of the rest of Thaw's: staff had their regular places at the counsel table. Justice Fitzgerald asked the District-Attorney If he had any motions to make, Jerome whispered for a moment with Hartridge and then announced that both sides had agreed that it would be proper to adjourn the regular trial for several days, Inasmuch as {t seemed reasonably certain thet the lunacy proceeaings could not be disposed of untti sombitime next week. JURY LET OFF UNTII. WEDNESDAY. Accordlugly, Justice Fitzgerald dismissed the fury until next Wednes- day morning, They left court with Thaw close behind them. The session of the trial bad lasted lesa than four minut the shortest in the record of the trial of Harry Thaw. The four women remained In thelr seats to hear any further steps which might be taken !n the proceedings instituted yesterday by Jerome) b ‘Justice Fitzgerald | th read from Mr. Jerome's original remarks when the matter first came up on p and Weapons, the quotation in which: Jerome had sald that fi, at the conclus | fk | Eons ieee er tert Be et oie L TO obi teeta a aa { | | aI

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