The evening world. Newspaper, February 15, 1912, Page 2

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eT shulted were on their way to the East River National from the Produce Exchange Bank at Beaver and Broadway. ‘There is no doubt that the robbery had been most carefully planned ed that the highwaymen were well acquainted with the taxicab’s destina- tiom and its contents when they held it up. They carried out their crime with the utmost coolness and deliberation, not in the least fearfnl that there would be any Interference on the part of th crowds in the street or ot that of the police they must have known they would pase in golag north-| ps ward along Charch street. The two messengers in the taxicab fought the rothers ay ‘eat they omukl One ef them was an old man and they were no match for the hi¢hwaymen, who were armed with blackjacks or weapons of similar character, and who set upon the €wo bank employees unmercifully. Re fe the custom of the Past River National Bank to wend out dafty to other! pens such of thelr checks as it has recet and recelve currency tn exchange for them. Wiur I. Smith, who ip sixty-on MI Sterling place, Brooklyn, and has been in the bank's employ for many years, waa one of the messengers gent out this morning. The other one wan Frank Word mam of about twenty, who lives at Vreeland and Sevent N. ds The taxteab the bank was accustomed to use w Martini of No. 147 West Fourth street, who has a taxicnd stand ot 1) ‘entra Hotel. CARRIED MONEY IN A SATCHEL. The messengers w this morning, with Martini at the wheel of the cab, to the Produce Exchange Bank. ‘There they $26,000 in bills which they put in the satche! they habitually carrted on euch Jour- neys. They left the bank at five minutes before Mi o'clock, and their text went up Rroadway to Morris street, which turns westward to the North River. ‘At Trinity Place, which 1s one block west of Broadway, the taxicab turned northward. It reached the corner of Rector street without incident, but fut after {t passed the corner three men approached it from the east side of Trinity Place, One of them jumped to a sent beside the chauffeur and the other two opened the! doors of the cab, one at each door, and eprang inside. | As the taxi had beon slowed down by @ sudden congestion of traffic, this wae not @ @iMoult manoeuvre. The man who Jumped up beside Martini thrust some- thing quickly against his side and » “Mow, you ‘drive on. If you make @ sound I'll blow @ hole tn you!" i Mortim was much frightened, ana wit scarcely a look at the man beside him 414 as be was bidden, He did not know what was taking piace in his cab. | Mi be heard was the sudden closing of the doors. So up Trinity Place inte Church | sirest, Its continuation, thy taxi proceeded, the man with the revolver never | peeking to Martini save now and then to say: “Faster, you; do you hear?” Martini saw the two policemen as he passed them, but he was too frightened, 109 @ure that man with the revolver would carry out hia threat, to call for as-; sistance, Meanwhile the two meanengers were having a fight inside the cab, As eoon be Me robbers boarded it they struck at Smith and Wortell, and the off man same to the floor of the cab with « deep gash in his scalp. Wordell, younger and better able to account for himself, was little injured by the blow he received, an@ Ge fought tooth and nali with the man who had crowded in on his side of the ead. @mIith was semiconsciour, but the robber on his side grasped hin throat and choked him to prevent a cry, Wordell tried to scream, but his assailant shut off his wind with a powerful hand and forced him down tn front of the sea In thie fashion the tax! sped on its journey up Church street, There was nothing about it to attract undue attention, as taxtoabs frequently may be found with two men in front. The robbers saw to it that no nolwe came from within the eab and they grabbed the valtse containing the $26,000, ORDERED DRIVER TO STOP TAXI. As the tax! egprouched the bury corner of Park T *} Mae ONting beside Martini said to him | “When you get to tho corner you stop, And don't gat off the box and don't | make @ sound, That's all you've got to do.” Martini, frightened more than ever because he Md not know what was coming, sibwea up es he was orfered and brought the cab to a stop a #hort distance from the corner of the crossing of Park place, As to what happened aftor that he ts rathee vague,” H@ heard the doors of the cab open and close again with » bang 24 eaw two men leap from inside just as the man who had been beside him jumped to the roadway. There was large touring car standing near the corner an@ Martini said that he thought the three men ran to It, got tn, one of the men t the maghine etarted away at once. ticket-seller in the northbound office of the Park Place station of the ‘ated railroad told a somewhat different story of the finale of wild-eyed, breathless and shaking with| excitement, dashed up to his window Just after 11 o'clock. There was @ Harlem rein etapding in the station. | “The firat of tho three men was tall, skinny, wore « black slouch bet and thes,” he eald. “He seemed to be atirut twenty-five years old. I didn't the others except to ave that they were shorter. man dammed a quarter into the window at me and yelled: ‘Three.’ through and gratybod three tickets out of my hand before I hed torn| , and the three made the train in about tiree Jumps, just es the gates | were slammed.” | After the three men had made thelr escape from the cab Martini recovered | his wits somewhat. At West Broadway and Park Place !s a fixed pollco post, ‘and there Martin! saw Pollooman Donohue of the Greenwich atrest station. stamtly he turned his cab tn that direction, and when he reached Donohue he 2084 him what hed happened. Donohue looked into the cab and saw the two messengers lying on the floor with bloody heads. Wordell, wav was in better shape than Smith, confirmed what tho driver sald, and the cab, with Donohue rd, was driven rapidly to the police ‘When it reached the station it was found that Smith had been seriously and an ambulance was summoned from Hudson Street Hospital, He wae there. Wordell's wounds were dressed !n the station, Detective Wheelan took Wordell to Pollce Headquarters years old, lives at No. 1, @ young! Paterson, th avenue ono driven by Genarro Mirondway | meng presented the checks and received oe" te sae fe and Church wiveet the | eR RLLE TOTO tn in Detective Stringer in em attempt to wet a description of the throe lighwayn tive much assistance in this matter. ‘The assault had come so suddenly and the light in the cab was so uncertain that Wordell could not toll what either robber wore, Martini ald that he was but neither could D atrala to took at the man who rode on the front seat with him, as ho thought the man might mistake a iook for disobedience of the revolver enforced order and dq Pate bullet through nim At the East River National Bank al! answeres to tnquiries about the robbery were retuned, Boon after the crime was tommilted a reporter for The Evening World went over the route taken vy the taxicab after the three highwaymen had boarded it Dut onty two men besides the ticket-seller at Park Place had noticed anything unusual in the nts of the day, No one seemed to hi noted the passage of the taxicab and no one saw, at least no one remarked in any way, the stopping of the tax! at the Park Place corner nor the hurried exit of the men This codbery has aroused the police to a realization of the oase with which auch crimes are being committed almost daily in this city, and a large fore detectives has been sont out to trail the fugitives, -$o———_____ TAXI DRIVER’S THRILLING SSS Martini, the driver, when he reached the Greenwich street police made this statement to Inspector Hughes “When I left the Produce xchange Bank at Beaver street and Broadway to @® to the Hast River National Bank with my two fares, I decided to drive down through Trinity place to Park place and thence up to Broadway in order old the congestion of traMe at the Equltable Butlding, Grove along Broadway to Morris street and then turned weat to ‘Trinity place. I turned north on Trinity place and drove along the east side of the sirect, Just as J was nearing the buck of Trinity churchyard three inen sprang toward the cab from the curb, One of the three made a leap for the box and eside me. As he did so he poked the muggle of a gun inn it with his hand so that passersby could not shed at me, ‘and straight turn TU Oi) you full of lead going slowly at the time and as soon as 1 felt that gun sticking tn ~ I let in some more power. 1 felt the door the cab yenked open and =r—-F-s0e86 fool the wtrugsle that was going on in the oad, but I did not look, straight ahead and feeling sort, of empty inside, ae if I was going over, I drove up the street t the corner of Liberty street we whizzed by a policeman and looking out I aw another cop near the corner of Cortlandt street. I drove right by Of them. too scared to make a sound, A» I neared Park place the man ‘Deside me enid; “ ‘Blow down now rnd stop at the corner of Park place.’ he Sumped off and streaked for that black automobile, “E felt the door yanked »pen again and saw the other two men Jump off and ola the one whe had been sitting with me, They all made their getaway and then @ oig crowd cam: Manini's cab wav taken to Police Headquarters, where Captain Faurot, the Anger print expert, took charge of 11 and made @ reproduction of every finger Prat that could be foind on it. ation, If you make a I obeyed him and Bullets Fly in Battle “® Sewover in his store in this clty to-| when the other opened fire. One of the -|the way the prisoner tried to tear him- took Amrtini there in the cab, ‘The police subjected them to searching questioning | ° STORY OF HOLD-UP IN CAB‘ THE EVENING WORLD, ’ to be used tn a “get away. | Bre Nold-up and attemp wan ih the store of Barnett Nemot. No, a Broome street, two doo of Orchard and from early morn! of the busiest parts of the eas robbery at Captured Bandit, in @ market centre and the atreet« were Aled with people vt In the shops! or bargaining sith treet peddlers . te real only halt a ed from a of his own and win beat trade being (hat of repairer and ond setter for reveral uptown | houses and department siores. It is his | Custom to go to these uptown places for | orders every morning ani then to come back and open his place about 9 o'clock, OPENED SAFE AND CONFRONTED | MEN WITH GUNS. This routine he followed this morning | and just an he had wins open the doors | of hia #ix-foot safe ty the back of hls wtore he | Ato fi 1 two men who » his (age and com ip bis honda. They stone thruat revolvers | manded him to hic vad crept nolamlertly inv th while he was busy with the combination | of the safe Nomet acted upon his frat Ivers were nis | threw linpulse, decane ther moet under we, ond hand: Ag he did so ho ry in a fash that the | revolver of one of (he men trembled In| up hts bie hand, That man was clearly fearful of what he was doing, wo Nemet took a chance. Me brought both arms down BARNET NIMET AND A ber iceh Nowenemogy suddenly, clutching the man about the Watst with one hand and with the other &rasping the revolver. The man at- tempted to shoot Nemet and two bullets crashed into the ceiling The jeweller drew the robber clore to him, using him as @ shield between him- ool the other hold-up man, beca the latter brought his gun into play and was Ing for @ ohance to put @ bullet into Nemet. He did fire four shots at the Jeweller, but none of them struck him, CROWD WATCHED BATTLE BUT GAVE NO HELP. While the astruggiing and shooting were golug on, Nemet held the human sheild in front of him and backed the two men to the door, the “shield” all thie time striving to break from his Grasp. But Nemet held on and saved himaelf, The nolse of the shooting at once drew @ great and excited crowd to the store emrance, but no one went to Nemet’s sesistance. Just at the door the man he was holding gave him a vicious kick and tore himself away and both men sprang Into the street. This gave Nemet Possession of the revolver, but when he attempted to uso it it missed fire, ‘The robber who otill retaine his gun flourished it threnteningly and fired over the heads of the people. The crowd fled. One of the men—the one without ® revolver, ran into Orc! opened oon after the mandamus e Was fied When the polls were closed, FH. Clay Plerce declared the directors proposed by him had been elected. ‘The new dl- restora immediately re-clested H. Clay Perce Chatrman of the Board, Clay Arthur Plerce President, and Andrew H. Finlay Vice-President. Charles M. Adams, who was on the Standard slate for a director, was ousted as Sece retary and Treasurer, and T. F. Lyon was elected as his successor. All of the ballots cast by the Standard Oll-Rookefeller Interests were resected. LIMITED DERAILED, FOUR ARE KILLED 22 HOUNDED (Continued from Firat Page.) other started eastward on Broome atroet. ited was held up, This ts the Atlantic In Hesex atrest, about two dlooks| Express. away, was Policeman Rosenfeld of the Delancey street atation. He had heard Nothing of the shooting nor the dile- turbance but he saw @ man running, stopped him and asked where he wus Passongera who were able to continue thelr journey were put aboard the At- lantic Express and are Wue to reach New York at 8.06 o'clock to-night, if the train is on time, ing. The man, Hebe cited, "reniied: “at Uresthless | "aie wreck occurred on the Mountain ‘I got into trouble with a man who| Division of the Pennsylvania. The! wants to fight me and as I am a peace- ful man I ran away.” PRIGONER THREATENED TO TELL MAYOR GAYNOR, The policeman said that the best thing to do was to go back and get the man, but the breathless one said he was afraid, Howev Rosenfeld _atarted back, and then the crowd, which had taken courage, came up and the police- man learned what had happened. On Rearest town of any fs Hunting: | ton, three miles east. As soon as the news of the wreck reached Hunting- don, all the physicians in that com- munity were rounded by the Pennayl- | vania oMcials and put aboard a spe- | celal train whioh rushed to the scene of the wreck. That the lons of life was not appal- ling ia attributed to the fact that the train was made up of steel cars. Few on the train escaped cuts and bruises, PUT ON SPEED TO MAKE UP LOST TIME. The train left Chicago yesterday afternoon and lost time during tho night crossing Indiana and Ohio, It! left Pittsburgh at 8.15 o'clock this morn- ing an hour and ten minutes late. No | time was made up in the climb to Al- | toona. At that division point two! heavy locomotives were attached and! self loose and it was necessary to handle him rather roughly, This provoked from him the threat: “Don't do that or I'll report you to Mayor Gaynor" By this time the reserves under Capt. Burflend and a squad of detectiv under Capt. Foye were on the ece and had the dlock surrounded, The man who ran into the tenement, how- » wot away, The other man gave his name as Louls Silver, but the police identified him as Louls Seidman, No, 9,208 in the| ordera were given to proceed at all tie Rogues’ Gallery, erved @ year in| speed the steam could work up, the penitentiary on Blackwell's Island At Warrior's Run the tracks are ele- | vated on an embankment as they follow | the course of the Juniata River, Nel. | ther of tho engineers could take any effective steps toward stopping the train | when the truck of the second locomotive collapsed, for the torn-up track caught jand derailed the second car behind them, The vestibules and couplings held on all the care back to the tenth, and they went over practically as one coach, The tenth car did not go completely down the embankment and the observation car was not dragyed from the rails. Bearing His Name. ‘The Pennsylvania Limited Is a favor- {te train with Western business men who ST. LOUTS, Mo. Fev, 15—The fight | de not care to ride on the eighteen-hour between the Standard Oi] interests and| Pennsylvania Special. It ts also heavily the It. Clay Plerce forces for control | patronises 0» New Yorkers returning of the Waters-Perce O11 Company was | fom Chicago and Pittsburgh. It is re- for “impairing the morals of a minor.” was taken to Headquarters, and 1 fotims of recent holdups have Ked to look at him, Pa PIERCE REJECTS VOTES OF ROCKEFELLER AS MANDAMUS SUIT PENDS. Elects His Own Directors and Re- tains Control of Oil Company been jorted that several residents of New mi Into the court to-day when the| York are among the injured, Standard O11 Company filed @ manda-| When the wrecking train reached Warrior's Run many of the injured Passengers were still Imprisoned in the While the sleepers and dining car were not smashed up, they were filled with the wreokage of seats, bert! and tables and under this wreckage pas- een ‘a were buried and unable to ex- tricate themselves, mus sult to compel the tellers at the | annual election to accept ck" votes of the Standard faction Ion of the Standard | WAs granted by the Clreult Court. The tion was directed against attorne: for Pierce as inspectors at the electto The polls for the voting of the atock| | cars. | Daring Robberies Here Recorded Since Jan. 1. This is an incomplete record of the highway robberies which have been reported to the police since the beginning of this y Jan. 7~William Davis, grocer, of No, 16833 Amsterdam avenue, held up by a man with a revolver fn his store, who took $1,300 from him. Jan, 9--Frank Anchelowitch of No, 2201 Crotona avenue, held up and robbed on the street by four men of $50 and his overcoat. Jan, 21-—B, Varoschitzki of No, 278 East Twenty-sixth street, held up by four men and robbed of $26 and an overcoat, Jan, 27-—-Two men armed with revolvers entered the H. and C, Garage at No, 207 West Seventy-fifth street and took jewelry and money wnounting to $500 from the chauffeurs Jan, 31—Max Schelder's newspaper delivery oMce at No, 15 Frank- THURS | The members of the engine crews, the HORLI DAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1912 Jeweller Shot at, Scene of Hold-Up, and Officer. Max SinveR \/ Se mail clerks and the passengers In the observation car did herolec work of rescue before the arrival of the rail- road wreckera and physicians. BRANDT SCANDAL WIHESSES HEAR BY GRAND JURY (Continued from First Page.) General Carmody, whose assistance I will have, 1 anticipate, in the investi- gation, “The investigation will be open to the Dublic and will be fully reported in the Press. This is a matter that requires full publicity. “Under the law I have power to sum- mon witnesses, but I have no authority to inflict punishment on those who may fail to respond to subpoenas, The Gov- ernor, however, has power of a char- acter that will be of use to me in that direction, should occaslon arise for its » seems to be no reason why my investigation should not begin next Monday. At any rato there will be 30 unnecessary delay.” Besides former Inspector McLaughlin, there were other witnesses in the Dis- triet-Attorney's office to- ready to fo before the Grand Jury tn the Brandt {nvostigation. Most of them were per- sons mentioned in Detective Woolridge’s report as having employed Brandt and discharged him for dishonesty or having suffered from his dishonesty, Among these witness were ©. P. Williams, formerly of Stonington, Conn,, and now living at the Ritz-Carlton, and Mrs. Johns Proprietor of an employ- ment agency at No, 90 Sixth avenue. John P. Rogers of the Pinkerton de- tective agency, Who was first called into the case by Mr. Schiff, and who brought in the police under the direction of How- ard Gans, was also on hand under sud- poena. Jvetice Gerard announced to-day that he was not ready with his decision or the application for a writ of habeas corpus for Brandt, He has gone over the papers and finds some points that appear important to him uncovered. +++ we LINER FLASHES WIRELESS CALL FOR DOCTORS. QUEENSTOWN, Ireland, Feb. b— The Leyland liner Caledonian, whioh left Boston on Fed. 2 for Manchester, called by wire medioal azviatance, A number of dociors left here on board a tug to Intercept the Hner, It te thought likely here that an acol- dent occurred aboard the stern | Protect Yeurtedf Got the Original an MALTED fort street was entered by four men who flourished revolvers and took $298 from him and his customers. Fob. 5—Samuel Appel, in his jewelry store at No. 2160 Eighth was held up by @ man witb a revolver and robbed of $1,183. enue, ‘There was snether daylight hold-up >| nearest to him and used him as @ shield Two men entered the place with! mon, an ex-convict, was caught as he “Pevelvere, ‘but the pjuck of the | was running away. The other er saved not only hie wares but| Two autos were in the nelghberhoos, wrappled with the robber} but it is not known whether they were Feb, 10—Irving Beckerman, a bank messenger of the U. 8, Raincoat Company, was attacked at Great Jones strect and the Bowery by two men, who took $998 from him and escaped in a black automobile. ] (Neda nae HS a Lm NNN Oyo ee nee BANK WRELNED WHEN ROBBERS BLOW Bi SFE jand ga Hundred Tenants in Elizabeth | they secu Street Building Roused by the Sho:k. | | steamship depa ESCAPE WITHOUT CASH. | Finger Prints on Dial Indicate That Three Men Did the Job. The safe in Gtovann! Maccarrone’: bank at No. Lilzove.h street was blown early to~ay, and the robbers) used 80 much explosive the whole front Of the establishment was hurled to the street, scores of tenants overhead were shaken from their beds, and “a panic ensued in the neighborhood. No money was obtained so far as known. The burglars were frightened away by thelr “rumble,” as the yeegs express it, The principal hopes of the Police for finding the robbers are based on numer- ous finger-printa on the jJapanned sur. face of the safe and on the combina- tion dial, Detective O'Gorman, who {s a finger-print expert, thought from his first view of these prints that he could get clear indications of the character- istics of at least three men, The bullding ts a five: tory tenement, housing twenty-two familles. The en- trance to the upsialrs apartments {s in| the middle of the ground floor, On the; north side of the hall is N. Trenta- coste’s restaurant, and on the south “de Maccarrone's bank, steamship office and foreign stamp department. He has been twenty years. The big eafo, stx feet high, th ide and two and a@ half feet thick, about ten feet from the front win- dow, Before it hung a: electric light. | The policemen on post had orders to! keep a close watch on {t, and the bank, | with another short distance away, employed Charies Harry, a private) Watchman, to protect their property. Policeman Crowell says he passed the | bank ten minutes before the explosion wi | Then they had to bore more hol jit any were ‘tained until the books are gone over. | Neve they had a “lookout tn front and {that they tapped an ele | ning into } ton tn tr | ments of [4m the walls and could hardly be re- | som were in business there for! . and saw the incandescent light burning in front of the safe as usual. The pri-| vate watchman says he passed five min- utes before the explosion and that the safo was 90 plain to him in the light he could read the figures on the convbinu- | tlon, | EXPLOSION WRECKS BANK AND) STARTS PANIC, But at 2 o'clock there was a roar that | rocked the whole neighborhood. The big | Dlate glass window went into the street | with « crash, and there was @ sound of | breaking glass trom several other build. ings, i he one hundred or more tenants in the house began running through the halls, down stairs, to the roof and down | the fire escapes on both sides. In a few minutes there was a similar exodus from other houses on both sides. Every- body thought # Black Hand bomb had veen set off, and soon there was such «crowd of haif dressed men, women ind children scurrying through the streets that the reserves from the Mul> verry street station were called. An investigation of the interior of the bank showed wreckage. everywhere, Most of the front of the place had been blown into the street, and fragments of the safe were sticking in the wall as if they had been fired from a cannon, There was hardly a whole plece of ture niture left. There is nothing to indicate how many of the safe crackers there were, but the police are conildent they were experts, They went through the hallway of the tenement to a rear door that opened Into an unoccupied rear room belonging to the bank, This door secured iby a heavy Iron bar that fastened in a staple, The rob- bers bored holes in the door, cut out a to infasten three bolts, and found then they had two locks to contend with. One they were able to pick, then mied" the door and got into tne vacant room jn the rear of the bank prope: The doors leading into the latter were not locked, BABY ICHED AO "BURNED TERRIBLY Face and Head Fairly Raw, Pin in Blanket to Keep from Scratch ing. Mother Had to Rock Him Night. “Cuticura” Cured Him, a ATTACKED SAFE. They firs: \ »t to the mship and | amp depar t behind the grill wort. Mg a desk, they pulled out all the took them Into the back room e them @ thorough overhauling. $5 worth o: stamps in thie Possibly some negotiebi et value of the iatter ured, cannot be a 71 Baker Bt. ff t my littl ‘atchogue, N.Y. ==" nephew was ‘swollen and inflamed, fon: way Papers. ani The Having cleaned out the ment the to the safe, turned off the tnc Nght and went to work, stamp and * orept escent ‘The police be- rle cable run- power to run ing fc ertain that they had powerful 4riils and were able to work rapidly. | They bored } around the combina- | ‘Yeus" fashion, poured in the nitroglycerine, known to the gentry as “soup,” filled the crecks with soap, And touched it off after they had got In the back room out of the way. Hi The shock of the explosion blew off go ¢ one of the massive doors of the safe, Ww. nd hurled the other around on its| inges with such force that the com- bination handle was burled into the wall go the door could not be budgod. The two inside doors were blown into the safe, one from its hinges. Frag- 1 were sticking all around ody had to 5 blanket so as to. * from scratching. for nine months. Every one who saw h the worst looking face baby. One doctor said t} neck and head itched and b iat It ths baby could if dead. We used diferent ointments cure eczema, but with no rellef. wrote for eamples of Cutleura Soap intment and my aster after t that they cased “him, bought the Remedios, ‘The only relief be would e when his mother vould was Soap and then apply, nt. He stopped scratching, dissed three cakes of Cuticura 4 four boxes of Cuttcure Ointment fece wi i nota sear on hist fine head of hair. Cuticura: erent ecmplctely cured him.” (Signed Jallie Valentine, Nov. 17, 1011. Ofntment i ple of each math Address," Cusiowt on. ‘Tenter-faced mem a ticura soap Shaving Stick. moved. The plate-ginss window and the tr: blown to the street and furniture overturned or demo! as ite pretty skin as. an the Imhed. Maccarrone sald there cash and §& worth safe, These wer was $2,000 In of stamps in the id to be intact. > CHARLESTON WINNERS. shay it h tT wit $350; : Senator Je 4 to 1 and ee, Rosel nee Fonso, Royal Blue Tours to Washington March 14, April 1, 11 and 25,, May 16 and 19) tir $12 Ermer 3 Days February 24, M. ind 23, April 6 and 20, May 4 and 18, Round $18 Covers all 6 Days Trip Expenses Secure IUustrated Itinerary for Details. SPECIAL TOUR TO FLORIDA February 27 (Via Seaboard Air Line) Round Covers all Trip $50 Expenses Railroad and Pullman Pares. All’ Meals in Dining Cars. Secure Mlustrated Minerary for Details and. 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