The evening world. Newspaper, May 9, 1914, Page 3

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=. r= . , SERVICES AT CITY HALI + that have been made thore. City Hall Park will be turned over | to the civic and patriotic organiza- | ‘ @esided to give these organizations a ) fag for the Mayor, announced that 1 utes, Hundreds from persons in pri- } vate Ife are finding their way to the T HE EVENING WORLD, ALL EXCHANGES CLOSE FOR FUNERAL OF DEAD HEROES Burial of Men Killed in V Cruz Battle to Be Made a Great City Event. Plaza Qutside to Be Reserved, for Patriotic Societies and i All Civil Bodies. ‘The Roards of Governors of the Btock, Produce, Cotton and Coffee Exchanges voted this morning to close | the Exchanges on Mondey from 10 to | 11 o'clock in honor of the sntlors and marines who died at Vera Cruz and whose funeral will be held at Brook- | lyn Navy Yard Monday at 11 o'clock, | after the city has paid aignal honors | to the dead Col. Daniel Apploton of the Seventh Rogiment has appointed a detail of eighty men, commanded by Majors Robert McLean and James FE, Schuy- lor and Capt. D. W. Falls and J. ‘Weston Myers, to act as escorts to the Mayor's committee of 100. Mayor Mitchel invited to-day civic and patriotic organizations of the) oity to take part In the ceremony at the City Hall, Monday, when tho funeral procession for the Vera Crua heroes gets there. It is planned to make the City Hall feature of the citys tribute to the memory of the departed sailors and marines one of the most impressive of the many de- monstrations of sorrow and rospect tions, Because of military etiquette they cannot take part in the actual fumeral procession, so it has been act- Bon-military organizations desirous @f participating in the City Hall Plasa ceremonies should notify Dock Commissioner R. A. C. Smith, Chair- man of the Mayor's Committee of One Hundred, who is stationed on Per A, North River. He may bo communicated with by telephone or fm person up to four o'clock this afternoon. The Commissioner will alzo be at his office on the pier to- morrow morning. Te bas been decided to assign an many non-military organizations un possible along the sides of the Plaza through which the funoral procession ‘will pass. Others will be stationed in the walks of the park, and {t Is likely that ® dispensation will be granted by Park Commissioner Wara, per- mitting the use of grass plots Mayor Mitchel has ordered a wreath of orchids and bay leaves five feet high which will be sent down the bay to meet the funeral ship. Dock Commissioner Smith and other city officials are also sending floral trib- office of the Dock Commissioner, 80 that It is expected that extra pro- vision will have to be made for the conveyance of these tokens. It_was announced to-day that the Dock Commissioner had sent a car load of mineral water to a uz for use of the land forces there, This act was prompted by reports of sus- pected attempts to poison wells and other sources of water supply avail able to our troops. The front of the City Hall is bein): draped in mourning to-day for Mon day's ceremonies, There is an appre vriation of §: The Wyoming, Capt. J. H. commanding, was towed from Hro lyn Navy Yard this morning at o'clock by four navy tugs which ¢ off their hawsers at 7.45. Five min utes later the big battleship we na | ateaming down the bay toward Am- Excruciating Tortures Women Undergo SATURDAY, MAY 9, 191 1914. BLAMES SNAKES SHAME ALMOST KILLS JOSEPHINE BROWN, In the Pursuit of Beauty of Face and Figure FOR TAKING A MAN “Re our Lea’ When @ creed for the in thelr quest Hancock, Martha Washin patients office, at No. 22: are anxious abe she said poor suicide is t higher educatlc are still many arently make chritude, “Over and torture for t complexion. it. came to me tion. Her m death's-head were puffed could scarcel: sagging lines. death mask. TIED LEST TI FROM “The operatio brose Lightship. ‘The Wyoming hi act as her as been assigned to of honor as she enters this With her alse will be the P. Ml yacht, M flower, which steamed down the tomac last night, to meet the funeral ship off the Virginin Capes. tary of the Nayy Daniels and tary of Agricniture Houston 4 aboard the Mayflower: The funeral ship, barring ident, will pass through the rrows and reaoh the Government anchorage off Tompkinaville by noon to-morrow eae MRS. BISON DEFENDS CALF.|, Bronx Zoo Keeper Wndly Cut by wat. Bernard McEnroe, keeper of the bison paddock in the Bronx Zon, was nearly |! killed to-day when he entered the en closure and incur wrath of a female member of the hi The female bison, wh herame a mother of a big, healthy calf last w Was frritable and yesterday chased Me: Enroe around the paddock. She didn't tw ny legKed. around fer’ baby and she let M know it qe did not tal and returned 0 dock to-day leon ta This tine anaged to run him down bow! him over. She rolled him in dirt, stam: him and was trying to ped him with her hi 7 pera rushed in with pitehforks u Srove her off, McEnroe was badly cut ‘Thomas J. Preston jr., "tormerly Mrs. Grover Cleveland, sailed for, New York to-day on e are ein. tends P ee cay 8 viet atay in the :! in al some clad eaiaioad te attend to, ae ery erste ter tt eres a. elec i toring the ) hodrs}| “Piercing the ears for earrings in 4 lat pplication © astringent, | well known torture, So is dying the unless it Is put on by a skilled | hair, whieh often ends in an inflam- Jnysician, there Is the risk of blood-| mation of the se: And the woman isonines | who sacrifices health and comfort by Biemixies, such as moles and su-, Wearing shoes a size too small for her perfluous hh ire removed by tho | is a familiar figure, She is deterred | needle, an operation by no) neither by corns nor broken arches, Jineans painless. ba massage, ane nor de Jonerves in her strugule other well-known beoutitier, means to have ‘pretty feet! the sacrifice of healthy tissues and “For beauty of figure women \0 ultimate effect isd us." | have sacrificed ae much as for woman told m “1 satd,! beauty of complexion, They [that a goud complexion ix the most have objected neither to tight Valuable single aid ty beauty because | laeing nor to improper diet. To |It covers the most space, Helleving attain the wasplike waist or the this, do not women make more saerl- | hipless effect they have pinched | flees for beauty of #kin than for othor | themselves mightily. As for diet, they ha ten slate pencils and MENACE TO “Perhaps,” “And yet consi risks they take “When women load their he: with false Permanent Injury to Health Also the Vain Quest, but No Sacrifice Seems Too Great in Taking the Chance of Im- rive and hold cheap the nor account the bert Browning wrote these lines he had no ‘dea of providing mary of her faith? es “The Inst beautiful as possible, have voluntarily submitted to pain they may find they hi ruined their beauty instead of in- had Wad paraffin injected all over her face to banish wrinkl admitted VES GNLARGED BY CUTTING THE CORNERS = Mh Rit Leal SrenaTION IMPLE MADE 8V Weis OPERATION PARAFING PADDING UNDER THE SKIN Is Risked in proving Personal Appearance. By Marguerite Movers Marshall. jovs three parts pain? strain: pang; dare, never grudge the throe!" woman who would be beautiful. But is there a better sum- 1 don't know of one, Every now and then some rebellious martyr to the cause of pulchritude sues the “expert,” who has skinned her face not wisely but too well, or who has removed gray hairs by the simple process of removing the entire coiffure, And yet the sacrifices for beauty go on. I fancy they are less numerous than they were. Some women, at least, have learned that there are other radiances in the world than the approving smile of the male, and the comparatively recent entrance of woman into athletics has also had a salutary effect. But if you believe temporary torture and even per- manent injury to health are not risked daily by women for beauty, examine the evidence offered by Dr. Eugenta Dr, Mancock was for several years resident physician at the Hotel ston, and has had an unusually large experience with women When I talked to her yesterday in her home, which !s also her 4 West Fifty-second street, she spoke with regretful candor of the suffering and danger women still undergo in the effort to create or conserve beauty. “Up to the hour of th women | >ut thelr appearance,” | act of many @ © make herself look as And despite the and athletics there women who will ap- | any sacrifice for pul- | chance of fosing their lives. At least one case of leprosy is on record in which contagion was traced to false hair. To my knowl edge ether horrible di been transmitted the same way. If much false hair is worn for any length of time a woman begins to lose er own hair, Headaches and strain caused by the heat and pressure on the head are other results.” Dr. Hancock's own dark hair waves Ughtly over her forehead and 1s wucht Ina simple knot behind, with- out sign of artifictal curl or braid. Her creamy white skin testifies to cleanii- | tess and good health, not to paraffin, | She is her own best proof that good looks are not dependent on painful and perilous beauty tinkering, “L saw a resport recently that Lon- don beauty specialists are expert in constructing artificial dimples. Can this be done?” F asked, “Indeed, yes. An inciaton is made on the inside of the cheek. The niin * pulled tn, tled in a knot and left to heal. The result is a dent or dimple have o” over again women And after al! their he sake of a good | i) eo) Recently a woman | in a terrible condi- jouth was set in a grin, her eyelids and stiff, and she ly eat or talk. She and The result was e HEY SEEK RELIEF) TORTURE. i noof skinning the face | a gpd deal of HEALTH IN FALSE drunk vinegar or gone practical! HAIR. " the doctor. der some of the other order to capture a desired slen- dern The baking and steam- ing processes of flesh reduction, 80 popular of late years, are ex- tremely injurious te health, hav- hair they run the Ss a ae oe ue ae To (eer ftom SCRATCHING PACE DURING SHINING ing a very bad heart. “When it seems no end to th have made in or prevailing idea of worn fur in hot lace when the around zero, ‘The: impeded their minous draperies ing skirts and in vented them from above their heads. “The hopeful th Hancock, “is that less foolish than phey acquirin i ws of heal nial growth Ww m other ought to look as can, but to acquit not seasions, anc ugly. comes thermometer mo things mere physical prettiness, to sacrifice more UNCOMPORTARLE ENAMG! on Pa effect upon the to dress there he aacrifices women der to satisfy the beauty, They have weather and filmy stood y have deliberately ments in volu- r in tightly-bind- sleeves: which pre- raising their hand, ing,” concluded Dr. women 4 they ui more respect for th and with thelr len are finding tn to admire than A wom ‘active as whe ty she ought| valuable pos- at © be And if ahe has good health geod mind she cannot be really! DETECTIVES CATCH A TARTAR, That's the Name of a Boy Fighter) ' ben Tartar is ian Hundred and who hay been Husain “only th: uy aL Poic ithe detectives: # ia painful, hough not « mhe dete r pr , y done, An astring on the ovtaide surtaoe, Hee tor Rate hou plied to the skin amd allow “Eylashes are cropped to make HEE @ number oF }1n a few hours the outer cuticle comes) them grow out thick and long, |him all the rope, off in flakes, leaving fresh, tender The electric needle is used for re- lowed him te the G hew skin. When this operation was) Moving superfiuous hairs to make (irst performed, before the strength the eyebrows shapely. Eyelids a of the astringents had been complete. — Slit_at the corners to make the ly tected out, the pain was > great @ m longer and larger. Bi (HAG busienth aelad to Fae tind (a ihe ladonna is dropped into the ey chairs and to have their hands tied to brighten them by dilating the Phey were afraid ther might seek to PUPII® This cguses inflammation Hospital | reliew ny with cold water, 'f used repeatedly. shout whieh £ is Wo use in such a SUFFERS EVEN CORNS IN HUNT|/. Londeel Ltt a Osan nove tare te FOR BEAUTY. Hie is in Ward under the atten Dr. Vosbureh. 7.30 P.M. ckpocket, only #ixt f who lives at and Buchth st in this country from months, wan in the rt Murr ast night in the they had wat Fourteenth street ata- "tailed He. truck and horse that had bean stolen n during the morning from Ham Nagle of No, 162 Seventh avenue At Third street and Avenue © Shert dan and Reynolds saw the stolen truck and horse moving eastward, with Bart and tT rio on the seat Kteynolds stopped the horse and jnat Tuesday. nieny (SuerMdan climbed up to arrest the Ing of his father, be. tWotmen, Barbarto drew a revolver event it'was but before he could use tt strap him down to) landed one his ample fists and 44. the p Hurbarto went clear through the back of tr of the wagon, ‘The two slouths sailed | in and quickly overpowered thelr | quarry Later th used the stolen}; | Nagle truck to haul the medicine to} Dinner Is} iyi nation house. thin "turning tn two Keparate lote of stolen proverty “Half-Past Clarice’ In M’Clave Home. §. Wood Mee! Nod at his summer Farm, tn © faces of In pla of his ne of him thelr ten childre Wood MeClave j MeClave hour 4, M Ormonde who, with fnu w wate eed Mela Louise MeClaye; hour &, hour % Mr. Mel Florence Holt guerite McClay McClave. ebrook f and Mrs hour 3, Mot lave; ive of Grantw Mra MeCiay un 1 is ine » by family erals hy appear p Met lay n. Hour 1 is re: hou Mrs. we nthe dial tures nd Roscoe Me tay hour 9, ur 6, Bila M ve: he hour Dune nM : hour hour 1, Mar- and hour 12, John - ce THE AOCBLA Fatigues, TORTURED TAKING &RSENIC STEAM BATHS ARE BAD FOR THE Weare, DIETING UNHEALTHY wMARTIN SHERIDAN PUTS GUNMAN OUT | WITH BLOW ON JAW Detectives Recover Stolen Wagon and Use It to Haul Loot to Station ‘Trailing horse thiever through the streets of New York is almost as ex- citing as the same sort of work used to be on the plains, as witness the experience of Detectives Martin heridan, Reynolds and Bromerhoft, of the nwich street station, Thi recited It when they arraignad Solo- non Bart and Giuseppe Barbarto in Essex Market Pollea Court. to-d. on a charge of stealing a horse and wagon A truck and | Warwick & Co, of ‘Thirty-seventh street and Seventh avenue was stclon a week ago yesterday, and on the truck were 65 cases of convulsion team belonging to medicine. The three detectives found the truck and team the next day on an East Side street, abandoned, but | the Yost the at Av merhoff property | went wagon It happened that fust before they had left their station house, a gen- eral order had been read notifying all policemen to look out for a leht Hlcine wax missing rday they get on the trail of {cine and located it in a loft due Do and Third street Bros mounted guard over the Sheridan and Reynolds to charter an express out on one trip. FIRE CHIEF KILLED BY FALL, Head of € nent Drops three ath, J, May 9 —Chartes thirty-five yeure old, of nortreet, Chief of the Can fen Fire Department, was Killed early this morning by falling three st the ground during a fire tn the cal Supply Company’« plant at htroet tn the reur of the Ridges way Totel was dead Chief Worthington Fire Department for fifteen years | Was appointed Chief year ago, | wae married and lea & widow eon. the | | j tral Valley, Orange County, =), ONNIGHT STROLLS Mrs. any B Anderson Needed Some One to Drive the Reptiles Away. WOODS FULL OF THEM. Walter Grant, Music Com- poser, Selected to Charm the Serpents. Are there so many snakes in Cen- N. Yu that the pretty married women who ko up there to summer must be chap- eroned along lover lanes o'nighta by men who are not their husbands? If that be ao, then Walter Grant, @ kood looking music composer, had a perfect right to take moonlight walks | with Mrs, Emtly B. Anderson, wife of | defense to the charge made by | and day. ty wile | nore divorce sult against her hus. Perey Anderson, who! drug- Rist. That at least ja Mra. Anderson's her husband that she and Grant were soul mates, The trial of Mra, Ander band started yeaterday before a jury In Juetice Cohalan’s part of the Su-| | preme Court, and Anderson ts coun- ter suing her for divorce, Grant. Harry Jones, an Assistant State Forester stationed near Central Val- ley, came all the way from up therd to be a witness for the husband, naming Right off the reel Jones confessed | he waa an expert on the enakes up there and knew every Inch of the ground in Central Valley, And knowing the country so well, did Jones ever see Grant and Mra. Ande in together? Anderson's attor- ney wanted to know of the witness, WALKED WHEN THE MOON WAS NICE AND BRIGHT. T saw them walking up the crooked road in Central V the witness related. the evening and sometimes at night when the moon was uy nice and bright. They walked arm in arn and sometimes had thelr arma around each other's waists. I never saw them kine, though, “Do you remember one particularly bright moonlight night when Grant and Mrs, Anderson weren't walking together?” asked the husband's at- torney. "Yes," the witness answered. xaw them sitting on the fence ri with their arms about each other looking up at the moon. ‘Thon on another occasion [saw them walking up toward the Mountain Top House, | cach smoking 4 cigarette and blowing | the smoke inte the alr. ‘How about another occasion when Mrs. Anderson was sitting down in the grass in the woods?” asked the lawyer. wp runpratey that, too,” the forester sald, Anderson was sitting down and “Grant head rested in her Jup. She was looking down into hi eyes and stroking his long black bal HERE'S WHERE THE SNAKES COME IN. On still another occasion, the wit- ness salu, he saw the couple walking down the same crooked road arm in as with a atick he Was carry- ‘This is where the snakes come Mra. Anderson's attorney In great excitement wanted to know if Jones knew every inch of the countryside “Are there snakes up there? the r apked "Many of them," the witness ald. “And it is not un mmen for mv to go around. with women, carrying sticks to ward off the anakes, in it?" the lawyer inquired, “ON, 1 know,” said the wit- ness, "Lon had to carry a atick for the snakes. I've killed a jood many snakes up there without any A ou matter of fact, don't. the es come right up to the hotel? | asked 1 don't think they get as ndly aw that,” the witness replied, ‘and any Way, snakes don’t bother 0 jean you bother them.” spondent, was called put Was excused tam ‘ore any questions were > you u asked | WHITE TO MARCH ON yD. JR. CHURCH. Fouck White, head of the Church of | at No. 11 Weat nnounced today he and his fol- the Fifth Ave- urch, popularly oe Calvary Baptist ¢ mwas the Kockefeller Church, and Key Woelfkin to certain questions White hes written Rey. Mr. Worlfkin telling hy t ng viatt, and that he ckefeller will ' m the Ine is det Andings of come | Foeltkan, aber with the Investigat tells Mr ¢ ur ehureh me 6 intimate way 4 Trinidad rw White’ offers his and his followers if any ation “by wilder “ women * of White's making « ban- ch ber whieh will be borne Sunday when te Hor f thie Kole. Forty-tourth atroet, ison Bundays, to. the One woman said it enn Wat White ly which Rocket “Sometimes in| ¢ Grant touched Mra, Ander- | AGED MAN ARRESTED + INARAD ON A FLAT Seventy-one, He Collapses When Led to Cell After a Merry Champagne Party A gray haired man, who saye he ie Benjamin Odio, seventy-one years old, | & retired merchant living at the New | York Club, No. 20 Wost Fortieth | atreet, came near dying of shame after |e was arrested when « gay party in| | | a fiat in Forty-seventh street, be- tween Sixth and Seventh avenues, wan raided by detectives early to-day. When tho aged prisoner was being lod back ¢) a cell at the West Forty- |seventh street atation ho screamed at aight of the bars, “This disgrace will Kill mo," he shouted. Then he col- Japaed. Dr. Tobin was mimmoned from Polyclinic Hospital and had to work | aome time over the unconscious pris- | oner before he could revive the old man, The physician then said to the police, “You'd better let him go to Rellevue. His heart ts in bad shape and it may be fatal to put him in a cell” The medical advice waa accepted nd Odio, who was charged with be- ing an inmate of a disorderly house, was placed in an ambulance and trun- died to the hospital under a police guard At aight of the Bellevue prison ward bars he again showed signs of col- apaing and cried, “That looks worse than the other place, Take me back |to the polloe station.” His request | was granted and on his return to the tation he was locked up. He had | sent out a mossago for a bondsman, but none appeared. Rone Harris, twenty-aix years old, | wan charged with being the proprie- tresn of the alleged disorderly house, and Dixte Purotval, twenty-three, of No, 124 West Sixty-sixth stroet, and mond, England, to Lisbon, where Ruth Cooper, twenty, of No. 6 West One Hundred i‘ Thirty-fourth street, both actresses, were charged with being inmates. Gussie Hiull- berry, colored, @ servant in the es- | tabliahment, was arrested on achargo of violating the excise laws, the de- ectives alleging that she was selling and serving champagne. The three white women obtained bail almost immediately after thoir arrest, At the New York Club it wan sald to-day that a Benjamin Odio, an elderly man, had quurters there, but that he had not been seen about the clubhouse for two nighta. —_—_———__ SPURNED LOVER MARS | ENGAGED GIRL’S BEAUTY |Slashes Her Across the Face With Razor When He Hears She Will Wed Another pretty Rose Verasanto's theart arrives from Italy shortly y her he likely will find her beauty marred through the act to-day of a jealous rival, Rose lives at No 8 Monrge street and is employed in a factory in Laight street. She is twenty years old and has all the at- tractivoness of a Sicilian beauty. Throo months ago she met Guiseppe Gurglate, twenty-one yeara old, of No, 198 Elizabeth street. He began |immediately to pay her court, but ahe |treated his attentions 4s a joke. In | short time he aw! her to marry him and she declined. This morning the girl had reached St. John's lane and West Laight street, when he aud- \denly stepped out and took his place ath aide, ‘Rone, will you marry met he asked, She gave him her usual reply of “No” und added: “You know why 1 can't marry you. T have a sweet- heart In Stetly, and he ts coming soon jto marry me.” | Gurgiate drow a razor and began slashing at her face. He inflicted a vix-inch gash on the right ide of her neck, one under her left eye and cuts that will loave scars on both oheeks. After 4 six blocks’ chase he was caught by Polloeman Sofskey of the Keach street atati He dented he had attacked the girl, but the police |say they found @ blood stained razor in his pocket and that she (dentified jim. | When law. to ma _-—_— GOT 2,000 FISH IN NINE DAYS, | Man Whe To the Fditor of The Evening World Martin T Ford, manager of | Rquitable Life Insurance Spmes A pas the just finished a sojourn at th w' si Hotel at Ocean Hoach, Fire Taland, ‘and }in nine days he has caught two thou- Jann flourders—actual“count-chonest Injun "Aha te xome fish story for The Even ning World WILBUR. How Much the Wife Is \Dearer Than the Bride! A happy home, a handsome wif For Constipation, Dixzi Bilious- ness and Stomach Troubles use i RG PILLS GET A BOX TO-NIGHT Fh ot Dre, MWe ond 25 the ben | and children—health is the secret. |p AMERICAN ACTA Accepts Sudden Proposal Taxi Made by Grandson Portugal’s Grand Old PARIS, May 9.—Josephine the American actress, ie to-day bride of John Feuerheerd, and heir of Duke Ferdinand, who @ multi-millionaire and called jrand Old Man of Portugal.” Since the downfall of King Feuerheert has become @ subject, but he is a royalist, aad the event of a restoration would low Manuel from his court at would assume his titles. ‘I met my husband tn the Royal in London Mareh 41,” Mra. Feuerheord, describing her sage ond romance. “His eyes are bine, same as mine, and we found we many other things in common, “On March 26 we went for @ tagl |) ride in Hyde Park, when John 4: denly proposed, and we it drove to Chelsea Town Hall, we were married by the | FRANK MORAN SMILES; FULL OF CONFID Crowd of Friends See =a MW to Fight Jack Johnson tn # i Paris. #1 } Frank Moran, the red-headed white | hope who says he is going to “Mek” Jack Johnson, the black champtom wan the last passenger to embark om the Olympic just before her last gamge plank was pulled in this mornings ‘The hopeful white hope stood em y plor with @ number of sports unttl the last mb advice from them as to how te off the black, and supplementing gestions himself as to how he is ing to turn the trick next mont. + “Bring back the bacon, Frank!” they yelled to him, . “If you don't lick him, don’t esmpi back,” they adjured him. “Watch me,” returned Moran, his red head disappeared under side of the ship and the went back with a whang, Moras. scheduled for an exhibition on Wee nesday night on board the Olymgé> with the Hon. Seton R. Boreas = ROSIEHERTZTO BEGALLED ~ AGAINST WASSERMAN ey That He Paid Weekly Graft to the Ex-Policeman, Rosie Hertz, who recently served: torm im the penitentiary for 4 disorderly house on the has been subpoenaed to Monday as a witness for the in the trial of the $100,000 il of Joseph A. Wasserman, liceman, against the Bronx News, Tho suit ta now in before Justice Brady in the County Supreme Court. Former Pe- lice Commiasioner Bingham may ba appear on Monday. Jacob Hertz, the husband of i was on the stand during moat of seanion yesterday, He testified he paid Wasserman from §35 te a week for protection when Wi man was @ patrolman in First and that he also paid Wi after the latter became @ clothea man in the Fifth at cinet. Quit Thinking You Cannot Eat Any Ggod, Wholesome Food Well, "Try eating anything yore with your food BIP a Minas oF STEWART 436-440-442 WEST Sia ST. RUG“°CARPET CLEANSING Founded in 1863 i TELEPHONE 5567 COLUMBUS

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