The evening world. Newspaper, April 14, 1916, Page 22

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—— t | 5 Se an, ee - Reanmenenenerentnseces etait ERT NE CT Rt RE The Evening World Daily. Magazine, Friday, April 14, 1916 a “| By J. H. Cassel none aoe iorid. | The U-Boat Captain’s Sketch . ESTABLIGHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Published Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Now 5% to The Stories Of Stories irk Row, New York. 4 “ = | RALPH PULITZER, President, $3 Park Row, - 7 be Aare J. ANGUS BHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Row, JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row aa ‘ Nepean lo vet wr . = Te | pee Sey fe os NGS, Plots of Immortal Fiction Masterpieces Entered at the Post-OMice at New York as Second Class Matter, . 4 \ pom og hag ont bY Evening | For ; ngiand and the Continent andé/ si ; “ - | | B ee a Te h for! for the United States All Countries in the International ‘nd Canad Postal sion | y Albert Payson Terhune One Year.. sueeseues 68.60 One Tear . sore One Month - 30'One Month. Ty Covrriaht, 1016, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), THE COP AND THE ANTHEM, by O. Henry. 74 OAPY" was a tramp. From March to December he roamed S VOLUM Brcscevrsvs NO, 19,060 WHO ARE HIS COUNSELLORS? ARRANZA’S clumsy and disingenuous effort to make out th United States troops never had the permission of the de facto Mexican Government to pursue Villa into Mexican territory is the woret way he could have chosen to set about securing their withdrawal. After the killing of Ameri the obvious and im mediate thing to do was to get Villa and get him quick. This Gov crnment was willing to discuss a reciprocal arrangement which wor allow Mexican troops to pureue raiders over the American border. ! Sut that was not the matter of first moment. ‘There was no inten- tion of dragging out negotiations while Villa made Carranza understood that perfectly When the punitive expedition firet crossed the line, with the assurances of the United States Government that it would in all ways | scrupulously respect Mexican rights, a Carranza general met the ad vance troo) the country. When winter began he always came back to New York, where he managed to get himself sent to the warmth and comfort of the Blackwell's Island Workhouse ‘for the cold months. One evening tn early December Soapy sat moodily on @ Madisod ( Square bench. Winter was at hand. It was high time for him to go to the Island. This trip was easy to arrange. All he need do was to commit some petty misdemeanor that would get him arrested and sentenced to a three-month Workhouse term. Soapy arose from his bench and prepared to incur arrest. The sim- plest and pleasantest method was to go to a restaurant, eat a big meal and refuse to pay. He entered the nearest restaurant. The head wal took one glance at his hobo raiment and ordered him out. Ho went to a cheaper eating house, devoured a hearty dinner, then an- nounced his insolvency and bade the waiters call the police. But they merely threw him into the gutter on his head, And a passing policeman grinned and walked on, | Not at all discouraged, Soapy picked up a stone barman threw ft throuch a plate-gliass shop window. A A Try for policeman rushed up. Soapy stood still and admitted “The Island.” that he was the offender. The policeman thought he ans = WHS Ving and sprinted off in pursuit of a man half @ Mock away who was running to eateh @ car, Fear gripped Soapy. It seemed he could t hitnself arrested, that the New York police force was in league to leav naione, But he tried ce more. First making sure a policeman was in sight, he sidled up to ® pretty girl and spoke insultingly to her. She merely laughed. The police- man yawned and strolled away. Soapy's chances of getting free board and lodging for the winter looked ‘dark. He next tried to create a disturbance by yelling at the top of his lungs and causing a crowd to collect. A policeman glanced at him, de- cided he was a college boy celebrating a football victory and looked the other way. In utter despondency, Soapy slouched out of Broadway and into @ cross street. Aimlessly he rambled on, until he reached the Little Church Around the Corner. The church was softly lighted. The organist was playing an anthem. Soapy paused, leaning againet the tron railings, and listened. He ree./ | mene them. He remembered tt from the days when he still ha a mot ida and atubitions, The muste stole into his heart, atirring } ‘strange memories and stranger yearnings. All at once, under the anthem's spell, he ren and made no protest of an By his present stand the First Chief faithless or a fool. Does he or does he not want Villa « Doee he want this nation’s friendship and co-operation or does he, want its contempt? Does he desire its support or is he willing to! risk being swept out of his present position into the discard? Does) he realize what will happen if his cantankerousness reacts upon the Mexican army or the Mexican people in a way to cause harm to Gen. | Pershing’s men? j ‘The best we can wish Mexico at this moment is the emergence | of some one who can show prudence and common sense. Carranza could ‘have been the preserver of his country. Instead there is grave suspicion that he will turn out to be only a catspaw in the hands of wr Hea bela! 0) tet etebsbitdy Ali] A Rag neo e ree ‘ contemptible was his present life. Ho longed to be a man again—respected, collision the first result of which must be the First Chic : a helf-respecting, with a place of his own In the world, And gradually the t= --- y - rs id 3 longing crystallized into a resolve. He vowed he would turn his back on the tramp ex. it of the way? | *s downfall. Germany's case whittles down to this: The German subma berms istence he had been leading, He knew where he could rine captain drew a picture that doesn't look just like the Sut A Strange get a job. To-morrow he would apply for tt, And he sex. Any artist is liable to that sort of discrepancy. Maybe Reform. would forthwith beg! rh a: : eee Uae ce é . d nnaannnnnsods The resolution gave him a feeling of exultant hap- there was & battle in the pertesape. \ piness, He looked back with loathing on his mis- spent years, In future he would Just then a policeman happened along. Seeing the tramp leaning against } the church railings, he decided Soapy was a suspicious character, So he @ arrested , Next mi months’ impr ANOTHER SHIP-BOMB PLOT. REDIT for the round up of another group of German bomb- plotters is due the New York Police Department. ‘lhe men arrested were engaged in a systematic scheme to make fire bombs and secretly place them in the holds of ships carrying cargocs to countries at war with Germany. The bomb cases were made aboard the Nortlt German Lloyd steamship Friedrich der Grosse at its pier in the North River, loaded at a Hoboken chemical factory and then distributed to the “placers.” - It seems to have made no difference that bombs concealed and timed to explode at sea in merchant ships were, unless discovered, lound to cause the death of hundreds of non-combatants and neutral persons among passengers and crews. Unlimited destruction of inno police court Magttrate sentenced Soapy to three at B kwe Island _————————— Do not trust all men, but trust men of worth; the former is silly, the latter a@ mark of prudence.—DEMOCRITUS, When a Man’s Married — By Dale Drummond — Ellabelle Mae Doolittle By Bide Dudley —— The Jarr Family — By Roy L. McCardell — Copyright, 1916, by ‘The Pree Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World), CHAPTER XXXII [upon the marriage announcement of . Marion Lawrence. Had she beer cent human beings was a mere attendant circumstance Cooyright, 1916, by The Prenx Publishing Co, (The New York Eveaing World Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Co, (The Now York Evening World later ae a poset wn (Wrong inthis am whe tad been tm r rs LL _ PLE, | bam acing o JARI : » tele- | Jot that one down agains little trouble ul else, and was Robert's i : In her submarine warfare Germany las once or twice admitted LLABELLE MAE DOOLITTL pn eng j JARN answered the tele-} Jot that one down against YOT ‘ Sr Taninae omat Tee eee ae + ; 7 : the Delhi poetess with a heart | phone, “Tell her I'm not . “Well, it's only a little fib that peo- efficient teacher of ‘ ieoharbnge oo claim nat ofan that women and children on unarmed liners do not invariably deserve and @ boul, waa the eueatoClnt | | estan ie ae 4 ne men re- | Brades, and was soon ‘nstailed in ee Wien aie tegearou aie : whispered rs. Jarr, I 1 day \- ‘ moh : pear aie All cause for fealou: ‘emoved, her” to be blown up or drowned without warning, But what about the nonor at a reception Jan ven} 4, aa atie Wave cela ualoude oil Vac otras (Menken Metis board i cing seaviay ack | xing for Robert " more’ ine ‘ res of persons 01 cargo vesse set come: > 0 by the Live and Let Live Seetion of | # as ar a arc aloud, s I have you to b it on. and and forth as she had done before she | tonse, and she begun to plan her re. hances of persons on a cargo v 1 ea, doomed to destruction he Wortai'a atlanmant. LAnene-oclM | Jenkins ii ae Huan you are.” said Mr,|met Robert, But now she felt ®| turn to Weatlind. “But the fear that at a certain moment by some devilish k-work contrivance hidden | Delhi, in Hugus Hall, Wednesday | ci ripe nea st | Mr. Jarr sputtered a minute, and |! strange unrest, @ dis ‘i fore Ml ml@ht nave glye ‘tore a4 ° Sac es wa hree cheers fo abelle Mae } “ . think {f es |she coulk t aecount, And— $01 ‘ 1 in its hold? { syenlngs vant ob PAS TES 7 | Doniit yelled Mayor” Walker, | then said: “Sra, Jarr has just gone | “Well. don't you think tf one does | #P ele ae acco! one away, kept her silent and held Ye hope the trial of these plotters will disclose not o mitted to invite a man, Sixteen dress | wien the second poem had been read. i wrong and isn't worried about {t, then , mise yh ne ta day came when she : We hope t trial of these plotters will discl not only the sith eure i evideata, 404 40S WAAL he teeta i riggs ay hands | out 1 know it's quite eariy,| ay wae vous error?”; “I won't ask him to take me back! | could no jonger cndure her loneli- German officials alleged to have financed the ship-bomb conspiracy, very tittle drunkenness, and almost 1 of you to not do it," she| but I believe she went over to Brook- | 4 ced stys. J I won't!” she would sey, denperately | ott verte Bee Bee ee elle . nea higher Jonad hwnd van } es no fehtia True, there was rather id. is honor enough to be per] yn to her mother's ‘ hs ee itis wanting to go, homesick for the o! bard use, and too! but also how those higher up apportioned moral responsibility for this Ne Mehting. | Ones oanatanie| milied 10 apRear batons sou, kal ree nee Tun ea was callousne juse of which she had been mis-|the train for Westland, She would particular kind of wholesale murder. Pelee Brown and Ike Whaley, but it| then, ople outside nicht get al “Well, I must say,” remarked Mrs, | "61 tress, missing the inde pendence, the nae Penile ane mid see on her wus of brief duration and was soon|wrong ided of this meaung if they| So it ts, Call « YOUR feeling of freedom which space gives, | © eye obert were st int 2a edi etme auractl card cheers, Vil Kyou a wong} Jerr in a mot aurpriag, Ae ots part, and I s remarking How and which ghe had not realized while jou Rian - 7 i Mf Unole dam «ol zhty little Refo: the dancing began Miss|and then we'll dune Jarre put up the telephone receive : vg enjoying it. Galo wee stormy ni, wi Phoveh aauilet man Hipjealt,, Ungle Ramm sete mighty itt Dovliitle favored the assemblage with | She hurried to the and sang kan Ke you cduld tell that poor woman 28 “hut Jane worked doggedly on. The! sho reache stland, and as pid chance to go indoors and forget the neighbors several of her latest “city” rhymes | her latest compoaltte Sweetheart va certainty can tell the biggest | glibly @a you did that 1 had gone saine spirit which had made her r6-) snow swirled about hor and dritted PE a RU See RG oS «LR ee ind they put all in good humor forjit We Must Part, t Us to Ve | stortes right band over to Brooklyn to see my mother fuse to cook for Bobet: Baw Helped in heaps along the street sho thought ° . ° the session of ‘Terpsichore that fol- | get? TlGSLBMUGHIN Gk YOUN/SEEKE: HALEY ohare Ode. waiaone wack her to stick to her fob, and she al-lot that first night whens Hits From Sharp Wits 1g epmnlcn OFT ecmea crs, Wiomuiced |[e'TNS, crowd ‘applauded with. wrent | Uaet! eur agent tn the |at this erly: hour and never crack | TOS etaunded herself at times that] Rohert had comets the mange 1ene by Mayor Cyras Perkins Walker, who | gusto. matter,” retorted Mr, Jarr 1 sub- a sm when a s time that poor, she was happy in her new indepen-/ tow: together, and of how she 4a A device for the prevention of] The employee who is fired with am- | peferscd tod “the fairest flower, All were pleased, t that the Recording Angel must |deccived woman must have known qe almost—not quite, Then of a d @he could never be hare eavesdropping ony tele- | bition is xellem fired. wi week's |on the Jimpe od of poetry.” erianaeh aieca aon: you were telling an untr b sudden thera came a day when thel happy phones 1s calculated to greatly lessen | notice.--Philudelphia Inqulre Doolittie mounted the rostrum look world turned black, when she knew| jy the attractiveness of staying indoors One drop of blood drawn from thy country's bosom ghouti me wis dark when she reached the ing very sweet in spite of the pre | that nothing mattered save Robert, | Tae etl house, As she walked up t on rainy days, Phe trouble about forgetting to send ence of a sty on her left eye, she grieve thee more than streams of foreiwn gore,-SHAKESPEARE you told me to say you weren't: ang his love. Without him she could) jnading to the Pl eC path re) a few friends wedding invitations ts) bowed very prettily and then skinned | I SHEdLhe! eine PAPAS IAS Rover. live’ through the comin) gunmen og ene ie (rahe BR & When the young husband agrees to] that you will not get as many plekle| a. poem. off of manuscript | Jarre was not heeding nie !month, But what could she do? Her | Ein arma the Nine, SARE, PAO. accept one of the offices in bis lodge,| forks ana salad spoons.--Macon | Without hesltation she began reading | ki . pride would not allow her to send for| Suc ,cnod the knob, which meets regularly every. week, | New ja thyme about Minneapolis, It fol- | Makin ga Hit him, natther would It let her contess | .V"'"s dv open and she entered you may safely say that the honey- ca % lows | I - Wood A es," she remarked, aa though to herself in the wrong and go to MIM.| noise, hut the door nt the Hviee tee toon 49 over.-Mucon News, First among the things that yo k i AP Pick hops fe area ete ae antiy unnappy; yet for | Noise, but 4 om a ee ought to belleve just because you Minneapolis iw wim they emake fon | 3) ma- oodwar rerself, “now I will have to stay at Sho was polgnantiy ynnopny; 3 w uddenly opened and the Ment There are always some who are|hear them, o hone | Copyright, 1916, by The Prem Publis 1 creat ©o, (The New York Bren ' home 5 nad some shopping tc streamed out ¢ lace the good things The York Evening W And I had some shopping to f She grew more and more restless, o the hall \ ‘do wot care. Maho Tawil ! uw “Jane!” Robert eried, and disappointed when the worst fuils to| about yourself that flatterers say to at eet oe f Hee, With the Doctor. And if he doesn't want to do that,|do downtown! Oh, dear! Oh, dear!" ag her health failed. Then one day| 2k) onert nd in an. happen. your face Albany Journal. Pivnat neicraees 6 the city | Sasne: The Browne’ apartment at 6.30 P.M. | he shouldn't be a doctor in the first “Why will you ve to stay home esha knew; and with the knowledge| her moment she was weeping in his — - w Yo) have r been to there? Mr Brown pane from business. “Mra. | place, Don't you think 1 > 4 on caine a thrill of Joy so intense it| "TMs. her wonderful secret shared, F } What @ sume! What a sorrow and pity! | Hrown greeta lium inditfewntis, She is quite!” Me, 8, (lentently) “Oh. iva rad WA on Mra, Jenkins's account?” asked | am® © tree: and with it came al “Can you foreive me, Robert?” she s I oy My sliter'a child, ‘Temes Ric idee ge- Nil nataadl nmelteien? ftevent if baby had diphtherla, or | Mr. Jarr Robert which would not] Asked tromblingiv. "T have hee: Letters rom the People a he Benn wh ia I, B. (right off the reel)—i'm | Soren If aby had diphtherta or | “Hecause you are a big stupid!” longing for For hours she turned the| Wicked. fault-finding wife!” But. {¢ In Thirty Day represents the common ratio, which ia Why’ should you be “offieious not late, aim 17 1 didn't stop” Mig, Hi. (exeltediy)—How dors he|eried Mrs. Jait, “It you had only! great wonder over In her mind, first] von wit take ino back Til try and, To tue Editor of The Evening W given as two,and “n" the numb: Pot apwabing of Miateailia Sion is 8 place, Billy |Know it tan’t diphtheria? He hasn't | jana aa 1 told you and simply sald [| full of fear and dread, then quivering| make a home for vou, try and mate A reader asks how many pennies a] terms, "30." The result may be agit sour Easter lat Green wanted to shoot me a game of him sinee yesterday, 1 want J rica with Joy. But hor Joy as well as her| you—and the ehtid-—hanny 40 thirt s y. {tained by logarithms, by wh ‘one! Don't be « den pape ayes ne | YOu to look at him, Freddi {wasn't in she would have known I) fear was tempered by her thoughts! “Tt wee for er or for worse, It moan woul have tn thirty Gaya by 167° ling Te da Pee gens Th thin point that Ike Whatey | DO but 1 refuses And Pete sult h-| Mr. B. thending over baby's orth) | was, but that 1! was not conventent of Hobert, Oh, If he only knew! and! tte wife” Robert nnawered. | “Wa asic nny the first day and 1,000 pennie: nt tha ° t pestered t © out of me ye el, you Httle ‘ > y > JAD? Or| have had hads now oa ox \ Spe aside Penny he firet fay bi 15 By substituting the grew obstreperous. Ike, who had {e's Just pestered Mt ut of m Well, well, you Iittle rascal, Mud- | for me to see her. Now she will| Tf he knew would he be GLA wowe will an. “sary values for their equiva a New Orleans der says you won't amile at jer : ; . y her actions driven bim| prectate the wood” . at come direct to the hall from Hogan’s| to Ko In and ha eae ee in Brooklyn and | ned one by. han ; e A very simple way for ne such | valu will get ‘#," the aum, cqual | last Aan con cnlncur Heat ener e izes HU meld aay, ugh for your Dad now, Snoops, go | Nne® | t Tam tn Brooklyn and | rom ner forever? Aaah toldndn hile Anoias tie Sean problems would be to use wh |to 1,078,760,000 pennies, which ta nm. | 4a) iste, Pens |G BUG k one ene onianen ab tlm he will come up. ‘One day as sho was glancing list-| for whom he had se patiently walted called “geometrical progression.” In| proximately the correct answer. Gey Rod tert,” sie | fost MY SB SIREN Mere, B. Cfearfully)—sea, he won't] “What should she come up for if! jessly through a newspaper ahe came Psst. this method the sum=a (R—1)—R—1, | metrics ieo- |S marked a Progression may be found in even laugh at you” ‘Take out your ‘s" hinks you won't be home?"| = — "a" standing for the first t thi n, which |any a vanced alge (peeved)—Did you hear} wateh, ¥ a book “idie, and if he doesn't 1 quals oR ask a questic F ed verplexed Mr, Jarr | % : in this method equals 1 R HAUSE Mt should be pleas niinwer ity" | What DL maid? Freddie, | Meh then that te the mupreme tent, eee ee ree ne Mra, Jen- Uncle Sam and the Servant Problem. = pi gia ieaeianod = ere d Miss Doolittle | r $., (suddenly)—Oh, Freddie a net gy ae oe ee . 7 ; x" ‘ © only viettr 0 gave occupation prior to ent Doll — | eaid Mins Doolittle ia t donkey {HM 3% Worried about baby eiira vm “Sol ying ts in New York at this hour ©, you aren't the only vietim) who Rave orcup tion prlor to niry ollars and Sense By H. J. Barrett sw Ihnean't aiiiod once to-day! for?” asked Mrs, Jarr, in. turn of the servant problem, More is] "wuoky” than any other lass en- Mayor Watker realized that Wha- |) Mr He (philosophically) —= Well (impertousiy)——there ts | « Dry et al A oa aa BPA a OLiAT cURAnke Hed during We peried 66S PS. we are just as partioulur 4 ’ { : prptliaed that Whe lthere are lots of days that I don't] ‘ ri Why shoul get up i > marine corps psc ual see ity gala lnvolces would arrive; would |eY Wea intcsion je took action) siiie. Maybe he feels blue, ea vere Reon intel at age [and get in at 8 o'ciook from East) Uncle Sam, rich and powerful, good | are. very Hight at ait times, ‘The pero he re 4 in the receiving room |immediately : : dayne be 10 mould | loetor=-he won't even Iaugh at Mtr, | 2" ee oa pe vintho|@verage marine considers that the amount on all incoming in-| thoy wet), tat department. Next | ole Brown, will yey sindly| Bet ele niet thee ia| Brownia watch, w Had) cpaver| MBNA? ier MF BABIES IAP BAe |t0 ‘nla “he end the arent Day ia: service offers better advantages than as we are in protecting Mt to the accounting depart. | omic maid the Maye ic Pe the matter with | tilled befor If you don't to] why! Don't you know the ways and | world, can't keep his coo BG tothe Sasi Or nett : é Bet ta oa : } bonito a9 ponger anything he could find tn civil Ife, ’ ent, to be again O. Kd by the audi. | The Constable ordered Whaley out come right over. I'm afrat shall | nab: these suburban women?” jor better than the ordinary suburban | gays an exchange, and he believe: checks,” said the proprietor of altor and vouchered, Mere was whene| A fight followed in which the o' habits of these su or bet 8 eves the 1 send for the doc have another pliystcia LE REA aR ani aua hate ps4 He offers them good pay,| opportunities for travel and adven- large establishment, “And for just|the fine Italian hand of the crooked |of the Jaw was knocked ye aa nee oh e here In fifteen min Mr. Jarr_ he Senter ROW | Sem m Mian berries ture to be unexcelled, and, were it Pe ts ceivent clerk appeared. Hefore drawing that |times: but he succeeds Mr. B. (calinly)—Lf you feel worried, [9 vou the ways and haltts of no women, | easy hours and lote of “nights out," | le 70) he mnekelna. and. were ot ‘ D feuaher Tie carelessly Olnhar |eie man cutaido hy ceili ay ad A ahe ee Hah fifteen minutes, the bel fet) Mr [not even the one he was married to. | ut they simply will not overlook the] oiais helieve that the “oldest branch porn to tn the quantity, was about to set fem up. | - neo” Of hells H rs = an Fey ain as can be,” Mrs, J. ey are cooks, bred and]of the service’ would hi Hn goin m4 he 3 110 Main, please h, helio a [era ast m with « strata | as plain as nb rs, Jarr | fact that they a , © ne iid have an almost ‘To prevent raising!” echoed the n=] thus {oauring our paying | f Nd lexcitement, always Pedi peeaees Ob, | whys Jwent on, “Her girl Jeft. ‘The only! born, and so keep moving on clean slate with regard to desertion terviewer in surprise. “Who 18 going did the man who wold ws thence } such disturbances , aah Pastor (throwing baby up in air) | 1 in suburbs will get| United States Marine Corps atatis- | No class of men look so lightly on th to raise your invoices?" Hi Mullin One tenon a Misa Doolittle smiled and | ont. hua CRA eee Well Manan * at alls your [time A ‘ th hh s ot} nitec ub SORE | - oath of obligation as these self same ‘The fires, apeaker smiled grimly he excess sum was divided | 54 ied hi maibh aall a aang apparatua to-day, eh? Give | up is when sho 1s leaving a | tics covering the last two years show| "knights of the frying pan,” marine That's a form of swindle which is|equaily between our empl and th 4 r Mr! (pause) 1 know, but, docu place, First Mrs, Jenkins get up ,a greater percentage of men deserted corps recruiters declare. practised quite extensively,” he ex r Ww ! '\ you know what uueppy. ftoli im ately there iso @ smiles andy ony o catch the train that girls | = plained. “It cost us several thousand! “It was only upon having our books tie werd aby he te ‘nd not se i Reece eo bagi alone enna r Gollars before we awakened to the|audited by « certified acconntont than, hit Constable Brows La TM es tees La eyey La BNL Mrs. B. (solemnly)—Frederick, we|icaving 0 Hlices 1h the COUNTY YePPPMPAAeeeeeseesenenennaaesennsn seeeeeeemBereeens | situation, For a long time wo were|we learned of our lows. T hay a great problem before us! We © two cul. [my train of thought was wre ething, And puzzled by the prices quoted us by s then ripped off another bef We | cat Fuiling in that, she wanted % fellow who couida’s resivt the lusy uf te UAT Owaiuat ay ts" ue! boa oF nan oopl hy ‘ duct wughit to 4 Seacccesseccecece . ae a A RN ln all, gama, maelt ton ble atlanta whan ‘ ss

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