Eso Deore Waddan, 8etlefonte, Pa., Nov. 24, 1893. ©» CORRESPONDENTS. — NO communications puniished unless accompanied by the real na ne of the writer. . THINGS ABOUT TOWN & COUNTY —— Market is gradually diminishing in size. —{‘Will-o-the Wisp’’ at the opera house Monday night. —“Rafllin” matches are all the style in Bellefonte just now. ~——The Daily Gazette has a stove factory and a nail works for Bellefonte. ——The Bellefonte laundry, Yerger and Laurie proprietors, will begin opera- tions on Monday. — A. G. Kellar, of Burnside town- ship, this county, is said to have shot a white deer last week. ——Reduction in photos at Shaeffer’s gallery for a short time, providing you buy a ticket this week. ——A new applicant for the Belle. fonte postmastership appears in the person of Albert N. Owen. ——W. R. Camp, the furniture deal- er who recently moved from this place to Tyrone ,has located in Milroy. ~—— The Thanksgiving foot-ball game in Bellefonte will be played between Philipsburg and our home kickers. ——The story that Sammy Meese, an escaped prisoner from the Centre coun- ty jail, has been recaptured is a canard. ——Next Monday night the “Will- o-the- Wisp,”” an Irish comedy drama, will be presented at the opera house in this place. ——John Gregg, of Tipton, Blair eounty, will marry Miss Emma Ash- man, of Curtin’s Works, this county, in the near future. “=— M. I. Gardner has bought the propery of the late Ellen Harris, on north Spring street. He will remodel it for his own occupancy. ——The Undine Steam Engine Co., will hold its regular annual Thanks- giving ball, in Bush’s Arcade, on Wed- nesday evening, November 29th. ——1It is gratifying to learn thot Col. D. 8. Keller, whois wintering in Aiken, S, C., for the benefit of hig health, is reported to be improving. ——Many fish baskets were torn out of Bald Eagle creek, on Tuesday, by Sheriff Ishler. Most of them were loca- ted batween Howard and Blanchard. -—Many sportsmen took their guns and hied away to the mountains, early Wednesday morning, to hunt small game. The light snow was good for tracking. ——Crushing lime stone for street making purposes and crashing stone masons for personal purposes are quite different jobs, Mr. chairman of the street committee. ——The Lotus Glee Club, one of the finest concert companies on the road, will give an entertainment in the chapel of the Pennsylvania State College to- morrow evening. ——How many sons and daughters in this community are helping their par- ents over the hard times by curtailing their desires for pleasure and taking a hand in the house-hold work ? ——Mr. Isaac Thomas, who fell over the fence at his home, on Thomas street, last August and injured his knee cap so badly that he is just now able to be out again has received $300 insurance on his accident policy. ——Monday’s list of post-cfiice ap- pointments brought two plums to Cen- tre county applicants. James I. Wil- liams was appointed to take charge of the office at Lemont. and Mrs. J. W. Keller of Linden Hall will have charge of the mails at that point. ——The state and county papers are just now publishing what they consider a bit of news. It is that the Pennsylva- mia State College is to be the recipient of the State’s exhibit in the “Mines and Mining” building at the Fair. The ‘WATCHMAN published this fact three weeks ago. —The many Bellefonte friends of Miss Margaret Alexander Landis, a daughter of Mr. Harry Landis, formerly of this place, will be pleased to learn that she is to wed Mr. John William Reavy, in Trinity Presbyterian church, Berwyn, Pa., on Thursday evening, Nov. 30th, —-=1In our last week’s issue we stated that a law partnership had been formed between E. R. Chambers and James R. Alexander which was an error. These gentlemen have only gone into partner- ship so far as renting an office together means. Hereafter they will both be found in the same office. ——Themas Collins, of this place, has secured the contract for building the new impounding reservoir for the city of Altoona. His bid was $158,000 and it is to be built in the ravine of the mountain at the renowned horse shoe bend and immediately below the one now used as a reservoir, and is to be completed within one year. Prize Essays oN BELLEFONTE, — Sometime ago the Board of Trade offer- led a prize of $10 for the best essay on | Bellefonte, restricting the number of “words to one thousand or less. A com- mittee was appointed to receive and examine all essays submitted and they reported at the meeting on Tuesday night that out of the four that were re- | cetved two had been decided upon as of | practically the same merit, so they deemed it advisable to divide the prize and accept both. The authors were then discovered to be Albert N. Owen and F. Potis Green. The one we publish in order to give our readers a little fresh intelligence on which they can blow Bellefonte. MR. GREEN'S ESSAY. Bellefonte, beautiful Bellefonte—the home of governors, geographically lo- cated in the centre of the state of Penn- sylvania, seven hundred and thirty-two feet above sea level and the county ——Small pox is said to be prevalent in Altoona. ——This is the last week tickets will be sold at Shaeffer’s. See ad. Anthony Farnsworsh Jr., of Lock Haven, is now an assistant in Zel- ler’s drug store in the Exchange. ——A special train will run from Philipsburg to Tyrone, Monday night, to carry passengers who want to see the performance of the “little Tycoon” in the opera house in the latter place. —A soft glove contest amused Philipsburg sportsmen on Monday evening. The Philipsburg pugilist broke his wrist in the third round, but stuck to it until he had whipped his Philadelphia combatant and wor the gate receipts. ——Mr. Alex Whiteman has retired from the mercantile firm of Sommer- ville & Co., at Winburne, Clearfield seat of Centre county, was laid out in 1795 and incorporated in 1806 and now contains a population of about five thousand inhabitants. ~The beautiful fountain (‘‘Belle Fonte’) from which it ‘takes its name rises in the very heart of the town and throwing off 14,600 gal- lons of clear, cold, sparkling water a minute without variation either in tem- perature or quantity during any part of the year, has a capacity for supplying a city of fifty thousand-people. Bellefonte is noted for its delightful atmosphere, romantic scenery lovely drives and the refinement and culture of its inhabitants. It is surrounded by hills that insure it against cyclones, has ten churches, a free library, large acad- emy, the best system of graded public schools, five weekly newspapers and two dailies ; these with its pure water good drainage, electric light, gas and steam heating plants, free postal delivery and being within twelve miles of the Pennsylvania State College to which three trains run daily, make it the ideal home of the literary man the retired gentleman, or those who desire to give their children a thorough, practical and technical education. Lying as it does in the midst of a rich agricultural re- gion underlaid with the finest quality of limestone in the world and with im- mense deposits of hematite and fossil ores, with splendid water power and being connected with all the large cities by competitive li.es of railroad, the Penna., N. Y. Central and Reading, it should become the Mecca of manufac- turers. There are two furnaces with a capaci- ty of one hundred tons each daily and one cliarcoal furnace making the high- est grade of that kind of iron, the whole of which produce should be used here. There are also a complete sixteen pot window glass factory, large nail works, foundry and machine shops, two plan- ing mills, three roller flouring mills, scale works, chain works, boiler works and three coach factories, while its kilns for the manufacture of lime and ground limestone are the most extensive in the country and the quality unsur- passed by any in the world. The water power in the vicinity is extensive and much of it waiting to be utilized. The soft coal and coke region lies within eighteen miles and the competing lines of railroad can be laid down at a very low rate of freight. As a location for the manufacture of all articles into which iron, lime, coal and sand enter it has on superioron the continent. If you are in business and desire a better location, or if you have anything worth manufacturing and wish to start in the best place calculated to insure a paying business, you are cordially in- vited to correspond with Mr. James Harris, President, or Clement Dale, Esq., Secretary of the Bellefonte Board of Trade. THe CeNTRE CoUNTY TEACHER'S INsTITUTE.-~The 47th. annual session of the Teachers’ Institute of Centre coun- ty will meet in Garman’s opera house, in this place, on Monday, Dec. 18th, and continue in session until the Friday noon, following. It is expected that most of the two hundred and sixty teachers in the eoun- ty will bs in attendance, for an able lot of instructors have been secured for the week. Among whom are Dr. Phillips, of the West Chester State Normal ; Dr. Groff, of Lewisburg; Prof. George Twitmire, superintendent of the Hones- dale, Wayne county, schools; Ex-Supt. Brungard, of Lock Haven ; Prof. Swift of Ridgway ; Gen. James A. Beaver and Prof. John Hamilton, of State Col- lege. The evening entertainments have been carefully looked after and will comprise the following attractive as well as instructive, pertormances in or- derof evenings as given. “Bits of Europe,” lecture by Dr. Phillips, of West Chester Normal; “Mind Your own Business,” lecture by Dr. Enders, of York ; “Patrick Henry,” lecture by Hon. J. J. Pinkerton, of West Chester; musicale by the Schuman Concert Com- pany. y Thursday the directors of the different public schools in the county will meet in the High school building on Bishop street to consider whatever business may ! come before them. county. His interest in the store has been purchased by John and Robert Sommerville, sons of the senior member of the firm. ——The ladies of this town have or- ganized a needle-work guild with head- quarters in the W. C. T. U. rooms, in the Exchange. The membership 1s growing rapidly and it is expected that much good will be done during the winter. The worthy poor will all be looked after. ——The Lotus Glee Club, that su- perb organization ofstar singers, will give a concert in the Chapel of the Pennsylvania State College, tomorrow, Saturday evening. Itis one of the finest concert companies that has ever visited Bellefonte and the people of State Col- lege and vicinity are fortunate ‘in hav- ing secured such an entertainment. ——Emily Miller a little friend of ours in Ardmore, Montgomery county, felt s0 badly over the non appearance of our election roosters that she sent us, last week, three beautiful big Demo- cratic cochins with the ‘hopes that we would have some for the paper next year.” So Democrats of the state and county remember we have our crowers ready for an illustrated number. ——A new schedule went into effect on the Penna, railroad Monday morn- ing by which slight changes are made in the time of arrival and departure of trains. Until our regular schedule is corrected readers will do well to bear in mind that Bald Eagle trains west will leave Bellefonte at 5.32 and 10.84 a. m., and 512 p. m, Trains east will leave 8t 9.33 a. m. and 4 28 and 843 p. m. On the Snow Shoe the train will leave Bellefonte at 8.567 a. m. and arrive at 4.49 p. m. ——MTr. George Hoffer, proprietor of Hoffer’s boarding house, in Huntingdon, died suddenly at bis home last Thursday morning. He was a brother of the late John Hoffer, of this place, and of Peter Hoffer Esq., and Mrs. Jared Murray, of Centre Hall. His death was somewhat of a co-incidence in that he was the last of a trio of aged hotel keepers who died suddenly within two weeks in Hunting- don. In life they had been boon com” panions. — ——A party of five State College students drove through this place last Saturday night on their way home from a day’s hunt in the mountains near Snow Shoe. They had a fine deer and + number of pheasants as the result of their sport. Some people are mean enough to think that the deer was dead when the boys got it. The party was made up of J. E. Quigley, James Fos. ter, H. P. Dowler, A. D. Belt and Ben Williams. ——Charley Garner Jr., who will be remembered as the only colored boy who ever graduated from the Bellefonte High school, is now a porter in the Ward house, in Tyrone. He distinguished himself the other morning by nearly breaking down the door of a room in which a guest was sleeping, who had left an order to be called at seven o'clock. Charley pounded on the door until his knuckles were raw, then con- cluding that he had a case of suicide on his hands went down to the office to tind out that the sleeper was a deaf mute. At a regular meeting, on last Monday night, council decided to con- tinue lighting the streets indefinitely at the cost of $8.75 for each arc light and at the former price of $1.50 per month for each of the fitty-five incan- descent lighta. The advance of twenty-five cents per month on each of the arc lights was occasioned by the change in time of use. Hereafter they will burn all night instead of until one o'clock a. m. Jus. Harris presented a petition and proposition to council to lay a boardwalk along Water street, from High to the C. P. R. R. stations for $210 The question was laid on the table until the Street committee and the borough engineer can go over it and report to a special meeting of council. Other busi. ness of less importance was transacted ‘ani the meeting adjourned. DEATH oF JAMES LAURIE.—Al- though it had been known for several days that he was in a precarious condi- tion his death was notso suddenly ex- pected and the announcement of it. Wednesday morning, created much sur- prise and sorrow throughout the town. More than a year ago his friends no- ticing his failing health urged him to go South or West, but with the confi- dence of youth and the hopefulness of a consumptive he accepted instead, a po- sition with the Mann Edge Tool Co., of Lewistown and when their shops were burned in March he took a heavy cold, from the effects of which he never re- covered. The second son of Rev. Dr. William Laurie, he was born in Philadelphia thirty years ago the 9th of last June. Since '76 when his father accepted the pastorate of the Presbyterian church he has been a Bellefonte boy. A boy who was liked and admired by old and young for his pleasant manner, his kind disposition and his general; good heartedness. He learned book keeping under Mr. Howard Lingle at W. P. Duncan and Co., and ably filled, at different times responsible positions with H. K. Hick’s, J. J. Pie, Osceola, the P. R. R. Co., and the Bellefonte Nail works. Bright and quick he was a favorite in school, with his business associates and in society. And since Joining the Christian Endeavor society, several years ago displayed that rare earnestness of purpose and devotion to truth which mark an honest Christian character. His death is the third one that has occurred in Dr. Laurie’s own family re- cently, and the sympathy of the entire community is with them in their be- reavement, His funeral services will be held this afternoon at three o'clock in the Presbyterian church. COMERFORD — THOMAS — At high noon on Wednesday, Rev. W. H, Christ, of Lock Haven, pronounced the ceremony which rade Marie Louise Comerford the wife of George Theodore Thomas, of Pittsburg, The nuptial event was solemnized at the home of the bride's grand-father, Bernard Lauth Esq., the noted iron manufactur- er and inventor of Howard, and was wit. nessed by friends from all parts of the State. The parlors of the Lauth homestead were prettily decorated with chrysanthe- mums and potted plants, and as Lee B. Woodcock, of this place, played the introduction to Mendehlson’s grand wedding march Mr. John Thomas, a brother of the groom, and Mr. Benj. Comerford, a brother of the bride, made an aisle with white ribbons through the assembled guests, Mr. Ed- ward Keating and Miss Genevieve Fri- | day, of Pittsburg followed and took their positions at either side of the clergyman, after them, Miss Rachel Burnside, a dainty little flower girl, preceded the bride and groom elect. The ceremony over, she scattered flowers down the aisle and the party proceeded to the south parlor where the reception was held. The bride was formerly a well known young society woman of this communi- ty, but recently has made her home in Pittsburg. Her husband is connected with the firm of Jas. P. Scott & Co., of the Smoky city. A CHILD BurNED T0 DEATH.--On last Friday morning the infant daugh- ter of Alfred Stewart, colored, met with a frightful accident which resulted in her death on Saturday. The family of Mr. Stewart lives on Penn street, the mother and little daugh- ter being alone at the time of the acci- dent. Mrs, Stewart, on going into the basement of the house, left the child by itself in the kitchen above. She had not gone long until agonizing screams from above warned her that something had be- fallen the baby. Quickly she ran upstairs and found it wrapped in flames. A piece of old carpet thrown about it smothered the fire out and a physician was sum- moned, but when he took the fragments of clothes off that were hanging to the burned body, the flesh peeled off the left side in great pieces. It was evident that the child had been fatally burned and it lingered until the next morning when death ended its sufferings. The only way the accident could have occurred was that the child had been playing with the fire. THE SINGER SEWING MACHINE AGENT ARRESTED.—W. H. Hill, the agent of the Singer sewing machine company in this place, was taken before "Squire Foster, Monday afternoon, on warrant sworn out by John C. Miller, the plasterer, to answer the charge of keeping a gambling house and main- taining a nuisance. Itappears that Mr. Hill. in connection with his stock of machines, has run a littlestore on Thom- as street where of late a number of ‘rat. flin’’ matches have been held. Chick. ens and turkeys have been chanced off on the turn of a dice and just to keep all in good cheer a barrel of sweet cider was on tap. A good many men and boys congregated about the place in the eve. nings and annoyed the Miller femily who live near. Mr. Miller could not stand it, hence the arrest. The hearing resulted in the discharge of the defendant after paying costa. —— Clearfield is threatened with a scourge of diphtheria. —— Storm serges in all the new col- ors. Lyon & Co. wen Only. one week left to get cheap photos at Shaeffer’s gallery—see ad. in another column. — Next Monday night the popular Irish comedy - drama “Will-o-the- ‘Wisp’ comes to the opera Louse. blue for ladies at $4. The best we have ever seen for the money. Lyon & Co. ~——James Eckert, a Lock Haven young man, employed as a freight brakeman on the Bald Eagle valley, fell from a coal train at Martha Furnace, last Thursday morning, and was severe- ly injured about the head. ——The last chance, to get photos at a reduced price —see Shaeffer’s advertise- ment in another column. | ——The Bellefonte Board of Trade has a movement on foot to banquet the projectors of the new Central Rail-road of Pennsylvania. ——1It is said that more lumber will be cut on the DuBois estate in Clear- field and adjoining counties this year than there has been any previous year in a decade, ~——Joseph Clark, aged 60 years, ‘dropped dead in the yard of his home, in Flemington, last Friday morning, He had been engaged in cutting a tree when heart disease ended his work. ——Mens new fall and winter suits double breasted, square cut cheviot and serge cheviots, black, navy blue, brown and mixed at all prices. Lyon & Co. ——There will be a public sale of farm stock and implements at the resi- dence of C. W. Jones, near Romola, and one-half mile east of Robb’s store, on Saturday, December 20d, at which cattle, horses, pigs, turkeys, chickens, all kinds of implements and harness will be sold. This will be a good oppor- tunity to get some needful articles cheap. ——Council should take prompt ac- tion in having a dry masonry wall laid from High street, all along the east side of Spring Creek, to the Central Pennsylvania railroad yards. Water street will be one that will be much used after the new road gets in operation and it shouid be improvéd to that it looks as though there is some energy in the town. If it is the duty of property holders to wall the creek up tHey should be compelled to do it, °° ——Charles and Edward Dean, two Tyrone boys, were playing with revolv- ers, on Monday night, during'their moth- er’s absence at church. One revolver was loaded while the other was empty and of course it was with the latter. that Edward, eleven years old, pointed at his brother Charles’ face, playfully saying. “I'll shoot you.” He pulled the trigger and to-day the elder boy lies in a precar- ious condition with a 82 calibre bullet somewhere in his neck. The hall en- tered the face just at the point of the nose and peretrated the roof of the mouth, lodging in the upper part of the neck. MARRIAGE LiceNsEs.—Issued dur- ing the past week—Taken from the docket. * John F. Thompson, of Bellefonte, and Hannah E. Woomer, of Curtin Twp. John D. Shuey, of Buffalo Run, and Amelia Behers, of Benore. George T. Thomas, of Pittsburg, and Marie L. Comerford, of Howard. N. F. Kreamer and Jennie Breon, both of Millheim. David G. Meyers and Ida M. Sort- man, both of State College. THE MILESBURG BAPTIST CHURCH REOPENED.-—The members of the Miles- burg Baptist church have secured a reg- ular pastor in Rev. J.B. Soule and hereafter services will be held there as usual. The audience room of the church has undergone needed repairs, new stoves have been put in and it is now a very comfortable place to wor- ship. On Sunday morning, Nov. 26th, regular communion ssrvices will be held. There will be Sunday school at 9:30 a. m., and preaching at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. and prayer meeting every Thursday evening. All are cordially invited to attend. THE CASE FOREVER SETTLED.— The case which Mrs. Maria Meek, of Stormstown, this county, had earried to court against the heirs of George Y. Meek, Dec'd, of Ferguson township, to recover a widow’s dowery claimed to have been due her from said estate has been effectually settled by the courts here. It was tried first before a master, who ruled that she had no claim what- ever, and when the’ case was carried to court Judge Furst sustained the ruling. thus leaving Mrs. Meek without any claim whatever on the heirs of G. Y. Meek. E.R. Chambers Esq., was her attorney and those who heard the testi- mony were surprised that he should even have tried to make a case on such a flimsy pretext. The announcement of Mrs. Sage’s death, which occurred at the Plaza Hotel in New York Wednesday afternoon was nota surprise to her friends in this town, for she had been ill for over a year with muscular rheu- matism and had lately suffered such intense pain that her death was hourly expected. Mrs. Jennie Sage was the se- cond daughter of ex-Gov. and Mrs. A. G. Curtin and a daughter-in-law of Henry Sage the benefactor of Cornell Universi- ty. She was an exceptionally bright woman of many accomplishments, and her charm of mind was combined with that of rare personal beauty. At the tinue of her death she was in New York for medical treatment, with her hus- band, her daughter and three sons. She will be buried in Ithaca, her home, Saturday afternoon. ——The sudden death of Mr. Joel Royer, an aged and respected resident of Rebersburg, was a shock to the citizen$ of that vicinity early last Tuesday morn- ing. He had been in his usa- al health before retiring the night previous, but life had flown when Peter Kessler, who lives in the same house with him, went to wake him in the morning at his usual time of rising. He was aged 83 years, was unmarried and left $1000 to the Reformed church of Rebersburg in which the burial servi~ ces were held yesterday morning. . —To-morrow, Saturday afternoon the Pennsylvania State College foot- ball team will play a game with the Volunteers, a crack amateur aggrega- tion of players from New York city. The game will be played on Beaver field, at State College, and will doubt- less be very interesting. ——A certificate for the deposit of $387 which Nancy, a daughter of Charles Snyder, of Ferguson township, had made at Jackson Crider and Hast- ings, bank in this place, mysteriously disappeared from a chest in which she had put it for safe keeping several days ago. ——The Methodist festival held in the Y. M.C. A. rooms yesterday and last evening was a success in every way. ——Come and see the largest line of ladies coats and jackets in this part of the State. Just got them in—the latest styles. Lyon & Co. ——Montgomery & Co., are offering men’s, youth’s, boys’ and children’s clothing and over coats for all at the lowest possible prices. Ready made clothing of the best quality at the lowest prices. Ce ———— Resolutions of Esteem. Wuereas Camp No. 59 Union Veteran Legion has received, with profound sorrow, the sad intelligence of the death of comrade John H. Odenkirk, be it Resolved, that in his death we have losta worthy comrade and his family a kind hus band and father. Resolved, that we extend our sympathy to the bereaved family and the adjutant be di rected to present a copy of these resolutions to them. C. DALE Jr. Amos Mo LLEN, Com. J. W Sruarr, ; Marriage. THOMPSON—WOOMER. By J. H. Oliger, J. P., on the 21st inst., Mr. John F. Thompson and Hannah E. Woomer, both of Spring township. ——————— —The following letters remain uncalled for in the Bellefonte P. 0. Nov. 20, 1893. Annie Clemson, James Henderson, Geo. Darner, H.S. Hicks, MatY haketian, Lillie Hooper, A. T. Delamater, Maccario Moscata, Addie R. Gilland, Rosario Moscaro, Carmine Fravasso. When called for please say advertised. J. A. FIEDLER, P. M. Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected weekly by Gro. W. Jackson & Co: The following are the quotations up tosix o'clock, Thursday evening, when our paper 00s to press : Rite Wheat. ......cisisusisirnininmtrmsmisiossirs 55 Red wheat...... ves 60 Rye, per bushel.......... 56 Corn, ears, per bushel. 2234 Corn, shelled, per bushe 60 Oats—new, per bushel 32 Barley, 4 ushel...... 48 Ground laster, per to! 9 50 Buckwheat per bushel. .. 65 Cloverseed, per bushei....... $6 00 to §7 00 Beliefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by Sechler & Co Potatoes per bushel i 160 Eggs, per dozen... 25 Lard, per pound... 10 CountryShoulders... 10 Sides...... 12 Hams...... 14 Pallow, per pound. 4 Butter, Per pound... risers sersressanse sens 26 The Democratic Watchman. Published evary Friday morning, in Belle- fonte, Pa., at $2 per annum (if paid strictly in advance); $2.50, when not paid in advance, and $3.00 if not paid before the expiration of the year; and no paper will be discontinued until all arrearage is paid, except atthe option of the publisher. Papers will not be sent out of Centre county unless paid for in advance. A liberal discount is made to persons adver- Hsing by the quarter, half year, or year, as fol- OWS : SPACE OCCUPIED. Oneinch (12 lines this type Two inches... Three inches. uarter Column (4}4 inches)....... alf Column ( 9 inches)............. One Column (19 inches)............... 35 | 56 | 100 Advertisements in special column,26 pe cent. additional. J Transient advs. per line, 3 insertions......20 cts. Each additional insertion, per line.......... 5 ete. wocal notices, per line 25 cts Business notices, per line.........vreeveernenn 10 cis. Job Printing of every kind done with neat. ness and Sispasch, The Warcuman office has been refitted with Power Presses and New Type, and SYeryihing in the printing line can be executed in the most artistic mannerand g the lowest rates. Terms—CASH. All letters should be addressed to P. GRAY MEEK, Proprietor La a——— - BE . » NE aR