——————— » When Twilight Comes. When twilight comes across the quiet laud, I crave your presence, you who un- derstand The comradeship of word and look and smile; The gentle talk and laughter, after- while, And homeward walk — worn sand. across the wave- How will it be, I wonder, when the grand, Full mid-day glow of life has vanished, and The sun's dial, When twilight comes, last rays fall coldly on the that we two together still stand; Tndone, perchance, the Oh, may deeds we hoped and planped, Tired and very old, naught tenderness thought, God grant that life may leave us hand | * im hand, When twilight comes, ~Theodosia Pickering Garrison, Truth, vet missing | Of or olden word or in! THE SHIP THAT BECAME AN ISLAND. The huge clipper, with its quaint figurehead and its flying jibboom pro- jecting far out over South street, New | York, bad just sounded six bells, and the other deep-water eraft along South i street were taking up the refrain, when | old Capt. Smith filled and lighted his | corncob pipe for the third time that evening, and nodded approvingly at the forest of graceful masts and spars | extending along the water until lost | to view around the bend at Dover street, “Thar,” he sald, “ef that ere sight fur of’ eyes may not timbers be shivered, but my spare yards also. Gorjis, ain't it, Shipm't 7" prodding old Capt. Mitchell in the ribs with his cane. His friend responded | with a not very enthusiastic grant. whereupon the old man continued “Yessir, they hain’t no place like ol’ street to freshen th’ days that oncet was, sailin’ craft ruled the ocean, and when these iron steam pots was as skurce as a pi rate in kingdom come. 1 tell mates, some days when ve bin walk ing along the North River front an’ seen nothin’ but steamships as fur my deadlights could reach, I've as blue as a skipper w= But when you oncet wot then, my hearties, can say what tain that the ght enough to make you Younger.” When the Captain Capt. Mitchell and Capt. R came involved in their argument as to whether a clipper ship built of wood is not superior to one construct ed of fron. The argument warm, as it always did, the old captains and a number of siders became involved. As was usual the case was finally appealed to the Ancient Mariner. “Wa'al,” said the old man . “there air a great many good pints to be considered on both sides this most important question. Cap'n Mit chell sais that you kin git more cargo Inter an irom ship, bein’ that th is thinner, an’ that doan’ spring a leak so easy, ‘cause they ain't no seams in her to be caulked up. That's all right so fur as it goes, but like a broke bowsprit, in dean’ go fur enough. Now, as Cap'n Reeves maintains, a wooden clipper will stand more poundin’, bein’ as there's more give to its sides, and it also rides th’ water better, bein’ as wood's more buoyant, Pusson’ly 1 prefer the wooden vessel, But, gen'lmen, doan’ never build a ship outen unseasoned timber. Doan’ do it. I oncet sailed in that kind o' craft an’ i woulden’ do it ag’'in fur all the gold | this side o' Hongkong. Never heeru | about it, eh? Wall, jes open yer | weather ears an’ I'll tell ye th’ strang- est ‘sperience that ever happened to | an orthodox skipper. “I had only had my master's certifi cate ‘bout a year, when one day one o th’ parteers o th' trading had made my last cruise fur come up | to me and sald: ‘See here, Cap'n, how | would you like ter change ships? We've got a new, spankin clipper fresh off the ways, She was bulit in a hurry, I'll admit, but she ain't none th’ less stanch on that account. Now, you take ‘er, an’ we'll see’t you doan’ . lose nothin’ by it.’ *Wa'al, mates, wot conld 1 do? It doan’ pay to bunk agin yer agents, and then, too, a new ship ain't to be sneezed at, so 1 accepted on th' spot, She was bound for the Cape o' Good Hope. Had | known she was built o unseasonable timber you wouldn't o me to sail up th’ Erie Canal on ‘er, ‘course 1 didn’t know that. The #gent who got me ter sign did't say nary word ‘bout it, muther, That's wot s'prised me most; fur of all th' men who pretended to be pious, OI Corey—that was the agent's name was th’ beatenest you ever seen, He ud go aroun’ with his nose in th' air loekin’ fur all th’ world like a sky pi. who has jes’ finished readin’ ten 5 from th' seriptur. Why, th’ ‘ol’ duffer had a wart on th’ end of his , big one "twas, too, an’ I'll curl an’ bust ef th' ol’ fool would have wart takeu off simply ‘cause th' ament sals remove not th’ ancient . He married a pretty little halut a only my th’ your 1 nories of wien you, as wot you ple IRE si of ceased speaking eves be MR st waxed and soon ail out sagely 0 sides she company || o euliker—Matildy Simplus, | N Her mother- howstmever. I'm fallin’ too far off my course, “As I was sayin’, I tuk the ship, which already had her cargo on board, and started out. It wasn't a good time ter start, for we had an’ ol’ moon, a nor'west wind, an’ ebb tide, a com- bination which doan’ leave enough wa- in th' East River to float a row- boat. Howsumever, arrer walkin’ over the Dimon’ Reef and three or four other ledges, we cleared the Bar an’ started out, “Everythin’ went well until we Kilt our first pig at th’ equator. We had made good weather all th’ way down, an’ besides butcherin® th’ pig th’ men shaved a lubber with a bar'l hoop jes’ as we crossed th' line, We was havin’ a great time, 1 tell ye. “Wa'al, one day when we got "bout fifty miles north o' Ascension Island we struck th' doldrums, an’ thinks I here is a good time ter send th’ men th' side fur a swim, Over they but they came out ag'in quicker went in. ‘Lord, Harry,’ sais ‘wot's th’ matter, my hearties? Git inter th’ ocean, every man Jack yer! Bat they didn't, “*Cap'n,’ sais one that was, ter went, nor they o' o th’ men, ‘ef may I be keelhauled,” ‘Look fur I ever seen, ‘Wot sais he, “Wa'll, as they all stood there look. like a passel of fools, 1 strung my- the side in a bowline, an’ purty near water. Mates, ye may bat th’ side o' that buds like a bass Buds, do I say? small sprouts they kep' ‘em is? sais L your- then I guv a gasp, believe me, April, mostly in they was branches, an’, moreover, fast that could see shootin’ outen th’ planks like fire outen an’ NO men over an’ knives ‘em to work cuttin th' branches But, lor’, it did no good. Fur every branch we cut out at least five came in its place. It grew to be one an’ two days, an’ th’ old ship begun on th’ appearance one floatin’ summer gardens ye down th’ East River. Th' masts looked like May poles, an” I'll be chin ef a big rose bush did right out on th’ end th’ cat As fur th’ yards, all festooned hangin® vines—wa'al, all fer say that if it th remarkable sight ever by or Neptune ‘1 strike my yals, all ship woukldn’ no impedi hangin’ be. unmovable a of “I promptly ordered all th’ SAWS an’ set out, o o these se sprout ao head, with mates, iu wasn't most seen man that's Course th i tus sich with an’ she the ments onto her, Cone = rock Gibralter, “We finally and guv flower as RUv uj to i fo Th' CArgo o' apples grapes an’ make fruit. ' Seyler up sardenin' . fie 8 an’ as fur herries, why you didn't have that we had ft afloat. Wa'al, port OLUTrSeIves isin’ an’ trees raised CLUE Nee. as is Ye roses an’ « io richest tor twit agricuit: ink soe irl eraf an’ th’ sh them floatin’ an evan things K rowin ter look ands ye in didn’t mind; life, tossin’ didn’t keer az 1 heered short skirts nt week, We Island. “The funniest th’ effect th temperate zone friits th’ ship. Pears an’ apples grew ger nor swash bu One would make five pies, an’ as fur grapes why when the vines was in full growth they'd weigh th’ =hip down tell th’ water come nigh up to th’ berth deck, Ships uster stop and buy fresh fruit off us, “But like all g things 1 ever dropped inter, this life came to an end. It was this way: We was all asleepin’ in th’ pear grove one day, when all o a sudden we was awakened by a pe culiar gensation. Th ship seemed ter be movin’ Up I jumped, an’ sure enough we was cuttin’ through th' water like a whale with both fins an’ his tail agoin’. wot made howsnmever. It was a Brit She nad come up | LE like isl But ivin a quiet on th’ Wwe nn ane oO th" Indi were WA we We about if SOT orean., got women in island last ship Smith Sezsxnrs happy an back, ever we 3 oney named th sag even for th’ LE] thing ever was tropics nad on that si Erew big kets, wel I soon see 1s move, ish ship-o'-the-line, while we slept, got a line around a cherry tree an’ was towin' us ter beat all creation. 1 hailed th Captain an’ tol” lum to enst off I'd eut th’ rope reply be sald I could be blowed. «ald he wanted th' isinnd an’ he take it. An’ in conclu he said that if TI ent th hawser blamed ¢f he woulden® blow hull shebang outen th’ water, “Wa'al, I raved aronn’, but it did no good, an’ th’ frigate kept towin' us along. We finally made the island o Trinidad, an’ then wot d've think that old British duffer did? He tied vs ap on one end o th’ island, raised th British flag on one 0’ th' pear trees, an’ proclaimed it British territory. How was that for brass? But th’ wustest part came when they evicted me an’ my crew for non-payment of taxes. Think o' that, mates! “I tuk passage fur hum soon after, an’ laid the matter before th’ State De. partment, but I got no satisfaction. TH Necretary o' State sald that I was th’ best liar he ever seen, an’ ter go home an’ stop drinkink'. That's where he was wrong, for ye all know, mates, I ain't no drinkin’ man, an’ as fur lyin’, ef there is a more truthfuller man than I am I'd like ter see him; eh, mates?’ The mates agreed in a balf hearted manner, or He Ragtime in Reality, “Do you have any rag time down here?” agked the man with the guitar, “It's always ragtime down here,” re. plied the hard-times citizen, with a lugubrious sigh, “nothing but rags; hardly any putetn"- Chieugo Daily a €8TS OF THE MAUSER PISTOL. Mon Effective and of lis Kind Yet Megarded nn the Deadly Weapon Known, Dr. J. D, Grithth, of Kansas City, has just completed for tue Government an official test of the Mauser pistol, in use by German cavalry and under consid- eration for adoption by the United States. The test was made not only with targets, but with human cadavers also, and Dr. Griffith says it proved, at ranges of from 50 to 500 yards, the Mauser pistol to be the most effective and deadly weapon of its kind ever In vented, and, up to the maximum range tried it is practically as good in the lands of marksmen as a Krag-Jorgen- sen, a Lee, or a Mauser rifle, When nothing except flesh resists toe passage of the bullet it makes a small, round, incision where it enters, and knife-like cut where it departs. If bone is in the way, it Is often shattered into fragments, The pistol with a shoulder attachment shoots accurately and will kill at a range of 500 yards. Bullets passed completely through the cadaver at that range. Several surgeons who witnessed the test said it was a mane weapou, beause it would kill a rs ————————— organ, would incapacitate if #t struck a bone, AH agreed that it was as humane as any of the modern weap ons using high-power explosives, pistol fires ten shots without reloading and can be emptied with accuracy of aim in less than three The cartridges are 30 calibre, and are pro- pelled by smokeless nitro-powder, The bullets weigh eighty-five grains each and have a lead core, surrounded by a nickel ~lated copper jacket, Or seconds, Vistons in Dreams, While under the spell of a dream the moral is completely overturned. The mental powers frolie in total freedom from the reins of order, et] quette, or even of the commandments, 1 have or two excellent friends who assure that their consciences awake in sleep, On the confess reason, one me are occasionally an English writer, # great many OWN experience says hand their other that entirely corroborates my own obwervations, For example, an admirable and most kind-hearted lady informs me that she palmed off terfeit coin on a beggar, and chuckled at the notion of his disappointment. A Hanthroplst, exercising indicial function, commits forgery only more # coun disting for many continually regrets the act when he A of her uished ph years high and learn nn dream was devotm] instruction of pauper children, ReCing one ake a face at her, doubled him smallest compa and thrust wom Win hanged time is to be the the at to of them m into the wa through the bars into of tue lent of men deliberately ran his friend through the body, Aver called the extreme him ine most henevo. after re 1d CO i his Ix and gratification he hs seeing the point hounlders of between 4 (ther the gpanion aut Crimes com in dreams peed not be but I am persuaded that cotild but Know all the ing by sleep with the here re corded if wy roper thing the most people in the gang froid effrontery, a diverting ox them Proper Hinost completely unbinshing picture trast to our knowledge of would present in their conscious hours Made Money as if hy Magie. An estimate of the inte (4 Vanderbilt's net income {rem securities places this annual revenne 1.000 (en For ing and ing to them works of thelr furniture it fit more than $500000 a quired, Mr. Vanderbilt had an Income inde pendent of his dividends and interest, as every other man of great wealth has, which generally i= overlooked. It is the custom when a large cor poration floats an of bonds tn have them underwritten.’ That means that several ban cate of rich clients of some of the larg: er banking houses, agrees with the cor. poration to take its entire bonds at par, or a stipulated figure, Then, through several banking agen. vies, the bonds are sold to the public at an advance, frequently, of 5 per cent. or even more. Suppose the bond issue fs £20,000,000 and the profit is 5 per cent. The under. writing syndicate, which Las not been obliged to spend a dollar, divides commission of £1L,000.000 for vices, Mr. Vanderbilt's name appeared fre quently among the underwriters who wrnelins invested at his household needs, entertain improving his residences, add art and renewing likely that year was re is ixsne fusne Vanderbilt roads, and financed by J. P. other large banking firms, of companies There keep up his splendid establishments, and even his charities, great as they were, the reproductive power of millions, Dog's Batttle with a Cactas, Otto Kleemann, who lives on Bel. mont street, recently acquired a beau. tiful cactus, which be established in his household, unmindful of the fact that his dog held the opigion that his master should have no other pets be. fore him. Now he had no eactus and the dejected semblance of a dog. The little animal espied the plant soon after its arrival, and lssued a challenge. In default of acceptance he gave battle, but retired at the first shock to recon. sider, The enemy had more teeth than The two rolled over and the torn a barb wire fence, and over in a death embrace, enctus was finally vanquished, into shreds and seattered about the room. But it was a costly victory. The conqueror Is punctured In more places than his owner can count. He may live to fight another day, but it will not be with a eactus.—Portland Oregonian. Origin of the Broom, Every housewife Is supposed to know how to handle a broom, but it Is safe te say that not one iu ten has any clear of what her sweeping utensil is r how it Is made, where the material eame from. rooms are made from the heads or brushes of the broom corn, a first cousin of our com- mon field corn. And in this connec tion is told a very pleasant little fairy story concerning Benjamin Franklin, “Poor Richard,” by the way, to have been about the biggest jack-of- all-trades that ever helped the United richest and most If this or seems powerful Nation of the world, the housewife and the broom-maker, as Hghtning catcher, editor, author, statesman and other numerous to mention.” broom corn first grew in India. From there it was carried to Europe, The story goes that Dr. Franklin was xamining a whiskbroom that had heen | brought over from England in the days before we had any broom corn of our own, He found a single on the broom, picked it off, planted it, and raised a stalk of corn from which is descended, so to speak, all the broow corn of the United States, In the making of the brooms the corn is put around a handle of maple turned in a layer wound tight with publisher, philosopher, things “too weed basswood or Inthe, Each twine in or wire until th is The sewed, vy desired size 1 attatned, i wen pressed out flat and to keep it in that . w an made in th way. ~~ | Times-Hernld broom is shape brooms Chicago are £ same . aS Wonderfanl Diving Horses, of from runway thin of water Ores wig The Arabian latest novelty cons horses, hich platform at the end of a ty-seven feet high feet deen two | i Ww dive al into a tank The bh i153 pulse twenty make dis no friy employed amd when brace then ’ ff shite Li 47] make horses Nothing New red te the tes Inder the Tent, 1 Wal fee neath Borgeo fats heard sthiess lions fiw ose spot the salam melted junk; i off we ander eating beard the we tronk other clown get the jokes used 1 know when dohia. Sane boys together, oN ie were ®OT twonty old horses wo old kind of voealists ne years Idled ngo, ‘round the ring: the same proved that sing. the same old hippopota. mus grunting with disgust: the saine old Persian ox was kicking up | dust; the same old rheumatic acro bats crawled painfully around, and the ossificdd contortionist was erawling on the ground. and ladies rode barebacked steeds to music sad and the | mame old girls we used to |OMO twenty years ago.-Minneapolis Mes. sate odd Con they was slow er ROOT, Willing te Risk Them, SEhe was shy germs in the water, Khe boiled and killed them by steam: She was shy of germs In the butter And microbes that fourish in eream. She was shy of germs in the sivloin Of germs in the marrowfat bone, She was «hy of germs on her money And germs that you meet at the playhouse, Of germs on the ear transfer slips: jut she wasn’t a bit shy of the micro bos, If there were any lips. Don't Nide Nackwards, People who object to riding bLack- ward on the ears will be glad to hear that the late John Cook, the originator of “Cook's Tours,” was subject to the He probably did as much railway travel as a man ever did, his average being 40.000 miles a year, and though of a singularly robust constitution, he found that he beeamo subject to a peculiar nervous affiie. tion In later years, which, however, disappeared when he stopped riding with his back to the engine, The Savage Nachelor, The Sweet Young Thing Did you! know there is a man in the moon ne longer Some one has discoversd a woman in the moon. Savage Bachelor No wonder the man left.~Indianapolis Journal, A Chances Mewiing, “Hello!” exclaimed the fish, of on Archibald's Chicago News, “Here “No,” replied the worm: “I just dropped in for g bite.” Philadelphia | FALSE CURIOS. and just growing dusk. Phere Are Regular Vactories Where They Are Made, A well known curio expert that there are factories in Europe for the manufacture of all kinds of works of art that are likely to attract the col lector, Modern articles of China are stamped with old marks cleverly that even experts have been deceived, says the Pottery Gazette, Arms and armor are treated with acids which e away the metal, thus producing the same effect as the ravages of time, Carved fvories are stained with olls to make them yellow and are subjected to heat to make them crack, Pleces of furniture have holes drilled repre sent the worm holes, and so on, until there will in time be very little in the way of curios which are themselves very curious, Paris of the strongholds of this while in Hungary where Dresden china fair manner, There safe way, and that reputable dealers, works of art very hands, As to auction rooms, Many ams they can pick art or curio for way to ix one claks there is a factory ix imitated in however, one buy through in all into the sent ix, is to Forgeries rarely get a rule they are have an idea thai p apr un mere song. That the chance for the forgers. They know this and work accordingly, thus the amateur spurious makers the teurs look but in question. they come think, and undeceived, 1ienrs 11] celoss work of in all and is deceived, The haunt out-of auction where ama ith the idea that nobody themselves can of the room The sale takes place and with a gem, so they perfectly happy until curio way FoOins in w know away are enough, in this discovered a and ob- hax, curiously lately His There been bronze All from hich ¢ away antiquity fabricated 11i¢ GLEE 8 i= jt i me alloy, certain propor ked bs this Skilled are taill portant made {ions by £1 in I Bin aff antag ure five 4 tion Lies thelr reproductions d noculate spots of bronze i wef Re, Gave Him a Pointer, When the ross esi s1yl 3 young cous ried is of the Jittie Wis you do it. uncle” s advised your and went “wnt neerfully. hat would in tinual presence we don't want v 5 4 $9 ¢ iountains of at All ion of want the and .iv natives’ to settle down on you 3 do i= to an ohbwervat Going urge there the down renirietios for a month among iberland mounta Wis Every um ins a reckless and defiant innovation talking about it.” ind to hear I i route and investigate. The drive them green w.th ough and kindly people bt I was in Strapping six body ix . wish they'd go the would Those tr reports envy. woman they footers would put aside their tobacco, comb their hair and bring me the wild flowers. The women my clothes to patterns, wherever we ever saw ret =r borrowed We were stopped, and the welcome best wasn't good enough for us. Ray, Uncle Pen.” with a flashing of the eves, “if you had half the courage and gallantry of those men down there you'd have thrown a few of your dude cronies through the win. dow instead of getting ready to resign, P's mighty glad, for some woman's sake, that you're an old bachelor.” Frogs in Carload Lots, The shipment of frogs from here this genson has been enormons. From one to three wagon loads have wen hip ped to Minneapolis, 8t. Paul and Chi cago every day since the ice went out of the lakes, The shipments are light now, but from the first of September | until the lakes freee up jump-fish will be a burden to the baggageman of the | Great Northern railway. Monday last | there was not a box of frogs in sight | when the train pulled in from the) west, and the baggageman was aston. | ished not to see a truck loaded with croakers, and remarked to the depot | agent that some one was entitled to a | medal, but just as he finished this sentence Ed Brooks’ dray team came around the depot with a load of frogs, aml the baggageman went to the cor ner of the ear for his gun, and If we remember right, he used some tall Ian. guage, but he grabbed up the boxes of live froge, fired them into a corner. slammed the ear door hard and howled for the engineer to pull out of town before another load of frogs came around the corner. — Litchfield (Minn) Ledger. Left Nis Nouse on the Rallway. A party of Indinnapolis people com. ing home from Petoskey, Mich, whose train was four hours Inte, are explain. ing the peculinr reason of the delay to their friends, They were on the Growl Rapids and Indiana road, and abou! thirty miles south of Petoskey the en these sigiied a Buge obstacle on (we track. 1 after The owner of the house was moving it, it was afterward learned, and when 6 o'clock came the tolling of the sup- bell found the on the rail Whether not the farmer be- red to a union, he stopped work im and took his horses to their himself to his evening mend, works after supper, and the hose ol onts and | No farmer into the which scouted out farm minded went The train crew country to find the saeltered the gingle house mover, and the conductor a man to the nearest station to telegraph for a wrecking train, The farmer was found and the wrecking train arrived in time, and, by the efforts of both, the house was moved off Indi- annapolis Journal. house the track. NEW ca VE DISCO VERED. Underground Opening in Tennesses n Strange Sight, which it the Mammoth and the been will Ken Vir A hielievad eclipse tucky gina cave is in Luray in digcovered in Cla Tennessee For years a in the side of Cumberland has attracted the passing account cave CAYEerns has mn wall hole mountain GT persons #UlY breeze flong was it t 1% attention on of the from ii; so ould wr ich came it a person's hat w blown off Lis head The place is located Mr. William Housely. curious to know this underground blasting made an opening man could walk, A party of explorers was formed and on entering they found hundred feet was fart of Ti of b ¥ on the y He further Trae something passage, apd into which a after travelling about a which KO that a regiment id n The and walls of the ber were Ie passages, a magnificent chamber, large auocuver clinm coul in it, floor smooth adding from the chamber four {ine were passage was selected by the exploring party. because the through which the rent of a Wh rom the big cham! wi cur half ARKASe nd ex » $f» 5 oF OL strong about a the r came, en mile beg beg: er an io ®O1 ihe distant » pounds be » more distinet 1 going further and up {oet of chamber Away few the entrar ites and r presence § 1 many peculiar formations. Che noise 3 counted urrent of air Mr Housel farm on Heavy « these « OER of the little is located, whic will explore Snake Charming. Snake cf gusting of of tootling « and their MMrnnng i= a favorit exhibit East, and invols a great on the deal beating of drun Ww } Som = of with the wor Himes Spex, until 1 snakes charmer are ked up to itement, by from Lhe : when the suakes seize thelr ratron the his tongue, blood er hast 1 have Moved and even draw in the furth Yehomous LOR een snakes emg for th while in full possession of and 1 told that in parts Morocco however, that has come and I have had these artists all to myself in the garden, with every facility for careful investigation—the venom fa had been previously removed. The whole performance is not particularly edify though as a novelty it of course has some attraction for the tourist, There exists, by the way, a well worn fable, which, while I am yet on the subject of snakes, may as well be gent ly apd painlessly laid to rest. It re lates that there abound in the older houses of Morocco City enormous rat eating snakes, which live jn friendly intercourse with the household, and even droop from the gaping rafters and fake snacks at table. Reduced to its lowest terms, the bare truth of the story appears to come down to this: That there are snakes of no gigantic IS Purpose the power to kill, is also done in every an of Case, nes ng, however, far from being welrome at the amily board. their presence is tolerated only because are best left alone, and do not + hand where, guests led. New York Tribune. The Tomato asx a Tonle, The tomato unquestionably pozsesses a high dietetic value, and has been for use in cases of blood impoverishment, a sug. gestion which perhaps rests apon the a considerate amount of iron. The presence of iron may easily be detected by applying to the cut surface of a tomato the ordi nary tests for this reagent. As a food for supplying iron, the tomato is far superior to any of the combinations of iron so commonly used as a means of (enriching the blood, 1t has long been known that these inorganic compounds ean not enter into the composition of the blood. It is possible, Lowe ver, that they may sometimes be useful; for, as bas recently been suggested, while they do not enter into the composition of the blood, they serve to neutralize ach substances which form Insoluble salts with the iron of food. and thus prevent its absorption and assimilation. In other words, they act ns protectives of nutritive iron compounds of food. The tomato may serve a similar pur. pose, not only BF supplying ther of Iron, but the Inkteduction o