Juniata sentinel and Republican. (Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pa.) 1873-1955, July 28, 1886, Image 4

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    WHAT SCIENCE SATS.
The Tearful and Wonderful" Me
riianUm or the II n man System Urn
pblcally l'ortrajed.
I In the (MitorUl columns of the Xew York An-i-.Kt,
il. Lasinjr. M. D.. ed;tor, writM tue fol
lowing tieitiiliful .iMcnjitioa of Uie lalKirjtodei,
of iDekmiisnsTetera. we think wr havj never
read finer or more irustwjr iij one.l
"Man Is Uie greatest of all clteniicjl
laboratories. Magnify Uie smallest coll
o! the body and what a factory is.
spread before Uie ejes countless cham
bers in which are plobea of air, masses
of solid matter, globules cf dying liqu id ;
a flash comes and the whole is consum--ed
and needful heat is carried into every
part of the system. Electrical forces
also generate and are conveyed to the
brain, the muscle3 and the various
nerve centers.
In another set of a million chambers
we see various gasses and vapors, iiy
chemicul action these are changed and,
purified in the lungs and the skin. The
blood we often say Is a great living
river. In its curreut are masses which
the air in the lungs did tot affect;
blocks of chalk; slabs of tartar; pieces
of bone-ash, strings of albumen; drops
of molasses, and line of alcohol, llow
are these waste iuasse3 disposed of?
Begin where you will in tl;U great
stream you must come to the purifying
places of the sjsteci. Here is all ac
tivity and an invisible force reaches out
luto the stream, seizes and carries this
mass of waste into vast trenches,! hence;
into a smaller reservoir, and Dnaiiy into
a larger reservoir, which regularly dis
charges its contents.
This separation of lime, uric acid
and other waste material from the blooi"
without robbing it of a particle of the
life fluid, passes human comprehension.
Inhtalth this blood, purifying process
is carried on without our knowledge.,
The organs in which it is done are
faithful servants wlioio work is silent
as long as health remains.
"People straugely wait until pain
strikes a nerve before they will realize.,
that they have any trouble. They do'
not know that pain concerns chiefly the.
exterior not the interior of the body.
A certain set of nerves connect these
blood-purifyinj orjaus with the brain.
They may not gnaw and bite as does
the tooth-ache or a scratch, but they
regularly, silently report. When these
organs are failing these neives indicate
it by drawing the blood from th9 face
and cheek, leaving the lip and eye
blanched, by sending uric acid poison
into the smallest veins, the skin then
becoming gray, yellow or brown. They
also prevent the purification of the
blood in the lungs and cause pulmonary
difficulties, weariness and pain. Who
enjoys perfect health, cs-peclally In this
land where we burn the candle in one
mass? The athlete breaks down in the
race; the editor falls at his desk; tin
merchant succumbs la his counting'
room. These event3 should not Lave
been unexpected for nature long ago
hung out her "lanterns of alarm."
When the "accident" finally comes, iU
fatal effect is seen in a hundred forms;
either as congestion, chronic weakness,
as wrong action, as variable appetite,
as head trouble?, as palpitation and
Irregularities of the heart, as premature
decay, as dryness and harshness of the
skin causing the hair to drop out or
turn gray, as apoplexy, a3 paralysis, as
general debility, blood poisoning, etc.
"Put no faith then ia the wiseacre
who says there is no danger as long as
there is no pain. Put no faith in the
physician, whoever he may be, who
says it is a mere cold or a slight indis
position, lie knows little, if any, more
than you do about it lie can neither
see nor examine tliese organs and de-.
pends entirely uio'.i experimental tests, i
that you can make as well as he. j
"If the output is discolored or
muddy, if it contains albumen, lymph,
crystals, sweet or morbid matter, is red
with escaped blood, or roily with
gravel, mucus and froth, something is
wrong and disease and death are not
far away.
"These organs which we have des
cribed thus at length, because they are
real!; the most important ones in the
human system, the ones in which a
large majority of human ailments ori
ginate and are sustained, are the kid
neys. They have not been much dis
cussed in public because it is conceded
that the profession has little known
power over them. What is wanted for
sucb organs is a simple medicine,
which can do no harm to the
most delicate but must be of the
greatest benefit to the afflicted. Such a
remedy, tried and proved by many
thousands all over the world is War
ner's safe cure. With those in whom
disease is deep seated it is the only
specific. I'or those in whom the seeds
are sown and the beginning of illness
started it as unfailing reliance. It may
be recommended to the well to prevent
sickness and the sick to prevent death.
With its aid the creat filtering engines
of the system keep on in their silent
work without interruption; without it
they get out of gear and then disease
and death opeu tho door and cross the
threshold."
Such writing ought not only to please
but to carry conviction that what
Editor Lassing, il. D., so high an
authority say3 is true, and that his
counsel is worthy the attention and
heed of all prudent, right-minded 10
ple. A'lhcsivc rover of 2Cails ini Screics.
The extensive use to which nails ani
screws are put in construction leuds
considerable Interest to any records oi
exjierience tending to discover theii
holding power. Haupt, In his "Mili
tary Bridges," gives a table of the hold
ing power of wrought-irou ten-penny
nails, seventy-seven to the pound, and
about three inches long. The nails
were driven through a one inch board
into a block, aud the board was then
dragged In a direction perpendicular to
the length of the nails. Taking a pine
plank nailed to a pine block with eight
nails to the square foot, the average
breaking weight per nail was found to
be 330 pounds. Similar experiments
with oak showed the breaking weight
. to be 415 pounds. With twelve nails
to the foot square the balding power
was 542j pounds and with six nails in
line 4Gi pounds. The highest result
obtained was for twelve nails to the
square foot in pine, the breaking weight
being in this case C12 pounds per nail.
The average strength decreases with
the increase of surface. Tredgold gives
the force in pounds required to extract
three-penny brads from dry Christiana
deal at right angles to the grain of the
wood as Cfty-eight pounds. The force
required to draw a wrought-iron six
penny nail was 1S7 pounds, the length
forced into the wood being one inch.
The relative adhesion when driven
transversely and longitudinally is, in'
deal, about two or one. To extract a
common six-penny nail from a depth cf
one inch in dry beech, across grain, re
quired 1G7 pounds; in dry Christiana
deal, across grain, 1ST pounds, and with
grain, S7 pounds. In elm the force re
quired was 327 pounds across grain,
and 207 with grain. Ia oak the figure
given was 507 pounds across grain.
From further experiments it would ap
pear that the holding power of spike
nails in fire is from 400 to 730 pounds
per inch in length, while the adhesive
Sower of screws two inches long, 0.22
inch in diameter at the exterior of the
threads, twelve to the inch driven Into
ij-lncn board, was 700 pounds in hard
wood and about one-halt' that amount
!n soft wood.
The practice or i egging down ever
blooming roses, so that they will cover
completely the
!y the sunace of the bed,
to prod.ite veiy pleasant re-
is sai.l that i-eggmg down
known
suits.
dahlias proves Q.uile satisfactory.
RARE POSTAli STASIPS. -
I
I A San Francisco Man's Great Collec
i tiou.
HI 11(1) U IVI II LUi . v w mi t - - "
'Frisco as it was formerly, but is oi
t
more serious character ami likely to Iks
more iennanent. Before the collections
were made haphazard, and many of tliem
were of but little value. -Now stamps
are being collected in a different way
and on a much more extensive scale.
The archaeological instinct which
prompts the collection is niore developed
among the rich, as they have the means
to collect the rarest specimens. In
stamp-collecting considerable money is
required, as some of them command
prices ranging from fifty cents to $1.50
apiece, in proportion to their rarity.
In this city there are at present collec
tions being made in some of the wealth
iest fannies.
'o collections in this city will com
lare in point of numbers, rarity, age and
value with the collection of William
Fasteiiratii, w ho recently arrived in this
citv from Mexico. This collection con
tains over ten thousand stamps, which
Mr. Fastenrath lias been gathering for
the liist seventeen years. It was in lSiW,
while at college in" Berlin, that he first
was struck with the passion for collect
ing stamps, and ever since that time lie
has been assiduously increasing his
stock, exercising the greatest caution in
selecting his siiecitnem. So valuable is
his collet ion that he lias been offered at
different times large sums of money for
its transference, and although but a
short time in this city lias received an
offer of $."5,000 for all of his spi-chiicus.
Theso offers he has repeatedly refusnh
A Chronicle reporter called upon Mr.
Fastenrath at his residence on Sutter
street, and that gentleman courteously
agreed to exhibit his collection. In an
swer to several questions regarding
st:iniT callierincr. be renlied:
"The value of a stamp does not de-
jN-nd upon the size or itniNrtanee ot me
country by which it was issued, but on
the small number issued and the issue
I iccomins extinct. Some of the rarest
stamps are those of countries which are
hardly known to the average reader.
Sinc e the adoption of adhesive stamiH.
some foitv-six years ago, there have
been exactly 4$,("i00 different kinds, dis
tinct and peculiar, issued by the differ
ent countries of the world. Many of
these arc lost aud can never lie obtained.
To collection in the world is complete,
although some in Germany and France
have brought as much as $50,000, yet
only comprised about 15.000 or 20,000
different issues."
Mr. Fastenrath then oiened several
large trunks and tok out numbers of
p. . . . , ,
weii-bouna dooks, wnicu nau ixxu so
cially manufactured for the purpose.
The different countries were all provi
ded with appropriate places in the dif
ferent volumes, and all stamps were
carefully and systematically arranged,
commencing with 1S40, when stanq
were first issued. Before that time let
ters were sent folded and sealed with
wax, the postage being either prepaid or
collected on delivery. The collector
first opened the volume printed "United
States," and showed stamps commen
ting from IS 17 the date of the first
issue to the present time. In several
places there were particular stamps
missing, but the collect ion is almost com
plete, liesides the general issues of the
United States Government, the collec
tion comprises selected specimens that
were issued by the States before the
adoption of sUunps by the General Gov
ernment, and also stamps issued bj
cities, such as St. Ixmis, Boston and
Philadelphia. In the collection inert
are also all the furious stamps issued bj
the Confederate Govenunent from lSxil
to 1804, which are dark in color aud are
ornamented with the picture of Jeffer
son Davis. The issue of Xew York
State of 1S42 is very rare. The collec
tion also contains one of the famous
Brattleboro (Vermont) stamps.
Following the United Suites collec
tion is that of Mexico, dating from
1S57, and being complete up to the
present time. Besides the general issue
of the Government there are numbers ol
local stamps issued by the towns and
provinces. The stamps change fre
quently in size, color and ornamenta-
Ition, on account of the many revoiu-
lions changing tne uovenimeni. i
rarest stamps are those of Guadalajara.
The third volume contains the Eng
lish stamps, commencing 1S43. The
first stamp in the collection is the fainoni
V. K. stamp, leing the oldest in exist
ence. Xext comes the one iwnny issue,
and following this is every Issue up to
the present time complete.
The fourth volume is devoted to Ger
man stamps, and is the most complete
in the set. All the small, petty German
States, ljefore the Confederation, are rep
resented with selections in this ltook
Oldenburg, Hanover, Hamburg, Schles-wig-IIolstein.
After these come the
first issues of the Imperial stamps the
new Germany after the Confederation.
The next volume is devoted to Rus
sian stamps, especially the rare Finnish
stamps, whose scarcity has caused many
a heart-ache to the collector. There
also a great variety of local stamps i
fciied by the different provinces.
Tho Italian collection is complete,
commencing during the reign of Victor
Emmanuel and reaching to the pre-sput
time. In this collection are some c-f t!:
rare Tuscan stamiw issued in 1850, s-!:e
of which are valued all the way from
$50 to $75 a piece.
The Switzerland collection is also
almost complete, including the Uv.it-s of
Geneva, Zurich, and Basle, many of
which are rare and valuable.
Following these are the stamps of
France, which are without a flaw or in
terruption, and these are succeeded by
volumes devoted to the smaller Euro
pean countries. In one of these vol
umes is the rarest stamp in the collec
tion, issued in Moldau, a vlac in Kou
mania, in 1858, and valued at $100. It
is a large and curious stamp, being de
voted to a representation of Uie head of
a stag.
After the Euroiean collection come
some rare specimens of Asiatic stamps.
The Persian collection comprises many
rare issues. Following these is a rare
set of stamps of the Island of Ceylon,
issued in 17; and valued at $5'j apiece.
Some of these are the most beautiful in
the collection. Japan, Egypt, Moroc
co, Liberia, Algiers, Cape of Good Hope
and others m fact there is not a coun
try in the world which ever issued
nta:nis but is represented in part in Mr. I
Fastenrath's volumes. I
Thj last volumes of the collection are
ailed with issues of South America.
The issues of the United States of Co-
lombia are valuable. The stamp known !
as the Jolema stamp is in this volume,
and is valued at $75. Paraguay. Pata
gonia, Chili, Peru, Brazil and Bolivia
are all represented, in many cases the
issues betng complete.
Bcsides his stampcollection, Mr. Fas-
tenrat i lias a lartre collection of nostal ;
curds from their first issue in Austria
till their adoption by the leading civili
zed countries of the world, and the
issues tip to tho present time. His ios-tal-card
collection contains over four
thousand postal cards.
ftetaitnuca nenzine is prepared as I i-, .asuy grown, tne plant, nitherto a
lows: One hundred and twenty parts j worthless weed, may prove a rival to the
of white soup are dissolved in a liter : cotton of the South,
bottle in 180 parts of hot water, 30 '
parts of spirits of ammcnia added, and An anti-insect fabric has been paten
the whole brought with water to three- ted by Mr. John P. Kegan, of New
quarters liter, then filled up with ben- York city. It is made by first steeping
zine and well shaken through. Oae ia-' the fabric in a solution of tobacco, cas
!e?ponful of this solution is mixed In canlla bark macerated in benzine, then
a one-quarter liter bottle with a little drying and steeping In tobacco, cas-
bestine. With this gelatine any stains .
may be removed without injury to the
delicate colors. The geltdimzed
btixme volatilizes with difficulty.
FARM NOTES.
Moxet ix Potatoes. The potato
. :rop mast always be sold within a year
' after it is grown, and usually the bjst .
.mUiSVxsVxeczop Is dug.
is dug. It
at least saves the expense of extra
handling. But there is rarely or never
year when the grower of a good crop
potatoes need make a loss on them.
Some time within the twelve months a
fairly remunerative price will be ob
tained. This year, although potatoes
have ruled dull and low most of the
year, there were two spells when good
prices could be had. One was just at
jigging time, when most farmers were
loo busy to rush their crop on the mar
ket The other is, at the tail end
f the season, just before new potatoes
come in marvet. This high price late
in the season cannot, however, help
farmers to market a large crop, as the
work of keeping in good condition till
this time is too much except for a very
few. But a few bushels that can lie
spared will bring nearly twice asj
much as the same quantity at last fall s
and inter's prices.
The cabbage worm, the larvae of the
common butterfly, may be easily de
stroyed in several ways. That of hand
pickmg, if liegun before the first brood
has passed into its perfect state, is effec
tual. We have also found that pyreth
rum powder mixed with five times its
bulk of p'aster and dusted into the cen
tre of the leaves with sulphur bellows
is certain destruction to every one of
them. The application of insecticides
in liquids to the cabbage has not been
satisfactory on account of the peculiar
structure of the leaf surface, which al
lows the water to fall off in drops and
not adhere to any part of it. Paris
green is unsafe to use after the leaves
liave become over four Inches In diame
ter. The roots of peach trees are of a por
ous, spoLgy nature, and if set on moist
ground they will grow rapidly in the
third and fourth years and then die.
Such trees never form fruit buds that
mature fruit. Peach trees will not beat
forcing with stimulating manures, even
in sandy soil, as they will cause au
overgrowth, and the fruit buds will
drop off In the spring when the sap
starts aud the buds begin to swell. Do
not plant on ground rich euough tc
grow onions, or the trees will make lat
growth aud produce unripe wood that
will be winter-killed.
Most farmers have learned that cut
hay or even straw wet and sprinkled
with meal is better feed for working
horses than whole grain and hay. 1c
this shape the nutriment In the feed h
easily eaten and easily digested. Horse:
do not need water when eating, except
as it is put on the chopped bay to make
the meal stick to it. The meal being
fine digests perfectly, while much of the
nutnment in whole grain is lost. Again,
the wasted effect made In digesting the
latter is so much detracted from the
strength which should go to the work.
Figs can be produced in greenhouses,
and may be grown in the open air at
far north as Norfolk. Crops have been
grown near Baltimore some seasons,
but more care must be given them. In
November a trench Is dug around the
bushes, cutting away about half the
roots made, when the bushes are vigor
ous, but less If they are not so robust
The branches are then bent to th
ground and covered in the trenches wilt
three or four Inches of earth.
Ax intelligent farmer, who has
watched the spread ot yellows among
his peach-trees, advances the theorj
that this is often brought by bees pass
ing from one tree to another when it
bloom. It is a fact that bearing tree:
are more subject to yellows than thosi
not in bearing. In seasons when frost
destroys peach buds there Is less spread
of yellows, though this may in part be
due to the greater vigor of trees tna'
are not bearing a crop of fruit
Most fruits need a good deal of wa
ter to ripen a full crop, but not man
will do well cm laud naturally wet
They want water, but it must not slaj
long enough to become stagnant wa
ter.
Immeksiox, for at least five min
utes, of the vessels in which milk Is set
will, it is asserted by a member of the
French Academy, destroy the organ
Isms which in the form of dark blue
spots distress dairymen.
Do not leave any unoccupied land tc
grow a crop of weeds. When an earl;
crop Is removed sow at onee any croy
that will keep them down. Buckwheai
and peas are good, and may be turned
under before frost
ScrEnriiosriiATE, or bone manure,
in any form is a specific for turnips oi
rutabagas. English fanners discovered
this and now apply bone manure U
their root crops instead of to wheat, as
is usually the practice here.
If paris green is used to destroy in
sects on young squashes, cucumbers and
melons, It must be applied more spar
ingly than tor potatoes. A tablespoon
nil is sufficient for two ordinary jail
fuls of water.
If any disease attacks a peach tree,
dig it up and put another in its place.
In all probability it is a case of the yel
lows, and Uie loss of a tree Is a trifle a?
compared with the danger of spreading
the infection.
Turning sod under and immediate
ly seeding down again by sowing grass
seed along in August, or with grass in
springtime, Is one of the best and cheap
est ways of increasing the hay crop of
the farm.
Twooillngs of harness, except the
collars, a year is enough; but the col
lars should be oiled every two weeks
during the working season, and the
sweat and dirt be removed each morn
ing with a dull knife.
It is about time that the attention of
farmers and all rural people was turned
in the direction of decided effort in be
half of protection to insectivorous birds.
They should be encouraged in every
practicable way.
Yovxo trees must be mulched as a
protection against summer winds and
sun, as well as against winter's frosts;
and every newly set tree should be firm-
' " "J uofc " " reu-"-
about h thewlnd-
A soil but five Inches deep cannot be
worth as much as another that gives
free scope to the roots cf plants to what-
ever depth they may penetrate In search
i iiumuicnu
Thread has recently been made from
the bolls of milkweed, which is said to
have had the consistency and tenacity
of flax or linen thread. The fibre is
long, easily carded, and can be adapted
to spinning on an ordinary flax spinner.
carilla bark and hot water, the fabric
to be used In trunk linings, etc., as a
protection from moths or other in-:
aecta.
HOUSXHOUX
Leuox Pickle. Choose a dozen
fiuo, well sized lemons fresh and er
fectly sound, scraps the outside of them
aritt a iinsA 4t broken nuart bottle.and
then cut them lengthwise down into
four quarters, but not quite asunder;
they must ba left so as to bang just to
gether. Bub these over with alt on
the rough outside, and fill the cuts in
the same manner with salt; put them in
a china or earternware bowl that will
just hold them, and turn them once a
day; let them lie thus four days. Par
boll twelve cloves of garlic, or small
onions cut into thin slices; add to these
an ounce of white sugar, a handful or
white mustard seed, aud as much cay
enne pepper as will lie upon a dime.
Sprinkle some salt among these, and let
them stand all the time the lemons are
in the bowl Then have a clean stone
jar ready, take out the lemons one by
one, squeeze them a very iuue, mu ij
iimm narofnllv in the stone iart lay in
the spices all about them, aud tie them
close down; let them stand a month,
and they will be fit to eat. Sugar can
be added to taste when served.
Coffee ix a Bao. Have the coffee
ground as fine as the mill will permit
and stir it over the frying-pan for one
minute, then either enclose it in a small
bag or put it into a cloth strainer fitted
in the top of the coffee-pot J held in
place by the rim of the pot or by a cir
cle of wire. The best cloth is sheer,
unbleached muslin, just substantial
euough to confine the coffee grounds.
Pour actual boiling water upon the
ceffee, cover the pot and let It stand
where It will keep hot without boiling
for at least five minutes ten would be
better. If the muslin is not too thick
all the aroma and flavor of the coffee
will pass into the water, and the coffee
will be as clear as wine. The strength
will depend on the quantity of coff ae
nsed and the fineness of the grains.
Heating the coffee before using it
greatly improves it
To Pickle Walxcts. They must
be gathered before the 23th of June,
when the green banc is tender enough
to be easily pierced with a pin; after that
they are too hard. Ly them in salt
water for three weeks, then wash them
from the salt and pour cold vinegar over
them. After three or four days pour
this off and use for catsup. Boil some
vinegar for five minutes with cloves,
mace, allspice and whole black pepper
tied in a thin muslin bag. When it is
still warm. Just cooled euough not to
scald the walnuts (as that would skin
them), pour It over them In a stone jar.
For catsup boil np the first vinegar
with the same kind or spices. Whoa
butternuts are used Instead of English
walnuts they must be scraped when
taken from the salt water; follow all
the other directions.
A caud rack for Invitation, etc.. is
of fine cream linen or satin to han up
against the wait It is oblong, with
the top making a sort of gable or point,
and has seven pockets stitched flat with
"etching silk" in some pretty design.
The upper pocket In the point is for
"Sunday, and need not be as capacious
as the others, which are arranged in
three tiers, side by side, each embroid
ered with the day of the week. TtiH
is the ;alternative to the looking-glass
frame for holding cards as reminders of
the day's engagement The pocket
must be made wide enough to bold the
postal-card .notice of meetings, etc.,
which many women have to keep in
mind or in view.
Phettt cushions for summer use In
rattan chairs or to cover up some of.be
execrable colors in the Shaker-worn
chair seats, are made ot white ground
chally with sprig cr running vine ia
pattern. The Uaselt awl cwrds are
homo-mad, ot white and colored cot
tons to match figures of the stuff. This
makes pretty work, as well as cool
looking cushions, that are most agree
able looking to the eye in summer.
Other cushions for piazza chairs are
tastefully made of scarlet and white
bunting over unbleached muslin cov
ets. A fixe frosting can be made of one
cup of granulated sugar and one-f ourU
cup of milk, without egg or gelatine.
Method: Stir sugar and milk over t
slow fire till it boils; boil five minutei
without stirring; remove from the fire:
set saucepan In cold water, or on Ice,
while you stir it to a cream. Spread
on cake while it will run. The advan
tages of this frosting are that it
will keep longer than the egg or gela
tine frosting, and it will cut without
breaking or crumbling. Flavored to
suit the taste, It is excellent
Potato Rolls. Boil six good sized
potatoes with their jackets on; take
them out with a skimmer, drain and
squeeze with a towel to Insure being
dry, then remove the skin, mash
them perfectly free from lumps, add a
tablespoonful of butter, the yolk of
three eggs and a pint of sweet milk.
When cool beat in a teaspoonful of
yeast Put m just enough flour to
make a stiff dough. When this rises,
make into small cakes. Let them rise
the same as biscuit and bake a delicate
brown.
Mauoaret'3 Melange. Pare and
cut a ripe pineapple Into half au inch
bits; pare and slice ripe bananas. Fill
a glass dish with alternate layers of the
fruit, strewing each with sugar. The
acid of the pineapple gives piquancy to
the somewhat flat sweetness of the ban
ana. The combination is singularly
pleasant. Pass cake with It
Chickex Jelly. Cut up a chicken
and put into a quart of cold wat?r: let
it simmer until reduced to a little less
than a pint; remove from the Cre, and
strain as for jelly; season with a little
salt. Chop the breast meat into small
pieces and mix with the liquor; and
then pour the whole into a mould and
set away to cool.
Crumpets. One aud one-half pints
of flour, one-half teaspoonful salt, one
teaspoonful sugar, two of baking pow
der, one egg, nearly a pint of milk aud
cream mixed together; sift together
flour, sugar, salt aud powder; add
beaten egg and milk; beat all together;
bake In well battered hot gem Irons-,
serve hot.
Ax egg-shaped work-bag is kept in
place with whalebone casing. One
side opens like a little trap-door. It is
made about twenty-four inches long, of
delicate tinted satine or suiah to re
semble a pretty Easter egg.
The indiscriminate defence of right
aud wrong contracts the understand
ing, while it hardens the heart
It is reported that Mr. Nordenfelt,
the inventor of the well-known machine
gun, has discovered that solid castings
ot wrought-iron or mild steel may be
obtained without changing the intrinsic
quality of the metal by the addition of
the metal aluminium, either alone or In
the shape of an alloy. The aluminium
makes the molten metal more liquid;
thus the gases in the metal pass easily
away, the metal runs smoothly Into the
mouldsand a more perfect productis ob
tained. Even a minute quantity of
metallic aluminium added to the mol
ten iron has an appreciable Influence.
Perfect castings ot considerable ductili
ty and great tensile strength have been
made from the softest wrought-iron.
Zme melts at 4129 C, and standard
gold at about 9009 CL, but if less than
2 per cent of silica be added to gold it
will soften in the flame of a candle, A
trace of antimony In melted lead will
cause it to oxidize on the surface mm h
more rapidly than would otherwise be
the case, and by stirring the mass tt is
I nnttnrmait intn a. kind of Past?
C UVII h HUU. V.
oxide. Cadmium also promotes the ox-
. .. - t 1 ...., fli'jt
ldallou OI pure mciieu lewi, '"- .
too, with a play of the most beautiful
coles. Mr. Roberts-Austen proved
this by illuminating the surface of the
melt el alloy with a beam of parallel
.... him tna fiWf rta lantern, and pro
jecting upon the screen an image ot the
surface of the molten mass; as the films
of oxide formed they were removed with
a little scraper, to mane way ior u'
surfaces, having somewhat the colors of
shot silks, ne stated that it may not
be generally known that copper can be
gilt as well by the application of an al
lot of lead and gold to its surface as it
can by an amalgam of mercury and gold.
On the application of heat the copper
absorbs the lead and the gold is left on
the surface. This process is recorded
in a papyrus of the third century, now
preserved at lyden.
ImHrY4iib
When fOQ nut or ewe Xew Yirx Cltv,
tfguexpreiMgeani p earmxe Hire, anduo?
dux itmU Uuiun UtfWl. opiMUM wriuul Uca
Udltepoc cu) aieunt rooms, BtiI P to" 0,
cniiion doUari 11 uJ npvjrJj pef
dr. European Plan. Eloalor. Kettiarual
tupo'.tol wtu ins bee. IIocm can, tuxes aul
e.eraMl raiiiead to aU depot Famlies "
better lor leaa muoer at Uie orand l aloa Unfa
tbaaalanj outer OnMlaas botei la Um cue
Revenge converts a little right into a
great wrong.
Confession ot tbe Lata lr. Ulo LawU.
Thousands of people all over this
country will hear with keen regret of
the death of Dr. Dio Lewis. For many
years he has been the inspiration of
good health to thousands and has min
istered comfort to those who would
very sadly have missed Ids cheerinr
words. Dr. lwis was one of the most
genial aad Inspiring of men. He did not
believe very much in taking medicine,
making hygiene a great hobby and in
sisting that if a person would live right
there would be little necessity ot medi
cine; and yet in 1383, bis candor above
all things else being noticeable, he
said, "If I found myself afilicted with
a serious kidney disorder I would use
Warner's safe euro." Adding, "The
truth Is the medical profession standi
dazed and helpless In the presence of
more than one ktduey malady, while
the testimonials of hundreds of Intelli
gent and very reputable gentlemen,
hardly leave room to doubt that the
proprietors or that remedy have fallen
upon one of those happy discoveries
which occasionally brlug help to suffer
ing humanity. I am not so narrow
that I cannot gratof ully recognize the
precious value of relief in the form of
medicine." Dr. Lewis met with an
accident which Injured him so that ery
sipelas set in and carried him off. His
testimonial, coming as it did from a
free, frank and open heart, is a very
Important confirmation of what so
many thousands huve said of the rem
edy ho so highly commended.
Take the world as it is, not as it ought
to be.
Ne la.tj sooalil live in uerpettul fear, an.l suff, r
fruai tbe more seriojs troubles tlut so srtea ap
pear, waca Dr. Kilmer's Coan.cn I'mi t Uku
KDTlseerf.4 3 10 prevcut an I earn Timor iul
Cancer Iberc
Sp:t; is an infirm vindication of fools.
Women, as a rule, are not Inventive.
They have no desire for new wrinkles,
unless using Carboline the Xew ietro
leum Hair producer, cau be classified
as a new wrinkle; all handsome ladies
use it
The best way to hold a grudge is to
forget it '
Frazer Axle Urease. i
The Frazer Axle CI rea.se is the v.iry Wsl.
A trial will prove we are rljjht. v. d
first premium at Xottb Caroiiu i Stale Fair,
Centeunial, and l'aris Kx'oluou.
If wine is a mocker, thin whisky
must be an outrage.
Te claims as to the curative powers of II ooJ's
Sarsapanllaare bis-l mtirf'.i on wiii fi; po
p'.a saj it ha4 ilne fur tlic n. sen I tj CI. U)1
A Co., Lor.-ll, XU-i, ( r a b.wk roat.tininx stale
Bunts of m juj r-iiurka!,d e ures Uf Ho I's Sjr
tapani:. The truest mark of being liorn with
great qualities is being boru without
envy.
FITS: AH Fits stopped free. Trettue it I ir r. u
Kit He or Dr. Kllne'siire it Sere K j rer fr?j n
111 case v ScntlloDr.lilnie.SJl ArclisL, l'iui..l'a.
The sort of a joke best appreciated
in the wild West is illustrated by the
following: (iibbs "So the man was
killed at the hotel, was he? S iiilbbi
"Yes; shot right in the rotunda.
Gibbs "Great Scott! No wonder it
killed him. That's a horrible place to
hit a man.'2
Those who would learn of the wrld
must not themselves know too much 10
start Willi.
Straioutf.x your old boot and sh.x-s
with Lyon's Heel SlitTeuers, aud wear tbeui
aiiain.
If net cultivattd, depravity would
soon cease to grow in the gardens of
t:.e vicious.
"Did you see tliat handsome lady whisk
past j ast now ?" sai l Mr. it. the other day,
while standing on the corner waiting tor
I lie street car. "Ves, I saw her," sail his
companion, "aud I realVy believe she has
the iln-t complexion of any persou I ever
ww." "Well." said It, "she never used
toapiiearon the streets without a veil on,
hut a short time ao, oae of those floe days
in February, she cauio out minus ber veil,
aud with thai beautiful complexion she now
has. Formerly her face was disfigured by
eruptions and freckles, but I understand
that lately she baa been using Dr. T. t'elix
(iouraud's Orleutal Crraui, or Magical
Uoautitler, for the complexion, aud that
in.iy account for the enchanting change. "
For sale at all dru stores.
Better go supperless to bed than run
in debt
KotlUug Like It.
No medicine has ever been known o ef
fectual in the cure of all those diseases ari.v
in? from au impure condition of the blood
as SCOVILL'S SAKSAFARILLA, OU
11LOOD AND LIVER SYRUP, the uni
versal remedy for the cure of Scrofula,
White Swelling?, Rheumatism, Pimples,
Blotches, Eruptions, Veueral Sores, and
Diseases, Consumption, Goitre, Coils, Can
cers, and all kindred diseases There is uo
better means of securing a beautiful com
plexion than by usin' SCOVILL'S SAU
SAPARILLA, OR BLOOD & LIVER
SYRUP, which cleanses tho blood aud
gives permanent beauty to the skin.
A Iridije of concrete, thirty feet in
span with a roadway thirteen feet wide,
and capable of supporting safely a load
of 200 tons, was recently built in Swit
terland In a single day. Two months'
time was allowed for the complete har
dening of the concrete, after which
time heavy traffic began without appar
ent injury to the structure.
The purest, sweetest ana best CoJ Liver Oil hi
the world, minafactured from fresh, health? liv
ers upon the seanhore. It Is absolutely pure and
sweet. FaUents who have once taken it prefer It
to all others. PhTSictans have decided It superior
to any of tke other oils in market. Made by Cas
well, Hazard a Co.. New York.
Coirrio bind, face, pimples and roujs skin
cured by us'ng- Juniper Tar Soap, nude by Cas
well, Uazard & Cx, New York.
To change and to do better are two
different things.
Xo Opium in Piso'a Cure for Consump
tion. Cures where other remedies fad. 23o.
Purf the Blood.
f. ..71.. e..nrlklll
W. do not el5m that Hood-. lUU th
only modhln. derTlD pafalle roaMeaee. but
Lllev. Uiat to purify the Mnod. to
renovate th. whole .r.tem. It U
availed. Tbe Inflaeoc. of
tbe beilth eannot be overestimated. If M be
comes contaminated, the train of consequences
bv which the health Is undermined Is Immeasur
able, Lo t Appetite. Iw Spirits, Ueadaebs,
lyspep.ia. Debility. Xervowness an other
"Utile (t) ailments" are the premonitions ol
more serious and often fatal results. Try
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Soldbyandnnjglstt. $l;alxIori Wad
only by CI. HOOD te CO, Lowell. Mass.
100 Doses One Dollar
FACETIAE.
Through the coating of coal-dust
that covered his face as he leaned
against a cart in a prominent coal yard
Saturday, could be seen an expression
cf woe. .
"Why so sad?" a wayfarer asked of
Uie disconsolate coal-cart driver.
"They've got a new man in my
Ilace-" , t . t.
"What was the matter and how did it
happen?"
"Well, it was in this way: I was
sitting on my cart yesterday while the
load was being weighed, when the bos3
came out and said my services would
be no longer required."
"But there must have been some rea
son for your discharge."
There was," he mournfully replied:
"the new man weighs seventy-five
pounds more than I do."
Falling of the hair it arrested, and bald
ness averted, by using Hall's Hair Ilenewer.
Obstinate cases of fever and ague can be
cured by taking Ayer's Ague Cure.
The best of grammarians and rhetori
cians often fell far short of perfection
in their commonplace conversation.
Some of them make a mistake when
taking others to task for their gram
matical fallings. But this Is no reason
why one should not aim at perfection.
The following illustration will serve to
amuse and possibly give point to what
Professor (to his wife) "My dear, I
wish you would speak more caiefully.
You say that Henry Jones came to this
town from St. Louis."
Wife "Yes."
Professor "Well, now, wouldn't it
be better to say that he came from St
Louis to this townV"
Wife "I don't see any difference in
the two expressions."
rrofessor "But there is a difference,
a rhetorical difference. Y'ou don't hear
me make such awkward expressions.
By the way, I have a letter from your
father In my pocket."
Wife "But my father is not In your
pocket. Y'ou mean that you have in
your pocket a letter frona my father."
Professor "There you go with yoar
little quibbles. You take a delight la
harassing me. You are always catch
ing up a thread and representing it as
a rone,"
Wife "Representing it to be a rop,
yon mean."
Professor "IIusli! I never saw such
a quarrelsome woman In my life!"
"Pauling," said a young depait
ment clerk to a pretty Georgetown
girl whiise waist his arm encircled,
"what do you think your dear pajm
would say if I were to ask him for your
hand?"
"I don't think he'd like it, Harry,"
she lisped.
"Xo?" he said in dismay for lie
thought he was very dense with t!ie
old gentleman. "No? why not?"
"Because, dear," slie smiled, "he
wouldn't want his only daughter mu
tilated In that manner. Ask for all or
me, Harry, and I have a vague suspic
ion you'll get me mighty quick."
Harry gave her a squeeze as big as a
dime museum anaconda, and saw the
father next day hi a most successful
manner.
"What is the booking to Xew
York?" inquired a man as he stootl
before the ticket-window or an Eastern
railroad.
"Seventeen dollars," said the agent.
'You mtan aw three pounds ten,
eh?"
"Xo,I mean seveuteen dollars. 1 don't
know anything about your three Dounds
ten. Ticks?"
"Ya-a-as, you may book me. But
three poun' ten Is too much, douch
know,, too awfully much. Does that in
clude me baggage?"
"That chap must be a newly arrived
Englishman," remarked the agent.
"Englishman!" said a brakeman wbo
chanced to be near; "he was born in a
canal-boat down here near Jollet. and
Ids father got rich buying aud selling
hogs."
"And are you glal to see me,
Bobby V" asked the Bishop, ou his semi
annual visit to the parish.
' Oh, yes," said Bobby, "cause we
always have a good dinner when you
come. But I didn't expect you."
"Xo?"
"Xo. I thought you'd go somewhere
else, 'cause ma said yesterday that it
was about time some other member of
the church offered to entertain you."
The latest "snake story" going the
rounds of the press Is headed, "A
Young Lady Tightly embraced by a
Serpent." Such incidents are not rare.
But the young lady doesn't know at
the time that he is a serpent. Some
times she doesn't discover the fact un
til after she marries him.
St. Bernard Vegetable Pills.
TV" WARKivnrn lrTKr.Y Vrafrrim.it
"f X Trre he-lciirfl for Lirrau I lUt m
; J f sfVi " OmiflaiiiU, CotftiTetKMi, Head U
i yT " f i l:.a Iirinec and Snrliur MoI.cl:n
;they have no equal. lamilr
hooiiiu tn witnmit a no or luo st
l'r-t-Vf.1 sir.t-il Pills in fw lna
TPTV-- uiall LS.uupira.wnt rmc Ail lri
Rrinil yur own Bon8
UIIIIU mi... Onl.. akelta.
SEilttM 'lowr I'm
llkraaHANDMIIib
WUinn' Pftlentk. lOO et
trr. Jtle FOWtl MILLS) sod FAKM
tEEI MILLS. Circular an4 Ttttlraaolai.
ca apUcailoa. V) lLaOi IUW bUM, .JTm.
BOOK AftEVTS WAVTED Tor
PLATFORM ECHOES
r 11 VIS TKCTBS WO HEAD A.NB ! AJtT,
By John B. Gouglu.
Hit bit n4 eraaitat Of rt, Mb Ml f tbrtllrar mtn.
. WEor uS um. Brlakl. pw. sal (oo4, fun (
'Loxhter ..4 t?ftrc" II mE mi im a. To It W aiA
kt Ufa DttU of Mr. OMck, tr I.ISt.1 . K-
IOTT. Aftati Wuttj.-Mta a4 WtoM. !
meat and. Qjrputmnu n. At.4-. m w.
Sr. Sttrm Ttrms ud rt rf . Wnta tut areaian w
.A. 0. WSSI.I.WISJI W C.'MUm Ca.a
S5
la a:i'. i;i)i. worth S1.31 FREE.
BnwTU,'..V r.itta Hor.BTi;. IL.l.j.Mlch.
Consumption Can Bo Cured 1
DR.
HALL'S
WM.
Cars Camartoi,'-c.l. rasnMm.,
TT; "! TVQg'a Up nOaks .wvata ata4
tlarUanai anna tha ckns WWei mresaapaaT
HAfAJS BAI.sAllx.wllHo.ra yaa, aa
Ml HI 1 1 iJ a. j. mu m a m A!u7 i
FRAZERAXLE
BEST IX TUS WORLD
ST Oat UK OaaolM.
untnoc
SaklEwrywbero.
At the tea table: )
Vhasecius "My dear, I have a sug
gestion to offer." n.
l,avina " ""
"It is tbat we have lhe3e
biscuits adorned with painted decora
tions of Japanese tiesign, appiy
rwr cu-.mn wholesale sta
tiouer down town to introduce them to
the trade as ilikaao paper weigiita.
What do you say?"
But sue was suenw
r-an sha Krer l.oia Uln?"
. r... i,.., when the nros-
is wiiai ju" , ,
"How can i!.i" - - -
reoolTe to link her destiny with that of ou
with a disease, that unless arrested, will
end In consumption, or perhaps in insajii-
... t - . i . i t. n.l rtist . nr ia to b
iret Dr. Saee's Catarrh Remedy, and cum
himself belore 11 is uai laio. 3
Would you be stronj, conquer your-
Mflf.
llow Women Would Vole.
ii. .i iin.vA.i f n mtt fcvcrv one
in tbe laud who has used Dr. 1'ierce a
... i. ...:..:,. wfwiM viii-H it ta be an
TOnw f natiil'u"" .
unfailing remedy for the disease peculiar
to her sex. tj uiuniii-
It is easier to blame than to do bet
ter.
To Consuinpllvrs,
or those with weak lungi. spiiuni of b'.ood .
bronchitis, or klmlrea auecuoiia oi nn
or lungs, send 10 cents ia stamps for Dr. I
V. 1'itroe's treatise on tUee maladies. Ad
dress the doctor. IluQ'alu, X. V.
nri T)k Ykre the charmins actress
"And how old would you take me to
be, Mr. ritzpoodle?"
Mr. ritzpoodle withdrawing the
head of his cane from his mouth
"Well, I aw cawn't say, I'm sure."
Miss Di Vere with a bright smile
"Ah, you mean you will not say. Y'ou
wish me to tell. That is what you are
after. Mr. ritzpoodle. Well. I am
Just as old as I look. "
Mr, i itzpoodie "inaeeu. 1 aw
should have thought you were much
younger."
UCt-f v.ri Tliimnfrpr UlPiW felloWS
am fitninnir the daily rate of livin-'
down to nothing almost. Here's one
puts it at niteen cents a uay.
lUAb o auu w u.r,.., - - ' -
doesn't cost me that by considerable. "
"Wny, now uo you manage nr '
"I don't. I'm living on my father-
in-law. He manages it for me some
how."
"fiFnnr.E. dear, don't vou think it's
rather extravagant of you to eat butter
with that dehcious Jam?" "Xo, love;
economical. Same piece of bread does
for both."
VSPEPSIA
la & dannraoi mm wlk M diatr
campluat. 11
ntiom. and 4
auIVk.i tt Lssnria l.v isjaOAlrinaT BatntM)
praMinc ib ton oi Uw ajstcsA. W pnymn lh
Icr tvap.a DecuM.
EST 72 Hi C
WoH-kTrvtJ enapltif 4 a rem !vpepl la H
hi ff.rsi. IIrrtburn. ltrlrbioic. Twmlkn th
KMd. rtc. It funcuiarrrJ (imtlLOblool.ttJBu
ltM t.'-c -tpvi:t. fttxl Uim ajeiauiuiB of tiM.
Ml Tuv-ua. Kdit-iT ot ilrrt-U, Cnaaibtrra-
hrtrg. i ... " I -UM;.! Krown't Ino B;Itrr U?
turn U'iul-If n
Mk. J. K. Jx.tst.zt9 PhtornphMT. f9 MJn St ,
It-rfolk " I al frMt ly trma m er
ot Dywpepai al driT0 nu totit I rm vart
ou tmtjDm. 1 nwd Brrmn, lroo BiUt m4
bjr baiti mi foil nmuxwdS
Gnnlam hm aborr Trmd Mark mn& crng J rd Uoc
on wrsppr. Tak mm other Mul only by
RUOW.N IHLMICAL.CIK. BALTiUOlie. Ml.
Ladles! Thosodull
tiroa locks ami fcclirt-j
srvnlt Tciumos! ThL.
HeiceJ j corrects all cun
ditions, restorca vlror
and Tltalitr an J br.a-.
cacK jroutblul clcc
t lURPHlNH
f j HA3IT CURED.
t QEtECTRIC BELT for KIDNEYS, Pa!n, Nervous 4
J.?ak. Bock free. FLETCHER 4. CO.. ClevcLiid.O.
SUREGUH
r.DYSPKMl.41N:!
iKsriOX- AtllrewJ M
Mill. V.Cijr. otti. N . o
cktAijr -la.)itaAaou f uruUU xl. Wrut xjc circular
1 poeiti rtscJy tot im Nt a ; it I i i
fMBMiyl ( r&tsi vrM n of Ljbc nr:.'
Nti carL Icdk J tr V.iomx im mt fait I ! ff.-
itoi I will ttad TWO IOTTLfc.3 PKE, t- r mtth m.
I'aBLI TRUTIMi on tult dte.to Dv7rrcr. Qirt I.
prNi4r.a4li:i. HK.T. A-8L.XL JI. ll f;rl Si.. N
3aSfe
CU1IS WHltl ALL tlit liilL
Best ii!jii svirip. Tustr U S5
tSjiO rWa WlriH f7H
AWMEi first premiusi
jemtlBir 1rrM -Jl. Bay Ble'l.ton
BEST VALUE b TOL'I K5ST. frfi f5SJSJ3dS3
. 8UFFA10 SSAtE COSPAtty, BUFFALO, M. y.
5k I ACr, IIAXDS, FEET,
Sf.-it. . .. r:-. Srf ck,
ki i Hu. Sw rtftr Oirt fr:ac4
N n. -inUM U WAARIfllDV.
... T. -J". SnSI.SWkMl
BORAX SOAP
CI"?l,BiAJ"V?"?"fces)wlilr
ad avr'eet. . xceliaat fir BalVaad Tollru
Fall aanad hara'.alr. For .ale eTarrvrliera.
Numan's Lawn Pump,
1 1?. A perftct rmp. u4 by r vsgera, fikruemcri,
Ufr. Maekialata. riuibtra. As. Ty fc prout mx-l mUi
tftywiMW let twitv Afcstfl wmatfd la wr evatv.
Btsi sdH fMUT rlttbufsir Ml. IM Si-00, frtmickt:.-
rf r14 ykfc k 9t .lc rlpt (re Mrealw uJ lna t aj-bta.
wT (unaM, uv valv ttavlibly KS
11 A T r a T. n . . .
""CMlW 111 AH1 IV IIIIK
j SB
I X XXaT. tjigtiaioa. N. V.
1 1 vwv zzrzfiirrzi i
as ca fl k ei ii i
ft. J. c.
leiaiSJ?-rV ?BesT
FUU. PABTlCULJSS.SiO YV&fA
BEIN BRdS. 4 CO.xWa'T-t 1
NEWARK. N. J-
BUFFALO QS
112 E3
RADWAY'S
The Great Liver
Stomach lmh
Kor ihecure or an ,:i,-,r.iPr, , ,v. . ,V"UJ
BoweK sua.,,, l: ooarsrj,-
Lmh f Appetite, l!.a, :h; -Yru rif!'
nal .iscera. Pnr. .Ir,.,Btt Sr..1
mcrrurr. minrn . ... .: ' ''. ejo-ai..
aai .ucera. Pure:,
luux. nw
DYSPEPSIA I
store strength f the n,iau., ' .''"iS.Tar,?
temtcoutr:t .lu vlklf w sl!
ce?7: ' 9 ' "H Wat. .
l)avi.l FtlchaM. I.tii.-;ar, ...
"iTK? V m ' i",SB
ii. a. i.jrr, v. m., tiunm.! , . .
Be hud er u-l." ".aiu "Best
K Hummel, B'jotvi'le. r. .
all uthers fai.L ' " Cs:M ia tri-
Alice E. oiurrr. Vt. storm a
IlTelr r that l;iw.,, .an. V 7 J: 1 .
VI ism the aija. ,t ,-u., 'rivr
"i jue ail I Trj." a wk, it
NO LADY IS RT ALLY BSAUTIFin
Without.eVhit.-Cl4lL
of
-.a,.l. "
a trie ueinty u corj.
nlaa V.V-aao P. . ...... I)-..i.r.
biiubara, C3;.rl Hin-H r liitJfl
lu h, etc li ,r me r-.rtA e'-ir. -ta, iai t4
or tue k q from tiie .iij'in'.ne!:i-.:U powJ-i
beautifies ue akia, g x.uz it tu: luf
au1 yutofu; kipper o w wQ 'MS.i .ap.jirie 1
oi-UiD bj anf olaer ru-iin. It l con. t.j w'etv
Bteui"4 m ill art to tcihe u.-k acJiiit Jci.
iifltriU wor.d titr pro .u.:e U
Strnl far Clrcaljiri. w.u IcVaLviaEJ kr
UTui iitt ire, free.
W. M. SCOTT A C O.,
f mnu A. il. tHi. IL :
P. ni..a 1 Sj-iijv.
p
H I bll I g Ia. -.
JAMS VJltT JELLY
inrtcr. ( ataau, irrfrff, laama-ia
k raiii.iunkiiitf : t t iru.. :V w.v-s, n-., -: r
mr vy M tV Wl S I K;! liLEf-i Tit j. i" ;v
Dr. WARD & CO.. LkUsoSI, i
111
WE Wl U. S EN D YOU POST FREE
. WaLCROWN YOUNG ROSES
12 FOR1$J.O0
6 for 50 Cts.
OCK XEW BOOK OS R.S2S,
THE AMATEUR HBffla
GIVEN WITH UACU 0CDE20?
1 Dollar and Cv:r.
AVc sc'I the Cook alone for '-
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THE FLORAL LXfHAXf.E,
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