Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, July 05, 1894, Image 2

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    FREELAND TRIBUNE.
PUBLISHED BVKBT
MONDAY AND THURSDAY.
TIIOS. A. BUCKLEY,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
OFFICE: MAIN STREET AIIOVE CENTRE.
SCBSCUII'TION KATES.
Ono Year.... gl 50
Six Months 75
Four Mouths 50
Two Months 25
Subscribers are requested to observe the date
following the name oil the labels of their
papers. By referring to this they can tell at a
glance how they stand on tho books 111 this
oiHco. For instance:
Grover Cleveland 2SJune!>s
means that Grover Is paid up to June 28,1505.
Koep the figures In advance of the present date,
lieport promptly to this ofilcc when your |iuier
Is not received. All arrearages must 1 paid
when paper is discontinued, or collection will
be made In the manner provided by law.
FREELAND, PA., JULY 5, 1894.
W hat has Congressman ./fines
erer done to deserre a rcnomina
tlon from the Democratic party '
There is a movement iti Chicago to
have Sunday services in tho various
theatres, especially lectures with a
stereoptieon ou tho life of Christ, and
prominent persons are considering
topics along this lino. A special list
of slides is to be prepared by the St.
Andrew Brotherhood. The object of
this is to gather the large number of
people who ou Sunday will not go to
church, but aro ready to enter a
theatre. *
Senator Brice, who is chairman of
the senate committee ou Pacific Bail
roads, has a treat in store for the
members of that committee, which
will combine pleasure with the accu
mulation of useful knowledge of the
property with which tho committee
has to deal. As soon as congress
a 'journs ho will take the committee in
his private car on a tour over the
entire Union Pacific and Central
Pacific Railroads.
<iet-rich quick schemes continue to
flood tho land. Fortunes are oilered
people for nothing." The names of
men prominent in church and Btate
are published as directors used as
decoy ducks to draw in tho unsus
pecting. On every hand are trans
parent frauds-—offers to make you
rich for a few dollars, land that will
quadruple in a year and so-called
benevolent societies that will in a few
years give you SI,OOO for about SOOO.
and meanwhile take care of you in
sickness. The American people love
to lie humbugged and schemes that
would pay a legitimate interest often
fall through, while the fraud gets the
crowd.
Never before have the colleges and
universities sent forth so many gradu -
ates into the land as in the month just
closed: and it is significant in a time
when the country is slowly emerging
from a prolonged and severe period of
financial depression. The public
has been educated up to the truth that
college training is not a luxury for the
few, but an opportunity for the many.
Intellectual culture has its utilitarian
value and as an investment is worth
far more than its costs. That is the
economic side of the question as seen
from the individual standpoint: and the
t "uth becomes oven more conspicu
ous if the question be viewed from the
standpoint of social welfare. Pkila.
Record.
A "Washington telegram to tl e
Philadelphia Times tells that Con
gressman F.rdman said: "I do net
think that the full significance of the
nomination of Singorly is appreciated
by tho Democratic party in Pennsyl
vania. There is plenty of time be
tween now and election day for groat
advauces to be made. Business is
already reviving, and if it continui s
to increase, the number of Democratic
votes on election day will lie greater j
than is anticipated by tho general
public today. Mr. Singerly will un-1
doubtedly poll a larger vote in tho j
city of Philadelphia than any Demo- j
cratic candidate lias received for a j
number of years. I anticipate a J
sharp and earnest campaign and I
shall not be surprised if Mr. Singerly
should bo elected."
During tho recent labor troubles '
in this and other states the militia '
has been frequently called upon ami
troops are generally furnished when
corporations make their request. To
this uo ono can make much objection, :
as it is done through tho county
sheriffs and is fully covered by tie
law, and the men themselves know j
such may be a part of their duty b< -
fore they enlist. It is time, however, ;
that a stop is put to the national j
guard acting as workmen whenever a
strike occurs. It has been done re
peatedly during tho late miners'
strike, and if tho state pays them for
pumping water, running ears, etc., as ;
as was done in Jefferson county, a j
change is needed. The militia of'the
present day is, as a general rule, a j
crowd of country jays or city dudes
who would willingly sacrifice their j
lives for the privilege of wearing
brass buttons and uniforms, and the
money appropriated to them is notli
ing more than an annual donation to
the corporations of the state. Thoy
resemblo soldiers as nearly as mon
keys can resemble men. I
| LINE-CARRYING KITES.
Possibilities Fcuud by a Scientist
in an Old Toy.
It In Made to Carry Life Lines to Wrecked
Vessels and Harnessed So That It
Can Haul a Wagon and a
Fair-Sized Boat.
What can be done with a kite in car
i Tying lines and buoys to wrecked ves
-1 sols has been the subject of a good deal
} of study by J. Woodbrklge Duvis for
1 several years, and he gives a short ac
count of his methods in the Engineer
j lng Magazine.
j The patient investigator preferred
the hexagonal shape at first for the
purpose in question, because it gives a
wider expanse for the length of rib;
but as sharper points render the kite
steadier and the covering material
stretches tighter with a starform, he
now adopts the latter and obtains it by
drawing in at the middle of each span
the cord which goes around the sticks.
To each of the six ribs he attaches a
string, and the three on its right hand
side arc united by ono metallic eyelet
and the three on the left by another,
and to these two bridles are attached
his flying cords or reins. For a tail he
uses four or five one hundred-foot
lengths of clothesline side by side.
The kite itself is about seven feet across
and so made as to fold up for easy
transportation. To get a fabric that
would undego this manipulation, be
waterproof and windproof and not bo
too heavy, required a good deal of ex
periment, but at last the problem was
solved, although Mr. Davis does not
tell cxactty how he did It.
One of the most interesting, if not
original, features of this business is
the way in which, by letting out one
of the two flying lines a little further
than the other, the kite can be made
to shift its position sideways. When the
lines have the same length it stands
square to the wind; when the right
TIIE KITE AT WORK.
hand lino is lengthened the kite swings
around to the left and vice versa. Ily
this simple means the kite can be
compelled to move through a range of
131 degrees of arc, or about three
fourths of a semicircle. Operated from
the deck of a vessel, or from land, a
kite will thus haul a buoy or lino sus
pended from the flying lines out
through the water a mile or moro. In
deed, a five-inch hawser, 1,200 feet in
length, has thus been passed from one
ship to another. Very little skill is
needed in order to steer and otherwise
manage this device, and ono lesson is
usually enough for a crew. A highly
important part of tho apparatus is the
pair of reels, set up on shipboard or
land, with which the flying lines are
controlled. Mr. Davis also makes use
of a "top-line," a third oord attached
to tho top of the kite, .lp getting the
latter up at tho start, and in so tipping
it as to raise or lower it afterward.
Ainonj tho achievements described
j by this expert are hauling a specially
I constructed wagon and a boat ny kite
, power. The latter craft can thus sail
45 degrees off tho wind and the former
fully 90. Those, however, are only mi
nor incidents in tho sohemo. which is
designed primarily to assist In promot
ing communication, for purposes of
rescue, between ship and ship, or ship
and shoro. which certainly promises tc
be exceedingly useful.
DeafncH* Cannot bo Cura<l
by local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way to euro deafness,
and that is by con-tit utionnl remedies.
Deafness is caused by an inflamed con
dition of the ninc'-us lining of the
eustachian tide. When this tube gets
inflamed you have a rumbling sound or
imperfect hearing, and when it JHentire
ly closed deafness is the result, and un
less the inllnmation can be taken out
and this tube restored to its normal con
dition, hearing will be destroyed for
ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by
catarrah, which is nothing but an in
flamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any case of deafness (caused by catarrh)
that cannot ho cured by Hall's Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CIIENKY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
Heart Disease Relieved in :JO Minutes.
Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart gives
perfect relief in all cases of organic or
sympathetic heart disease in thirty min
utes, and speedily effects a cure, "it is a
peerless remedy for palpitation, short
ness of breath, smothering spells, pain
in left side and all symptons of a dis
eased heart. One dose convinces. Sold
by William Woolcock.
Tho secretary of the Elkhart Carriage
and Harness Mfg. Co., of Elkhart, Ind.,
informs us thattlicir prices will 1m; lower
for IK9I than ever, lie wishes us to ask
our readers not to purchase anything in
the line, of carriages, wagons, bicycles or
harness until thoy have sent 4 cents in
stamps to pay postage on their 112 page
catalogue. We advise tho readers of this
Vapcr to remember his suggestion.
Do you wish to enjoy good health? If
so, use Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills,
which clean the bowels and purify the
blood. _ |
See McDonald's 75c lace curtains. I
CURIOUS HOME MAGIO.
An Enchanted Spiral Produced by Drop
ping Soapsuds on a Wire.
Make a small spiral of very fine iron
wire and coat it slightly with oil.
Place this coil CL.efully in a basin of
water and it will float on tho surface.
Tako a straw or glass tube and im
merse the lower end for a few inches
In a glass containing soapsuds. Ileforo
removing tho tube place the index
finger over its upper end, so that somo
drops of the suds will, by the air pres
sure, remain in it.
Hold this tube over tho center vf the
coil, and by quickly removing and re
placing the index finger allow a drop
y — 7i
DROPPING SOAPSUDS ON TIIE COILED WIRE,
of suds to fall upon tho water. Tho
spiral will immediately make several
revolutions in a most mysterious man
ner.
The audience should have its atten
tion attracted to the fact that the tube
does not come anywhere near the spiral,
and that there is no force exercised to
move it.
Another drop of tho suds in the same
manner will produce a repetition of
the peculiar action on the part of the
wire.
The action of the spiral wire is due
to the fact that the addition of a drop
of soapsuds somewhat modifies the sur
face water so as to alter a force known
as "superficial tension." The science
of this change, however, is rather too
deep to permit of explanation here.
The exhibit of this trick may be made
in two ways. Either the claim of magic
may bo made for the spiral, which, with
suitable strange incantations and ap
propriate gesturings, may be made be
fore the eyes of tho audience and
anointed with the mystic fluid the oil,
or the simplicity of the spiral and oil
may be explained' and the suds, to
which some slight coloring has been
added, may be ready prepared in a bot
tle and be introduced as tho great mag
netic fluid. There are few whoso knowl
edge of natural philosophy will enable
them to explain this interesting ex
periment in "populnr science."—Louis
ville Courier-Journal.
LOADSTONE MAGNET.
Its Exceeding Age Testifies to Its Excel
lent Workmanship.
The picture of the old-time loadstone
magnet shown below is from the Eleo
trical Engineer. It is composed of a
piece of loadstone with soft iron pieces
fitted to it. One of theso bands which
holds the parts together is silver. Or
OLD-TIMH MAGNET.
this band is engraved: "Melncrt (one
6idc not shown) A Paris, 1753," and on
the pole pieces the letters N and 9 in
dicated the polarity. This polarity is,
according to the French custom, marked
Bon the north-seeking pole. The mag
net weighs two pounds three and a
half ounces and will sustain more than
Its weight.
The magnet was brought to America
about 1775 by Dr. John Francis Vachcr,
a French physician who was educated
at tho college of Montpclier. Do joined
ono of the American regiments as sur
geon, and served for some time, no
was a member of the Cincinnati, and is
buried in St. Paul's churchyard, in New
York. It has been tho plaything for
his and his descendants' children for
over ono hundred years, and its sur
vival shows its good construction. It is
now in the possession of the family of
Vho late Hon. Robert Gilchrist.
FOUR-FOOTED BIRDS.
Queer Creatures Recently Discovered In
the Amazon Country.
That there are still numerous chances
for the indefatigable student and in
vestigator to make new discoveries
may be judged from the fact that tho
only known species of four-footed bird
has been discovered only quite recently.
This curious anomaly, which could
very properly be styled an "Avis para
doxals," is a native of the Amazon
river country, its principal habitat
being the islands of Ma*rajo. It is only
during the period of incubation (at
which tiihe the little embryo'B extra
legs and feet are seen at their best)
and early birdhood that the four
footed feature is at all observable.
Like tho baby frog, which either
"sheds" or absorbs its tail, tho four
footed bird rids itself of its useless
legs In tho same manner, chicks six
weeks of age usually being perfectly
free from any signs of the extra mem
bers. The ornithologists profess to be
lieve that this curious creature Is a
survival of some past geological epoch.
Its scientific name is Opisthocomus
cristatus. The natives call It tho
"hoactzin," which means the "evil
smelling bird." It is also claimed that
there is not a carnivorous animal
known that will taste its flesh.—St
Louis Republic.
A More Fitting Comparison.
Cholly Chumplcigh—Do you coilsidei
' marriugc a lottery?
Miss Coldeal—No, I do not. I think
It is more like progressive euchre than
a lottery.
Cholly Chuinpleigli—llow extraordi
nary! May I ask you in what way?
Miss Coldeal—Because there are so
many booby prizes in it.—N. Y. World.
Did Not Need It.
A book canvasser went into a bar
ber's shot and asked the proprietor if
he eouldsell him an encyclopedia.
"What's that?" asked the tonsorial
artist.
"It's a book that contains informa
tion on every subject in the world."
Victim in the Chair (feebly)—He
doesn't need it.—Spare Moments.
Hong of the Sunny South.
I would 1 were an icicle; •
I would my melting soul
Were going on a bicycle
Pellmell towards the polo!
I'd like to hear a blizzard whizz.
And get a goodly slice;
My sole desire this moment is
To put myself on Ice.
—Atlanta Constitution.
Doing Nobly.
Mrs. He Style—llow is your daughter
doing at college?
Mrs. Do Fashion—Beautifully. Mme.
Rringemupp writes that she is the best
dressed girl in her class.—Good News.
A CUIED OF FORTUNE.
Brake O'Day—l)W dut lucky cent ycr
found change ycr luck?
Dewey Eave—Well, before I hud dat
cent two hours I was clubbed by a cop,
knocked down by a cable-car, an' lost
me diamond pin.
Brake O'Day—What did yer do wid
it?
Dewey Eave—l put four more lucky
cents wid it an' took de same as usual
The Now Way.
Visitor—You say your mistress is not
In?
Fresh Domcstlo—She was in the sit
ting-room a little while ago, but I can't
find her now. I guess she saw you
coming, and put on her bonnet, and
skipped out the back way.—lndianapo
lis Journal.
A FlxotJ Iluhlt of 111 M.
Maude—You better be on the look
out for a proposal from Charley Dood?
ley.
Ellen—Why? Has he expressed hit)
affection for mo?
Maude—No, but he proposed to mc
last night and I refused him.—Chicago
Record.
Like All the Rent.
Mother—Your husband is growing
cold.
Daughter—Mercy! Why do you think
so?
Mother—He does not kiss me half so
affectionately as he did before you were
married.—N. Y. Weekly.
Mini Ilcen There Before.
Wife—To-morrow is your birthday,
darling, and I'm going to stop at the
ieweler's and buy you a present.
Her Hubby—(Jet something cheap,
pet. I haven't paid him for my last
birthday present yet. Sparo Mo
ments. f
Beyond 11 1M Depth.
Dobson —There goes Jones, the ex
pert accountant. They say he's going
orazy.
Jobson—What's the trouble?
Dobson—He's been trying to straight
en out his wife's household accounts.—
Puck.
I'lcartAiit All Around.
"Wasn't it awful? The minute aftei
they were married she happened to dis
cover that he wasn't a real duke."
"Humph! Think of his predicament
The fact cropped out right at the tiin<
when he discovered she wasn't a rich
heiress."—Chicago Record.
Not True In Ills Case.
Thespo—How stupid it is to pay any
attention to these current sayings.
Rialto—What is the matter now?
Thspo—There is a popular adage
that "every man has his price." 1
haven't had the price since the close ol
last season.—N. Y. World.
Protesting Too Much.
She (doubtfully)— Have you really tol<?
me of all the sins you ever committed'
He (stoutly)— Yes. All.
She (sorrowfully)— Then I ain not
worthy of you. Farewell for—for—
forever.—N. Y. Weekly.
Short Period*.
\Y atts—l understand that Lushfortlj
has the impudence to call himself a
periodical drinker.
Potts—So he is. Ho gets full oner
every twenty-four hours.—lndianapolis
Journal.
Compensation.
"I should think bicycle riding would
contract the chest," said Dawson.
"It docs," said Ryder; "but see what
fine, full, rounded shoulders you get.'
—Tid-Bits.
Matrimonial Item.
"Is that the parson's new wife?"
"Yes; he married for love, they say."
"Well, if he did, there's no mistake
about love being blind."—Texas Sift
ing*.
In the Hot Weather.
Tboy soon will clash, these old-time foa
Callod out by woather fickle—
The man whose head Is slightly bald.
The fly with feet that tickle.
—Wuahiiitfton Star
STEAM TREE FELLING.
An Knglltli Mnrhtno Which Seems to l)o
Its Work Well.
Tree felling by means other than
manuul labor lias been an engaging
subject to many inventors, and for some
time past a more or less interesting ar
ray of appliances designed to accom
plish it has been paraded before the
readers of mechanical journals. One of
TREK-FELJJNO MACHINE.
the more recent of these machines
brought out in England by Allen Han
some, of Chelsea, reminds ono very
much, in appearance, of the now so fa
miliar rock drill, the drill proper, of
course, being supplanted by a recipro
cating saw blade, substantially in the
manner shown in the accompanying
sketch. The piston to which the saw
blade is attached works in a cylinder of
small diameter but rather long stroke,
pivotally supported on a pair of wheels,
so that the whole arrangement is read
ily portable. Steam is intended to be
supplied to the machine from a
portable boiler through a long steam
hose, so that the boiler can remain in
ono place until the machine has felled
all the treos within a considerable
circle around it, the space cleared, of
course, depending upon the length of
the hose. Cutting down a tree, how
ever, is not the only function to which
the machine is limited. Ily par
tially rotating it on its axis the
saw can be set to cut in a vertical di
rection, or at any angle between the
horizontal and vertical positions, so
that, after having been felled, a tree
may be quickly cut up into desired
lengths. It generally happens that
when a large tree falls it does not lie
flat, as its branches hold the upper part
of its trunk from tlio ground, and in
order to squarely cross-cut trees lying
in such a position it is necessary to in
cline the saw somewhat from a vertical
line. This is readily done by the adjust
ing capacity just mentioned.—Cassell's
Magazine.
BURNING A NEEDLE.
How to Perform This Carious and Appar
entiy Impossible Experiment.
To perform the curious experiment of
burning a needle, all that is required
is a jar of oxygen and a few bits of
cork. Oxygen may be prepared in the
following- way. Procure some chlor
ate of potassium, which is commonly
BURNING ▲ NEKDI.E.
sold in a white, crystallized form. On
being heated, this substance yields all
its oxygen, of which more than a third
of its weight is composed. The decom
f>osition of pafts, at first slow, becomes
n a short time sff rapid that there is
danger of an explosion, to obviate
which it is well previously to mix with
the chlorate an equal weight of bioxido
of manganese, a black powder. These
two Bubstanees should be placed in a
glass connected hy a rubber tube with
a jar or bottle containing water, and
heated until the oxygen is all obtained.
Now take a long, coarse needle, impale I
a bit of a match on its point and insert j
its head in a small cork attached by a
wire to a large cork stopper, which
will cover the mouth of the jar. This
apparatus is shown separately in the
cut. Set fire to the match end, and in
troduce it while burning into the jar of
oxygon. The bit of wood burns vivid
ly, then the needle becomes incandes
cent, and with ft crackling noise sends
sparks In every direction until all the
oxygon 1R consumed. The effect is
somewhat like that produced by a
roman candle. The bottom of the jar
is protected by a good depth of water,
otherwise it would be inevitably shat
tered by the drops of melted oxide of
iron shed by the needle. When the
process of combustion is ended a little
round knob is found at the end of the
needle which has not been burned.
This is melted oxide of Iron, caused by
combustion. A thin knitting needle
may bo burned with equal success in
the same manner.—Once a Week.
Old Shoes In n Now Eight.
A French savant has invented a new
science which he terms scarpology,
whereby he proposes to diagnosticate
mental qualities from the appearance
of the shoes worn by the subject. He
claims that shoes that have been worn
are full of faithful indications as to
lack of energy, fickleness, bad temper,
or the opposite qualities as the case
may be. If the sole and hcol of a
shoe, after two months' wear, are
equally worn, the owner is an energetic
business man, an employe that can bo
relied on, a good wife or an excellent
mother. If the outside odgo is
most worn, the owner is adventurous
to rashness and of a bold and persistent
turn of mind. Wear of the inside edge
indicates irresolution and weakness in
man and modesty in woman.
llow the Weather Shift*.
It Is a remarkable fact that in the
temperate zone of both hemispheres
the weather is constantly shifting from
west to east. This is true to a degree
hi the lower polar regions—we know
little about the higher—but it is not
true of the tropics. In the tropical
zone severe storms are likely to travel
westward, and the smaller local storms
travel in all sorts of directions.
INSTEAD OF THE BONE.
Vulcanite Supplies Missing Sec
tions of the Human Frame.
Dr. Michael*. of the French Academic at
Pari*, Replace* a llrokon Ilone of
the Arm by a Rcully Won
derful Operation.
At the French academic a very deli
cate operation of prothesis was recent
ly performed, showing- just what could
be accomplished in replacing a portion
of the skeleton by means of aseptic
artificial pieces. The surgeons have
proved that artificial pieces made of
vulcanite or metals that do not oxidize
can be buried in the tissues and left
there with impunity.
I)r. Michaels performed the opera
tion. The patient had had tuberculosis
of the humerus and shoulder Joint,
complicated with suppuration and fis
tulae. An operation was imperative,
but the removal of the diseased tissues
would have left such a hole that the
wound would never have healed, and
the functions of the limb would have
been lost if an artificial joint had not
been interposed between the lower
fragment of the humerus and the
scapula!
Dr. Michaels' apparatus to supply the
deficient bone is described in the Paris
edition of the New York Herald as fol
lows:
It is composed of three parts: First, a
straight rod, eight centimeters long,
P
THE APPARATUS.
destined to replace the piece of hu
merus removed; second, another
straight piece, representing the neck
of the same bone; third, an irregular
sphere for the head; the whole four
teen centimeters in length and made
of vulcanite. We have not space to
describe it in detail, but can only say
that the three pieces were fastened to
gether in such away as to admit of all
the movements of rotation and circum
duction of n natural joint. It is a me
chanical oh<f d'oeuvre. It was not
enough, however, to make it; it had
also to be put in place.
Ily means of fittings of platinum
adapted to the upper and lower ends of
the apparatus M. Michaels was able to
fasten the lower part to the humerus
by means of screws going through the
bone. The head ho fastened to the
glenoid surface by driving a platinum
wire into the neck of the shoulder blade
to a depth of three centimeters, and by
passing two other loops of wire over
the top of the bone, the wires boing
naturally tightly fastened to the arti
ficial head without hampering its
movements in any wuv. In order to
facilitate the grafting of the perlostouin
and muscles onto the artificial humerus
M. Michaels had adapted to it little
ridges perforated with holes for catgut
sutures. In the same way to fasten
the capsular ligament he had provided
two platinum rings to *keep it in its
normal position.
The apparatus once adopted the
wound was closed with the ordinary
THE ARTIFICIAL JOINT FITTED*
precautions. The operation was per*
formed a year ago, and the patient's
condition has since improved in every
way; in fact, his health would bo per
fect but for some small abscesses that
have had to be opened on four occa
sions.
Sound and Light Compared.
The velocity of sound through the
atmosphere with the temperature at 08
degrees Fahrenheit is at the rate of
1,185 feet per second. Through water
it is 4M times, through-iron it is ten
times, and through wood of the differ
ent kinds it travels with a velocity
from 11 to 17 times greater than that
with which it travels through air. The
velocity of light is 102,500 miles per sec
ond. Estimating the distance to be even
05,000,000 miles, light would pass from
the sun to the earth in a fraction over
eight minutes, and in one-eighth of a
minute would flnsh around our globe.
If an explosion should occur on the sun
to-day that was so gigantic in its na
ture as to ultimately penetrate to our
earth we would not know it until the
year 1008, simply because it would take
the sound fourteen years to travel the
intervening distance.
Files Are Fond of Alcohol.
If several men are asleep in a room
and one of them is drunk the flies will
gather on the tipsy man and avoid the
others. The reason is that insects revel
in tho odor of alcohol and sometimes
get drunk on it
■SCIIIPTI!
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