Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / Sept. 30, 1886, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE GOLDSBORO MESSENGER. THURSDAY,- SEPTEMBER , 30. 1886. Miscellaneous.. Attend to it No wih Many suffering people drag themselvesabout rith failing strength,' feeling that I they are steadily sinking into the grave,when tty using arKer'8 Tonic they, would find a cure com mencing with the first dose, and vitality and strength purely coming back to them. ! I am 63 years old; have been sick nearly all mv life, and ought to know eomethirtg about medicine by this time. I have Used Parker's Tonic f reely:f or more than a year, and consid er it the best remedy I have ever known. In tact, I now nnd no otner medicine necessary. ir0r weakness, debility, rheumatism, and, that stressing ail-goneness and pain from which I suffered so long, it has no fjqual. I do not see how any one can afford to do without so valu able a medicine." Mrs. Hattie N. Graves, lot. East and Front streets. Providence, K. I. Parker's Tonic Prepared by Hiecoi & Co., N. Y. g ild by all Druggists In large bottles at One Dollar. sepl9-wswlm toabls ki For Sale ! We will sell on easy terms the land in Brogden township, described as follows : It consists of two (2) tracts, adjoiniDg each other, about one (1) mile west of Dudley. Xhe home tract contains two hundred and teventy-two (Ziz) acres, ana is snuaiea on the east bank of Brooks' swamp; eight (8) horse farm cleared; the,iemainder is well timbered with oak, pine, ash and cypress; large quantity of good marl; young or chard; good dwelling and out houses, and two (2) tenement houses, all as good as new. , The other tract lies iust east of ana ad joins the above, and extends to within one fourth d) of a mile of Dudley; and con tains about a four (4) horse farm cleared; the woodland is well timbered with pine and oak; it has a good dwelling with eight (8) rooms; out houses and one (I) good tenant house; good apple orchard and one of the finest mulberry orchards in the State; a fine opportunity for hog raising and silk culture. No ChiU! No Malaria! The above will' be sold in a body, or separate, tq suit purchasers. t 2"For 'further particulars call on or address R. L HOLLOWELL, Wilsons Mill, N. C.,'or J. G HOLLO WELL, Dud iev N. C. sep27-tf EQEerton, Finlayson & Co, (leneral Commission Merchants, m AT WHOLESALE 051 RETAIL! Box Meats, Mess Pork, Flour (all grades) Sugar, Coffee, 5. C. Hams, Lard, Meal, Corn," Bran, Oats, Hay, Crackers, Cheese. Butter, Snuff, Tobacco, Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, Shoes, Crockery, Lamps, Glassware, Wood Ware, Baskets, Red "Cand K Oil, Molasses, Syrup, &e. Bagging, Arrow and Delta Ties. AT LOW -FIGURES FOR THE CASH. Goldsboro, N. C, sep6-ti NOTWITHSTANDING THAT THE DOG DAYS ARE UPON US, YOU CAN FIND AT IflM'i FAMILY GROCERY! West Walnut St., Goldsboro, N. C, A Good Supply of Fine Groceries and Foreign Delicacies, Snuff, Tobacco, Ci gars, Tin, Wood and Willow Ware, &c, Tvhich he is offering at very Low pCes, FOR OSHII CSTDon't fail to call on him before pur chasing elsewhere. julyl-tf HEAP DOORS. NOT SWEARING, 500 O. G. Doors, (Calls) 75 mWSB APIECE 1 These are good strong 4 panel doors, but knotty. For cheap tenement houses just as good as a higher priced door. J. STRAUSS & CO., Goldsboro Rice and Planing Mills. septO-lm . SUMMER - Starapi Send in Your Orders for Ginger Ale, Sarsaparilla, Soda Water, California Pear Nedtar, And the Latest Thing Out,1 TONIC BEER ! You will find all the above Drinks to be Good, or No Charge, j. aHOCERIES! I am still leading in Low Prices in Gro ceries. My Stock is complete. ; Call and get prices before buying and I know I will sell to you. Respectfully, ! . . Walnut Street. Gold8boro.,N. C, Mar. 22. 1886.-tX Brepry Hotel BrtrsM! STILL IN OPERATION. ' mm . f ; Shaving and Hair-Cutting quickly and neatlv performed by the. well-known ton sorial artists, James Bates and j William Best, in their parlor in the Gregory House. dec34-tf -V"t My boy," the grandam slowly sa'd,J Your words do oft provoke me ; By gosh, by golly and by Ned n Are swearing, and should choke thee. Of words that havo th prefix 'by Sue1 worls ri this you nmy.rely ? Invariably are swearing. i , ftrf 1 H - i ! . - ,,; ji t . "i I i 5 I i iTda hi. mzxvMn 1 i - . 1 -1-.... 1 1 ? "Indeel, then I'm in error ; - - I thoug ht what I'd heard others say - For me could have no terror. '.By' cannot be so bad by Jialf, r Yoi must be magnifylnirj -The papers say by teiegnipV." " Weil that, wj child, U lyinjf'i i t ;v "' She A HANDSOME FIEND. Drives Her Div trend Husband to Death, and Think the Tragedy Very Funny. We were at the Air-Line Junction, ju9t out of Toledo, and the four or five of us waiting for the same train became quite friendly, as men will under the circumstances. We were out on the platform when a train came in from the other way and about a dozen passen gers got off. All of a sudden a middle aged man with a bald-head and a pro fessional look about him he was one of the ! five of us who were waiting gave utterance to one of the biggest oaths in the swearing calendar and took a step or two forward. We saw that his attention had. been attracted to a rood-lookin woman who was in the company of a rather oldish and good looking man. The woman left her husband for so the man proved to be and walked right ;up to our friend and held out her hand and said: "Shake, Charley! You aren't looking exactly well. Divorce and all that doesn't agree with you first-rate. Let me introduce you to' my hub." "No! Never!" gasped the man, whose face was as white as a sheet. "O, well, just as you please. He's a good feller and. he wouldn't be jealous, (iot 3our second wife picked out, old boy!" "For God's sake go away!" "All right, Charlie, but I supposed you u oe giau to see me. weaiun t get along together very well as man and wife, but we shouldn't lay up any grudges. How's the foiks at home? How's your business doing? Anybody dead or married since I left? Say, Charlie, what did the papers say about me anyhow?" He held up his hands as if to keep her back, and she laughingly said: "Bah! but I ain't going to hurt ycu! If you are going to stop here for an hour or two come up to our room and we'll talk over old times.' With that she bowed and turned awar, while our friend began pacing the long platform. One of the others understood the case and whispered to us: He was divorced from her two years ago, and it nearly drove mm crazy. and is a scheming, heartless, woman. Lands! but how talk to him after that fash- PKESIDENTIAL L.OVES. She was faithless dare she ion!" About we went fifteen minutes fc train time in to see , about our luggage, leaving the man still walking. We had scarcely left the! platform before a special came dashing past. We heard the whistle and the bell and the roar ing, and the sounds had not died away when there was a shout of horror from the platform. The divorced husband had flung himself under the train, and when it passed bis body was a mangled corpse. The woman came down from the sitting-room into the crowd and asked what had happened. Some one told her that a man had Hung himself under the wheels, and she was given a descrip tion of the victim. "Why, that's my old Charley!" she exclaimed, as she raised her hands. "Now, what could have possessed him to do such a thing! Why, it's so funny so very, very funny that he'd let him self be ground up that way!" She ran back i to the edge of the crowd to tell her husband, and as she explained the horror to him she tapped him on the shoulder and said: "Now, then, you won't be jealous of me again, will I you? Detroit Free Fress, i Paris Counterfeiters. A correspondent of the New Orleans Picayune writes: Counterfeit and de preciated coins are very common just how in Paris. Every day we read of the arrest of manufacturers and "shov ers" of the "queer,?' and the courts deal with! them very severely; but the ex ample does not appear to exercise any deterring influence on other evil-doers. One and two franc pieces of lead, so clumsily imitated that you wonder how any one can be taken in by them, are constantly being offered in change at cafes and restaurants.. It is an abso lutely necessary precaution to examine every coin received at such places, not only to avoid counterfeits but also to prevent the garcons from passins off on you Peruvian and Chilian dollars, which are exactly the same weight and size as 5 franc pieces, but, not being legal tender, are worth 15 to 20 cents less. How this South American money has found its way into France is something Tean not explain, but there certainly is a great deal of it floating around .and, sure of being able to pass them on others, the waiters at many of the large cafes on the boulevards make no difficulty about accepting them. But it is not only at such places that you are likely to get taken in with these South American dollars. Only the other day, when I was going over to London, I paid for my ticket at the railroad depot with a bank note and then, holding my change in my hand, I went into the luggage-room to get my baggage reg istered. My trunk was a trifle over weight, and in payment of the excess I handed the baggage master one of the coins I had just received at the ticket office, but it was pushed back to me with the remark: Pas bon; and on ex amining it I found that it was a Peru vian dollar.' As I had no time to go back to the ticket office I put the piece in my pocket and went to the train. Since my return I have learned that the railway companies make a regular practice of sending all the bad or un current coins they receive in the course of their business to their ticket offices, and, as the traveling public is usually in too much of a hurry to examine its change, these coins are easily got rid of. It is quite as bad at the postoflice. where it is the rule to pay from one-half to two-thirds of all money orders in silver, and the chances are that if you have to collect an order of any amount you will find one or more depreciated coins in the stack of 5-franc pieces piled up in front of yon. I If you express your sur prise at such a proceeding the clerk will reply that ihe department is so often cheated by the public that it feels itself at liberty to do a little cheating in its own turn. , . , . - .... x. In Germany, if false information is given to a newspaper reporter he can collect damasres of its author. Something About the ; Wives and hearts of Oar Rulers. Sweet" He Walked'tlie Plank. f -5 V TtK - President - Lincoln's ' first love ; was a golden-haired blonde, who had cherry lips, a clear blue ye, a neat figure, and more than ordinary-intellectual ability. Her name was Anne Rntletlge. She was the daughter of u tavern keeper iu Salem, 111. Mr. Lincoln met her when he was about 23, and, aft-r a romantic court ship, became engaged to her She -died before they could be married; and Lin coln was-so ihuch affected by her death that his biographer. Ward Lamon, says his friends pronounced him crazy for a time. He was watched I carefully, and, became especially violent 'during storms, fogs, and damp and -gloomy weather. At such times he would rave, declaring, among other wild expressions,'- I can never be reconciled to have the snow, rain, and storms to beat upon her grave." At this time he began to quote, it is said. the. poem which is so well identified with him, beginning O, wby should the spirit of mortal be proud? It is supposed that he was thinking of his first love during the times he so often repeated it. Years afterwards, when he had become famous, he was asked by an old friend as to the story of his first love for Anne Rutledge, and he said, I loved her dearly. She was a handsome girl, and would have made a good' and loving wife." Lincoln's next love was a tall, fine looking woman, named Mary Owens, with whom he became acquainted .about a year after Anne Rutledge died. Upon her rejection of him, he wrote a letter to his friend Mrs. O. H. Browning, saying that he had been inveigled into paying his addresses to Miss Owens, but on be ing refused he found he cared more for her than he had thoughtj and proposed again. In this letter he says: "I most emphatically in this instance have made a fool of myself. I have come to the conclusion I never more to think of marrying, and for this reason that I can never be satisfied with any one who would be fool enough to have me." Still, it was not long after this that he was engaged to Miss Mary Todd, a well-educated, rosy brunette of Lexing ton, Ky., who was visiting at Springfield, where Lincoln was a member of the Illinois Legislature. Both Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas proposed to her. She refused Douglas and accepted Lin coln. Lincoln became suddenly ill, and it was more than a year before the mar riage was consummated. It took place finally in Springfield, and the couple began their married life by boarding at the Globe Hotel at 4 a week. Lincoln was 33 years old at this time and Mary Todd was 21. A number of the presidents have been in love more than once, and several have suffered the pangs of love unre quited. Washington Irving says that Gen Washington had a serious passion at 15 for some unknown beauty which made him really unhappy for a time. The son of President Tyler, who is dis tantly related to the Washington fami ly, tells me that the general tried to win the daughter of Col. Cary of Denby, Warwick countv, Va. Col. Carv was very wealthy, and Washington, who paid attention to none but prospective heiresses, was much attracted by one of his daughters. He was a poor Major then, and he rode on horseback to War wick county, and called upon Col. Cary. Cary, a stiff old gentleman with a ruffled shirt and much dignity, asked Maj. Washington, as he aiighted from his horse: "May I inquire, sir, what has caused you to honor me with a visit at this time?" Maj. Washington blushingly replied that hu "-had come to ask permission to pay his addresses to Miss Cary with a view to marrying her. "Well, sir," responded the stately Colonel, "I would have you understand that my daughter rides in her own car riage; and if that be your business you may as well mount your horse, sir, and return." Miss Cary afterwards married a man named Ambier, a member of one of the noted families of Virginia. She was present at the celebration which took place after the surrender -it Yorktowu, and it is said that when she saw Wash ington so highlv honored she fainted away in the realization of the great mistake she had made in not marrying him. A year or two after this, when Wash ington had become a Colonel, at 23 years of age, he fell in love with May Phillips, a rich New York heiress, at whose house he spent a week. The authorities are divided as to whether he proposed to her or not. All concede, however, that he was slighted and went away very angry, and it is charged that he carried his anger to the. extent of aiding in the confiscation of the Phillips estate after the Revolution had become a success and his love had married his rival. John Adams' love affairs were numer ous. In 1764, the year in which he was married, he writes in his diary: "I was of an amorous disposition, and very early, from 10 to 11 years of agev was very" fond of the society of females. I shall draw no characters nor give any enumeration of ray youthful flames. It would be considered as no compliment to the dead or the living. This I will say: they were all motlest and virtuous girls, and always maintained their character through life. No virgiii or matron ever had cause to blush at the sight of or regret her acquaintance with me. " , These reflections, to me consolatory beyond expression, I am able to make with truth and sinceritv; and I presume I am indebted for thisJ blessing to my education." Jefferson's "first5 love occuiTed when he, a youth of 19! years, was going to college at Williamsburg. His anamo rata was Rebecca Burwell, and his let ters of this date ate full of her and hi love. He devotes many pages to hh grief over losing aj watch-paper which she had cut for him. and Christmas day, 1762. he wrote a letter about his sweetheart to his friend John Page which would have; tilled, says Parton, twelve modern sheets of letter paper. He was continually: comparing her to the loves of the poets, and copies of love songs written by Jefferson at this time are still in existence. He sighed for a year before he broached the subject of marriage in a stammering wav at a ball. Miss Burwell did not give him an ex- E licit reply, and a short time afterwards e found she was " engaged to another. Frank O. Carpenter ("Carp'V. LippincotV $ Magazine. A good old story on its rounds again: A Yankee woman while visiting Eng land .was .complimented by a British officer upon her English, and. asked if she was not. peculiar in this respect among her countrywomen. 'Oh, yes," she replied with nonchalance; "but then I have had unusual advantages. There was an English missionary stationed near my tribe." 'I was1 seated in the1 old hotel now occupied by the Union Pacific railroad: It was the nearest house to the river and had. a view of all, the 'ground- to the river. I got in one of the windows and watched a drunken Indian on his home ward journey. Ho staggered along until he came to a deep .ravine, tilled with water, leading down - to the river. It was spanned by a single plank. The Indian came to the ravine and looked over. He folded his blanket about him and looked over again. He looked at the plank. "He started to go over. Tim least in clination which he experienced to fall over caused. him to come back. Several half-unsuecvssful attempts were made and finally he fell over into the water. With great difficulty he climbed up the bank from which he originally started, acting as though it was beneath him to go to the other bank, which he desired to reach. He kept on trying. I went in to dinner, and on coming out saw him complete the task of crossing the plank. Apparently he had walked him self sober. Not once during his many trials did he exhibit any signs of anger or discomfort. He made up his mind to walk that board and he kept on trying until he succeeded." St. Paul Qlobe. What Babies May Come To. No doubt Grover Cleveland forty nine summers ago was- u fat baby in a pink calico suiv-bonner, carried about by admiring female friends, and there is little doubt that the neighbors scuffed at the idea of his being President when a fond grandmother declared that she felt her bones a-tingle with such pro phecies. Abraham Lincoin couldn't have been a pretty baby and Beecher was only one of the feeble infants over whom nurses solemnly queried if it was "worth while to try to raise " him." A baby is a good deal like an apple sprout. You can't tell what sort of fruit it's go ing to bear, and if a good deal depends upon the stock no less depends upon the care it gets. A man simply looking at the growing pip can't tell what it's coming to. You may ten years hence pick juicy Porters from it, and in forty odd years you or your sons may be beg ging that pug-nosed baby for a post office. Nobody knows what the Ameri can baby will turn out or whom he'll turn out, but we'll give him a smile and a good word wherever we meet him. May his lungs never be weaker, his legs never less sturdy, or his ranks less full. Heaven bless him! Lewiston (Me.) Journal. The Eighth Missouri. "The Eighth Missouri were good fighters," said Theodore R. Davis yes terday, as he stopped making the smoke of war with his brush long enough to whiff the smoke of peace out of an at tenuated cigarette, "and what they wouldn't steal, except my colors and pipe, was not down in the articles of war. Why, once at Vicksburg they stole a grave. There was really no good place there to bury a body, except on the levee, and the ground there was so hard that the grave-diggers had a tough time of it. Vell. it happened one day that one of the Eighth died a natural death, and while the boys were wonder ing what they should do with him, a detail from an Ohio regiment filed out to dig a grave for one of their number that had passed over. The Eighth looked on to some purpose, and when the Ohio boys came out next day with their dead they found the grave filled up and a cracker box lid at the head, with Sacred to the memory of of the Eighth Mo.' But they were good fighters." A Dollar Invested Builds a Church. The German Evangelical Lutheran Lucas Church, near the cornec of Broadway and Walbrldge avenue, Toledo. O., remained un finished for the lack of funds. Last Saturday Mr. Henry Sass, 29 Western avenue, received 3,000 for one-flf th of ticket No. 77,227, which drew the second capital prize of $25,000 in The Louisiana State Lotterv on July 13. He is a member of the Church (Rev. A. B.'Weber pas tor), and will loan at a low rate this $5,000 to the new church, which but lor this aid wouli remain unfinished for lack of funds. He is a tailor, 70 years old in this country twenty has supported a large family is very popu lar where he livep, and the people there re joice with him in his good fortune. Toledo (Ohio) Blade, July 27. Miscellaneous. GRADED SCHOOL BOOKS GRADED SCHOOL BOOKS GRADED SCHOOL BOOKS GRADED SCHOOL BOOKS AT AT AT AT WHITAKER'S BOOKSTORE. WHITAKER'S BOOKSTORE. WHITAKER'S BOOKSTORE. WHITAKER'S BOOKSTORE. flier, Sugar, Coffee. 250 30 25 15 250 BARRELS FLOUR. (All Grades.) BARRELS REFINED SUGAR. (All Grades.) SACKS COFFEE. (Rio and LaGuyra.) BARRELS MOLASSES. SACKS SALT. (Liverpool and Fine.) B. M. PKIVETT & CO. NOTICE ! The undersigned having duly qualified as Administrator ot the estate of W. J. Forehand, deceased, hereby notifies all persons having claims against said estate to present them to him on or before the 1st day of October, 1887, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate are request ed to make immediate payment. N. J. SMITH, Adm'r of W. J. Forehand. Sppt. 23, 1886.-6W LOOK HERE ! The Greatest Medical Discovery of the age is Dr. Wm. H. Peterson's Infallible Cure for Piles or Hemorrhoids. It cures without pain ; without the use of knife or Ligatures, and has never failed to cure where the directions have been faithfully followed, as hundreds of testimonials will show. To all persons who are afflicted with this terrible disease, we say.give us a trial. Our motto is: No Cure ! No Pay ! But we Guarantee a Cure if our di rections are followed. Address Wm. H. PETERSON, M. D.J Aurora, Beaufort Co., N. C. ' feb5-tf SCHOOL BOOKS ! tvm. il vtnAa nf Rohnnl Tlnnlr nd School Supplies, Paper,EnvelMn CC KO to nnll Anlin uwivoiuniii juJKJ-tf t Under Opera HouseV ' Opening of a Mammoth. Stock OF iii Uiiter tarnl is I a WEHLd & BB,0B We are now prepared to offer to the Public one of the Largest and Best Selected Stocks of Merchandise it has ever been our pleasure to offer. We have Goods of every grade, and we are candid when we say that we believe we can suit most anv one in Quality and Price. fcf3 Don't send North for your Goods this Fall. We can use the Money at Home to as good ad vantage as Northern firms and will give you as good values for your Money as any House you can trade with. We will suit you both in the Qual ity of Goods and Price. Whatever you buy from us, that does not suit you exactly, we are right here to take the Goods back or exchange them. In our Dress Goods and Wrap Department We are displaying all the Novelties that are out. We have an Elegant Line of Ladies, Misses and Childrens Wraps in the RTnrneSF 5 ttp VTi16 woul1 0&U. your attention to our Stock of HOSIERY, GLOVES, JU 1 1 ONb, FANCl GOODS and TRIMMINGS Vhich is complete in every particular. Our Shoe Department Is likewise complete. Every pair warranted to be Solid Leather and give entire satisfaction. We sell at the Lowest Possible Price and will save you the Jobbers profit, as we get all our Shoes direct from the Manufacturers. Our Clothing and Gents Furnishing Department Is Full and Complete. As heretoiore, we keep only the best makes in this line. In addition we were lucky to get hold of large lots of Goods in this line which we bought considerable under regular prices. We have one lot of 100 Snits which we are offering at $7.50; they are all wool Cassimer, and the original piice was $14.00. Another lot of Union Cassimer Suits we offer at $5.00 per Suit, original price $10.00 It is impossible to enumerate the different Bargains we have, therefore would only request an examination of our Stock. In our Merchant Tailoring Department We are prepared better than ever before to make your Clothing to order on TEN DAYS NOTICE. Our Goods will be made up with the greatest of care and skill, at very reasonable prices, and we guarantee satisfaction in every case. Laundried and Unlaundried Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery, Gloves, Suspenders, &c, in the greatest profusion, fill this Department. These Goods have been selected with the greatest of care. We can suit the most mstidious taste at popular prices. Carpets, Rugs, Mattings and Oilcloths. In this Line, as in the rest of our Stock, we are displaying the Newest Designs of every grade and at prices which will be hard to duplicate in Northern Markets. We keep a full line of Carpets always in stock. Do Us The Favor To Examine Our Stock Thoroughly before purchasing or ordering. It is our determination to get you to buy your Goods in GokUboro. if sufficient Stock, Variety and Low Prices can accomplish it. This Is No Idle Talk ; We Mean What We Say, and shall endeavor to do our part to accomplish this end. Therefore we most cordially invite you to call and Examine our Fall Sock. Respectfully, we: ED TO) Oi mm lft Is replete with a Large Stock and Varied Assortment of DesiraVe and Seasonable Goods. We guarantee to Duplicate any Hill in this Department, no mat'er where bought, and save you Freight and Expenses. 200 Bales North Carolina Plaids. 40 Cases Prints (all Styles). ISO Pieces Dress Goods. 50 Bales of Unbleached Domestic. 15 Cases of Bleaching (all Widths and Grades). oOO Pieces Pants Goods (all Kinds). 300 Pairs 6f Blankets. 500 Dozen Mens, Boys and Childrens Hats. ' 200 Dozen Undershirts and Drawers. JOO Cases Shoes, all Styles and Grades (Special Bargains). A Complete Line of Hosiery, Notions and Fancy Goods. Be Sure and Examine Our Stock Before Ordering. We will make it Interesting for you. WEIL Iir pimp 25000 Pounds of Side Meat are received every week. 1O0O Bundles of Arrow Ties. 500 Rolls of Bagging (different weights). 25 Barrels of Sugar. lOO Cases Soap. 25 Cases Lye. 150 Gross Matches. Silt. I . 250 Barrels of Flour direct from the Western Wheat Growing Section. 25 Barrels of Snuff (Gail & Ax and Lorillard'sV 25 Barrels of Molasses. ..; 25 Cases Potash. 25 Cases Soda. 50 Boxes Tobacco. ML As well as other Goods in the Grocery Line which will be sold Wholesale and Retail at very Low Prices. CD septI3- WEST-CENTRE STREET, GOLDSBORO N. C. W8wlm
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 30, 1886, edition 1
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