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HOME TRA] We Want a i' ET'S all get together and help to i We all realize the consequenci mercial affairs, depression of rea What we want is plenty of busines In the building of houses, the sale of I healthy condition of business in our cc HOW SHALL WE ACCOMPLISH The easiest thing in the world. Ju here among ourselves, and we will cre? In other words, LET'S PATRONI STEAD OF SENDING OUR DOLLAR Let's be loyal to our own best interest big monopolistic establishments that ready money in sight. It is the aim of the big city mail merchants out of business, so that w cities for our merchandise. The big sands of dollars every month to accoi THEY WILL DO IT, TOO. UNL TO STOP IT. It is up to us to prevent the big ma keepers out of business, for several n our community will be rubbed off the ' and that our ownership of property hei event. The local stores, to a very large ex by our business men are the principal It Is the taxes paid by our storekeeperi for the street lighting, for fire protects leges and protection. If we permit the big mail order 1 of competition, what will we have lef an undesirable place in which to live. If the mail order houses accomp] railroad interests will decide there is stopping of trains here?because there men to stay over in our town, r.ci frei In such cases we will be trying bi'yers, for who will think it a good i town? But this is just what we must exj the mail order houses, for it is only / the town possible. When we send practically all of ou . the cities there will no longer be a nec? It all resolves itself into the questii OUS TOWN, WITH GOOD LOCAL VALUES, GOOD WAGES AMD GOOJ SHALL WE HfAVE A DEAD TOWN, \ CIPAL STREETS, STORE BUILDING SIGNS HUNG UP. NO LIGHTS AND 3 IT ALL. RESTS WITH US. WE . Common sense and good judgmeni If we don't, who will? What can we expect from the ma received our money and the local store ning? Shall we expect help and assis We all know that the mall order taxes. They do not support our schoo lighting'the streets or for our fire depj Every dollar spent at home means roal estate values and added facilities Every dollar sent to the mail vrd< Hon for our stoi^keepers and less *t?. munity. Which do we prefer? W^ must against our community? LET'S MAKE IT A LIVE TOWN CULATION AMONG OUR OWN BUSI PROSPERITY .. rrp HERE IS NOTHING OF GREATE X PROSPERITY OF OUR COMMI ^ PROSPERITY AT HOME CONDITIONS. If our local merchants and storeke ness their prosperity Is communicatee munity. The values of our real estate incn more money in circulation and it is e expansion, paying for improvements, b In every way we can discover bet business men are busy. There Is every reason In the wor! home Instead of sending it to the big < our home community we profit in man; But if we send our money to the i hear of it. If enough money is sent to munity we may easily put our local me our trade from our local storekeepers to maintain their stores. Every dollar sent out of our town so much from our own individual pros| cf the storekeepers and from the comr """"" Think of the consequences If wt houses for our necessities and our Iuj our local merchants woald have the "< to be followed by the "for sale" signs AND WHEN THE BUSINESS HO SALE WHAT WILL BE THE VALUE Such conditions have actually pre happened that the citizens became "mi les for the greater part of their men doned the field, because there was no of taxation fell on the various propert} ness concerns to bear the big proportic Property values decreased until there estate. The town became dead. In the meantime the head of a t drawing an income of over a million a< the business received by his concern, t one above described and from our ow all over the United States. Every dollar of this enormous in in small communities. Every dollar se amounting to hundreds of millions of prosperity of some community, struggl but retarded by the short-sightedness out of town in preference to helping community. ' Of course, it was all done unthi* to the mail order houee did not stop would add to the prosperity of the h They did not stop to reason that by 1 they would be best advancing their o^ THIS COMMUNITY NEEDS Y01 OF EVERY DOLLAR IN ORDER TO WHICH TO LIVE. YOU NEED THE TO MAKE YOUR PROPERTY OF GF THE BENEFITS OF A UEI'TJUk u YOUR HOME BRIGHTER, MORE D DOLLARS AND CENTS. We must all consider these matt sending our dollars to the mail order sary to the upbuilding of our commu: vantages, even with no other motive, and keep our dollars at home so that our own prosperity. We will all find that it is a fact, every view point, that we can buy as c merchants as from a mail order house ing, instead of buying a "pig in a poke New Language. During the recent call at Galveston of the German war vessel Nurnberg some members of the crew had occa sion to visit a shop wherein two Irish men were at work. The foreigners talked together in their own tongue. The Irishmen un derstood nothing of what was said, and at last one of them could not re strain his curiosity. "Say, Mike," he "asked his fellow laborer, "do you know what those fellers are saying?" ? DE BOOSTS MM Live Town nake our community a live one. as of poor business, stagnation in com- > 1 estate values, low wages, etc. s, money in circulation, a live interest lots and acre property and a genuine, immunity. IT? st keep our money in circulation, right ite our own prosperous conditions. ZE OUR OWN BUSINESS MEN, IN S TO THE MAIL ORDER HOUSES. ;s instead of helping to bolster up the are draining our resources of all the order houses to drive the small town ! will all be compelled to send to the mail order houses are.spending thou mplish this object. ESS WE ARE SENSIBLE ENOUGH .11 order houses from driving our store easons. the greater of which are that map if we have no business concerns e will not amount to anything, in this :tent, make this town. The taxes paid support of our schools and churches, s that pay for the local Improvements, >n and for all other communistic privl louses to drive our business men out t? A place of empty store buildings, lish their purpose it is possible that not sufficient business to warrant the will be no reason, then, for traveling ght to be delivered to our stores, to sell our property, but will find no nvestment to buy property in a dead >ect if we keep sending our dollars to the business of the town that makes r business to the mall order houses in sssfty for, or a reason tor, a town nere. on: SHALL WE HAVE A PROSPER BUSINESS, GOOD REAL ESTATE 5 MUNICIPAL DEVELOPMENT, OR VITH PIGS ROOTING IN THE PRIN S EMPTY AND WITH "FOR SALE" N'O FIRE PROTECTION. ARE THE ONES TO DECIDE. t tell us to protect our own Interests. ill order houses after they shall have keepers have been put out of the run tance from the mall order monopoly? houses do not pay any Of our local Is, or churches or hel]? to pay for our irtment. added wealth, added prosperity, added of all kinds. ir houses means more unfair competl xes toward the support of our corn make the decision. Are we for or BY KEEPING OUR MONEY 'IN CIR NESS MEN. v, f AT HOME !R IMPORTANCE TO US THAN THE INITY. IS BASED ON LOCAL BUSINESS / epers transact a large volume of busl l to every person In the entire com ;ase. Wages are Increased. There Is sore readily obtained for purposes of uying luxuries, etc. tter conditions on all sides when our i i Id why we should spend our cash at :lties. By keeping it in circulation in y ways. nail order houses, that is the last we ' the mall order houses from our com rchants out of business. By diverting we can make it impossible for them to the mail order houses detracts just perity, as well as from the prosperity nunlty in general. > should all send to the mail order curies. How long would it be before ilosing out sale" signs on their doors, on the stores themselves? t USES ARE ALL ADVERTISED FOR OF OUR OWN HOUSES AND LOTS? availed in some communities. It has ail-order-mad" and sent to the big cit shandise. The local merchants aban business there for them. The burden , ' owners, because there were no busi in which generally falls to their share, were no bidders for undesirable real ?lg mail order house in Chicago was nd a quarter dollars, made possible by >y mail, from such communities as the n community, as well as from others come was diverted from storekeepers nt in to that great mail order concern, dollars annually, detracted from the ing to become a center of population, of the citizens who sent their money towards the prosperity of their own kingly. Those who sent their dollars to consider that these same dollars ome community if expended at home, helping those in their own community :s-n interests. JR HELP. YOU'NEED THE HELP MAKE A BETTER COMMUNITY IN PROSPERITY OF THIS COMMUNITY :EATER VALUE AND TO GIVE YOU OMMUNITY IN WHICH TO MAKE ESIRABLE AND WORTH MORE IN I u ~ a CIO. ?> C I11UOL OLUp UUU LUlUtl, uei'Ji? houses, that our co-operation is neces oity and that, for our own selfish ad we must patronize home institutions they can work for the advancement of when we consider the question from heaply and as profitably from our local >, and we then know what we are buy t "Don't be showing your ignorance," i said Mike. "They're speaking short j hand." Could Not Afford Alibi. After listening to the charge made by the police officer, the judge turned to the prisoner and said: "Did I understand you to say you had an alibi?" 9 "No. yot^r honor," replied the pris oner. "I'm a poor man and my lawyer wanted $25 extra to furnish one."? Judge's Quarterly. MONEY FOR S. C. UNIVERSITY J. P. Morgan, of New York, Sends Check For Six Thousand To Erect Building. Columbia.?A check for $6,000 from J. P. Morgan & Co., of New York, was received by A. C. Moore, acting presi dent of the University of South Caro lina, the promised donation of the Peabody educational fund for the pur poses of an euucational building at the university. When the donation was first offer ed it was to have been used for schol arships. The board of trustees, how ever. decided that the money could better be used a3 the beginning of a fund to erect a new building for the school of education. A committee consisting of A. C. Moore, president of the university, J. E. Swearingen, state superintendent of education, and August Kohn of the board of trustees went to New York last fall and appeared before the I>eabody board and asked that permision be given to spend the money for building purposes. * The interest on the $6,0001 will probably be used for scholarships. Port Business Sets New Record. Charleston.?The closing of the fis cal year with the United States cus tom houge shows Charleston's port business for the past 12 months to have been the largest within a quar ter of a century. Both exports and imports for the year just closed tower above those for the previous year, while the cash receipts for,the past 12 months show an increase of over 47 ner rent, over those of #the previous year. Custom officials expressed themselves as highly gratified at the showing made and enthusiastic as to prospects for next year's business, predicting that the port will do an ex port business of $25,000,000 during the ensuing twelvemonth. The fact that the cash receipts of the custom house for the year just ended show an increase of over 47 per cent, over those of the previous year is even more gratifying when it is taken into consideration that for the past year a lower tariff has been in operation. Had the same tariff prevailed, the increase is cash re ceipts would, 'of course, have been much larger. The exports for the fiscal year just ended amounted to $20,829 591. The imports for the same period amounted to $5,543,866, both being increased over figures for the year previous. Exports for the year previous amounted to $13,511, 757, this year's increase amounting to $7,317,834. The imports for the year previous amounted to $4,773, 209, the increase in favor of this year amounting to $770,657. Another Step Toward Exposition. Columbia.?Another forward step in the movement that has been start ed to provide a building for South Carolina at the Panama-Pacific Expo sition to be held in San Francisco in 1015 has been made. Edw. W. Robert son, chairman of the South Carolina commission, and under whose initia tive the movement was started ap pointed the board of officers,/- as fol lows: For vice chairmen: F. W. Wag ener of Charleston, W. G. Mauldin of Hampton, E. H. Aull of Newberry, jonn a. uieveiana 01 spananuurg, LerOy Springs of Lancaster, W. D. Morgan of Georgetown and Thomas Wilson of Sumter. To Build Coal Terminals. Charleston.?Any , skepticism that may have existed with reference to the carrying out of the plans of the Holston corporation for building their large coal terminals on the big tract of l?$d owned by this concern on Town creek should now be banished, and those who may have believed that the concern would ultimately build here, but doubted that they would be gin within 60 days, as was stipulated in the agreement made with city council recently, should be complete ly dumbfounded, as actual work to ward the carrying out of this big pro ect has been begun on the site. Greenville Is Host July 17. Greenville.?The citizens of Green ville will be host on July 17 at what will be the greatest picnic ever given in this section. All people of thin section are invited. Congressman A. F. Lever will make the address of the occasion and dinner will be served to the 5.000 people or more who are ex pected to come by the people of the city. x s ^ Captain Drake Dead. Bennettsville. ? Zachariah Drake, who has held for a quarter century the world's record for maximum pro duction of corn upon a test acre, hav ing harvested from one acre in 1889 corn to the amount of 254 bushel?, in Vtio *7-|r,t o* V.io nlnrW, uicu in uio ixoi J cal ciL iiio yiaixw tion home near Drake. The funeral and interment took place at the Drake cemetery near Blenheim. Capt. Drake was a member of one of the oldest of American families, the first of them having come over from England and settled on the coast of Virginia. Will Build Trestle. Charleston.?Oposition to the plan of the Carolina, Atlantic &. Western railroad for erecting a trestle across Goose Creek is entirely lacking as evi denced at a public hearing held in the office of Maj. Goo. "P. Howell, corps of engineers, U. S. a., at the custom house on this matter. Major Howell's recommendation of approv al of the plans will go forward to the war department in due time. Aiready the war department has approved the plans of the Carolina, Atlantic & Western railroad. Charged With Infanticide. Greenville.?Elsie Barbare, 7.5 yearn of age, was arrested by Rural Police man Gosnell on a charge of infanti cide. It is. alleged that she made way with her infant girl, whose body was discovered on the morning of June 20 by Mrs. Ben Barbara, mother of the girl accused of doing away with the infant. In a confession which the young girl is said to have made to So licitor Bonham and the arresting offi cer, she claimed that the child was born dead, and that she put the body in a gulley in order to sav? her name. Transparent Fabric; FOR the dance or the garden party or for any other of summer's fes tivities the airiest and prettiest of gowns may be made like this one of sheer organdy pictured here. And there is any number of transparent or semi-transparent materials from which to make-a choice suited to the design. There are the plain and fig ured nets, voiles, swlss organdy, ba tiste, and the finer lawns, besides silk muslin and chiffon. - . This is an American design, orig inal and simple. It is prettily girlish and need not shrink froifr comparison with the product of any French estab lishment. There is an underskirt and waist of silk rfiuslln. For this under sllp the thin washable Chinese and Japanese silks are'desirable, for they can be readily cleaned. A baby waist, with rather full sleeves, and a plain, moderately full skirt, answers this v purpose and is to be made as a sepa rate garment The outside skirt is also straight and plain. It is trimmed into very shallow scallops at the bottom and these are finished with a narrow ruf fle of very fine point d'esprit or val lace, for which'fine plain net may be substituted. Over this skirt there Is an over skirt, somewhat fuller than the under skirt, and cut at the bottom in the same way, In shallow scallops, finished with the lace edging. The overskirt drops over a ruffle made of the organ Style Features i / A COIFFURE that Is popular with "Miss Manhattan" must possess certain style features which are worth Inquiring into, since this young lady is very sophisticated and keen and discriminating, when it comes to the matter of milking selections. One of those new hairdressings which have compelled her approval is shown here and since imitation is sincerest flat tery the French twist, made of a mass of waved hair, may consider itself flat tered. The most noticeable points in this I style are the waving of all the hair and the side part. There is a return ! to waves and curls and the promise, already occasionally fulfilled, of puifs in the coming styles in coiffures. Far more than half of the prettiest effects show the hair parted at one or both sides and massed on the top of the I head. The hair is combed more away from Adjusting Children's Sashes. It takes an artistic hand and a deft toucli to tie broad, handsome ribbon into the sash bow that is to adorn a little girl's frock. Most women can tie the ordinary bow with Its i two loops and two ends, but the sash nmnprlv Hpri tndav needs more LKJ VU f ? skill than that. The correctly tied sash at present has upstanding loops, ajid a shower effect below of loops and ends requiring a good deal of ribbon and adjusting. When such a bow has been arranged It should be edged with lace. The ruffle fol lows the lines of the drapery in the oversklrt, which is caught up at each side- by a group of nine tiny tucks placed over the hips. The neck Is cut square In front and there is a square turnover collar of lace in the back and edging of lace set in at the front. A strand of pearls is worn, most appropriately, with this, as a neck finish. Two smart acces sories complete the costume. They are a wide girdle of figured ribbon and a cluster of little flowers, forget me-nots and June roses, fastened un der the overskirt at the left side. The girdle is finished at the back with a fiat bow. If it were not for the sleeves one might say this gown lacks any dis tinctively original and picturesque touch. But they are features of im portance. The bodice, cut in kimono fashion, with full short sleeves, de pends upon them for its smartness. Set on to the short sleeve are shaped ruffles of organdy headed by a full ] puff of the same.^ The ruffles are cut into long points in 'the manqer of old fashioned "angel" sleeves. They seem appropriately named in the va pory material of this gown. The unusually wide brim of the hat worn with this gown is an innovation in shapes. The hat is made of ma nn.e with horsehair lace over it on the crown and upper brim. There is a sash of ribbon about the crown, with flower medallions affixed to it. in New Coiffures the face than it has been. This is the effect of hats which set less far down ton the head than those that preceded them. It is not difficult to arrange the hair in the manner pictured, but the wav A U I ~ lug ia ii u i au caoj, o i Lit: UUJJL1U la worn with the long twist at the back, and for dressy occasions a Spanish comb makes an effective finish, thrust in at the side near the top or at any ! angle that is becoming to the wearer, i It is quite the style to show the ; forehead bare at one or both sides. In the side part, as pictured here, the J left forehead is bare and a lock of j hair falls down at the right side and [ center. Little love wisps of hair about j the face are curled in tight ringlets. 1 ( The ears are almost uncovered, mark ing the last of the innovations which hairdressers are introducing. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. sewed into position, and snap fasten- ? ers placed under it, thus avoiding j ( thn riiffionUv nf re-tvinc each timp It i is put on. Raisin and Rhubarb Pie. The following comes from old Vlr* ginia: Cut rhubarb into inch lengths and stew as usual, or scald in boiling water, then drain. To every pint of rhubarb allow half a pint of fine rai sins, stemmed and seeded. Bake be tween two crusts after it has been sweetened to taste. ON EGYPT'S FAMOUS RIVER ' , Sailing on Its Placid Waters Rowers i Weirdly Chant as They Tug at Their 0?rs. A a wo oaf nn AKonoofh tho min. The picnic is in cor to eat. Ready to serve ft Dumber of Libby Lunch < Get acquainted with them. arets of the mosque,'the skies Blowly - turned from orange to lilac and purple of night, throwing a strange pink light over the .city's buildings, AricheBell 1 writes in the Cleveland Plain Dealer, i The minosa trees and date palms be came black and great white cranes, : seemingly knowing that their wings j had an appropriate background, cir- i cled over our heads; over the deep i azure river and over the many white i sailed dahabeahs that were floating along in the breezeless night, propelled : by rowers who were chanting weirdly i as they tugged at the oars. i Dimly we could see the black draped i figures of numberless women approach i the river's brink and we knew that the i splashes in the water were caused by i the dropping of the heavy jugs, which 1 they twirl around till they are filled, after which they raise them laborious- , ly to their heads and then skip.up the banks and disappear in the darkness of the night * Tfhe sounds of the city ceased and all 1 was quiet. All but the plaintive lay of i a piper who must have been some- f where not far off on the bank of the ? river. It seemed that he was playing * the love sopg of Larbi or Beni Mora. J It was monotonous and drowsy and in- i voked sleep. In the morning before " dawn I heard the boys pulling-the i stake near my window. I had fallen 1 nsleen tn natlvfi music and now I Was awakened by their song. -As we start ed the river, the clarion call of the 1 muezzin rang out from the minaret. 1 For good Mohammedans it meant that a new day had begun?but for infidel Americans, there were several addi tional hours of sleep. Use Magazine Stories. An invalid or aged person who en loys magazine articles sometimes finds the magazines, with their bulk of ad vertising, hard to handle. If the mag azines are taken apart by removing the little wire clips that bind the sec tions together, the stories or articles can'be easily handled separately. And my article specially likely to be en joyed by a friend at a distance- can be sent by mail when separated in this way. >~EVER HAD A UHJliL After- Taking EI.IXXB BABEK "My little daughter, 10 years old, suffered nearly a year with chills and fever, most of the lime under the doctor's care. I was discour aged and a friend advised me to try Elixir Btubck. I gave it to her and she has never had % chill since. It completely cured her." Mrs.' Cyrus Helms, 308 E St., N. E., Washington, D. C. Elixir Babek 50 cents, all druggists or by Parcels Post prepaid from Kloczewskl A Co., Washington, D. C. Just Like a Woman. "Father, is mother your soul mate?" asked little Willie Botts. "Er?yes; I guess so, s.on," answered Mr. Botts, cautiously. , "Umph!" snorted Mrs. Botte. "I'm not your soul mate, Henry, but If I ever catch you looking for her, there's going to be trouble in the family." No. SIX-SIXTY-SIX This is a prescription prepared es pecially for Malaria or C^illa and Fever. Five or six doses will break any case, and if taken then as a tonio the fever will not return. 25c.?Adv. Forestalling Criticism. "Why are you taking such an active part in this reform movement? I have always thought you rather easy-go ing." "So I am, bijit in these days and times it behooves one to accuse someJ body else of wrong-doing before he is accused himself." YOUR OWN ArPGGIST WIIX TELL TOD Try Murine Eyo Remedy for Hod, Weak, Watery Byes and Granulated Eyelids: No Smarting? lust Eye Comfort. Write for Book of the U.ve >y mail Free. Murine Kye lteuiedy Co., Chicago. Not Outspoken. "I was outspoken in my sentiment at the club this afternoon," said Mrs. Clarruloue to her husband the other 3 veiling. With a look of astonishment he re plied: "I can't believe it, my dear. Who outspoke you?" ? National Monthly. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days four drueeist will refund monei if PAZO 3INTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching. { ftliiid, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14days. 1 j fiio first application gives Ease and Rest. JOe. j Weaker Than Water. "Waiter, return this tea whence it lame," said the sad-looking individual. 'If I drank much of that I would get ;o that ordinary water would make me ! irunk."?Current Opinion. How To dive Quinine To Children FEBRILINE is the trade-mark name given to an | niproved Quinine. It is a Tasteless Syrup, pleas- i int to take and does not disturb the stomach. Children take it and never know it is Quinine. (Uso especially adapted to adults who cannot lake ordinary Quinine. Does not nauseate nor :au5e nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try t the next time you need Quinine for any pur pose. Ask for 2-ounce original package. The lame FEBRILINE is blown in bottle- 25 cents It takes a very wise woman to listen i tvhen she can't talk. J Deviled Ham Olives g^Libby, MfNeiff & Libby Chicago FRENCH LEGION OF HONOR Highly-Prized Decoration Which Every Son of France Has the Ambl tlon to Receive. The first decorations of the Legion of Honor, the famous French order of merit, were conferred in 1802 upon,-;? military and civil officers who had dia> ? ^ tinguished themselves under the con- v BUlate. The order was founded May 19, 1902, by Napoleon, when he was ;; first consul. It consisted of various & grades, as grand crosses, grand offlr / cers, commanding officers and legion aries, and was a reward for service^,^ of merit. The order was confirmed hTiA Louis XVIII when (the Bourbons w? returned to the throne a century and it has been continued, with ne___ ... sary changes In the constitution;", through the reigns of Charles X, LoulsY;; Philippe, Napoleon III, and the second',, and third republics. Many Americans and British subjects a?d other tdv- ^ L eigners have received the decorations af the Legion of Honor. And the Clerk Smiled. ^ There recently went into a fashion iDie sfloe snopcne aaugnier oz a mw xrhose wealth has been acquired with n very recent years. The young wom in was disposed to patronize the clerk ' ind rejected a number of "classy" ' ; slippers he produced for her approval^' finally she said: "I think, perhaps, I shall take these two pairs. But Louis.' j ?V heels are too high for me.j 'Give/ ne a size lower-^-or, stay?perhapg v L,ouls XIII will be high enough.1/ During courtship the young man ikes to say good-night the next mora ng. To Cleanse Rusty Nail Wounds HANFORD'S For Galls, Wir* Cuts, Lameness, NAk Strains, Bunches, Thrash, Old Sores, Nail Wounds, Fool Rot W|' Fistula, Bleeding, Etc, Etc. ^' Made Since 1846. ***aW* Prescribed by doctors for nineteen year* / Heal your skin with Resinol NO matter how long you have been tortured and disfigured by itching, burning, raw or scaly skin humors, just put a little of .that soothing, antiseptic Resinol Ointment on the sores and the suffering stops right there! Healing begins that very minute; and in almost every case yourskin gets well so quickly you feel ashamed of the money you threw away on tedious, useless treatments. Resinol Ointment (SOc and fl) nnd Res inol Soap (2.V) clear uway piujples. )!uck heads and danJrutf. Sold by ail druggists. SALVE FS on/t THE M-EOWARDS. CORRUGATING CO COVINGTON - K V. il : i: KODAKS & SUPPLIES Ws also do highest class of finishing. , Prices and Catalogue upon request. S. Galciki Optical Co., Richmond, Va? StI.I. U.VI.1.-11K.V KING SKl.I-SHAKI'KX ING SHKAKS. New design; Ilea the hand ike a glove. Good profit. Write for terma. Steele isales Co., liox U 162, Kingatree. S. 0>