University of South Carolina Libraries
I,I A Family Companion, Devoted to Literature, Miscellany, News, Agriculture, Markets, &c. of of Vol. XIX. NEWBERRY, S. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1883.eo9 Ii PUBISuD EVERY THURSDAY MORNING, At Newberry, 8. C. BY PHOB. P. GRRHKRR, Editor and Proprietor. Terjss, $2.00 per .Anma Invariably in Advance. The paper is stopped at the expiration 'ime for which It is paid. a p The N mark denotes expiration subscription. a.tksg. Tl IItt1lT- IND B STOCK' ~ OLOTHINC EVER EIXBITE9 M. REWDERRY, CAN BE FOUND AT IRItHIT& JII1C(JPPOCK' .Eery Article in the iDne of GENTLEMEN'S WEAR, . FROM A FINE PAIR OF Shoes up to a Hat. UNDERWEAR a Specialty. A FINE ASSORTMENT OF Clothing for Youths Announcement No.11 We will offer special inducements, for tt -ext sixty days, to all who may wai Ready-made Clothing or Furnishing Good Hats, Boots, Shoes, &c. Our bargain tab has been replenished by adding therei many garments in good styles and. itboi defect, from broken suits, all of 1Which wi be sold, or given away, without regard i cost. This feature is especially full i Youth's and Boys' Clothing.. Call and gi b as. N. B.-Overcoats for Men, Youth an Boys as low as two dollars.. WRIGHT & J. W. COPPOCE Jan. 4, 1-tf. .1ZseUaneous. I NOLIDA SARE COMINI " AND NOW IS THE TIIE TO PRE PARE FOR THEN. FINEST VARIETY OF TROP1ig FRUIT I MARKET. Fresh Oranges Every Week BANANAS, COCOANUTS, ORANCES, MAL.ACA CRAPES iIOrthern Fruits. Peanuts, IRaisins, - Currants Sdispatch. e T &C0. CHlARLESTON, S. C. Nov. 30, 41-Om. SUBSCRIBE FOR THiE WEEKLY PALMETTO YEOMAN COLUMBIA, S. C. It Is an 8 psge paper, designed for the pc4 pie, filled witth interesting matter-Famil Reading, News, Markets, &c. Subscripto One Year, $1.50; Seven Months, 1l.00 Three Months, 50 Cents-payable In ad vance. For Six Names and Nine Dollars a nished. The DAILY YEOMAN an site noon paper, is $4 a year.McUKN 40-tf Editor and Publisher. Clubbed with the aRaL, at $3.25 GRAND (JENTRAL liOTEL (Formerly the Wheeler House,) COLUMBIA, s. C. TIOROUGELY RENOVATED, REPURNISKED AND REFITTRI .TERMS, $2,00 TO $3.00 PER DAY. JOHIN T. WILLEY, Preprlet'r For the SeaSide, Chimnne; Side, Sunny Side, Shady Side, Right Side, Left Side, or any other side. e x lot just received at the A l~ LD BOOK'STORE. n.. o, 6-4t ALSTON DINNER ilOUSB Passengers 'on both the up and dow trains have the usual time for DINNER Alston, the junction of the 0. & C. R. El and the S. U. & c. R. R. Fare well prepared, and the charge res sonable. MRS. 11. A. ELK INS. Oct. 9, 41-tf. WRIGHT'S HOTFl COL UMBIA, S. C. This new and elegant House, with a modern imtprovemients, is now open for ti reception of guests.WRGT&SN Mar. 19. 12--if Pro rietorsi. DR. E. E. JACKSON, "*MG1R ISlT AN B MIS1 COLUMBIA, S. C. Removed to soetwo dors next to Orders promptly attended to. . 1 n-t.t m .Plisenaneous. I Can Tell You How to Be. Your Own Doctor ! If you have a bad taste In your mouth, sallowness or yellow color of skin, *el de-' Isodn.stupid and drowsy. appetite un sponde,nIregent headache or dizziness, you} rare 'bilous." Nothing will arouse your Liver to act on and strengthen up your sys tem equal to SIMMONS' l HEP TIC I CO POUND Or Liver and Kidney Cure. REMOVES CONSTIPATION. RELIEVES DIZZINESS:( DISPELS SICK HEADACHE. ABOLISHES BILiOUSNESS. CURES JAUNDICE. CURES LIVERCOMPLAINT. OTERCOMEs YALARIAL BLOOD POISONING. REGULATES THE STOMACH. WILL REGULATE THE LIVER. WILL REGULATE THE BOWELS. THE LIVER AND KIDNEYS Can be kept perfectly healthy in any cli * mate by taking an occasional dose of SIMMONS' HEPATIC COMPOUND, TEE GREAT VEGWETBLE LIVER AND KIDNEY "EDICINE, ,DOWIE & MOISE, e PROPBIE'ORS, I WHOLESALE DRUCCISTS " CHARLESTON, S. C. 1 * A- FOR SALE EVERYWHERE... n And in Newberry by Dr. S. F. PANT. I Nov.9, 44-ly. d WANTED,' 15,M0 TONS COTTON SEED. I Highest cash price paid foiCotton Seed delivered in car load lots at any R. R. De pot or Steamboat Lauding in South Caro lina, Georgia or North Carolina. Highest cash price paid for Kerosene, Lard and Whiskey Barrels. FOR SALE, COTTON SEED MEAL. The best and cheapest food for all kinds of stock, and the cheapest and best fertilizer .n the market. Write for pamphlets con taining analysis by Dr. C. U. Sheppard, State Chemist, and directions for use, to CHARLESTON OIL M'F'G. 0., e c 28 Broad St., CharleEton, S. 0. Dec. 7, 49-Sm.' GERMAN KAINIT, (Direct importation.) PERUVIAN GUANO, (Direct from the Agent of the Peruvian C Government.) FISH GUANO, t (6 to 8 per cent. Ammonia.) Nova Scotia Land Plaster. - SOUTH CAROLINA GROUND PHOSPHATE, t Fine ground and of high grade. d p For sale by . HERMANN BULWINHLE, EERS WHARF, r CHARLESTON, S. C. Dec. 14, 50-3m.. Rooks and Stationery. ONR M0R AGAlN. - e6p it Before the Puki The largest and best stock of C ? BOOKS, STATIONERYt L AND FANCY ARTICLES Ever shown in Newberry, at the t ! IUU OOK STOlE, Comprising in part Boo ks Scho ooksr ndPictre Books, Hym Books, ,'Scia Books Bibles, S cellaneous Books and other el kinds of Book~s. Plain Cards, Christra Cars ewar -Car$dsEn g, roms Perlo A B CBlocks. Writinrs-such as. Note, Letter, Cap, BlPar-wide and nar Envelops al sizes, Laand Slate Pencils, Card Cases. noes, Checks,Gams To.Paints, Slaes - soy rsds Chalk Crayons Fancy .Papeteries, Colored Paper, Tissue I Pae, Go ad Silver Paper, Writing 1 nl Pens, Tags, Ec. m1's Fasteners. Ltt CH EA P FOR CASH. -Thos. F. GRENEKER, PROPRIETOR HERALD BOOK STORE. Nov. 30, 45-tf.t t 9b *** *e. 2 Ilutain,pie.accurate toe arkis Vretarcar io" Seds D. M.FERRY& CO. DETRonT MicHt. Dec , u 0n.. - Ins *I la ADVICE. I must do'as you do?"-Your way, I own, I Is a very good way; and, stiil, here are sometimes two straight roads to a town- t One over, one under the hill. s .ou are treading the safe and well-worn way ! That the prudent choose each time, h nd you think me reckless and rash to-day Because I prefer to climb, our path is the right one, and so is mine, We are not like peas in a pod, ompelled to lie in a certain line Or else be scattered abroad. ft rwere a dull old world, methinks, my h friend, If we all went just one way, a et our paths will meet no doubt at the end, -h Though they lead apart to-day. rl on like the shade and I like the sun; You like an even pace; like to mix with the throng and run, And then rest after the race. s] like danger and storm and strifb; You like a peaceful time; v like the passion and surge of life; You like its gentle rhyme. on like buttercups, dewy sweet, 81 And crocuses, framed in snow; like the roses born of the heat, And the red carnation's glow. a must live my life, not yours, my friend, f For so it was written down; Pe must follow our own given paths to the 14 end, it But I trust we shall meet-in town. -Ella Wheeler.. al ,tIttt l0eg CIRBLBSS WORDS. i There was not a happier, more ontented little woman than Mrs. 1trong. It is true she had not h uch of this world's goods, and ome people might have found uch to fret 'about in her lot; but a he was one of those who thought a ,f the bright side of that sentence, C rhich some think the "saddest of t ngue or pen"-it might have een. "Why, John," she would say, d how fortunate it is father lets us ave this place. As to the trouble f getting up early so that you ca fire ake that train, I find it makes thts ay so nice and long for my sei, lnee g and reading. Just think wharht would be to have to pay house tin Bnt these hard times. Then it idinh o good to live in the country while ur children are young." nteao "Chills !" John sometimes put iV .in thn -just r,o test the little woman. "Now, John ! Chills are bad, I'1fo dmit, but then there is no otheing .lness about, and I really think w$ts re getting acclimated." -ai Then the husband would laugh,ouis nd stretching his tired feet to the re, would draw his wife to his side nd in his heart thank God for her ontented spirit. For two years b; dis went on; times were so hard ti sat little Mrs. Strong lived strictly t4 Sherself, only once in a while, h eeting some of ;her old friends S rhen she spent. a day at her mo. 5i iers in the city. Sometimes she ~i rished that she could invite them el ut to her country home, but al- h rays put it off, knowing, wise little d oman, that "many a mickle makes h muckle," and that she must not c] pend anything on extras till t] ohn's salary was raised. At last, tl t the time they least expected it, d n increase came and one night E ohn said: "Now, my little girl, you must ii iave a friend or so to spend the h ay with you at least. I know it is d onesome out here. Write and ask I ome one at once."b "Lou Failree and Mary Barker?" d "All right. ~Il see Jac Faklerie ci -morrow and arrange it, so you'd s5 est get ready. s The next morning word came t< hat the ladies would come out in ' he morning train and stay till hJ vening-an all-night visit could ' ot eome off just then. How the ittle woman flew about the house, s: uttng finishing touches here and n~ here. Willie and Robbie helped, t) nd Dick hindered-as usual. The m 'ys were principally interested in 1< e nuwonted display of cake tl rhich graced the sideboard. - "Now I hope they won't disap- s int; in ten minutes they'll be lt tere,"-said the mother, sinking into b ,rocking chair with a delighted ense of order and cleanliness about a ter; were not the boys as clean as b rjnst rady forhed? r "If they don't come we can eat 11 the cake, can't we?" said Rob ie, while Dick listened breathless T for the answer. "No; if they come you can have our share, but if they don't come re'll keep it till to-morrow. There's ie whistle ! Run boys, to the tation." "I'll just make sure the boys aven't upset the room," thought ie mother, who had not had nine ears' experience with boys for othing. As she opened the bed om door, what a scene of con ision met her eyes. The dhildren ad dressed in mamma's room, as iey found their own pretty cold, ad their every-day clothhs lay in eaps on the floor; the toilet ar mgements were all in disorder, hile Dick's dolly, as dirty and for. >rn as Toddie's lay in state on the otless bed quilt. The room was At half in order when Willie's yice was heard: "Come right up. Mother said :u were to take off your things up airs." Giving a fling to Dick's dolly, rs. Strong went forward to wel me her friends and the usual talk >llowed; exclamations about the ngth of the trip, how they left all t the city, etc. -But aren't you very lonesome?" 3ked Lou, thinking of the long, iet days with no concerts or etures. "Yes, indeed," chimed in Mary arker, "I don't see how you stand , you who used to be so fond of >ciety. Do you like this place >r a home?" Now to tell the truth, the wife %d never asked herself any such aestions. "I don't find it very )nesome," she said; but even as ie spoke her heart sank a little, id she began to see the bleak, bare )untry with its winter mantle of iow, through her friend's spec icles. "If you had a horse it would be ifferent," said Mary Barker, ab mtly, shaking out her lace. "Oh, yes; a horse is almost a of Township 4, was des 'oyea V last week. None' of the con- aba vere saved. Fire supposed to tai ndiary. ton tationery department connect- e i the HEiALD keeps up with bri. les, and has on hand a large trat 3 assortment of every article in parq ie. sen ,bright and beautiful is the som. f the HERALD this week. A work upression blanket has done it. beyo g is the "matter with Hannah" cf. -papt is the time to prepare for a Croi garden. Put in, potatoes and cen eed. Corn may be planted, if nipped, plant. a second time. ma ily bird catches the worm. find LeConte who left Columbia 3ars ago, at which time he was 821n d as one of the most promis- hero. jJ - a +i1thstate. died wk The afternoon slipped quickly y. there were .new magazines to lk about and the latest embroidery >explain, and when at six o'clock er friends had gone, and Mrs. trong met her husband she as ired him she had a delightful day. *et her husband noticed a differ ace in his wife at once. At first e thought it was only because the ear little woman had been too ard at work beautifying and eaning up, but as day after day le shadow did not leave her face, iough it lifted at times, he won ered "what had come over Nellie?" [er bright ways had changed. very time she wexit into the parlor, seemed so very empty, and she eard again the question. "How o you like this place to live in? don't see how you stand it." The oys felt the difference. Mother idn't go to skate, and though she ame out and looked at their ciow man, she didn't stay and nowball them, but went in at once > sit at the fire and think-of ~hat? She began to forget what ad been, and to think that what ras, was very hard indeed. "I don't see how I've stood it," be said to herself, "there's really othing to here I" To be sure diere was that quilt she had been iaking for the Home of the Friend ass, and she was only half through iat last volume of essays, but -"she didn't feel like it," and so at and thought and wished, till at ist one day she startled her hus and by bursting into tears. John thought the sky was falling 'hen his wife, who had been so rave and cheerful through such sal trials, broke down in that way "because she was lonesome." In spite of all remonstrances, he in sisted that the boys should be left to the servant and she was to spend a week in the city. "I'll tell you who'll do you a world of good-Aunt Huldah !" Nellie thought, with a pang of remorse how she had neglected the old Quaker lady;,but John was sure she would be welcome, and insisted on her going into town the next morning with him. "Glad to see thee, child? To be sure I am. But thee is pale and thee does not look so bright as of old. The must stay a week with me and tell me of all thy troubles." "I haven't any," Nell insisted; Aunt Huldah knew better. She took good care that Nellie had plenty of sight-seeing, and in a day or two saw with pleasure that the color was coming back to her cheeks. "The last day was rainy, and Aunt Huldah said they would spend it quietly together. They chatted of many things then after a pause Nellie said: "Aunt Huldah, how would you like to live in the country?" The old lady's eyes sparkled (what memories she had stored up of her happy country home), but she said, "I don't think how much I would like it, for I must not leave this home, child. It's best not to think of the impossible." "But the country is so lonesome." Aunt Huldah's face brightened so that was the trouble? "Are not thy boys with thee, and hasn't thee books and thy husband?" "Yes, but-Lou Fairlee-" "Ah, child, I see. Folks won der how thee is content, and they wonder so that at.last they break up. thy content. Now Nellie, when I was a young wife,.my own dear mother gave me this rule : "Never let anything make thee pity thy self; spend thy pity on the truly unfortunate, and if thee is down hearted, go to work or play. Are there no poor thee can work for in thy quiet home, child, and are there no romps thee can enjoy with the lads?" "Oh, Auntie," said Nellie, "I see it now ! Lou and Mary seemed so sure I was lonesome, and pitied me so much that I pitied myself." "Don't make the same mistake with thy poorer neighbors; when thee goes to see them, never pity their lot-remember sympathy is quite different from pity." That evening Nellie joined her husband, and together they reached their country house. John was so glad to get her back, and what a fuss the boys made ! Never was a woman more proud and happy. No more lonesome days for Nel lie Strong. If she feels any symp toms of the olC' dissatisfaction, she has learned how to shake them off. But are there not many young wives who have been led to be discon tented by the thogghtless words of their friends? Are we not all for getful of the time when we must give an account of these very words? If you know how to spend less than you get, you have the philoso phers's stone. Love beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, en dureth all things. Promises hold men faster than benefits; hope is a cable and grati tude a thread. Judgment and reason have been grand jurymen since before Noah was a sailor. As turning the logs will make a dull fire burn, so changes of study a dull brain. Where is an author in the world that teaches such beauty as a wo man's eyes? The virtue of prosperity is tem perance; the virtue of adversity is fortitude. Every thought which genius and piety throw into the world alters the world. Many an honest man stands in need of help that has not the cour age to ask it. OUR NEW YORK LETTER. i From our own Correspondent. HOW WIGGINS WENT WRONG ON THE ] DELUGE-MUD A BOON FOR TRI UMPHANT TAILORS-BOLD AS THE MACCABES-THE DIRECTOR OF A 1 HIVE OF BUSY BEES-WIT AND WISDOM OF A SOUTHERN CHIEF- I A BEFOOZLED B(EETIAN BUMBLE'S I BLUNDER-PAYING DEAR FOR AN OFFICIAL WHISTLE-A NOTABLE NEWSPAPERMAN'S FLOP OVER YOUTHFUL TREASON MELLOWED BY AGE. NEW YORK, Eeb.16. 1883. E If Wiggins hadn't been so des- I perately previous in explaining i that his storm came on time, but by I a slight error in calculation had dropped into the Pacific Ocean, he I might have save his credit as a prophet. For by all odds the nas tiest storm we have nad for years < has deluged the land. Chopping down our forests is getting to be i quite too expensive a proceeding ! for our people at large to put up 1 with, however it may suit certain 4 selfish persons. To say nbthing of E the direct loss of such disasters as i have engulphed Cincinnati, Louis- < ville and other important seats of < industry, the delay in mail, in ship- ! ping goods has cost the country many millions of dollars. Right f here, the storekeeper who pays 1 $20,000 a year for rent and looks i at the rushing torrents which bar 1 the way to his customers, while salaries, rent, gas bills, &c., go on 1 all the same, feels blue, and this I is quite a large village, full of busy men who all feel the same. A week of such weather Is as bad as a fire. Our friends at Cincinnati i seem to have found it worse. Perhaps our Street Commissioner has an interest in numerous cloth ing establishments. It is difficult to understand why on any other hypothesis, such an excellent chance i for cleaning the streets as was pre sented by the thaw and down pour was neglected. The snow was soft and- very little labor would have 1 assisted Nature to excavate the long forgot ten pavements. There is the I less excuse as the Commissioner has shown that he can clean the streets when he wants to, and whatI he has done not once but often hei ought to be made to do again. There was some excuse for some of the rascais who preceded him, as, con sidering they never cleaned the streets, a charitable view might be taken and they might be supposed1 not to know how. A Hebrew hero has been devel oped in a mild merchant who em ploys a number of girls in the man ufacture of gimp and other mill nery fiigs. His place caught fire, when, like a general or the captain of a sinking ship, he guided his bewildered help to the means for escape and judiciously hurried them without excitement or fiurry from the danger. He had just passed the last one safely out when the supports of the fire escape gave way and he was cut off. Through the volumes of smoke and flame he managed to get to a window and then was scorched till he had to clamber out and hang on .to the sill. Every moment was an hour and an extension ladder became enmeshed in the netmork of tele graph wires which disfigure the city, and the moments were prolonged to minutes. Every ear was listen ing for the sickening crash on the sidewalk of the exhausted man now hanging for dear life by his hands five stories above them. Finally a fireman got the ladder clear after some desperate acrobatic work and got the man down. They both re ceived an ovation and if that comparatively poor manufacturer doesn't become rich pretty soon it will be remarkable. Fitz Hugh Lee and his chivalry have gone. The old raider got off one very capital thing in the course of one of his numerous brief, jolly, soldierly and sociable speeches. He remarked that this was a great country, bounded on the north by ice and on the south by banana, and any one who tried toslip in against our will would be apt to slip up. I fancy these sentiments will be very generally endorsed. A jackass of a coroner has been trying to make himself conspicuous and has succeeded in covering him self with even more than the usual contempt appertaining to the ex pounders of Crowner's Quest Law by summoning all the prominent residents of the city in a case of bomicide. Gould, Grant, Vander bilt and a score of eminent bankers, nerchants, speculators and poli. icians were invited to determine he cause of the death of one fichael McGrallaghan or some mch name, whose head and a beer itcher had become too intimately icquainted for the benefit of the 'ormer. Strange to say the big nen were all afflicted with sudden ickness except ex-Mayor Wick am, who is not such a very big nan and came meekly as a lamb to he sacrifice. The Treasurer of the Dock De artment has had the pleasure, a second time within seven or eight rears, of paying the amount of the lefalcations of a thieving clerk t'he first time it was $15,000. this hie the amount was under $10,000, nd the Commissioner was rein ursed the next day by the brother >f the culprit. It is a mystery to some people as to what fun there is n being a treasurer under such cir ,umstances. Where does his boodle wome from to make up for such mnnoyances?" Ex-Congressman Thomas Kin ella, editor and part proprietor of he Brooklya Eagle, the-great pro noter of the Hancock boom, has ought the Brooklyn Union and is oing to run it as an independent aper. This means that he will get ;he reading public of the City of Jhurches to abandon their ohd fay rite, by thus cutting his nose ofp to ipite his face, he'll reduce his profits n the E^gle to nothing but wil nake it up by success on the Union. Ele succeeded McCloskey, the mad nan who afterwarde committec ;micide and who by.his Copperhead ditorials nearly got up a riot in he early days of the war. T. K.' hose amorous and other adventures ire notorious, "couldn't get his own way on the Eagle and was bound o have it somewhere else. Talking of Copperheads, it is a Ludicrous fact that one of the prom inent directors of the fund for rais ing a soldier's monument in Brook Lyn is David M. Stone, Editor of he Journal of Commaerce, who was imprisoned in Fort Lafayette for publishing the famous (or infamous) bogus proclamation, and who was rorced by that most dangerous >f all mobs, a well-dressed mob of brokers, to hoist an A merican Flag over his building after lime of his kbnoxious editorials. They gave tim fifteen minutes before they tanged him out of his own windows, and as he had no such article on Lhe premises there ,was some tall scratching around by his friends, who borrowed a flag just in time to save his neck. RADIX. From the Charlotte (N. C.) Journal. WIL LIAM C . PRESTON. wnmnby.oe who Eew sad Eard We have read many descriptions of the effect produced by great orators upon their audiences, and have once or twice witnessed queer scenes of the same kind, as It has been our fortune to hear some great men speak, but an incident related to us several years ago by a gentle man who has long been prominent in public affairs and who wais once a United States minister to a Euro pean Court, is perhaps as remarka ble an illustration of the power and eloquerice as any ever recorded. The gentleman referred to was walking with us from the Capitol in Washington just after we had both been listening to an unusally fine speech in the House of Represen. tatives, upon w'hich we were com menting, whea turning to us, he said: "You are not old enough to re member William C. Preston whern in public life. He was by far thE greatest orator that I ever heard, and never equalled, pehaps, by any American except Patrick Henry, h by him. I wasa sort of pet of Mr Clay, and often heard hiui and a3 his great contemporarie but, although some%Imes h inga he wa not the.equatof Mr. ma bnn uersD c wt:r DoNu; wit-1g id ;o Preston. Clay, Webse C h o ate, Sargent'S. Prentis the other great:orators o had each his own pee,m andeach was ier' other; but Prestonsseisii, bine all. "I once witnessed.i Macon, Ga.,- which Icane get, and which, -ridielt seemed Saeranrd , that very reason ther o sive and sikng proof Preston's absoute ieo audience. I have fi tho nce' tiesd parallel to i." "It was in the laf" 1844. An immene. 'teen or twrentytoI sembled tohearPs, sta had beens -crowded :i around ftC There: i ' buzz and cons ono such ave toa in had been speaiews' when it beg aus& music of-hto was i fin ARenaien and went at it:p i an the i;it 0 overibhe dense mass? listnes. ,With''t sonorous voicethe to .rise- .on tiptoe,- L inaga'nwith its tf."; anthe waayed of uis am iea anr ent lath au lisene brsth -~W t r risteda11 fashits ang agie theyrwyedg bralde Aedngth, in cpenidurst, seiae therwsn ig i wrnced t e ver bay ea and till whatthnrewAitoutis dic the et other,le posI& fobout teonal;o ' ev en t neiatwed been speakiong," said hier only finise li in.th t ae I wa foer eapeut to hdmer likesithaain." ofThe Cart o er ledr tfeoo Lndrtu's a e the smaklipo,' aM he ofrun, n mythe and itrance.m' iw side ofhSarltnbur. 4 The digwrso o mader Bann, le' oleonleytthe iey sie.Kofr Sra plare. They were: "General, did Y them straight ?" It is to live twice to be enjoy the retrospect ofe your7 life. any men employ th years so as to make #uhe miserable. A secret is too ilef. eogfor tWO~, and too three. Teloqcons si. igaltheasroper more. let usres Mm - ~