Transcribed July 26, 2001 by Patricia Scott
Copyright 2001
This information was transcribed from copies of the Las Vegas Age housed on microfilm at the Nevada State Historical Society in Las Vegas, Nevada, one of the best kept secrets in Las Vegas! NOTE: portions of the paper were destroyed or torn hence the ****.
Use your "find" feature on your browser as the listings are transcribed as they appear and are not in alphabetical order.
1905
The LAS
VEGAS AGE
Las Vegas, Lincoln County,
Nevada
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C. W. NICKLIN, Proprietor
Chas. C. CORKHILL, Local Manager
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Subscription Terms:
One year $3.00
6 Months $1.75
3 Months $1.00
1 Month $.50
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GREETINGS
This is the first issue of The Age and to the citizens and pioneers of Las
Vegas and Southern Nevada the publishers desire to pay their humble respects. There exists little need for a more formal introduction; neither is it
necessary to exhaust time and patience with an extensive review of our plans and purposes. We are all strangers in a
a strange land, come out from the more commonplace abodes of civilization for a common purpose-to seek prosperity
in the development of a virgin country.
Therefore, let us dispose with useless formalities and proceed with mutual good will to the task before
us. The AGE has been established as a business proposition upon a purely business basis. It does not come with
---- of trumpets and beating of tom-toms. As becomes a legitimate commercial enterprise in a new field, it has been launched in a modest
way, preferring to assume a position whose alternative is advancement. The AGE is presently equipped as it is with a completed new and first class outfit of
newspaper and job printing material, it stands ready at all times to maintain its proper place in the vain of progress in the growth and development of
this pro----- section. It will endeavor to -----ate the best interests of Las Vegas and Southern Nevada without fear or favor, and to become a
reliable disseminator of clean news of both local and general interest. Under the same management as The Age is the Bullfrog Miner, just
established in the town of Beatty, the center of the famous Bullfrog mining district.
As the interests of these two sections are practically identical, and to
a certain extent interdependent, these two papers will be conducted in harmony,---- reasonable encouragement --- become important factors
in-- of turning to good account resources of Southern Nevada.
................continues........
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LOCAL
AND PERSONAL
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?. K. W. BRACKEN has returned from a business trip to Utah.
Come in and subscribe for The AGE, for three months.
-- at the AGE office and give us lots of news--mineral discoveries,---ch aid will be appreciated.
S. D. MOORE, of Salt Lake City, one of the pioneers of this valley was here. ___ short his visit the first of the week.
?. BANKS and Co? DRISCOLL, of Gold--- are in Las Vegas and will make ... settlement their headquarters for the present.
M. G. BARNETT of Los Angeles, is staying at the Navajo tenet hotel for --- days outfitting in Las Vegas for a trip to Bullfrog.
-- GADETTE, who has been quite ill ---- attack of bilious fever, is out ----he streets again attending to business.
Who will be first to sink an artesian well, to drill for oil? Think what artesian water or oil would mean for Las Vegas.
?., E. HANRAHAN of Boston, Mass., who arrived in Las Vegas a couple of weeks ago, enroute to Bullfrog, has decided to remain here and go into business as soon as the townsite lots are on sale.
Every line of business should be represented in The Age advertising columns. Outsiders naturally judge towns by their newspapers.
Wilhelm WERNER, owner of Corn announces that he will soon build a commodious hotel on his property.
The Age will grow better from week to week. It will publish all the live news concerning Las Vegas and Southern Nevada. Can you afford not to be a subscriber?
The little daughter of "Bob" CAMERON, who suffered a severe attack of ptomaine poisoning is now well on the road to recovery says her physician, Dr. RUCKER.
Drivers, be gentle with your faithful horses. They are more than half human and deserve kind treatment. Feed, water and care for them well and they will yield you the best returns.
J. H. MATHER, surveyor and civil engineer, with headquarters in Los Angeles, spent a few days this week in Las Vegas looking over some tracts of land recently purchased by the Pioneer Investment company of Los Angeles.
Mrs. H. L. HEWETSON left last Sunday evening for Los Angeles where she will spend a few weeks in visiting friends. Mrs. HEWETSON is accompanied by her daughter who will be placed in school for the balance of the semester.
W. J. WHITE, proprietor of the Cash store, has a new line of women's shoes which he is selling at city prices. He has also added to his line of haberdashery and put in a new line of shady summer hats for both men and women.
George F. POLENZ, cashier of the Las Vegas Bank and Trust company, has purchased 160 acres of land about a mile east of Las Vegas ranch. He will plat it into five and two more villa tracts and colonize it with desirable people.
J. F. GREEN, of Beatty, who conducts a freighting business between here and Bullfrog as well as operating a hardware, lumber and hay business in Beatty, was in Las Vegas this week en route to San Francisco where he buys his store supplies.
J. S. HARRIS of San Diego is with the Kuhn Mercantile company acting as general clerk. Mr. HARRIS is well known to most arrivals from Southern California. He has lived in that state for years yet is --lished with Las Vegas even in her infancy.
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. McWILLIAMS with little daughter left here Thursday evening for a visit to Los Angeles. They expect to return in about a week. Mr. McWILLIAMS brothers are now in Los Angeles and have found the public there greatly interested in Las Vegas.
E. S. ALNUTT, who is conducting the tent hotel south of town will erect a fine structure of sandstone as soon as he can secure a suitable location. The building will have forty or fifty bedrooms, office, parlors and a spacious dining room, and will be known as the Hotel Navajo.
Mr. and Mrs. W. G. RICHARDSON of Los Angeles, are residing temporarily on the White tract. They will locate permanently on the railroad townsite. Mr. RICHARDSON is a builder and contractor and has several contracts for buildings to be erected as soon as the lots have been secured.
One of the recent arrivals from Los Angeles is the FITZWILLIAM family consisting of B. H. FITZWILLIAM, wife and 12 year old son, Elmer. Mr. and Mrs.FITZWILLIAMS are at home to their friends in a commodious tent on the Buol tract, and as they are southern people, the latch string will always hang out.
Mrs. H. T. BLAKE of Los Angeles, assisted by her two sons, P. A. and N. D. BLAKE, has erected a large tent on the White tract and is conducting a lodging house and restaurant. The BLAKE family may engage in the hotel business if a suitable location can be secured on the townsite.
Two, or possibly more men have perished on the desert within a short distance from this settlement during the past week. Others have been re--ened just in time to say. All are said to be tenderfeet with a notion that they were prospecting. No prospector in this country should get very far from his water supply.
District Attorney Benjamin SANDERS has returned from Pioche and will establish a permanent law office in Las Vegas where he has a large clientele. Judge SANDERS has formed a partnership with Judge MARIANEAUX, a capable and well known jurist. This firm will attend to all civil business in any of the courts in the state of Nevada, and especially in the Lincoln, White Pine and Nye county courts.
C. A. WHITE, of Minneapolis arrived in Las Vegas Tuesday to look at his property consisting of eighty acre adjoining the railroad townsite on the
southeast. Mr. WHITE is the guest of Mrs. BISHOP while here. He has had several large offers for his land but has about decided to plat it in town and
villa lots and place it on the market.
Fred ROSENFELD of Los Angeles, secretary of an investment company of the Angel City offered Mr. WHITE $10,000 cash for the tract of eighty acres, which offer Mr. WHITE promptly declined.
F. I. KREMER is one of the pioneer merchants of Las Vegas. His stock comprises in its scope almost every necessity of civilized life, with the exception of furniture and he is ever willing to add to it. Mr. KREMER draws a fine line between good service and servility. He and all his clerks give the former without a touch of the latter and the consequence is that all customers of the store are friends instead of patrons.
Al BISHOP and John RUSSELL who are conducting one of the most prosperous livery and transfer stables in Las Vegas have added to their good luck by locating a very promising mine about twenty miles out from the settlement toward the Colorado. E. S. ALNUTT, owner of the Navajo tent hotel, has joined in the development of the property and the three are looked upon as embryo millionaires.
Mrs. Mary BISHOP, who has for the past nine years taken an active interest in the Vegas valley, has taken the state record in the real estate business. She has located over 9000 acres of land in the town of Las Vegas for her clients. Mrs. BISHOP is a shrewd business woman and she is also an honest and kind-hearted one, and her --- south of the railroad townsite is the center of attraction for all the settlement.
Mr. and Mrs. M. C. THOMAS will move to the railroad townsite as soon as they can secure a lot. Mr. THOMAS sold his four business lots on Wi----- avenue this week. One of the lots used for residence purposes by Mr. THOMAS, who had erected a neat tent house there which the purchaser of the lots also bought. Three of them were sold to W. C. SMITH and one to Mr. COOK.
Judge M. S. BEAL, whose law office in the post office building, has a copy of all he state laws. In his collective data concerning this county he has a township map on which is marked the government and state lands that are open for settlement. Judge BEAL is an old frontier lawyer and though he has spent some years in San Francisco, his interests and inclinations have always led him back to the border.
Norman N. KUHN who******a construction company store a couple of weeks ago, has added a drug department and now has a well equipped fully stocked department store. KUHN came here from Omaha, Nebraska, in which city he had an --ble social and business standing. He likes frontier life with its expectations so well that he has decided to bring his family here in the fall and will build a home on the railroad townsite.
H. KIRCHENSLAGER, C. F. SLOSSON and B. F. DAVISSON of Monrovia, California, prominent citizens of that thriving foothill town, made a pleasant call on us last Wednesday. These gentlemen are wide awake and appreciate the advanstages to be gained by getting in on the ground floor. They left here declaring themselves as having confidence in the future of Vegas to the extent of an early return and the investment of considerable capital.
Harry BELGEN and Tom WILLIAMSON, who have earned great popularity by serving Las Vegas with a clean and palatable dairy lunch, have had to enlarge their bakery quarters. They are now able to turn out a thousand loaves of bread every twenty-four hours and have the only sand oven in the settlement. Mr. BELGEN, who has been laid up for a couple of weeks with a partly burned wrist, is now again able to take an active part in the production of his unrivaled pies and cakes.
A. T. WRIGHT & Co., the active and successful real estate dealers, this week sold to Mrs. S. T. BUSHFIELD three lots on Wilson avenue, known as lots 8, 9 and 10, clock 12, valued at $325 per lot. WRIGHT & Co. are said to be the only real estate brokerage license which is $21 per quarter, and if this is the case, outside of the town of McWilliams, which handles its own property, the Wright firm must have the only real estate business in the settlement.
Walter JOY, the only practical assayer in the settlement, has one of the most complete outfits made for the purpose. His labratory is the scene of many a discovery of real wealth and the arena of many tragically slain hopes. Mr. JOY has a reputation for ability and reliability that was earned in northern mining districts. He was for three years the assayer and chemist of the noted Kittie Burton gold mines in Idaho. Mr. JOY has a wife and three children, now living in Idaho, who will soon come to Las Vegas to reside.
Messrs. CROWELL and ALLOFT, who are the pioneer merchants of the settlement--in fact they welcome competitors. Mr. CROWELL is from Los Angeles and is well known to most prospectors arriving from Southern California. The firm has the largest general store in town and it is the natural meeting place for the clans every evening. The CROWELL map of the state of Nevada is the only complete one published and is recognized authority, deciding many a discussion on location of mineral districts, distances of camps, etc.
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Issue 2
LOCAL AND PERSONAL
W. D. GOSS, who is associated with Assayor Walter JOY in labratory work, has been made happy by the arrival of his wife and two little daughters, who will make their home here.
S. F. LACROIX, who had been working for G. F. POLENZ, returned last week from a business trip to Los Angeles and left again the first of this week for the south to be absent for some time.
J. McG. BARNETT, recently of Los Angeles, left for Bullfrog Tuesday morning by stage, and his brother W. M. BARNETT of Denver left shortly after with Mr. SMITH of the firm of J. E. GREEN Co., of Beatty. Both expected to arrive at Beatty Thursday morning.
Joseph GALIAINO, known as Prof. GALIAINO to the Angelenos, is just completing his building on Clark avenue. It is one of the best buildings in town and is commodious enough to accommodate the professor's pool room, bar and barber shop.
The lodging house being erected by J. F. FOX will be completed and open for business early next week. The house is a well built modern structure with wood and cloth partitions and will be conducted as a high-class family rooming house.
Wilson avenue is rapidly becoming the business center of the townsite. Many new buildings have been erected during the past ten days and the temporary structures are fast giving way to the more permanent ones. Several new enterprises will be launched on this street in the immediate future.
General Manager R. E. WELLS, of the Salt Lake road, paid a brief visit to Las Vegas on Saturday. He was accompanied by H. E. Van HOUSEN, superintendent of the Salt Lake division of the road. These officials came to inspect the equipment of the road from Salt Lake to Daggett preparatory to passing over it the large excursion party bound for Los Angeles from Salt Lake on the 16th inst., and they took up with them a long string of coaches to Salt Lake.
Moye G. NORTON, special correspondent of the Los Angeles Examiner, spent a few days in Las Vegas this week. He is enroute to the Bullfrog district and will probably settle at Beatty where he will open a law office and will also cover the Bullfrog district for the Examiner. Mr. NORTON is leaving a large practice in Los Angeles and has set aside the social pleasures of the Angel City for the strenousity of the mining camp because he, too, feels the call of the wild.
The other morning George F. POLENZ and Wilhelth WERNER walked into the Bakery lunch room and Mr. WERNER, who is an affable young German, said to the young man behind the counter who takes orders, "Vie gehts?" The waiter shouted to the cook, "Stack of wheat cakes." "Nein, nein!" shouted Mr. WERNER. Quoth the waiter, "You're lucky if you get three this morning; we're pretty busy." "Ach!" sighed WERNER as he sank down to await the inevitable.
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Issue 3
Chas. HUNSAKER, of San Diego is bookkeeper for F. I. KREMER.
J. K. HERSONS, of Salt Lake City, is a guest at the Navajo Hotel.
C. Valdimar SCHMIDT, recently of Los Angeles, is in Las Vegas.
Dr. J. K. W. BRACKEN and sister, Miss BRACKEN, are spending a week in Los Angeles.
Frank QUEREAU, of San Diego, who has been here for some weeks, contemplates making a trip to Bullfrog.
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. ADAMS, of Tombstone, Arizona, have erected a tent on the White tract. Mr. ADAMS is a builder and contractor.
A. R. SUTTON, of the engineering department of the Sale Lake road, arrived in Las Vegas Friday morning and after a couple of days here will go on to Indian Creek.
Manager of the Commissary Department of the S.P.L.A. & S.L. railroad SEAMAN is looking over the business of his department on this division
and will remain in Las Vegas for a few days.
J. S. WISNER, who conducts the popular Las Vegas saloon, was one of the pioneers in the business in this valley. He has a host of loyal patrons
and his trade is increasing rapidly.
Louis G. BUSCH, who has been a resident of Montana for the past seventeen years arrived in Las Vegas this week and as soon as he can secure a
location will put out his sign. He is a painter and decorator.
Leo SEBLEY has sold his men's furnishing store on Clark avenue to W. E. HAWKINS and has gone to Salt Lake City.
He expects to return here in about a week enroute to his home at Williams, Ariz.
J. D. KRAMER, the barber, at Wisner's, is a tonsorial artist who is working for success in the right way. He is more than ordinarily
painstaking and is rapidly making permanent patrons of those who drop in to try him.
Emil LEHMANN, representing the Salt Lake Brewing Co., is in Vegas, just returned from Beatty and the Bullfrog district.
He will remain here a few days in the interests of the company before going on to Salt Lake.
H. G. RADISILL of Goldfield, spent Thursday with G. F. POLENZ of Las Vegas Bank & Trust Co. Mr. RADISILL is one of the bank's directors
and was heartily pleased with the appearance of the bank and the business it is doing.
Judge and Mrs. Thomas M. JEFFREYS of Weiser, Idaho, are at home in a cosy tent on the banks of the creek at the ranch resort.
They are in the shade of the cottonwoods and when the heat of town seems intolerable, the home on the creek is cool.
J. W. McKENNA, proprietor of the Green Light saloon and cafe, has been making many improvements on his establishment on Clark avenue.
A porch has been added, the front neatly painted and this week, the canvas roof was replaced by one of shingles.
J. H. ROONEY, the well known surveyor, this week added to his large holdings here the 320 acre Butter tract which is located about
three miles from the Las Vegas ranch. Mr. ROONEY bought this half section in order to square his tract of 8000 acres.
Tom EDWARDS, of Shoshone fame came in from Beatty this week for supplies for his stores in Beatty, Rhyolite and Gold Center.
Mr. EDWARDS some time ago disposed of his interests in the Shoshone group to E. A. MONTGOMERY for the trifling sum of $100,000.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerome WINDER and two pretty children arrived from Los Angeles Friday morning and left Friday on the regular train
for Salt Lake City whence they will proceed to Ogden. Mr. WINDER is connected with Auditor BETTIS' office in Los Angeles.
Henry INGRAM, who is now associated with J. T. McWILLIAMS, was for years in the office of General Attorney GIBBON of the Salt Lake
railroad at Los Angeles. Mr. INGRAM has been an acquaintance of the McWILLIAMS family for many years and a warm friend of J. T.
W. C. ROACH, representing the well known firm of Bishop & Co., of Los Angeles spent a couple of days in Vegas this week.
He will cover the Bullfrog and other mining centers in the interest of the company.
C. A. WHITE, who has been very ill at the home of Mrs. BISHOP, on his tract southeast of town is convalescent and will be out in a few days.
Surveyor ROONEY has platted twenty acres of Mr. WHITE's land and the lots will soon be placed on the market.
W. E. HAWKINS, long a resident of Northern California, has opened his clothing and men's outfitting store next to KREMER"s on Clark avenue.
Mr.HAWKINS came here a couple of weeks ago, and after making a contract to open the store, he made a flying trip to Los Angeles to buy goods.
The Palace saloon on Clark avenue, FRYE & ROS?ON proprietors, occupies one of the largest and neatest buildings in town.
The fixtures are especially fine and the services in keeping with the surroundings. A successful opening was held on Monday evening in spite of the disagreeable weather.
Councilman F. W. NOFZIGER of the city of Los Angeles, is spending the week in Las Vegas. He is stopping at the Navajo hotel.
Other new arrivals at the Navajo this week are, N. W. TARR, Los Angeles; B. W. CAVE, Redlands; O. F. BECKMAN, Boulder, Colorado; S. E. SCHNABEL, Red Cliff,
Colorado; J. P. HARRIS, Salina, Kansas.
Frank CLAYSON, from Corona, California, has added another to the number of Vegas rapidly increasing business enterprises.
With a stock of furniture and household goods he is occupying an emergency shelter on Wilson avenue opposite the bank, but hopes to soon provide more
comfortable and commodious quarters
Ong LOY, of Vegas fame, has a partner named Toy LUI, with whom he is about to open a restaurant in Caliente. "Loy" as he is known here,
just returned from a trip to Salt Lake City, where he interviewed Mr. TUTTLE and "he say everything all right." As Mr. TUTTLE is so closely associated with the
management for the railroad, it hardly seems possible that he would commit himself so seriously. Yet LOY's word may be taken.
W. H. BALLOU, wife and two children arrived in Las Vegas from Goldfield coming through the Bullfrog district and on to Vegas in eight
days of easy pleasant driving. They carried with them their entire restaurant outfit and will open at once a restaurant and lunch room on Wilson avenue near
Third. Their restaurant in Goldfield, which was quite successful, was known as the Ouray.
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VEGAS BREVITIES
The pioneer Investment company of Los Angeles closed a deal on Tuesday for the Woodbury eighty-acre tract near the White tract.
It is said of the Shoshone mine that "Bob MONTGOMERY could in ninety days development make it yield as much as $50,000 a day."
F. W. NOFZIGER, second vice-president of the Consolidated Lumber Co., of Los Angeles, spent a couple of days this week looking after
the interests of his company which is establishing a lumber yard here with C. F. LINDSTROM as local manager.
Dr. HEWETSON has located a fine onyx quarry in the vicinity of his marble properties. This onyx is white and warm sepia in
tone and reveals some beautiful designs or markings when polished. There is no more beautiful marble in the country than that from the doctor's marble
property which when developed, will add to the wealth and fame of Las Vegas valley.
A. L. HOUGHTELIN, of the firm of Houghtelin & McLeod of Beatty, general merchants, arrived here Wednesday on his way to
San Francisco to order goods. Mr. HOUGHTELIN says he thinks that all freight for the Bullfrog camps and settlements will from now on be shipped from
Las Vegas, as it has been found that by this route there is a saving of time and money.
John RYAN, of the Tonopah & Tidewater railroad, and of the borax mines, spent a few days here and then went to Daggett to
look after some company business. He says that his surveyors now working on the preliminary line which is being run between Las Vegas and Bullfrog, will
complete their work by the end of the month. It may be some time before the public is taken into the company's confidence regarding which one of the three preliminary lines
The contract for the erection of the roundhouse has been let to Poulson &Ulnistead; Los Angeles builders. Mr.POULSON is expected
to arrive in a few days when work of building will commence. The grounds have been cleared and everything is in readiness to facilitate the work. Mr. POULSON may
be accompanied by his wife, as he stated when here to complete specifications a month ago that he thought Mrs. POULSON would greatly enjoy spending a couple of months here.
J. T. McWILLIAMS had a full page advertisement in the Los Angeles Examiner last Sunday, offering lots for sale in the plat.
He certainly had the original Las Vegas townsite, for the commissioners approved the plats which he duly recorded, and the lots are all he represents them to be,
yet many Los Angeles people who have been watching for the finishing of the railroad and the opening of the railroad townsite doubtless will confuse the two sites.
As Mr. McWILLIAMS has been confirmed in his right to use the name Las Vegas the query is put every day, "what will the BOUL'S ADDITION is located west of the shops, roundhouse and ice plant. An ideal place for those who are looking for homes, who do not wish
to go through town to and from work. You can select well-located lots within easy walking distance of your work. Our prices are low
and our terms are as you wish to make them. We suit you, not ourselves. Come and let us show you where you can get a lot for nothing. Less than
you can rent the same amount of land for within the same distance of your work. Our office is open to you and we hope you and
your friends will make us a call. Let us figure with you upon a good adobe home - cool in summer and warm in winter. We have surface water within
ten feet, which is soft and sweet, free from any chemicals which are injurious to health.
BUCK'S SUBDIVISION PETER BUOL, Agent. C. A. RUCKER, M. D. WALTER JOY J. T. MCWILLIAMS FURNITURE WATER AND FEED
will finally develop into a railroad.
railroad call its townsite, Quien sabe?"
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One page Ad
The highest and most sightly residence portion, lying from 300 to 500 feet back of the Railroad Company's townsite, which will be the city
proper when placed upon the market. It is proper an ideal place for a home, being only from three to five blocks back of the heart of the coming city. This
plot of ground is now upon the market and an office upon the ground, where plat and prices upon this property can be had, and our agent will be upon the ground
to show all comers the advantages of this fine location, which is just far enough away to be out of the noise and smoke of the shops and engines which are a
worry to all housekeepers. This property will be appreciated by the most conservative investors and homeseekers.
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PROFESSIONAL CARDS
Disease of Women and Children
Surgery a Specialty
Office at Las Vegas Drug Co.
Wilson Avenue, Las Vegas
Assayer and Chemist
Gold or Silver Assays, $1.00
Mines sampled
Las
Vegas, Nevada
Civil and Hydraulic Engineer
Twelve years in Lincoln County
Enquiries answered regarding lands on Salt
Lake Route.
Wilson
Avenue, Las Vegas, Nevada
We
are furnishing the peo-
ple of Las Vegas
with fur-
niture at the lowest
possible
prices consistent with the
present conditions. Let us
figure on your bill.
W.
S. CLAYSON
Cor. Wilson Ave and 3rd
St.
For Man and Beast
at
Miller Wells on the
Vegas and Bullfrog
Road
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