to move Inaalmateofr* force of will is |i m>6lsllj people who havSV*r&ot : *8* pfcrform&uce, with their |k|$i - ::#es. VIggo Leiche is a Dene tt jfoajrs 'it*.. He arrived at Alto §f- . cently from Copenhagen to visit uncle. C. Jesaen, a fruit package man^f ofacturer there. . > , Leiche had been there only a «fef#t tone when his weird mental pomps began to. "astonish tfceaatiYe*.'*f He Irst performed in % drug .«#•*• #Wf- • town, says a telegraa^ifaifr^ His uncle heard of it and aoootedL&e Idea of its reality, finiqt lat er he repeated his 1% Ms uncle's home .and completely routed /Chat worthy man's skeptidainr«i*r&- lag his power. In performing athis ancle's home he used an iron poker several feet long and quite heavy. Standing it against the wall at an angle of 45 degrees, fce seated hltoseifrVfow feet distant, focused his eje/t on the lop of the poker and within a few sec onds it began trembting, then <#ettu- olly rose to a perpendicular position. After standing still a moment it moved toward him in short jumps. He can affect any wood or metal object siuch «s umbrellas, canes, etc., in the same way. A short time before going to "fepi to the only time he can ho induced VIGGO LEICHE, fouth Who Moves Inanimate Objects by Will Power.) .10 practice his strange power, as it makes him deathly sick unless he can «° to sleep a short time afterward. C- W* J^oung Man'* Chances. "A western weekly of national circu lation has an interesting symposium in tiply to the question, "What are the young man's chances?" The conclu sion of the contributors, in which the editor joins, is that "a young man's . opportunity in the business world were jk îrer more numerous, attractive or conspicuous." The Conservative, how ever, warns young men against the false notion that success can be at tained without-hard work, and espe cially does it warn them against spec ulation, in which where few succeed thousands fail. The successes are blazoned to the world, the failures are seldom heard of; they are the WteckS that strew the wayside to which small |*dl» mp to* ' ' :f ','V'iimi)' ,i K - \ Mr-f. K^epptl to See "Maces. Mrs. George Keppel, the noted Eng. ? ! ;ifeh society woman and special friend Of King Edward, who arrived on the Steamship Etruria the other day, came expressly to witness the yacht races. She is a close friend of Sir Thomas Lipton and, of course, is anxious that \ ; .|ge should lift the America's cup. •'•'"VMm. Keppel is a beautiful and ac- • ' i m MRS. GEORGE KEPPEL, Ipopular British Society Leader ̂ Attendance at Yacht Races in * New York. In ICgxmpliahed woman who wields grist .influence in the court of St. James. She is as courageous as she is pretty, as Was shown during the recent accident 4in the royal yacht, when she and the ^klng almost lost their lives by the fall- ling of a mast across the deck. She , displayed great coolness and did not feint, as did some of the other women :||totoo^ ; * , Color ana the tFrttstJfc- Anthony Overton of Kansas City, :$tan., declares that "trusts have help- '^fcd the negro." Mr. Overton, himself * negro, said this at the final session *C the National Negro Business League In Chicago last Friday. He explained that the great combines had prevented fluctuations in prices, with the result that the colored dealer could better know his ground. The combines help ed negro manufacturers also by reduc ing competition and in this connection toe declared that the great steel cora- vftlne had prayed a good thine for the ;f|0sgro. »r The wonderful adaptability of the tpanese to western civilization is own once more in the person of S. Tanigi Wara, who in September will %e&>me professor of chemistry in the University of Columbia, Mo. Mr. Wara ftps been educating himself in the United States for the last seven years. He has secured the degree of master of arts and has served as assistant to Professor R. O. Graham, who holds the cSiair of chemistry at the Wesleyan university at Bloomington, 111. prob- C* boiler of Tren- er «afe*a ft* way from Philadelphia to . J. ll la-? {tared - that evsn this Ust of casualties may not be comiMi, for many passengers jumped * - --- - and the hold of the hides the bodies of After the explosion the shl$ task :|MNuid the passengers and pre forced to leap into the riv er. Later the vessel ran ashore Those dead are: J. D. Chew, assistant en gineer; Mrs. Elizabeth Green, Phila- delji|$*i; Arthur Lansing, molder, Trp|«»j N. J.; August Mable, deck hai^ Philadelphia; Matt Mable, flre- man, Philadelphia; James O'Connell, Jfreman, Wilmington, Del.; hoy pas- toehger, body not identified; four men passengers, bodies not identified. Pas sengers and members of the crew were hurled across the deck by the explo sion, several being killed outright, while a number sustained serious In juries. Others were pinned down by timbers and scalded with steam and boiling water which waa scattered from one end of the vessel to the other. A panic followed, but the of ficers restored order alter a time. When the fire *U still aboard had to jump into the water. As the boat was nearing the land even those who could not swim were able to keep above the Burfaoe until rescue parties arrived. The forward portion of the upper deck was well filled with pas sengers, while-many others were in the cabin. Before any of the passengers or employes bad an opportunity of seeking places of safety another explo sion occurred, and this time the port boiler was rent In twain. Scalding steam and water poured into the cab n, and sections of the woodwork of the boat were torn away. Those of the passengers who were not injured by the scalding steam and boiling water were struck by the flying portions of the splintered cabin. Legs and arms Were broken and faces and bodies were parboiled. The screams of the Injured could be heard on shore. CAMPS FOR CONSUMPTIVES. *i*e Hew Cold Weather iBMgvrated la Boston. As soon aa the weather will permit and proper locations can be selected there will be pitched near Boston the first of a number of camps for con sumptives. This camp will consist of ten piano-box tents, arranged in a cir cle with an open-air fire in the center and surrounded by a duck wall eight feet high. Each of these tents will be a consumptive home; a consumptive will sleep there, even through the cold est weather, with no other protection than plenty of felt blankets, felt sleep ing boots and a two-gallon jug of hot water. The tents are only seven feet high, with four-foot walls, boxed in around the bottom a foot from the ground. The people who live there will wear (me heavy suit night and day. They will each take one quick soaplses bath a week and will eat three good hearty meals a day, with e&ee in the morning and hot choco- late any time ot the day or night. Their bill of fare Will include milk, eggs, vegetables, bread and butter and meat, chiefly beef, mutton/or pork. This open life la expected to cure the occupants of their disease. The meth od Is the result of experiments made last winter In a tent on Huntington avenue. LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS. Spring Wheat--No. 1 northern, 70@71%c; No. 2, 69H@71V4C; NO. 8, 68@69%c; No. 4. 83 ®67c. Winter Wheat--No. S. 6»%066%c. Cora--No. 2, 55%c: NO. 2 yellow, 66%© 86%c; No. 3, 54V40MHc; No. 3 white, 66%c; No. S yellow, 54%@55c. Oats-No. 4. 33Vic: No. $ white, 3614c; No. 2, 34«4c; No. 2 white, 36%c. Cattle--Choice export and dreused beef steers, $S.40@6.70; fair to good, $4.6006.36; stockers and feeders, 12.90^4.25; fed west ern, $4.1566.35; western range steers. $$.80 @4.26; Texans and. Indiana 92.750&7S; Texas cows, tt3&f>2.80; native cows, 12.40 @8.75; hf tfera, $2.75fiS; cannera, $1.50*^2.90; bulls, f2.260t.26; calves. *3to4.75. Hogs- Heavy, $6.1006.36; mixed packers. $6,000 6.27K: light, $B.60@fi.l5; pigs. $4.6006.60. Sheep--Lambs, $4.25^4.90; native wethers, $3.2606.60; western wethers, *3.10@3.50; ewes, $2.76@S.f< ); stock sheep, $2@2.?6. Blackberries--16 qt», fair, $101.26. Blue berries, 16 qta, Michigan, $1.26. Pears, brls, $3.2563.60. Grapes, 4 baskets, Dela ware®, Mmftc; baskets, 8 lbs. Ives. Illi nois, 11c. Beans--Pea beans, hand picked, $2.60; medium, hand picked, $2.700176. Butter--Creamery, extra ohoice, UMfc; seconds, 14@14V4c; dairies, choice, 17c. Cheese--New goods: Full cream daisies, choice, lO016Kc; Young Americas, 10%@ long horns, 10tt@l0%c; twins, Domnambttltet Wrecks TnUa. ! , What is believed to be the first in stance of the wrecking of a train by a somnambulist occurred on the Missou ri Pacific road at Birch Switch, near Garnett, Kan. The brakeman on a freight train that was on the siding lay down on the ground for a nap. Two fast freights passed in safety, after which the brakeman in his slum bers got up, opened the switch and then lay down again. Soon a passenger train came along and crashed into the side-tracked freight. The engines were wrecked and the fireman of the seriously Life Term foi a Lyncher. George Howard was convicted at We- tumpka, Ala., of murder in the first degree and was sentenced to life im prisonment Howard was a member of the mob which lynched Robert White, a negro, near Wetumpka, some months ago. When the case was called Wednesday morning Howard under oath related the details of the lynch ing, admitting his participation there in. He gave the names of the mem bers of the mob, which numbered thir- -if '*.i Rtt CfcteCi ttadf Appmtn. ^ Members of the International Asso ciation of Fire Chiefs at Indianapolis were given an exhibition of four com bination hose and chemical wagons and of two new metropolitan steamers. Wednesday evening the visiting chiefs and their families were entertained by the city. Wednesday afternoon 15,000 people surrounded the Grand Hotel to witness a practical exhibition of a life- aavlng net. A young woman from one of the summer gardens jumped from the fourth floor of the Grand Hotel injury. Philip .«nn ounced, 13 known as the most expert all-around Iranian athlete in the United States. At the same time Miss Pomeroy, who Is wealthy, is a favorite in New York society. Among the feats which she has to her credit Is the killink, single-handed and with one rifle shot, of a grizzly bear near her camp at Glen- wood Springs, Colo. She la also a famous cross-country rider and lone-distance swimmer. One of her most unique claims to dis tinction in 6tn athletic way is the fact that the best known teachers of fenc ing in the country declare her to be, without exosptton, the best woman fencer in the United States, "capable of fencing jrttli any Ktan, no matter how exper^ without expecting that taVor be shoim her because she is a woman." Miss Pomeroy is a Cincin nati girl, is$fie her prospective hus band, Philip <&&irk. Is a native of St Loula. W MACHINE. Wfif to Sim JftiftMtfo CVcrtiivr. Within the memory of living man a three-minute trotter was pretty sure to throw his dtwt In the face of anything on the road. Then came the period when "2:40 tail over the dashboard" was expressive of the limit of the trot ter's speed. Oliver Wendell Holmes, in his poem on "Contentment," re marked that he would be satisfied with a nag that could do 2:40, though a few seconds less would have given him the pole against alLrivals. But tile real attack of the trotter on time began with Flora Temple's step ping out of the 2:30 class and estab lishing a record from which the des cent has been almost by single seconds or fractions of seconds down to that of Cresceus this yesx. How the seconds have been clipped off is shown in the following table: 1856--Flora Temple..*,.. 2.24 1859--Flora Temple 1865--Dexter ... „. ....... ,2:18% 1866--Dexter .. ..2:18 1867--Dexter .. ....2:17% 1871--Goldsmith Maid 2:17 1872--Goldsmith Maid?* . .t: 16 1874--Goldsmith itoid .2:14 1878--Rarus ... t: 13% 1879--St. Julian 2:11% 1880--Maud S. ................ .2; 10% 1881--Maud S.. .......... .......2:10% 1884--Jay-Eye-See .. ̂ 2:10 1884--Maud S. .2:09% 1885--Maud S. ...... ....2:08% 1891--Sunoi .. ..V.,.....2:08% 1892--Nancy Hanks 2:07% 1892--Nancy Hanks ............2:05% 1892--Nancy Hanks 2:04 1894--Alix .. 2:04 1894--Alix .2:03% 1900--The Abbe* .. 2:03% 1901--Cresceus s V. *..,,V... .2:02% 1901--Cresceus .. 2:02% The most remarkable Bhowing of this table Is that which gave to Maud S. her title of "Queen of the Turf," which she held for no less than ten years, the record of Jay-Eye-See not standing long enough to oonstitute a flaw In It. The present champion of the turf holds not only the record for the fast est time ever made by a trotter, but the fastest heat in a race, the fastest second heat, the fastest two-heat race and the t|itMt three-heat rape. His endurance is as remarkable as his speed. JacK** Cos* JF3OO.O0O. Mile. Fagette, who lately made her debut in Paris, a few days ago re- M«W- FAGETTE JACKET. celved a present of a bewitching bo lero Jacket, which it is said cost 1,500,- 000 francs, about $300,000. It Is covered with diamonds and pearls, emeralds and sapphires, rubies and turquoises. It was placed on exhibition In the window of a jeweler in the Avenue de rOpesra, where it attracted crowds Morm -A/if«r-©/finer WeaKfi+t*. Only Americans with irreducible back-bone should trust themselves un der the mahogany across the sea. A little flattery seems to boil a weak American spinal column down to jelly. A Connecticut judge named Harrison, who ought to have proved stronger, has coolly prevaricated at the Interna tional Association dinner hi Glasgow by solemnly declaring that the Ameri can people want the treaty ratified and that the next session of congress will see it adopted. Had there been the least justification for so preposterous an assertion would Hay and Pauncefote have been willing to mend their joint production radical ly so as to secure even a promise of its future favorable consideration, or is the jelly-backed person from the wood en nutmeg state a candidate for Brit ish naturalization?--Chicago Chron icle. John W. Gates, the steel wire mag nate, is probably one of the best ama teur billiard players In the country. He Is very fond of the game and plays it nearly every evening. slide. machinery has finally reached his sphere wad waittid kiln that he must seek other occupation. The latost piece of mechanism to invade the larger cities consists of machines which dis pense with bookkeepers in large es tablishments and perform their labor through the medium of an operator and a typewriter. One of the machines in an ordinary establishment does away with the labor of two men; an other dispensing with the, labor of eight men. The first machine, under the direc tion of an ordinary typewritist, makes out a bill, copfes the invoice perma nently in a book, and makes a perma nent sales sheet copy. The work is all done in typewriting and tn perma nent books. The second machine makes a sales copy, an original, * du plicate and a triplicate bill of lading, a platform order, a factory shipping order, a bag-room order, a loading or der and a car card. Still a third ma chine, of which Marshall Field haa taken thirty, makes one bill a month adding the items day by day, record ing the date and salesman's number by a lock arrangement which makes it impossible for the operator to enter a series of items without dating the same and entering the salesman's number, enters all credits in red ink, and carries 1,200 accounts at one time. A Tennessee bank cashier is respon sible for the invention of these ma- " i i V ' Y'\V%V A BOOKKEEPING TYPEWRITE®. chines. His name is Fisher, and he lives at Athens. Some years ago, look ing through a postofflce window, he noted a clerk cancelling stamps with a hand stamp. He wondered why the same work could not be done by ma chinery. From that point his thoughts m «f *• |MM «, *•» J* at Hk»r mi******. ink; Uncle Sam has been prying into the Inner life of the humble potato and after a most thorough and rigid in vestigation declares in the year book of the Department of Agriculture that tiie potato is a deserving and ex tremely valuable member of the com munity. Just at this time when the country is in the throes ot a potato famine, the deductions of Uncle Sam will be of special interest Scientific investigation on the part of the government has ahown that the practice, which has become so general, of serving potatoes with meat and other similar foods which contain lib eral amounts of protein is based upon correct principles, one food supplying the deficiencies of the other. Potatoes and other foods containing carbo hydrates are sometimes objected to on the ground that they are starchy foods and do not supply much nitrogenous material. It should be remembered, however, that the potato does contain a by no means inconsiderable amount of protein, and further that carbo hydrates are an essential part of a well regulated diet The potato called in different regions white potato, Irish potato, English po tato, or round potato was first Intro duced into Europe between 1580 and 1585 by the Spaniards, and afterwards by the English about the time of Ra leigh's voyages to Virginia. It is com monly believed to be a native of Chile. Wild potato plants closely resembling those cultivated today are still found there, though it is a fact worthy of mention that, as the potato has been modified by cultivation, it has largely lost the power of producing seeds, and the cultivated potato differs from the wild In seldom producing seed bearing fruits. The edible portion of the potato is made tip of 78.3 per cent Water, 2.2 per cent protein (total nitrogenous mat ter), 0.1 per cent is made up of crude fiber and materials which in some of their modifications constitute the cell wandered on to the wonder why his own books could not be kept by ma chinery. He tried to make a book keeping machine. A year ago he pro duced three machines, which are now supplanting bookkeepers In large es tablishments. walls of plants and give them a rigid structure. These figures, like others for composition of food materials, rep resent general averages, from which there are wide variations in individual specimens. Though the skin, cortical layer, and flesh differ somewhat in composition, they all resemble more or less closely that of the whole tuber. When potatoes are stored they un dergo a shrinkage. According to tests made at the Michigan agricultural ex periment station, this amounted to 11.5 per cent when they were kept In storage from Sept 20 to May 1. This shrinkage is probably due to the loss of water by evaporation. To obtain the highest food value po tatoes should not be peeled before cooking. When potatoes are peeled before cooking and placed directly in hot water and boiled rapidly less loss of material is sustained than when they are cooked in water cold at the start The wholesomeness of potatoes cooked in different ways is largely a matter which each must decide for himself, the general experience being that for men in health most of the methods followed are satisfactory. Although under ordinary circum stances potatoes are unquestionably a wholesome food for most persons, ill ness is sometimes caused by eating them. There are undoubtedly some persons In health with whom potatoes do not agree, just as there are those who cannot eat strawberries without distress. This is due to personal idio syncrasy, and not to the harmful char acter of the food. Potatoes a year old which have lain in a cellar, and shriveled and small potatoes which have sprouted without being planted, are considered especially dangerous, and should not be eaten. f Hoter Sartio-r- Dumont Erscaped Death ^ •[niniw " The illustration printed herewith, sketched by a Paris artist, shows how the intrepid Brazilian aeronaut, M. Santos-Dumont, escaped from death by his airahip, "Santos-Dumont V.," being caught between two houses at Passy in falling. M. Santos Dumont was trying to win with the airship of his own invention the Deutsch prize of $20,000. He had succeeded In round ing the Eiffel tower with difficulty, but his balloon was then unable to make headway against the strong wind which was blowing, and it fell on one of the new houses near the Trocadero and close to the Seine. Luckily the frame of the car caught in one of the walls, where it remained suspended. But for this, M< Santos-Dumont would probably have been killed. As it was, he was tn a most dangerous position for over half an hour, hanging in mid air in the small wicker basket which forms the car. Here he clung until res cued by some workmen, who climbed over the roofs ot the adjoining houses and let down the guide rope, which had fallen on the roof of thebuildingstruck by the balloon. Santos-Dumont fasten ed the rope about his body and was, with some difficulty, hauled up to a place of safety by the workmen. colonies of stingless beeS have been discovered in the isl and of Montserrat, in the West In dies. Efforts are being made to in troduce them in this country, as their honey-producing qualities are fully equal to those of the common variety of bee. Ojcen _for th* President, Just before the last presidential elec tion Farmer Samuel Webster, an ar dent Democrat who lives near Sus- q u e h anna. Pa., agreed with a Re p u b l i c a n n e i g h b o r that if Mc- Kinley was elected h e would p e r- sonally. drive his prize yoke of oxen overland to Canton, O., and present them to the president. Ever since the election was decided Mr. Webster has been seriously ill/ He has now recov ered, however, and he arrived in Can ton on Monday after his long drive. If Bryan had won the Republican with whom he made the bet was bound to drive his thoroughbred trotting horse across to Lincoln, Neb., where it would have been presented to the Orator of the Platte as a part of the spoils of war. Mr. Webster and his oxen made the trip in ten days. Under the cir cumstances the president could not re fuse to accept the gift, and it is whis- f t Descendant* of James Lawrence, frigate Chesapeake in the w 1812, won an im mortal place in history when, in the fight with the British man-of-war Shannon, he waa mortally wounded, and, with his dying breath, cried out: "Don't give up the ship." A splendid monument to Cap- t a i n Lawrence stands at the entrance to Tfc church in New York. Meanwhile, three little boys. ence, Lester, and Isaac Lawrence, and 4 years old, great-grntt< famous sea captain, hare for more than two years in Barnabas Home, an institution j pendent children on MulhNBTKjr New York. The boys are half- their father being dead and their mother at present working as a va^t in a New York family. &grpgtual Motion Mae tun*. ^ An improved automatic or self-act ing gravity wheel is the modest title of an invention by Herbert Rose Of Australia, which has recenGy tMttn fel*- ented all over the world, and wind*, ft the claims of its inventor are promises to supersede steam aa a mo tive power. The invention relates to the om- straction of a gravity wheel, with eoia- centric rings, secured to aripi ing from the center. These, weights act as balance awl levers and are so nicely those on the downward grade two-thirds heavier than thoee upward grade in action--that a i falling of the weights on the grade insures perpetual motion. A cessation of the driving force only he effected by weights from telling, by a very simple cox form of a spring which ib|B,on; weights simultaneously. ' wheel forty feet in diameter aaA 'iftia^v feet wide, it is estimated tlMCt.tt will carry 1,050 weights and that tile driv ing power will be equal to 1,443% tons , from the center ot the wheel. The THE MOTOR WHEEL cost ot construction fs abe the cost of machinery for steam i and it is also claimed tlMit i motive power will reduce Che expenses 95 per cent The working model has 1m jected to continuous tests, as : parently capable, like the broo*s» "going on forever," which what is expected of ax claiming to constitute a solutloi' the secret at perpetual motion. " pered that he gave the bad better a nice little sum to bring home, with him. The oxen will be placed at work on the McKinley farm. Chinese Population by y-'. ...*. ...17,937,000 ..f.. .. ..36,247,000 Chili Shantung Shansi .:..... 12,211,000 Honan . .yi'lf.•>i22,115,000 Kiangsu •* .........20,905,000 Anhui ..f.*20,596,000 Klangsi 24,534,000 Cbukiang ...... ....11,580,000 Fuhklen Hupeh .. Hunan . Sensi .. Kansnh . Ssechuan Kwantung ...., 22,190,000 .....22,190,000 ..'...21,000,000 ..... 8,432,000 ..... 9,285,000 ^*.67,712,000 .,.,*.*..22.706,000 ...... --%•* Kwangsl -«• • • a e *«e 5,151,000 Kweichow .......... 7,669,000 Yunnan ........ 11,721,000 In an address recently delivered in London Mr. Asqulth, the well-known member of parliament made felicitous use of English when pleading for bet ter linguistic culture. He took occa- sion to condemn "the uncouth and pseudo-classical terminology of the men of science, the tortuous and neb ulous phrases of philosophers, the pre tentious conventionalities of the art critic and the Blipshod slapdash of the newest school of journalists." ~Model yacht" 'Racing CM*, Most people have no difficulty in ap preciating the enthusiasm of the ex pert yachts man as he rides over the waves on his white- winged fly er. But to the majority it will prob ably be hard to understand bow yachting enthu siasm can rise to a point where full- grown men are willing to spend much time and money in racing little toy yachts In small ponds of water. Yet in London alone there are at l<*ust two large and important associates*, the object of which is the saili*4 ef to* y»»*bts. Minister Wu on Wa Wu Ting-fang, the Chinese to Washington, is showing tl at home in almost any fiel| torv. One of his latest made at a dinner in New cently, when he was called respond to "The Ladies." course of a short but cmstti^ graceful speech he said: "When I see so many bei|pp|||M6K men confronting me and I nsft.e^lad upon to be the gallant of the **••*•& what can I say but that I wish COf thttt.: moment only that I were not a. OkhMb* man. I should like to be can as lI stand hete, so tflw| one of you would appear a»' IjSWillNl, to me as you actually must wlisaaaM*' through your countrymen's s» 4lN(t the slight difference in the tensi tiou of my orbs cannot do Justfe* the impression you make upon BM, in dividually and jointly and aevcfmlly. uut there are some WeU-nourished ares and forms among you that .ffffif appear to be as line as tfeo best that my own fertile country haa praiicsd. And your intelligence and -rili. f am told, which are hidden under in tricate fashionable apparel, are more beautiful even than your form3. May you all feel the depth and Minus III of my admiration, and may jmt irfoth- V'ij ful looks and honorable years always " walk hand in hand." " ' "f ~ ; . % , * : 3 trans' J?ad Robert G. Evans. United trict attorney for Minnesota, denly at Minneapo lis the other morn ing from heart dis ease, on the bal cony of his home. At 8 o'clock Evans went to the bed room ot his daugh ter to awaken her. He grasped the foot rail ot the bed and shook it, seem ingly unable to speak. Jost as she awoke Evans staggered from the room and made his way with difficulty tn the balcony over the front porch. There he seized the railing, back his head and gasped, then to the floor dead. He had been a ferer from heart disease for § year and a half, and a sudden attack of tin trouble carried him off. The web of the common fine that twenty-five thousand it--enough to encircle the> would weigh only half a mailto:S.40@6.70 mailto:B.60@fi.l5 mailto:3.10@3.50