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Show AS CLEVER .SOME WOMEN ARTISTS are! FAMOUS. WHO i Which They Have' Achieved Results Works , Are Rare Among Exhibited ' Nothing Womanish About Their pictures Excellent Illustrations. t . i (New York. Correspondence.) HE modern woman, freed in great meas yje from the old re straints her by put upon society,-ha- s come rapidly to the front in art as in .everything else. In our own land of .liberty," she has made strides In the of development AVJRPpC ldeais those lofty within the scope of overly flay which f man only, and f by hard work has achieved a place in the world of art, enwhich nature, by her sympathetic The hers. should dowments, Intended Qne of the foremost of American artists is Alice Barber Stethe a phens,' delineator of nature in all varied forms of artistic medium. " The' career of this young woman has been Mrs. advance. one of persistent a showed as a little 4ry girl Stephens marked instinct for art, and at the age of seven years her talent for drawing was so marked hat she was given over to masters in the School of Design in Philadelphia, where her parents then . , an honor seldom accorded a woman. MEN. AS "A Sunny Afternoon in Venice, a small canvas, which she exhibited at the Society of American Artists ten years ago, attracted wide attention, and at once raised her to a place in the art world to which her extraordinary talents entitled her. Mrs. Nicholls made a years stay in Southern Africa, and her paintings of desert life are esteemed by her contemporaries to be specimens of her finest work. Mrs. Nicholls is also a mild disciple of the Impressionist order. Matilda Browne is an. artist who gives promise of a brilliant career. She is a happy portrayer of animal life, not the wild; unrestful examples of the brute creation, but the quietly grazing herd or dozing sheep In cool meadows of star-eye- d daisies. Miss Browne is still quite young, and is devoted to her work. A year or so ago she visited Holland, working the summer through, and studying the styles of other artists. Her illustrations for juvenile publications have been xvery popular, many of them appearing in those childrens books issued by Harpers. Georginna, A. Davis is also an excellent worker in nil and water colors. She ha not had' the advantages for studying other, than thosenffered by the Art Students league of this city, and yet her pri and- - ink and wash drawings are eagerly1 accepted by the Illustrated periodicals, and compare favorably ,with the work of more experienced artists. These are but a few of the clever women artists among us, women who have by their vigorous efforts of self appreciation taken place by the side of man iri the same branches of practical art, and turned talent to good account financially. , A Model Flat. I London Answers: The proprietor of a large building in Loridon, which contains several fiats on the upper floors, says that he never succeeded in renting these apartments readily until lie employed a very eloquent Irish woman as his agent. . Several times the graceful blarney of this excellent woman has secured a customer, where a less gifted agent would probably have failed. Kinvayiences, is it? says she to applicants for the rooms; sure, its could and hot wather at all hours of the day an nolght, agrayable to. yer tashte, an scullery coppers that wud make a washerwoman of the queen of England Are the rooms comby prifference. warmed asks the inquirer. fortably "Are they warmed? with a surprised air. Sure, wid a sloight turn o yer wrist ye have anny degray o timpera-ttir- e known to the therimether. But the stair case. Is that easy to go up? Nriw, thin, says the eloquent agent, as if she were reaching the climax of all th wonderful advantages of the building, the staircase is that easy that when .yere goin opp ye would N resided. NICHOLLS. Later she entered the Penn- i that yer cornin down. sylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and well,belave The 'intending tenant usually capitubefore she was sixteen became a prize lates, at this point. pupil In the womans life class. Later she was offered superior opCOINS TEACHER. portunities for study under the trainiIn ng of Julien and Carlo Rossi, Paris, The Man Who Has Stirred. Up the Great But where she remained two years. of Financial Discussion. without the exceptional natural gift delicate conception that has enabled her (Chicago Correspondence.) to portray those pretty, trifling details William Hope Harvey, author of "The of life which grace a homely subject Elementary Principles of Money, with charm, these advantages of study Coins Financial School, and A Tale When of Two Nations, eminently successful . would have availed her little. Mrs. Stephens returned to America she contributions to current financial was prevailed upon to become an in- -' literature, a is comparatively structor In the School - of Design, in - i , ! Philadelphia, a position which she still holds. As an t Illustrator Alice Barber Stephens stands, in point of eminence, at the head of the list of women artists in that line. Her successes in black and white have beenmany, but she has not confined herself ib this mode of delineation. In the realm of color she is easily at home, and many of her recent canvases, which shiw, less of the conventional instructor! than her other work, bear striking pnanifestations of the pot too' extreme impressionist school. Another clever illustrator and brush-womis Mrs. J. Francis Murphy, who holds her own in the world of art with her talented husband. Mrs. Murphy is as happy in oil as In crayon work, arid ranks high as am illustrator. Her fancy Is for old ruins, soft moonlight and fantastic shadows. Nothing could be more suggestive of sentiment' and poetry than One of her moonlight paintings, where shadows are deep and lights are strong. In our popular periodicals her illus-blac- k and white;, these illustrations are trations appear rom time to time, but perhaps her most earnest work has been devoted to! book illustration. In which she has exhibited a rare, faculty for grasping the Authors ideas and portraying them in a simple but convincing style. As a colorist, Maud Stumm is esteemed a genius.; Hers is a highly poetical temperament, and this quality is evinced in all that; she does. Much of Miss Stumms;work is done in water colors, in which medium she excels. Occasionally one meets .with a classic -- an ( f Prevents Frauds by the Tellers and Is an Absolnte Check Against Errors or Colinsion ployes. Dishonest Between. ' j Emi i T LAST A DEVICE ha been invented t o make bank clefks honest. This is a more import- ant statement than you think. But when you stop to remember that more than $25,000,-00- 0 was embezzled in this country in ' can 1894 you see what means to hanks and big money concerns to be insured against dishortest paying tellers and receivers. The Union. Dime Savhas got a ings bank of New York-Cit- y machine which does it. An almost human mechanical device of polished steel and brass which never robs, does not havSto be bonded, but does simul-- . taneously and unerringly r the work of bond teller and bookkeeper, would appear to be an impossibility, even In these days of wonderful inventions, but such a machine has been perfected and is in daily use, says the New York World!. The name of this machine is the arithmologautotype. Bookkeeping by. machinery is an appropriate name for its processes. It is regarded as Infallible in preventing errors, accidental or intentional, among bank employes. It has been often said that no device can make a man honest, but dishonesty can be made mighty j dangerous by proper safeguards. The arithmologautotype, while not entirely dispensing with the services" of the regular bank teller, resolves the tellers duties into a simple handling of a customers pass-boo- k to the machine, turning a crank, and handing the book back to the customer again. The machine does the rest. With the mechanical teller any intelligent young man or woman can do the work as well as the most expert bank employe. . The story of the arithmologautotype is like one of Jules Verne's romantic mechanical devices brought to material shape and use. It is the creation of President Charles E. Sprague of the Union Dime Savings bank. This new machine has had' a practical trial in that bank and metj all expectations. It was taken out last week to allow room for permanent connections to be put In, and as soon as these are ready, probably in ten or twelve days, two arithmologautotypes will be fixtures in the Union Dime Savings bank, one at the receiving and one at the paying tellers window. The arithmologautotype, which the reporter examined at the bank, consists of tan elaborate mechanism in a polished steel box about . three feet square by two deep.j On the left side of this steel box is a steel cylinder1 of about -- twelve inches in diameter, inclosing a series of wheels, on the tires or edges of which are the letters of the ' alphabet and the numerals. On the bottom of this cylinder are openings through which the letters and figures on, the whole appear when the machine is worked. Directly under the cylinder is a side on which the .passbook is placed, open, so that when the slide s pushed in the figures and letters on the wheels within the cylinder will make an Impression of ihe exact amount deposited oa the page of the 1 , book. j J 'The front elevation of the large steel box has a longitudal opening, which shows the edges or! tires of a set of wheels on each of which are numerjals. On the top of the box is a similar a similar set of wheels. j t WONDERFUL MACHINE IN NEW YORK BANK. f 1 MRS.. RHODA &OLMES STOPS BANK THEFTS. open-ingshowi- ng These openings large enough one on to show each whel. figure was man. He born Aug. young In front of the square box, and In 1851, , 16, Putnam Buffalo, outward at its Wse, is a large county. West - Virginia. His early education was acquired In the common keyboard containing 120keys similar or district schools of his neighborhood to but considerably! largbrthan those and at the age of 16 he was a school- of the ordinary typewriting machine. teacher himself. Reading law in an ofwhole euparatus weighs about The fice in his native town he passed a 500 pounds and stands on a steel frame creditable examination at the age of 19 years, and was admitted to practice. at about the height of the average bank Success followed his efforts as a lawyer, counter. The box is securely locked and he became noted at the bar of Ca- with Yale locks, and .there U no 'getbell county. West Virginia, and in the at the work Inside by anyone circuit embracing this, Putnam, and ting the president or cashier of the other, counties in the Kanawha valley. except who have the keys. A crank onx In 1875 he left his West Virginia home bank, and settled in Cleveland, Ohio, where he the right hand side of the machine is successfully for the means by which it is worked. practiced his profession two years. In 1877 he located in Chicago The method of operation is as follows: and practiced law, having an office in The machine, located at the receiving the Portland block. In 1879 he went to tellers window, is set at blank before Gallipolis, Ohio, where he became coun- the opening of business each morning. sel for several wholesale firms, and as well a partner in the dry goods firm of The openings in front and on the top John T. Halliday & Co. There he mar- show simply a row of ciphers. A ried Miss Anna Halliday, by whom he appears to deposit, say $125.50. has had four children. In 1884 he aban- The pass-bootogether with the dedoned the practice of law and emigrated posit slip and the deposit, is handed from Ohio to Colorado, settling in Den- to the teller. The latter compares the ver, where investments became his spewith then the items; places the cial line of business. In 1890 business slip open on the slide under the called him to Ogden, Utah, and there pass-boo- k he took up his residence until May, 1893, cylinder on the left of the machine. He when he returned to Chicago. Since re- quickly presses the proper keys in the which denote the amount of establishing himself in this city, Mr. authorin been has engaged Harvey deposit. Instantly the wheels In' the ship, the publication of financial litera- big box revolve, and at the apertures ture. His success haf, oeen pronounced. In the front and on the top of the box His works have commanded widespread the won$125.50, appear to a figures and" attained have together attention A derful degree of popularity. So far as with the number of the pass-booof in in on of turn full the School crank comthe Chicago, spoken The right the work That turn of the crank Coins Financial School. is concerned pletes It is only a figure of speech or an alle- does Three things simultaneously. a lesson practically gory used to convey a full recin the pSss-boo- k In Mr. Harveys school, in ord ofprints and easily. the 25th May, transactions fact, consists of the clientele that seeks 1895, B., $125.50. It alsosay on the with works prints avidity. and reads his in the machine the amount detape Always in the Market. millionaire posited and the number of the passJinks Why j0 these So folks will book, and it also registers on a total dress so shabbily? Winks their watered sheet the sum deposited. take pity on em and buy A second customer comes in to destocks. is placed posit $50.25. His pass-boo- k be to of Ignorant face in the Have the courage the of at the box, aperture a great many things in order to avoid while at the top one the figures are the calamity of being ignorant of every- $175.75. showing the total of two de thing. Sidney Smith. - W. H. HARVEY, ar-eNjus- jex-te:..ii- , ng , cus-tum- or k, key-boar- d, MRS. ALICE BARBER STEPHENS, from the Greek or Latin poets done in exquisite, and if (one will look carefully over the work he will find at the far right-han- d Stumm. corner the name of Maud j Rhoda Holmes Nicholls is an artist of varied gifts, and a most prolific worker. Her types range from delicate wash drawings to strong effects of light and shade in pictures of desert life. Unlike most artists who generally foster a specialty her well filled with studio, her work, shows evidences of genius for composition in all branches of art. Mrs. Nicholls has worked In Rome and Venii ce, and much of the Influence of those rare artistic climes can be traced in het paintings. V bile In Rome she was made a mtm-i- T ike Roman Water Color society, k. posits. A turn of the crank and th record of the second transaction is complete. And so it goes all day, the top opening in the box showing the total deposits as they increase. The machine is so situated at the tellers window that the depositor can have a plain view of the figures in the face of the box, and thus see for himself that the amount of his deposit is correctly recorded. At the end of the day the cash in the receiving tellers cage should tally exactly with the amount registered atthe aperture in the top of the box. There can be no changing of figures or turning back of wheels. The mechanism is such that this is impossible. The crank can be turned one way and only a certain distance at a time. If the monkey key should be passed by mistake the fact would at once show in the opening in the front side of the box. The teller is not allowed to make any entry or mark in the pass-boohis sole duty being to place the money handled by him in a receptacle and work the machine. With a machine at both receiving and paying tellers window in a bank, the top or total apertures of both machines from a constant balance sheet, from which the officers can tell at any hour just how the business of the day is running. Highest of all in Leavening Power. 1 n J o r,R j ! L- - J V- - j Wa 3 wL J ft r s' w vA i 1 The Elevator Boy., An Opening for a Live Man. In on of Denvers office buildings He arrived in a small Western town there an boy. He Is always from the East, and after supper he on theis go, elevator but interviewed the proprietor of the hotel. He is far too slick for this wlrj ked world. Is there an opening 'fu this place He was meant for a fairer fcliane; He swears at the manager, swears at his for a ljve newspaper man? f work, t the wuz tother day, replied Thar And is kicking all tne time. He groans and sweats neatk ,kis load of proprietor pleasantly. . work, Has it been filled? his Bewails stoncy way; Well, no, not egsactly, I reckon; but But once a month he quiets down t J Its gota man in it. Who is he? And Complacently draws hl$ pay. r r f Reduced Rates to the East A newspaper chap from the East. A live man? I reckon not. Leastways not so live k, WON A WIFE BY BRAVERY. Latest U. S. Govt Report Via laclfic System.! the Union To Boston and return July To Baltimore and return July ,17-2To Boston and return August To Louisville, Ky., and return Sept. For additional information call or write to Geo. Ady, Passenger Agent, Dil 17th street, Denver, Colo. ,1-- 7 13-1- as he wuz. 4. 3. How do you mean? Wal, yer see, it wuz this air way: A live man came here and started a paper. He jumped on the respectable HALLS CATARRH CURE Is a liquid and U citizuns of the community, and be gosh he raised thunder generally. We taken internally. Sold hy Druggists, 75o. couldnt stand that, so we jest dropped The trouble with cheerful petopie is that him In that ere well out yunder. He their cheerfulness Is so hard to snub. we so a little ruther chap, p5vuz news-to go light on him. The ' Itandthe Baby la Cutting Teeth. want Ra sure use if an old and that yer yet openun got remedy, papers . Winslows Soothing Sypvt for Children Teethlng- it. He concluded he didnt want it. The etlngier a man is about valuable 6-- ! 8. ; 5 I cun-clud- ed well-trie- i Romantic Adventure in Japan of a Francisco SaVlor. Charles Litner is one of the luckiest sailors that ever sailed out of this port on a sealing schooner. He is going to be married to one of the prettiest gifls In Japan. Not only is she very pretty, but her parents are very wealthy, according to the stpry told by C. Burdell, says the San Francisco Examiner. Burdell came up on the steamer Coptic last week. Speaking of young Litner, he said: "Charlie is the son of Sebastian Litner, a laborer, who lives out on Nineteenth avenue. He is an athletic young fellow and has always had an ambition to see the world. Thats why he shipped on the schooner Jane Grey and went roving over the seas in search of seals and adventure. While at Hakodota, Japan, a few months ago Litner happened to be on one of the chief thoroughfares one afternoon when a spirited pony ran away with a Japanese girl, Miss Siena Kato. Litner saved the girls life by springing in front of the runaway and striking, the pony a stunning blow on the head with a club. The act was regarded as one of rare bravery, and before we left Japan It was announced that Litner was, engaged to marry Miss Kato. He was hurt in the accident and was first taken to a hospital, but was afterward remoyed to the young lady's residence at the, request of her parents. The marriage ceremony was to have taken place two! weeks after we sailed. They are probably married by this time" . j things the more - apt he is to give advice. There Is Pleesure and 1gefit and and A party of ladies .were gossiping no small satisfaction In abating troublesome ill s by using Parkers Uinger Xonio. of their painful about the '1 Le , sex. One lady related that, on a forsty I see most of your halri Is gone, said 5fes, replied Burton, fall day, she had walked half a mile Brown to Burton. unknown. for left y parts its discovered she from home before that, was she In with other respects It I go Easyweto, Removso Ootifg will although endure wonder may, fully equipped, she had forgotten to them. Getthathindercoms and seejfcow nicely it confessed takes them off. M put on her hat. toA second go to the theater, that in dressing There ought to be a law passed that railhaving first taken a bath, she forgot to way, restaurant - keepers shall date their apput on her flannels, and did not note ple pies. the omission until she was exposed to FITS All Fits stopped free by Dr.KlinegOreat Restorer, ho Fitsafter the flrstdays use. the wintry air, and in the company of Nerve Marvelous cures. Treatise and S2 trial bottle free to whom explanations t it cases, bend toLr. Klme,H31 Arch kt.,PkU a gentleman A would have been embarrassing. We learn that ministers are Seriously disffiird declared that her experience was turbed over the Innovation known as the aunore culpable than that of the others, tomatic coupler. for she had once deliberately stepped Corn Calve. Hansons into a full bath tubv before taking off Warranted to cure Magic or money refunded. Ask your absent-mindedne- t - Number Three Got There. j ss 1 Hin-nerco- j ! , her clothes. It was agreed that the prize belonged to number three j Iiow the Trouble Began. George was gazing dreamily at the j druggist for it. Pile 15 cents. ifor be fish to the brain. A diet Is said good Probably this Is because the fish go so often in schools. t Plsos Cure is a wonderful cough medicin. Van Sielen and Blaka W. Pickert. Mrs, Aves., Brooklyn, N. 1., Oct. 26, 94. dear girls back hair. The moment a man finds out he has been Laura, he said, making a motion as a fool of himself he has learned to. if adjust it, do you know there is making ' j something valuable. a lock out she answered, but I know No, ! ! , theres ging to be a strike. r And he got it on the ear. Matrimonial. Golden fled i cal Do you. re Indianapolis Journal: member that ldve letter you wrote to me before we were married, in which ' f you said you would even give up your chances of heaven for me? remarked IlTS Well, said Mr. N. Peck, after he Cures Nlaetyelgbt per cent, of all had got hold of his hat, and had the cases of Consumption, in all Its door open, I guess I told the truth. Earlier Stages. j j A Few Years Hence. The Trust After Chio&go Special. Reported here today that a - had been offered for the large sum of moneyby famous tobacco habit cure called a syndicate who want to take it off the market. offices revealed the fact Inquiry at the general was not for sale to the trust at that success 1b marvelous. any price. Almost every Druggist in America sells under guarantee to cure tobacco habit or . refund money. No-To-B- ac. Sejms to me I used to hear of a of youngsters called the couple Do you remember twins.' heavenly who they were? M no, I have forgotten their names, but I have a kind of dim impression that they were, two little girls in blue. , No-To-B- No-To-B- ac No-To-Ba- No-To-B- ac The Res nit. tlv am'. ( Zwlnski is going to FLOTSAM. be married to Miss Getthere, the heiress. Cinnamon tea is recommended as a Hazleton Nonsense! Im his most beverage for people who. dwell in ma- intimate friend, and Im sure he has larial districts. such intention. The orange and the lemon are both noMarie No. but she has. said to be fatal to the cholera bacillus. A French medical authority asserts subscriber to editor Im mad that death caused by a fall from a great allAngry the way through, an I want my paheight is absolutely painless. stopped! Ncfverre, the great dancer of the perYes, sir; do you want to pay what eighteenth century, was called the you owe? Shakspeare of the ballet. He did much No; I aint mad enough for that to elevate its character. The milk of he reindeer and its Boy Mamma, am I made out of cheese product are said to be most ex- onions, ? sage, sorrell and cellent for all lung diseases. no! What do you Mother Mercy, A. large pike was found In a rabbit mean? trap at Osberton, England, recently. Boy Johnny Jones said he was goThe trap was fully three , yards from ing to knock the stuffing out of me. the water, and it Is supposed that the pike had jumped at a fish, and the force of the jump had taken it out of the water and into the trap. Marie-LCoun- t Although by many believed ;to be incurable, there is the evidence ojf .hundreds of all its living witnesses to the fact that, aincurable earlier stages, consumption! is disease. Not every case, but a large percentage of cases, and we believe, fully 98 per cent, are cured by Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery, even after the disease has progressed so far as to induce repeated bleedings from the lungs, severe lingering cough with copious expectoration (including tubercular matter), greqt Joss of flesh and extreme emaciation and, weakness. ' Denver Directory. I j , bread-crumbs- j MICROSCOPICS. Tli s ancients knew how to cheat. Loaded dice have been found in the ruins of Herculaneum. The bank burglar got but 75 cents and some beneficial exercise out of the bank of Corder, Mo. Near Lac de Jouk, France, the River Orbe is spanned by a natural bridge wliich Is over 700 feet In width. Youngstown capitalists have $60,000 to equip a telephone exas a rival for the Bell company. change steamer Every going north from Port Townsend is loaded with miners and adventurers for the Yukon gold fields. A big Laramie ranchman states that at the source of the river there is at least forty feet of snow on the mouneub-sotib- ed Headquarters For HARNESS AND SADDLES , Do notb deceive! by uarelt-sb- l fictitious price?, sucl at 135 team Harness for (1 I JO steel ,cincha. cowboy-saddl- e horn, double for IIS, but before purchasing, send for jnynew illustrated and descriptive catalogue free, and see , what you are are not a represented, you ordering, and If can return same goods at my expense. I use the best oak tanned leather and employ only first rlass work men. J. fl. 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The many, who live bettain sides. life more, with ter Governor Hughes of Arizona has ap- lessthan others and enjoymore expenditure, by promptly pointed twelve newspaper men to act the worlds best products to as a board of immigration commission- - adapting the needs of physical being, will attest erfJ. the value to health of the pure liquid MEDICAL DONTS. laxative principles embraced in the . Syrup of Figs. Dont allow smelling salts or any pre- remedy, is to its due excellence Its presenting too paration of ammonia to be used most and pleasform the in acceptable seripersistently, in case of fainting, as to the th8 ant refreshing and truly ous injury may be caused to the lining beneficial taste, properties of a perfect laxmembrane of the respiratory passages. clerinsing.the system, Dont attempt to argue with a de- ative; effectuallyheadaches and fevers colds, asserdispelling his lirious patient ana permanently curing constipation. tions, but appear as interested as poshas It given satisfaction to millions and conversation. the in sible met with the approval of the medical Dont let a delirious person see that you are afraid, or inclined to let him profession, because it acts on the Kidhave his own way. Always be firm but neys, Liver and Bowels without weak. ening them and it i3 perfectly free from gentle. a or Dont wake patient for food every objectionable substance. medicine unless ordered to do so by the Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drugmedical attendant. gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manmeans use of any Dont removing ufactured by the California Fig Syrup moles or superfluous hair until you conCo. only, whose name is printed on every sult your physician. also the name, Syrup of Figs, Dont leave knives, scissors, or any package, and being well informed, you will not dangerous weapon within reach of a ccept any substitute if offered. delirious patient. Dont leave windows unfastened lv a delirious patients room. N 1 15 E. E. BURLINGAMES ASSAY OFFICE Laboratory And Chemical iEslnb.itheA ls$6. j , JEWELERS AND Til OTdG RAPHE R9, send your sweeps and watpe containing gold and silver for treatment.! Prompt return sli- and highest cash price paid for gold aDdLawver bullion. Address 17;!$)' and 1738 fence Street. Dc ver. Colorado, II. 8. flATCIITO Obtained633 in all countries. Denver rAI LIl ID Bailey, Equitable Bldg., kind 30 Oures FemaleWeaknes of any Denver Vlsnn Y IS 1 Londoner Bk,163u Arapahoe si, of mining, printing Repairs end cutting. etc. Pipe threading 141a-17 18th st. & Garsnft,1 Nock elevators. Ireight Machinist T1 1 1 CREAHERXSUPPLIES. AIRV& I II I State n Agents power, sold on separator, hand and AT KIN a and Jong time. - A. easy payments 15th and B azea Sts,, Denver, Col. MUS.E CO., A FOR PILES SURE CURE moist nre like um oanm, Itching Files known bj w arm. This form and Bleed. Land, intense itching when me or Protruding Piles yield at once to DR. OS PlLElREMEDY. which acts directly on parts affected, al sorbs to morr aL Jars itching, effecting a permanent pore. Price boo. Druggists or mail. Dr Uosanko, Philada., kaZ H |