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/•*■ «~\ HE first service In the
”21 church part of the Cathe-
NW LJ dral of St. John the Di
/M K& vine and the first conse-
LOiSi wt ' cration in that rmgnifi
AtfNl I T ,L eU -ice wtH. —-■;
RA P \ ®7 place on ''o<ines f ) a y of
■ Easter weel5 ’ Apr' 1 19,
says the Ne7 York
Press. It will be the
xSp greatest event of its
kind in the history of the Protestant
church in America. Practically all the
clergy of the diocese, more than 400
lit number, will take part in the cere
mony. Among the church dignitaries
who will be invited are a number of
bishops from other dioceses, as well
as representative clergymen of other
communions. Invitations will be sent
to nearly 500 lay members of the
Diocesan convention. Among the laity
Levi Pt Morton, formerly vice-presi
dent of the United States and gov
ernor of New York, and J. Pierpont
Morgan will be most prominent. Mr.
Morgan has given several hundred
thousand dollars toward the cathedral
and Mr. and Mrs. Morton's gifts now
total nearly $1,000,000. It is said that
the date of the dedication was ar
ranged so the Mortons might be pres
ent. Heretofore services have been
held in the crypt, but now enough of
the main building itself has been com
pleted to make possible the consecra
tion and the use of a portion of it.
This Easter Wednesday the choir
and two completed chapels will be
consecrated. The crossing, where the
congregation wiH sit, is not to be a
permanent part of the cathedral as"it
Is at present and. therefore, this por
tion will not be consecrated. The
concrete walls which have been put in
place so that the completed choir
could be used will be taken down. The
two chapels which are to be conse
crated are both the gifts of individu
als. St. Saviour's chapel is the gift of
August Belmont and St. Columba’s
chapel was the gift of Mrs. M. A.
King. Mrs. King died not long after
she°had made the arrangements for
the building of the chapel.
A special consecration service will
be used. The order of service is now
being prepared. Special hymns have
been chosen. For the processional
“Christ Is Made the Sure Founda-
PROPER TAX ON BACHELORS
If They Could Be Made to Pay SSO
Each There Would Be Np De
pendent Children.
"If every bachelor could give SSO
there would need be no dependent
children,” says Miss Mary Vida Clark
of the State Charities Aid association.
“Some bachelors are now taking care
of from one to six children and some
childless couples are supporting whole
families.
“There js a reason, though, why we
look to the bachelors. There Is a
bachelor In this city who has interest
ed himself in no less than six chil
dren and he specified that they should
all be little girls. This is a special
work of the State Charities Aid so
ciety and this bachelor seems to like
his part in It.
"Our society, you understand. Is for
the purpose of placing the thousands
of children sent to state institutions
in good homes. And here Is exactly
bow the bachelors can help us.
"In placing a child it costs us on an
tion” will be sung and the offertory
anthem will be “Unfold Ye Portals
Everlasting.” The committee of ar
rangements for the consecration is
composed of Archdeacon George F.
Nelson, Dr. William M. Grosvenor, Dr.
J. Lewis Parks, George Maccullough
Miller, Henry Lewis Morris and Rob
ert Livingston Gerry.
The Finishing Touches.
An army of workmen has been em
ployed for many months putting the
finishing touches to the choir and the
chapels. At one time it was hoped it
would be possible to have the opening
service on St. John’s day, last
ber. This was found impracticable,
and so the next great festival of the
church, Easter, was chosen. The cor
ner-stone of the building was laid on
St. John’s day in 1892.
The great building is nowhere near
completion. The choir and two of the
seven chapels are finished. But even
as it stands now, the cathedral is
capable of seating about 3,000 per
sons. No other church in the ei.,y,
except St. Patrick's, has room for so
many. Although the walls of the
crossing are regarded as only tem-.
porary, an accurate idea of how the
central part of the great structure
will look may be gathered from its i
present appearance. The ground planj
of the cathedral is in the form of J
cross. Where the arms Intersect eaqf
other, is the part known technicaur 1
as the crossing. Over this rises tjr y
great central dome. The total cost/
the cathedral probably will ex<f °.
.>,ovv,yvt ■ i J . j> , f f?f!
been spent .already ta bring the cathe
dral to its present state. When it is
completed it will be the largest ec
clesiastical building in America and
the fourth- largest cathedral in the
world. The biggest of all cathedrals
is St. Peter’s in Rome, which is near
ly twice as large as the one next in
size, that of Seville, in Spain. This is
only a little greater in size than the
Cathedral of Milan. The Cathedral of
St. John the Divine ■ will be about
four-fifths the size of the one in Se
ville. A new cathedral is being built
in Liverpool which will be almost as
large as the one here. Only one of
the four arms of the cross which the
cathedral will form, is complete. The
nave and both the transepts are yet to
be done. Four flanking towers will oc
cupy the angles formed’ by the tran
septs, the nave and the choir.
Ex-Governor Morton’s Gift.
The choir is the gift of former Gov.
Levi P. Norton. The choir stalls are
of carved oak. They are very elab
orate and are surmounted w-ith charm
ing statues of monks praying, sing
ing, blowing on musical instruments
and going to battle. The bishop’s
chair is of oak also and is no less
wonderfully carved. The reredos has
many very fine statues. The figure
of Christ has on its right St. John,
St. James and St. Peter; on the left
Isaiah, Ezekiel and Elijah. A fine
statue of Moses, much like that by
Michael Angelo, is at the extreme left,
corresponding to St. John the Baptist
on the other side. Each figure is beau
tifully done; but for that matter they
all are everywhere, inside and outside
the building, high up and low down,
conspicuous or hidden.
In front of the reredos there is a
tiled tablet which came from the orig
inal Church of St. John the Divine in
Ephesus. Its inscription states that
the original church was built by the
Emperor Justinian. Behind the rere
das altar will be hung the Barberini
tapestries, five in number, that have
been loaned to the Metropolitan Mu
seum of Art fqr a number of years
average of SSO for advertising, visiting
and inspecting homes, sometimes
many miles from this city.
“But this is the story of the bache
lor who interested himself in the six
little girls. Something was one day
published about this new work in
which our official* guaranteed to find
good homes for little orphans at SSO
each. The next mail brought a check
for SIOO from our then, unknown
bachelor with a note, short and crisp,
saying that the donor would like two
little girls placed in homes. There
was no difficulty in finding the chil
dren good homes.
"When these little girls were placed
I wrote the bachelor to what good ef
fect the money had been used. To
the surprise of the officials the return
mail brought another check for SIOO,
with a communication to the point,
reading: ‘Replying to yours of the
28th, would ask that with the
inclosed money two more little
girls, sisters preferred, be placed
Kindly keep me advised of Helen and
Marjorie.’ The latter were the two
little girls previously placed.
past. They are already in place. They
were made in 1633 and are unique.
They are so large that they will be
hung 56 feet from the floor and yet
seem entirely in proportion with their
surroundings.
The choir floor is of mosaic and
gives a gorgeous touch of color as one
looks toward the shining altar. The
ceiling of the great dome also Is to be
of mosaic. In many of the European
cathedrals the roofing is of wood
which is very beautiful, but is hardly
enduring. There are few great Eu
ropean churches that have not had to
be restored because fire. When
the roof of Canterbury cathedral was
burning the priests and choir filed in
as usual and sang evensong, so that
the chain of daily service leading
back so many centuries should not
be broken. There will be no such dan
ger in St. John’s. Nothing but gran
ite, unburnable limestone and marble
enters into Its composition. There 1b
no steel or concrete or anything whose
absolute durability is not beyond
question. There is hardly a tower in
England that has not had to be re
stored because of defectF e founda
tions. But New York’s cathedral ac
tually can claim the palm over even
those that have stood for centuries.
No less than $355,000 was spent on
making the foundations as absolutely
secure as anything on earth can be.
Chapels of the Tongues.
Around the choir, between it and
the walls, .runs the ambulatory. This
gives access to the seven chapels that
are to stand at the east of the cathe
dral. They are called the Chapels of
the Tongues, and each will be repre
sentative of some one of the nations
or of groups of nations that go to
make up America. Services will be
held in foreign languages in these
beautiful chapels, and strangers will
feel as much at home as they do ■
when they enter St. Peter’s and see
the signs hanging on the confession
als, to tell what language the priest
within speaks to the faithful; for the
cathedral is to be the property of all
people.
Two chapels already completed are
the Chapel of the Holy Saviour, to be
used especially by Christians of the
Oriental rite, and that of St. Colomba,
the apostle of the Celtic nation. The
former is the gift of August Belmont
in memory of his wife. It is of Gothic
design, very richly decorated with
marbles and semi-precious stones.
The statues are the saints of the
Eastern church. The large stained
glass window is extremely dark in
coloring, and when the eastern sun
pours in the effect is indescribably
rich. Against this mass of gorgeous
colorings stands the exquisite altar of
white marble, delicately carved. The
whole is as rich and beadtiful as the
little chapels of Rome, and when time
has mellowed the tints and given the
depths of tone that nothing else can
supply there will be nothing lovelier
anywhefe.
The same thing might be said of I
| the Chapel of St. Colomba, which is i
| dedicated to the saint of the British 1
! sles, and is built in the Norman
\yle. There are round arches and
\y simple vaulting surfaces, carried
' (arge columns, set free of the walls
ornaments, like those in Durham
»i£Vers''u,lnd3w,TijLhe'cathe
dral at York. The statues of this
chatkd are peculiarly beautiful. The
exterior figures represent St. George
of England, St. Andrew of Scotland,
St.) Patrick of Ireland and St. David of
Wales.
The statues within the chapel repre
sent the heroes and scholars of the
British church from the earliest age
to the present.
v
Fixing the Carat.
The carat, the unit of weight for dia
monds and other gems, has various
values in different countries and a legal
value in none.
The Dutch caret, formerly 205.09 mil
ligrams, is now 205.12 milligrams; the
French, 205.0; the English, 205.409; I
the Arabian, 254.6, and the Bolognese, |
188.8.
In all, 21 different values of the carat
are recognized. In consequence of this ■
confusion purchasers and even vendors I
are often deceived and only dishonest j
dealers are benefited.
In 1905 the international bureau of
weights and measures proposed the
adoption of an international carat of
200 milligrams. This value become le
gal in France on January 1, 1911. —Sci-
entific American.
Meeting His Wife.
“Is the train from New York in
yet?" asked a man at the Union sta
tion ticket office the other morning of
Assistant Ticket Agent Schroeder.
“Well,” said Mr. Schroeder, “there
was a train in from New York five
minutes ago; one is just coming in;
there’ll be another In half an hour.
Later there will be a lot more.”
“Ain’t that just like a woman?"
the man outside the window asked.
"How’s that?” was Mr. Schroeder’s
I inquiry.
“Why, my’ wife wires me from New
I York: ‘Will be home on morning
; train,’ and she’ll be mad as fury if I
: happen to fail to be waiting at the
steps of the one particular car on
' which she happens to
■ land Leader.
“We had no small sisters at the
I time, but with the bachelor’s money
I we were able to find homes for Jane-
I and Anne Theresa, two little mites
I who seemed to have no future but
that of institutional children. Janey
was one of a flock deserted by -her
mother, but in the orphanage school
she became a prize pupil and seemed
to thirst for knowledge and learning,
i ”In time came a call from a couple
■ who wished a child ‘who would appre
: ciate all the educational advantages
■ that money could furnish.’ Children
| with a studious bent are not so easy
to find, but Janey appealed to and
: suited her new parents and she has a
j fine home.
"Again we reported to our bachelor
I friend. Immediately there came an
| other check for SIOO, with this terse
! note: 'I beg leave to acknowledge
; receipt of yours of the Bth. Inclosed
! please find check. Kindly place two
; more little girls.’
‘lf we only had a fee more such
bachelors the troubles of many of out
’ children would be over.’—New York
__— „■ ——
•- ■ ■ Utu .I. "J'-w, ire ——Ji
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-9 r.fc-
mia WtMir Ml
WLL LOON WHEN WAVE# /J AUA7EED OUT
I
IT is impossible for a loyal Ameri
can to stand anywhere in or
about Havana harbor and look
out on tie tower of the Maine and
the twistid steel that once formed
her hull and lot feel a sense of indig
nation and a conviction that what fol
lowed was a just retribution for so
dastardly an ict, if the Spaniards ac
tually committed the deed.
One feels a kind of personal Inter
est in the .ivwsftar that carried the flag
for years, that figured in the national
drama so tragically, that must forever
appear in the annals of our country.
Whether or not the Spaniards were
guilty of the vessel’s destruction is ex
pected to be developed when the bulk
is uncovered.
The battleship Maine was sunk In
Havana harbor 13 years ago. The
wreck of the Maine could have been
blown up anc thus disposed of at a
cost of $20,00). The Cuban govern
ment wanted to do that in order to
clear the harbor. But Uncle Sam
would not hav? it, and so for years a
mass of twisted iron, aentineled by a
lone turret, has grinned, skull-like, at
the passing world. Congress, aroused
finally to action by public sentiment,
appropriated $300,000 to be expended
in raising the Maine.
The Maine at the time of the explo
sion was swinging with her nose to
ward the Havana shore, and the wreck
lies in a line almost west and east,
bow Snd stern. The buoy to which she
was moored was about three-eighths
of a mile from the west shore of the
bay. The wreck lies in about the cen
ter of the harbor.
On the 15tb of February each year
the have visit
ed the jF'f w i it with
■; s 1 ’ ‘ A : "’Tyl
wreaths aul offered prayers for the
men who were swept to death on that
dreadful Feiruary night.
There are conflicting reports as to
the condlttot of the hull. A Spanish
board of investigation officially report
ed to the Sptnish government that the
bow is in ote place, while a Cuban
board locatec it in another. A United
States invest gation agreed with neith
er. The water depth is from 30 to 37
feet The veskd is (or was) about 33
feet in height—that is, to the top of
her decks. Tie deck is now 19 feet
below the surlice of the water. The
mainmast and he fighting top are ex
posed—.also a part of the house,
turned upside town.
After their Img neglect the bodies
of the unfortunite seamen, who went
to their death o. that February night
13 years ago, w 1 find a resting place
in the Ariingtri National cemetery
under the of the fighting mast
which now thrujts its top above the
waters of Havail bay. The decencies
will thus be sa|sfied. But ft is not
sentiment alone which is directing the
activities of tie government engi
neers. If it were only that their prob
lem would be Immensely simplified.
<The cause of ti explosion remains
unknown; in tin?wreck Itself the en
gineers hope t ’find evidence which
will explain tb mystery. All their
plans, accordlirly, were laid with a
view to leavilg such evidence as
might exist undsturbed.
Briefly and naitechnically, the plan
being used to i.ise the vessel is as
follows: A seris of cylinders—2o in
number —forminga cofferdam, are be
ing sunk in the .Vater, silt and mud
around the wrex. These cylinders,
when will form an egg
shaped dam enc cling the wreck. This
dam will be mao watertight and the
water inside purged out Hydraulic
pumps will suck ut the mud and the
Maine and her ftal wounds will be
_ exposed.
The constructla of this series of
cylinders is the writ now under way.
Half of the 20 ylinders are down
now. They are mde of Lackawanna
sheet steel pilings ind about 150 piles
are needed for eah. Each cylinder
is 50 feet in dlaupter and each pile
is 75 feet in lengt;
Steam hammers mounted on barges
jare used to drive tese piles, and four
of them are at woi at the same time.
,The bed of the habor is soft down to
(about 60 feet. Blow this the piles
must be driven int from 10 to 15 feet
i; Ek M j .-ZijjWtai" aa . B ■
of stiff clay. As the cylinders are
completed each is filled with clay,
scooped up by an Immense steam
dredge from a bank near Regia.
The cylinders are connected by an
arc on the outside, which joins each
cylinder by a "three-w-ay” pile. The
pocket between the arc and the cylin
ders will also be filled with clay and
thus prevent leakage between the cyl
inders. In other words, there will be
20 big, round affairs that look like
gas tanks, filled with clay and locked
together around the sunken wreck. It
will take, it is calculated, about two
days to pump the water out of the
space within the circle of cylindrical
gas tank affairs and more time to
suck the mud out
After the vessel is "exposed,” the
work of raising the Maine will begin.
How to proceed, what course to pur
sue, what equipment will be required,
all these are questions that only time
and the preliminary xyork of exposing
the wreck to view can answer. For
no one knows the vessel condition.
No one can say with accuracy wheth
er or not the vessel can be floated.
If It be humanly possible, the holes in
the ships’s sides will be patched up,
the water let In through the dam of
cylinders, and the hulk floated. If
the bow is beyond repair, the Maine
will be cut in two, bulkhead and
stern floated.
The Cuban government is resisting
t|ie United States in this work most
cordially. A wharf of sufficient size,
conveniently located in Casa Blanca,
just beneath the walls of 'he Cabana
fortress, has been set aside for the
work. To place the cylinders, ordin
ary round piles are driven at the axis,
of each. Around this central pile is
floated a templet of wood, made tn
sections for ease of removal. The
sheet piles are shipped in lengths of
25, S 5, 40 and 50 feet, and are bored
provldsd
75 feet. The piles f ir a complete cyl
inder are set up a templet and
then driven to the depth
After any remains of found
in the wreck have been .- emove( i an d
the necessary examination } las |j een
made, the actual removal ot wreck
will be begun by whatever -uethod is
found most economical ano advan
tageous. It now seems prob»b] e that
this will be to sever the shattc re( j p Or .
tion of the hull from the after la rt to
build a bulkhead across the cijt sec
tion, to remove the shattered parts
piecemeal and finally to float the un
broken end away from Havana-
Tho Way Successward.
"Success is never easy,” said the
late David Graham Phillips at a din
ner at the Princeton club in New
York. “If I told you how many maga
zine stories of mine were rejected
before my first novel made a hit,
you’d never believe it.
"Success is like skating,” said Mr.
Phillips. “When I was a little boy
in Madison, another little boy said
to me enviously one winter day:
“ ’How did you learn to skate so
well ?’
“ ‘Oh, just by getting up every time
I fell down,’ I said.”
We'll Defined.
Charles Dana Gibson, an authority
on feminine beauty, discussed at a
dinner in New York the beauty of
the Englishwoman.
“I admire,” he said, “the English
woman’s type. Most men, however,
don’t. She is so lean, you know, with
a clean, greyhound leanness. She Is
like a tall boy in football training.
"A Japanese diplomat once defined
the Englishwoman neatly at a ball in
Cavendish Square.
“ ‘Comparing the Englishwoman
with others,’ he said, ‘I find out the
former’s meat looks much harder.’ ”
To Support Widowers.
It is said that women in the civil
service in Sweden will have to con-,
tribute to a fund to support widows,
widowers and children of those for
merly in the service. This including
ot widowers as interesting and along
the line of women’s suffrage argument,
which makes no sex distinctions.
Sidestepping.
“How old would you guess me to
be?”
“I wouldn’t guess; I got done look
ing for trouble years ago."
Truthful.
Owner —Do you like your harness?
Horse —Not a bit.
! Rheumatism Advice s
Gives Prominent Doctor’s Best s
Prescription—ls Easily Mixed. ‘ >
“Get one ounce of syrup of Sarsapa
rilla compound and one ounce of Toris
compound. Then get half a pint of gooa
whisky and put the other two ingredi
ents into it. Take a tablespoonful of
this mixture before eax-h meal and at
bed time. Shake the bottle before us
ing.” This is not new in this city as
many of the worse cases of rheumatism
and back-ache have been cured by it.
Good results come the first day. Any
druggist has these ingredients on hand
or will quickly get them from his
wholesale house. Any one can mix
them.
A Fair Return.
Minister (arousing himself in bar
ber's chair) —All through yet?
Barber—Aye, lang syne.
Minister—Then I must have been
indulging in a quiet nap?
Barber —Ye wis that, sir.
Minister —It was very good of you
not to waken me. I am very thank
| ful for what has been a most refresh
< Ing sleep.
Barber—Hoots, mon, haud yer
10 xmie; it’s only a fair return. I slept
all Bjj-ough your sermon last Saw
bath.- |_ on( j on Tit-Bits.
Critic.
"And whai’q, your father’s business,
my little man .'-.asked Rev. Fourthly,
as he made his mc-. c j ng ca u on t h e j n .
fant class.
He s a dam-at-it l<lqk-it,” said the
little chap, whose father wrote dra
matic criticism for a newspaper-
Harper’s Weekly.
Explained.
"Now they claim that the human
body contains sulphur.”
“In what amount?”
“Oh, in varying quantities.”
"Well, that may account for some
girls making better matches than I
others.”
Cheerful Anticipation.
“Have you seen my ‘Descent Into
Hell?” asked a poet.
“No,” said Curran, -warmly; “I
should be delighted to see it.” —From
Clark's “Eminent Lawyers.”
ONLY OWE “BKOMO QUININE."
That Is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININK. Look for
tho signature of K. W. GROVE. Used the World
over to Cure a Cold In One Day. 25c.
Heaven won't seem worth while to
some women unless there’s an occa
sional bargain sale.
Whenever there is a tendency to consti
pation, pick-headache or biliousness, take a
cup of Garfield Tea. All druggists.
Town criers were abolished when
women's chibs were organized.
FSSWQM
For Infanta and Children.
Kind Yoi' ;
A'ways Bought
ALCOHCL-3 per cent • **
!!» /Vegetable Preparation for As-
Sjsii similatingiheFoodaridßegula- "Rpara th A f <
ting the Stomachs and Bowels of DU CLIO UIXU
Signature ZAjJ
Jjr Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- xF Jr als
nessandßest.Contains neither nt
Opium. Morphine nor Mineral |Jr
itj Not Narcotic |j
TkfryiZy/t • A Ik
Senna * \ HMB M
j Tfotftelle Safa •• J W jWL H
Sli • HpptmM - \ A Vi A
fiiCmioruiUStda.* / a
> •> Hornt Seed - 1 ■ ® ■ • ■
MJ . C/ari/ied Sugar T ■ W B
Winkryreen Ftnvor. > ■■
;■/: A perfect Remedy for Constipa- Ago Qfi
tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, w ww
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- 1 11/
nessand Loss of Sleep IJI rfir 11 VP I*
Fac Simile Signature of
Thirty Years
c PRQTIIDIA
xiGuaranteed underjhe Foodanj
Exact Copy of Wrapper. gbntaun comrant. HKWYonK«rrT.
f Get Well I
“I was in a terrible condition," writes Mrs. Anna Lou ■
H Bigham, of Pelham, Oa. “I could not stand on my feet, I
I any time at all, without great pain. My head ached all the H
time, so bad at times I could hardly open my eyes. 1 suf-
I sered with pain in my limbs, and my back, all the while.
“Cardui relieved me almost at once. My pains are all H
gone, the headache is nearly well again. I hope every I
' I suffering woman and girl will give Cardui a fair trial." I
liAKErAßmiil
I Ip 11
CC 65 fa?
I The Woman’s Tonic i
Cardui is a specific medicine for women, made from I
| pure vegetable ingredients. It has been found to be a I.
H splendid tonic for women of all ages, parttularly effective ■
I in relieving those aches and pains from wfich only women I
if suffer.
, a If you’re run-down, weak or nerves, don’t be dis-
W couraged—try CarduL With a record of over half a cen- I
tury of success, isn’t it reasonable tc suppose this medi
cine will help you, too?
Give it a fair trial —give yourse'- a chance to get well.
I You’ll be glad you did so. Sold e/erywhere.
JUST THE DIFFERENCE.
“Which do you prefer—life in the
country or in the city?”
“I'm not sure. It depends on
whether I am in a mood to be attack
ed by a cow or a motor car.
Why Maria Laughed.
Hiram paused at the door and hold
ing up a steel trap, said:
“Mariar, when, you see this trap
again it will have a skunk in it.”
Fifteen minutes later he reap
peared.
“Mariar,” he yelled, “you come here
and loosen me out of this all-fired
trap.”
And then he got mad at “Mariar"
because she laughed.
If a man succeeded in discovering
perpetual motion he probably would
not feel as proud as he did when as
a he discovered that he could
whistle through teeth.
Insomnia
“I have been using Cascarets for In
somnia, with which I have been afflicted
for twenty years, and I can say that Cas
carets have given me more relief than any
other remedy I have ever tried. I shall
certainly recommend them to my friends
as being all that they are represented.”
Thos. Gillard, Elgin, 111.
Pleasant. Palatable, Potent, Taste Good.
Do Good. Never Sicken,'Weaken or Gripe.
10c. 25c, 50c. Never sold in bulk. The gen
uine tablet stamped CC C. Guaranteed to
cure or your money back. 924
Thompson’s Eyo Water
to remember
M you need a remedy
COUGHS and COLDS