LOW TRIBE Of ESKIMOS There has been discovered upon one of the Islands of the Hudson Bay, the remnant of a lost tribe of Eskimos, a community which hag been for centu ries without Intercourse with any oth er representatives of the human spe cies, and whose members never, uutll quite recently, hal an opportunity of seeing a white man. The facts of the discovery are well established, having been retried to the Federal authorities at Ottawa by the Kev. A. W. Bucklaud. Mr. Bucklaud says that these strange people will virtually .I've -la the shne age, knowing no metals. Their habi tations are built entirely of the skulls of whales. The home of the tribe Is upon South ampton Island, a piece of water-girt land nearly as large as the State of Maine, lying at the extreme north end of Hudson l!ay. These people or their ancestors have undoubtedly Inhabited the Island ever since pre-Columbian days, and at the present time they ex ist exactly us they must have done then. Having beeu Isolated for so long a period it Is natural that they should possess many peculiarities, A very re markable collection of their utensils, weapons of the chase, and other ob jects, was secured by Mr. Bucklaud, but, to the great regret of the Canadian authorities, it whs allowed by him to pass into thu hands of private persons. The huts on the island, are buill by putting together the great Jaws of whales and then covering them with sklna. In the middle of the primitive dwellings Is a slight elevation, on which stands the stone lamp, employed for lighting, heating, cooking, and melt ing snow and drying clothes. This lamp Is nothing more than an open dish of whale oil, with a wick of dry moss fiosked In fst The whale Is the chief means of subsistence of these poor people. They use the bone for many purposes, mak ing plates ami cups and toboggan-like sleds. They also manufacture sledges of walrus tusks, with deer antlers for crosspieces. The members speak a di alect peculiar to themselves and they are the most daring of hunters. Not more than sixteen members of the tribe flow survive. Mr. Buckhind agrees with the explor ers who believe the story that Anilree was murdered by the Eskimos. He has lived for years with these people In their tents, and can not say too much for the kindliness of disposition and readiness to assist strangers. He explains the tiuding by them of instruments and other property by the hypothesis that they belonged to the Tyrell brothers, who In 1H!U, nearly lost their lives near Marble Island, Hudson Iiay, and left many valuable articles behind, including their cameras, plates, etc. Mr. Ruckhind Is confident that An dree will never again be heard from. When he was asked by the Norwegian government lust year to undertake a search for him, he declined, believing that to do so would simply mean a waste of time and money. Nw York Sun. THIS ELEP;iAT IS NOf REAL. Here Is a "freak" photograph. At first glance one would suppose that it was a picture of a young lady riding on a baby elephant But It Is not a real elephant It Is a mere silhouette cut out of boards and Is Intended for an advertisement, a sign being painted on It. The lap-robe of a carriage Is thrown over the sign to conceal it, and the young lady Is managing herself with dlttlculty on the harp edge of the elephant's buck for all that, she looks comfortable. The photograph was taken in the out skirts of the City of Washington, the elephant being set up by the roadside. A Convenient lcarnen. Mrs. Hall whs Just wishing she had some one lo send down town after a spool of silk with which to finish her sewing, when her neighbor's Utile six-year-old boy came in. "Well, Hobble," mild Mrs. Hall, "If I pay yon .'! cents will you go down to Stone's nnd get me n spool of silk?" Hotiert was very willing to go nnd waited while Mrs. Hull wrote the num ber and color of the silk she wanted, md as she handed him the slip Hobble laid: "Mrs. Hall, I guess I must be a little twin) of hearing, but did you soy 4 enls'" -Little Chronicle. Like Papa. "I saw Kluinsey's bnby yesterday. It's a regular chip off the old block." "Why, I couldn't see any resemblance it all." "Not Well, when I the kid It sad just opened Its mouth and put Its foot In It." l'liilndelplila Tress. ' Kaat T.me er H. A DMHit travels over an ocean cable it about 700 miles a second. feJi RICH, BUT WRETCHED. A Miserable Millionaire" Poara Forth Pathetic Tale. Money does not make men happy, dear Lady Hetty, though the want of it may make them unhappy. The fol- lowing letter, which has been address ed to me by "A Miserable Millionaire," is a curious document: "Sir Poverty Is to happiness what hunger Is to food; it Is appetite. The simple pleasures delight the ioor, and those are innumerable. Elght-aud-tlfty years ago I was born In a cot tage, with do hope or -prospect of rising above the position In which circum stances had placed me. As a laborer I passed my youth; would that my millions could reproduce that -happy time! It is sufficient for the present purpose to add that I emigrated, pros pered, and eventually amassed a co!os sal fortune. I now live in palaces, and am wretched! "Care Is my master. I have a multi tude of Interests, and In many direc tions, and my mind Is never free from anxiety. I am In continual dread of losing some of the money which I have so painfully acquired, and a thousand and one unexpected occur rences could materially affect my fortune. The raid into the Transvaal cost me a quarter of a million, though I was not concerned iu that despicable attempt. 'That Is but one source of my mis ery. Money is made to be spent, and I do not know how to spend it Intel ligently. It requires special Instincts, education and training to enjoy the artificial pleasures which money can provide. I have collected many art treasures which I do not understand. I only know what they cost, and the cost represents to me their value. In my library are stored the best editions of celebrated books, but I have neither the Inclination nor the time to read them. My butler, gamekeeper, coach- man ) rw! thn wintnln f m .,.t.. , . . ... , are masters In their respective depart ments, for I know little or nothing of the management of a big establish ment, the rearing of game and the beating of covers, the art of cooking, and the government of a ship. The sense of Inferiority Is always active though I am the nominal superior. The finest wines require the fluent taste to appreciate them, and my taste Is, like my nature rough. My friends have been chosen for their social val ue; they are the best which money can command. We have nothing In com mon; they are companions, not friends. My wife, who formerly took so great an Interest In whatever concerned me, now devotes herself to society. My Imagination breeds disturbing thoughts every instant of the day; my wlfo Is ashamed of me, my son Is eager to suc ceed to my estates and fortune, my friends are designing, my servants are swindlers. I am alone and in the way. I was immeasurably happier when from day to day I dodged starvation. "But this misery Is mostly caused by my being an upstart! I find those who were born rich are only apparently happier. The wealthy are always pre paring to be happy. 'When our new house Is built,' 'When my picture gal lery is complete,' 'When my viseotintey has been changed to an earldom,' 'When my daughters are married so it goes on, and death calls before the last element for happiness is secured !" "Scare Heads." In the hands of the modern newspa perman, an ordinary Incident receives a melodramatic flavor, while a tragic episode Is made trebly thrilling by sen sational headlines. Were Hamlet de scribed In a press telegram, the mes sage would be headed something like this, large letters: "Appalling Trage dy In Denmark; King Murdered by His Hrother; i'oung Court Lady Goes Mad and Drowns Herself; Four Hoyal Per sonages Slaughtered!" "The Merchant of Venice," Instead of appearing under that modettt r.nd com monplaee title, would have been her alded by Bhe liner as "Extraordinary Venetian Trial: A Jew Moneylender Claims a Pound of Human Flesh!" In like manner Itomuo and Juliet would have become "Deplorable and Pathetic Tragedy In High Life. Two Lovers Commit Suicide!" or something of that sort These examples Indicate how Sliakspeare's terse titles would have shot out If bandied by the mod ern Journalist Good Figuring;. School teacher, examining the class, lights on the youngest and Is so struck with his Intelligent aspect that he questions blm forthwith: "Now, my little man, what do five and two make?" The little one remained silent. "Well, suppose, now, I were to give you five rabbits to-day and two more to-morrow, how many rabbits would you have then?" "Klght," promptly answered the Juvenile. "Klght! Why, how do you make that out?" ."'Cause I've got one to home al ready." Cincinnati Knqulrer. A I ii in Inuni i. a a Mubatltutn for Pnpir It Is slated that experiments with aluminum as a substitute for paper are now under way In France. It Is now (Ktsslhlc to roll aluminum Into sheets four-thousandth of an Inch in thickness, In which form It weighs less than paper. Hy the adoption of suit able machinery these sheets can be made eve n thinner nnd cnu be used for book and writing paper. The metal will not oxidize, is practically fire ami water proof, and Is Indestructible by worms. When you have overslept ever notice that the clock gets a look of contemn' ou Its face? jcience For years the fertile soil of France has been cultivated mainly with the aid of cows and oxen instead of , horses. Now, however, In consequence of the Introduction of American agricultural machinery, horses are rapidly coining Into use on French farms, and, as In the case of the machinery, America is called upon to supply the larger part of the demand. American horses are also purchased-in large numbers for the French army. One of the most remarkable and in teresting products of German chemistry is the cubic inch of radium lately pre pared for Prof. Curie. It cost $2,000 and required the use of several tons of barium salts. It shines like a lamp, also exciting phosphorescence In other materials like zinc sulphide. So ener getic is this action that a small particle lights up a mass of zinc Bulphidc a thou sand times as large, and this phos phorescence continues a considerable time after removal of the radium. The terror of cattle, dogs and wild an imals before5 the eruption of Mont Pelee adds to the evidence that the senses of the lower animals are unlike our own. The late Prof. S. Sekiya, of Toklo, kept pheasants to study their behavior before an earthquake, and Prof. John Milne testilies that their screaming often gave notice of preliminary tre mors of an earthquake that were unfelt by human beings. This being the case, It seems not unlikely that the creatures on Mont l'ciee heard sounds and felt vibrations not perceptible lo man. It has been long known that the colors of butterflies are Influenced by temper ature. Experience during the last ten years has given Dr. K. Fischer some startling results, and have shown not only that cold seasons may produce new butterlllcs from the old, but that ab normal heat may yield the same varie ties, the changes being due to retarded development. Extreme cold, moreover, brings out other variations that may appear also in extreme heat. He sug gests that these varieties of extreme temperatures may become permanent at a future stage In the earth's evolu tion, all hough Standftiss contends that they never were and never will be any thing but singular freaks. Within the last fifteen years the new Industry of "fox farming" has been de veloped In Alaska. It originated In the desire to preserve the valuable blue fox from extermination. The experiment was begun by placing twenty foxes on an unoccupied island. In the course of a few years some thirty islands were thus turned Into fox ranches. It was found that the animals soon became sulliclcntly domesticated -to cease fear ing their keepers and to assemble at feeding places. Eight hundred or a thousand foxes are included in a ranch. At the proper age a certain number are killed for their pelts. The business ap pears to pay very well, and It Is sug gested that other fur-bearing animals might be domesticated and propagated In a similar manner. That a certain portion of the blind may be taught to see Is indicated by the striking success of M. Heller, of Vienna. When brought to him three years ago, two Hungarian boys, aged seven and five years, could see nothing, but their eyes appeared to be normal. Their training began with looking at a bright disk iu a dark chamber. They learned to distinguish this, and the younger boy, who progressed more rapidly than the other, was then shown familiar ob jects against the disk, then lines and figures, and finally was able to read. Later he was made to recognize the ob jects and letters by daylight. Another examination showed a defect of the retina, and It was concluded that the field of vision was so narrowed that the feeble Impressions reaching the brain attracted no notice before the unusual teaching. TURPENTINE FORESTS GOING. Buthleaa Depletion of I'inea Drought to Notice. The first organization of turpentine men, known as the Turpentine Opera tors and Factors' Association which recently held Its first annual conven tion In Jacksonville, Fla., was con fronted by the question of complete annihilation of their business, due to the ruthless tapping of young trees and the rapid depletion of pine forests. Ten years ago Norfolk, Va., was the great naval store port of the industry, two years ago Savannah and now Jacksonville, and next Tampa and then what? Professor Ilerty of the I'tilted Slates Department of Forestry has been called upon, and was present at the convention. Newspapers In the South have pre sented able articles on this same sub ject for years, but the writer has seen young trees no thicker In diameter thnn eight Inches boxed; once, twice, yes, three times, so that a step ladder was used for the top boxing, nnd the strip of bark left was Insufllelent to gather the sap to feed the tree. The life of a turpentine tree after the first boxing Is about two years. That meant Hint after the sap has been taken the third time the tree must either be cut for timber or It dies. A trip through the pine forests of Georgia and Florida will demonstrate the rccklet-s manner In which the boxing has been done, and. worse still, where clearings have been made no effort has been made to check the growth of scrub oak and nw palmetto, which effectually choke the young pine rearing Its head where Its parent stood. Gradually ttie oper ator hive been driven south, land to- day It Is estimated that at least on hundred camps are located In Florida alone, and about fifty camps In Geor gia. Nine hundred operators were at thi convention. Each man has elthei bought or covered with options mort or less pine forest and In spite of hli knowledge of what the future will bring Is rapidly killing the goose wit! the golden egg. The end Is near In tbt turpentine nnd rosin industry. A few more years will see a tremendous risr iu these commodities, and no effort hai yet been made to restore the depleted forests of Virginia, Georgia, Alabama, North Carolina or northwestern Hon (la. The "fat pine", is indigenous tc Piesa. States; It grows rapmiy, out. u easily exterminated by the more stur dy plants which spring up In the foresl clearings. NAMES OF LAKES IN MAINE. Peculiarand Wonderfully Constructed,1 but liorrowed from the Indiana. i lie mention in a press aispaicn iron arnnngton. We., describing a urown lug accident of Lake Mooselookma- guntic recalls to uimu me tearruiness and wonderfulness of the aboriginal titles with wihich some of the charmiu inland wafers of the Pine Tree Statr are burdened. Those who urge the retention of th Indian names of American localities and natural features have much reasot on their side. Certainly those who have substituted for them modern Englist names have seldom been happy In theli selections. Hut such aboriginal local names of lakes and mountains as Med dy hemps and I'assudumkeag and Slsla delists P.ashaheegan, Umbacooksua MollechunUenmg and Mooselookma guntic can commund unreserved admi ration only from enthusiasts. They art undeniably cumbersome and hardlj likely to strike euphoniously on the un prejudiced ear. Possibly they, are re plete with poetic suggestions, but thej don't convey them very clearly. Theo dore Winthrop had the poet soul In him but he strove In vain to get poetry oul of the mimes of some of the Maine lakes he loved best. MoosclookmaguntU suggested to him only the effort of at Indian hunter, with an exceedingly ltn perfect command of the English lan gtiage, to tell how he had unexpecledlj sliot a moose, and Mollechunkcmug sug Rested to him nothing more romantli than the thought that the lake had beet named by some woodman after hli Inamorata, his short-faced Mary, hli Molly of the chunky mug. Now and again the residents of locall ties afllicted with such names as thes petition the powers that be to changi them to something better fitted for or idliiary daily use and nre therefor abused as vandals by all cultured per sous In oilier parts of the country. Bui It Is possible that the most cultured per sons would sympathize with the van dais If they had to summer and wlutei with Mollechunkemug and Mooselook maguntlc and the rest; had to say all that every time they were asked whence they came or whither they wer going; had painfully to write It all oul every time they sent forth a letter or telegram. Rochester Democrat. Almost a Pessimist. I ain't a-goin' to kick about the way thii world is run; I ain't a-goin' to kick about the way I'm gettin' done. I'm tnlkin' 'bout the sunshine an' tht butterflies an' bees An' the ningm' of the brooklet an' tilt iiiunnuriii' of the breeze, Instid o' tellin' how the cow I lioughl two weeks ago .leg' nnelielly quit givin' milk which surely goes to show That human nature in a trade ain't wlial it ought to be; But tlieu 1 ain't a-goin' to kick about it no, siroe. The times that I've been swindled, well, they'd nearly fill a book, Hut you'll never hear mo hintin' that mj feller man's a crook; The only proper way to tell my senti ments would be To find some language which was growed inside of Mount Pe-Iee An' turn it loose like lava fur to burn th land near by An' send up strenks o' lightnin' to ilium In n t e the sky. I ain't a-kickin'; I Jes' let my dithVukiei slide, I know I couldn't do the subject justlc If I tried. Washington Star. Egyptian Telephone Poles. The company operating a large tele phone system In Egypt has ex perl enced great difficulty In securing suit able poles. The climate of the countrj Is so hot and dry that good timber U use for a pole line for the transmis slon of an electric current does not grow, and timber Imported from othei countries dry-rots and becomes ust less in a short time. A certain poll Imported from Sweden proved to b the most valuable, but Its greatest Ilfi was not over four years. The company began negotiations therefore, with cedar pole firms In tht Fulled Slates, with the result that ar rangemetits have been completed wltt wholesale producers of cedar poles ties and posts for the shipment of fif teen hundred poles of the white cedni variety, Michigan grown, to Alexau drln aud Cairo, Egypt. Ilnnk Nolo Forg-pry. An extraordinary method of fnb'rl eating bogus bank notes has Just been detected In Brussels. The operator cut small pieces from real notes, and put t In-111 together with Infinite dexterl ty on u tissue paper so line that tin fraud could only lie with difficulty do tecled when the bogus note was held up against a strong light From ten good nnlis an eleventh of higher de nomination was manufactured In thii war. TOPICS OF THE TIMES. A CHOICE 8ELECTI0N OF INTER. ESTINQ ITEM8. Comal ant a and Criticisma Baaed Upon the Happening; of the Day Histori cal and News Notes. The aeronauts continue to parachute themselves to death. . Now for a few more lectures on "How We Did Not Reach the North Pole." Medical science needs bodies, no doubt, but medical science can aiong without grave-robbing. get The dressmakers have decreed against the trailing skirt Street clean ing departments may again be neces sary. It Is hard to separate the sheen from (hp enut trnstu hh nil nf th pm nrA nun. j po8ed tQ buU ja wheneTep and wher. ever they can. The captain general of Catalonia and the editor of a Madrid newspaper fought a duel, but they chose firearms, I so neither was hit. Mr. Morgan's name Is conspicuously absent from the list of directors of the Hi,ip combine. The power behind the throne usually stays there. That 10-year-old Utah boy who came upon three bears and killed them all offers assurance that the Presidential supply is not shut off at its source. It must be a puzzle to military men to note the honors heaped on General Booth, who never killed anybody or Invented a new butchering machine. Filipino women are forming women's clubs and are learning to conduct fairs and expositions. Evidently they pro pose to do some benevolent assimilat ing themselves. The English aeronaut who sailed his air ship over London may not have con tributed much toward solving the prob lem of aerial navigation, but possibly be got a chance to see the sun sbine. Most of King Edward's pictures show him with a cigar in his mouth. If the annual salary proves inadequate King Edward can no doubt secure a liberal revenue by merely mentioning the name of the cigar. A French physician says the ancient Egyptians suffered from appendicitis and were frequently operated upon, as is shown by the mummies. He doesn't go so far, however, as to say that every ancient Egyptian who became a mum my had Just left the operating table. Although the signers of the Declara tion of Independence held that "all men are created equal," they did not main tain that all men have equal Intellectual powers. The colleges are beginning to recognize that some students learn more readily than others, and are arranging to graduate the bright students in less than four years. Several of the leading universities of the country have Just announced that they will give the de gree of bachelor of arts to students who complete the course In three years. Commissioner Ware's pension report for the year ended June 30 last shows that there were then carried ou the rolls !)!l'.),iJIG names, which is a gain of 1,71 1 over the previous year and a net gain of 5,732 since 18!8. The total amount disbursed for pensions in the last fiscal year was $137,500,000, and there are 3311,430 pending claims await ing net ion by the pension bureau. In 1K70 Garlield said the pension list had reached lis limit. The number on the rolls that year was 242,755, and the mini paid for pensions a little more than $33,000,000. Robert Morris said that experience hail taught him to be cautious, even when trying to do good. A like con clusion has tieen reached by a manu facturer whose relation to his employes was almost fatherly. He used to pro vide for the girls a luncheon, for which he charger only one cent although It was reckoned that the food cost him 4Vi cents. The girls struck for certain privileges. Later, when they begged to be taken back, the manufacturer decided to charge 5 cents for lunch and ! make a profit therefrom. The girls prefer this arrangement Even be tween capital nnd labor the "treating" method whlchsbould not be confound ed with fair treatment Is bad ethics. "Have you ?" "No, but I have something just as good." That Is sub stitution. And It Is one of the crying evils of the day. it Is a crime against lie laws of modern commerce. It Is robbery of a fair name. It Is theft of a reputation. A man or a firm devotes years to the preparation and perfec tion of a standard article of commerce. At the expense of hundreds of thou Miuds of dollars the article Is exploited. I'ubllelty of tills sort costs huge ex penditure. The name and merits of I he article are made household words by mentis of newspaper advertising. A demand for this specific article Is cre ated and the call Is made upon the druggist or the grocer or other mer chant by the purchaser, if the nier hant does not keep what Is wanted he should let the customer go elsewhere o liml It. Instead, many salesmen -ay, "Now, here Is something I make nyself and I can recommend It" Or Here Is something Just as good." As natter of fact, the substitute Is not so :ood or tie real article would not lie ised as '.lie stnndiird of comparison. One cur for this wrongdoing Is to limine the merchant out of It The other is for the customer to staf bf bis original Intention and refuse to ac cept the substitute. Let there be aa Imperative demand for honest goods. Fair dealing should dictate. Foul deal lng should not be encouraged. There; is nothing 'Just as od" as the thing1 Itself! Out of the Chicago University come a love story that makes the world feel tender toward a woman. When a wife, proud of her husband, wanti him to have a career, the chances are that she will work harder to obtain It than he will. She is content to live In the reflected glory of his promi nence. She gladly accepts hardship and worry in order that he may grow and progress. That was the way with Mrs. Robert Gordon Jeffrey. Robert was teaching school. It is a Job that does not pay well. A locomotive en gineer receives each month about three times as much as the average school teacher. The one is not paid too much, but the other is certainly paid too little. There had to be a bread winner for the Jeffrey family, and yet Robert was determined to enter the university just as soon as he had saved a little money. Mrs. Jeffrey reg istered in the university summer school under her husband's name. What she learned each day she taught to her husband In the evening. She was a pupil by day, a teacher at night and a glorious little woman every hour of her life. She did the housework, she cooked and washed dishes. She burned her cheeks over a hot stove, and work drove the dimples out of her fingers. But she kept up with her class and did prodigious things in the way of learning, and all because she loved a man and wanted him to get on. It is over now. The male Robert Gordon Jeffrey is a student at the uni versity. He is three months ahead of his class, and was allowed the ad vance credit by the faculty. Some day he may be the head of a great college, or even President of the United States, and if he is wise he will never forget what a treasure he possesses In the woman who was pupil and teacher be cause she loved her husband. It is good to live with fine old trees They are the best of company to one who has learned their language. They listen or speak as one chooses and they never tell secrets. In the fall Kentish country of England there Is a certain pair of English oaks standing sentinel before a pleasant English country house. Their proportions are noble beyond praise. The great sweep of their branches has gone, for they are old very old. But friendly Ivy growing thick and lush about the limbs lopped by the hand of Time conceals the wounds. Their gigantic trunks are three times the stretch of a man'e arms. At night, sitting beneath them, one is surprised by a whisper of wings, and a ghostly company of white owls sail forth, noiseless and weird, seeking their meat while the world sleeps. They are the most timid of birds, but the old trees are their friends and pro tectors against Intruding human curi osity. In the depths of their hollowr arms the solitary birds are safe. Five, six, seven hundred years these trees have stood, looking on the human life that has ebbed and flowed about theli roots. What lovers' vows have they registered! What children's games have been played about them! What weddings and funerals have passed under their shadow! WThat bitter quar-j rels have they heard, and what lonely repentance have they sighed to seel What crimes have been desired or de vised beneath their branches! WTmt gentle deeds of mercy have been wrought within sound of their rustling leaves! Gazing upon them now, there comes to the sensitive spirit a vision In which all ordinary human life has the flimslness of a dream. Before the dignity, the silence, the age of these gigantic trees human discontent sinks away abashed, and one trusts, child like, the power that has nourished through centuries these great oaks, and has kept them ever more beautiful from youth to age. F.ducation Rest ric ted. Education in Persia does not appeal to be very general. The bazaar and merchant class know how to read and write, and also acquire the rudiments of arithmetic. The missionaries have established numerous fine schools In which secondary education Is ac quired. In Teheran there Is a college founded by the late Shah some yean before bis assassination, in which are educated the courtiers and great no bles of the army. Although nearly every village has its school, usually held in a mosque, a large proportion of the population are Illiterate. Of course there Is nothing like public schools, as we understand the term, the teacher receiving a small sum each month from the parents of each of his pupils. As discipline Is severe, a boy who l Idle or whose parents are backward with the monthly stipend has a rough time of It. The bastinado on a minia ture scale Is always ready In the cor ner. Old Knieralil Mines to lln Worked. A company has been formed for t hi reopening of the rich emerald mines of Somondoco, Columbia. The mines were discovered In 1537 nnd worked to advantage until 1702, when they were closed by order of the King of Spain. i When a 'man has to have breakfast at 0, to be off at work by 0:30, the neighbors don't admire blm so much as they pity his wife. A woman Is never mean to a niiia until he has said he loves her. Some little people can eat a mlgbt big uieaL ,