Newspaper Page Text
arantihe is on
jverin Health New Boards Orleans to Act. Causes
FICIALS ARE CAUTIOUS
L f i S That Disease Can Be Con
fined to Italian Quarter of City.
retention Camps Are Estab¬
lished at Various Points.
^ New Orleans dispatch says; The
cial autopsy on a patient, an Itai
D, who died of what has been called
Lpjcious fever, has disclosed that the
sease was yellow fever. President
mchon of the state board of health
notified Governor Blanchard and
l6 health officers of Mississippi, Tex
, and Alabama. Arrangements have
; en made for a detention hospital to
eat the remaining cases. Applica
on of the same methods which were
jursued at Havana is to be made, and
he authorities are hopefull that the
isease can be stamped out. Presi
ent Souchon said:
“No cases of the fever are known
r, exist outside of this area, save
wo or three which are directly trace- j
hie to it and the infected area, a
tew squares in extent, is under vig
tus disinfection.
"It is expected that the measures
idopted and operated will be success
'ul in eradicating the infection, the
jature of which is suspected to be
rellow fever, though tlie an tops ic find
ngs in one case only determined this
is a conclusion.”
I k'ew The quarantine situation affecting
Orleans is not serious in that H
applies on y to persons and baggage,
land this will be relieved by the Im
mediate establishment of detention
camps on the lines of all the railroads,
where travelers who desire to go to
the quarantine territory may remain
five days and secure a certificate of
non-infection from the marine hospital
service. Surgeon J. H. White of the
United States marine hospital serv¬
ice Sunday arranged for the estab¬
lishment of camps at the following
points: Slidell,* on the Queen and
Crescent: Avondale, on the Southern
Pacific and Texas and Pacific; Ken¬
ner, on the Mississippi Valley and
Illinois Central, and Waveland, on
the Louisville and Nashville.
Alabama quarantined on the basis
of opinions expressed by her health
officer. Mississippi and Texas quar¬
antined on the basis of information
telegraphed them.
The state health and city boards
of health of Florida, Saturday, order
ed a quarantine against New Orleans.
Preight will he permitted to pass af
ten fumigation, but inspectors are stm
tioned at Tlomaton with instruction*
to allow no persons from New Orleans
to pass.
Sunday the city of Montgomery,
Ala., through Acting Mayor C. P. Mo
Intyre, issued an official proclamation
of quarantine against .the city of New
Orleans.
The board of health of Selma, Ala,
Sunday afternoon sent back to New
Orleans a thirteen-year-old girl of that
city, who arrived Saturday to visit
relatives. The girl’s parents reside
in the Italian settlement of New Cr
leans, where the yellow fever is said
to have been discovered.
Havana Quarantines.
A Havana dispatch says: On ac¬
count of the existence of yellow fever
at New Orleans, ouarantine has been
declared against that port.
Mexico Won’t Quarantine.
The health authorities of Mexico
City say there will be no quarantine
against,''New Orleans. The sanitary
inspection of arriving passengers from
infected ports is strict and suspected
cases are isolated. Merchandise from
ports where yellow fever exists is not
detained. The theory on which the
Mexican sanitary authorities deal with
yel'ow fever is that it is only com
numicated by a species of mosquitoes,
thus the unreasonableness of quaran¬
tine precautions.
Washington is Aiding.
The officials of the public health
snd marine hospital service at Wash
ington are working in harmony with
those in Louisiana in the effort to
prevent anv spread of the fever. Dr.
A. H. Glenns,n, acting surgeon gen
er al in the absence of Dr. Wyman,
w ho is now in Honolulu, has dis
ratched Surgeons G. M. Gulteras from
Cairo, ill., T. H. Richard from Savan
nah and J. H. White from Mobile to
P'oceed to New Orleans and assist
the marine hospital officials stationed
tbe ,%
A thorough outgoing passenger med
teal train inspection service will be
organized so as to prevent the depart
ure of any persons who have been ex.
Posed in any way to the disease.
CHILD LABOR BILL APPROVED.
House Committee of Georgia Legisla
tor Makes Favorable Report.
By an overwhelming majority the
house committee on labor and labor
s, itistics of the Georgia legislature
^oted favorably on the child labor bill
°f Madison Bell of Fulton at the
meeting of the committee Tuesday af
ternoan. The vote stood 17 to 6 in
fa vo r of the bill.
BILL AGAIN BUTTING IN.
German Emperor and Czar Nicholas in
Conference—Meeting Sensation—Much Comes as a
Speculation.
A special frem St. Petersburg says:
On the eve of the peace conference
and with a suddenness already discon¬
cert. ng diplomatic and court circles,
the emperor left Peterhof Sunday
on
board the imperial yacht Polar Star
for a conference with Emperor Wil¬
liam, who is cruising on the Hohen
zoilern in Finnish waters.
The e&ar is accompanied by his
brother, Grand Duke Michael Alexan¬
drovich, and a considerable suite, in¬
cluding Count Benckendorff, marshal
of the court; Count Heyden, chief of
the imperial chancellory; Admiral Bir
ioff, minister of marine; Captain Von
Essen, who commanded the battleship
Sevastopol during the siege of Port
Arthur; Captain Chagin, who eom
nianded the ATmaz, the only cruiser o
Admiral Rojestvensky’s fleet to reach
Vladivtsok, after the battle of the
of Japan; Captain Hintze, naval at¬
tache of the German embassy and
also a party of courtiers and the em
peror’s escort of sailors and marines
with a guard commanded by Admiral
Nuloff.
^ * s noticeable that there is no rep
resentative of the Russian, foreign
°® ce among the emperor’s entourage
Dor is the German ambassador Oil
board the Polar Star. This gives coi¬
° r to a report that the meeting was
arranged between the two emperors
directly without recourse to the usual
diplomatic channels, Emperor William
suggesting the rendezvous by tele
graph from Hernoehand, Sweden. The
idea, the report says, met with the
czar’s favor, but the final arrange
rnents were only completed Sunday
an d some members of the imperial
family were hastily commanded to
accompany his majesty,
Many diplomats were taken com
pletely by surprise by the news.
T ^ e action of Emperor William
. seeking conference at this
m a mo
ment is generally interpreted as an
assurance of his moral support of
Russia in the coming pour parlers
at Washington and Portsmouth and
to show that German participation
in the recent Japanese loan was not
a mark of the alienation of German
sympathies from Russia. Emperor
V ill.am, whose keen interest in the
lessons of the Russo-Jap war is well
known, has also taken advantage of
the occasion to discuss the details
with eyewitnesses and the presence
of the naval officers who distinguish
ed themselves in the far east is due
to his special request.
A special dispatch from Paris says:
Emneror Nicholas’ cruise in the
Gulf of Finland to meet Emperor Wil
Bam is the subject of much comment
in the pfiess. Certain newspapers ex
press the fear that the German em
peror will influence the carrying out
of the peace program, while others
are of the opinion that Emperor Wil
Bam will seek to estrange Russia
from France.
The London newspapers of Sunday
morning noted with inquietude the
sudden resolve of Emperor Nicholas
to visit Emperor William, and all
kinds of speculation indulged , , .
are m
as to the possible motives for, and
the results of such a momentous in
terview at a time when so many dif
fieult problems are facing European
diplomacy. The Moroccan and Scan
dinavian questions are regarded as
possible subjects for discussion, and
it is also supposed that the reaction
ary party in Russia may have suc¬
ceeded in persuading the emperor of
the impolicy of permitting M. Witte
to conclude peace on a basis accepts
ble to France and Great Britain.
All the correspondents agree that
the interview was of Emperor W:l
Ham’s seeking, and the result is .wait
; ed with the greatest anxiety.
No news of Emperor \\Claims
! whereabouts has reached London
since tie left Gafle, Sweden, and wuu
cruisine northward. There is no hoi
j bor at Borgo, and the imperial yac is
must be in the open sea.
Telegrams from Berlin indicate that
the meeting between the emperors i3
as great a surprise there as else
where,
’
- "
;
EXCURSIONS PROVE PR
| $100 from egroes
Fitzgerald Collects
and Have Five in Jail.
When Acting Mayor Hooker of Fitz¬
gerald, Ga., Thursday morning count-
1 ed up the amount of fines already
collected from the negro excursionists,
j -who were arrekted on various charges
Nfonday, he found the city’s funds In
creased ’by $100 covered cash, and with the personal chief
de sk
0ffec (. g tendered by those who had
’ their
fai ] ed to dnd the money to pay
there are still five in the
’
JURY CONVICTS BOMFORD.
Despoiler of Capt. Parks’ Home Guilty
of Agg ra vated Assault.
At Tampa. Fla., after being out 24
hours, the jury trying Harry Bomford
for assault with intent to murder on
Captain C. L. Park, rendered a ver
dict of gu |it y of aggravated assault
Tuesday, deferred, pending
The sentence was
a motion for a new trial.
DEADLY HEAT WAVE
Old Sol’s Rays Slaughter
Victims Right and Left
MAKES FEARFUL RECORD
Fatalities in Great Cities of the
Country Reach Appalling Figures,
as Mercury Climbs Steadily to
Torrid Height.
A New York special says: While
the record of deaths and prostrations
greatly exceeded that of Tuesday,
there was a distinct diminution Wed¬
nesday in the temperature prevailing
throughout the eastern section of the
country. Although the midday heat
was everywhere terrific, it was broken
by scattered thunderstorms, many of
a Very violent character, and towards
evening the temperature felj rapidly
until normal summer conditions were
reached.
A3 usual, the maximum official tem¬
peratures were exceeded by those pre
v ailing in the crowded streets where
the actual temperature frequently ex¬
ceeded 100 degrees.
The cumulative effect of the torrid
ity of the past several days was pain¬
fully evident in the enormous in¬
crease of the number of deaths in
New York. While the death roll of
Tuesday was only twenty-six that ot
Wednesday reached the appalling total
of seventy-five, being nearly half of
those prostrated. This was almost en¬
tirely due to the collapse of young
children and aged persons, whose ex¬
hausted vitality was unequal to the
strain of further suffering.
After a night of altering heat
spent b thousands in the streets, in
t he public parks, on piers along the
rlver tront and in ev ery vacant place
tiat promised a breath of al the con .
dIt{on9 tbat con£ronted the people of
New York Wednesda ffiorning wer e
terri fying. The sun rose in a cloud
legs sky and b(yur after hour the beat
grew more and more intense By the
h0ur 0 f noon the hospitals were crowd
e<} wkh suffering persons . At 3 0>cIock
m the aftern00n came the long prayed
fQr rellef wben a terriflc thunder .
storm and a deluge of rain bum over
Brooklyn and the lower part of Mam
battau flnd sections of New Jerse y.
geveral deatbg reported were thoae
Qf persong who had faIleil) whiIe
asleep, from fire escapes, where they
were endeavoring to escape the stifliug
a j mo3phere of crowd ed tenements,
mb 150 bodiea ln tbe coid st0 rage
r0Qm at tfaa clty movguei the refrlger
, atlng gystem wa a found to be out of
j j order Wednesday, and it *was neces
sary to resor t to the use of tons of ice,
i j wb j cb tbe b odies were packed, and
l fifty bodies were hurriedly shipped
to the potter’s field.
For the first time, the New York
City Railway company issued an order
ermitting all mot ormen and conduc
tors to remove their coats while on
! j duty during the heated term, Almost
ol> tbe men ava j] e d themselves of
^ privilege,
^ order to save all who might fall
j ntQ tke bands o£ the police after
court hours the torment of a night
ln the station house cells, the police
magistrates made arrangements to ac¬
cept bail for prisoners at any hour
during the night during the hot spell.
The suffering among animals during
the day was intense, hundreds of
horses, many of which died, being
prostrated. An extraordinary mortal¬
ity among dogs and cats, of which
hundreds of bodies were picked up in
the streets and reported to the po
, ^
j Following are the deaths named: and pros
£ r£d; j ons f rom be at in cities
^ ew York, 75 deaths and 167 pros
tra ^ ons . Philadelphia, 10 deaths and
^ prostrations; Baltimore, four
deatbg and ^ ve prostrations; Wash
Ingt0 n, one death and 14 prostrations:
; Bogtonj ’ one deatb and 25 prostrations;
five doatbs and six prostra
tlons.
I GRAND JURY AFTER JUGGLERS.
Beach Announces That Probing of
Cotton Leak Will Now Begin.
The grand jury of the District of
Columbia will take up the allegations
that there has been jugglery in the
cotton crop statistical reports of the
department of agriculture with a view
of possible indictment or indictments,
The announcement that the grand
I jury would meet to consider the sub¬
ject was made in a statement issued
bv United States District Attorney
Morgan H. Beach at Washington Fri¬
day night.
MORE TROUBLE FOR EQUITABLE.
New York Legislative Committee Will
Probe State Insurance Affairs.
There will be a legislative investiga
tion of the life insurance business as
carried on in New York state, both
_ of
by state corporations and by those
other states doing business within the
state. This investigation will be made
by a special joint committee with
ample powers.
McDonalds implicated?
Kinsmen of Sheriff Passmore Alleged
t Have Taken a Hand in Murder
of the Carter Children.
It was with a rush anu remarkable
energy the Rawlings’ murder trial
noved at Valdosta, Ga., Wednesday,
notwithstanding the intense stifling
heat. The negro Moore was brought
back to the witness chair when the
court convened. He could not begin
where he left off Tuesday, but had to
recite the sa-me story over again.
Moore told several conflicting sto¬
ries about the killing, and admitted
that he had told several lies in order
to save himself. He was positive,
however, that Milton, Jesse and Leon¬
ard Rawlings were at the Carter
home, and that Milton and Jesse did
the shooting. He said that he went
to the Carter home to help do the kill¬
ing on the agreement that he be paid
$100; but, when he got there, his
nerve failed him, and he could do
nothing. He also made the startling
statement that the Rawlings boys had
told him Carter had $1,500 in the
house, which they could get if he
would go in and kill the rest of the
family.
The sensational feature of the day
was the pronounced determination of
the defendants’ attorneys To trans¬
plant the crimes of June 13 from
the Rawlings family to the McDon¬
alds, kinsmen of Sheriff Passamore
of Lowndes county.
It was shown conclusively by the
testimony of Mrs. Carter, mother of
the dead children, and by Miss Dora
Carter, the eldest daughter, that Tim
McDonald, brother-in-law of the sher¬
iff, and Jim McDonald, a boy of 15
years, were in the Carter yard the
night of the killing, and that one
of them was armed. It was establish¬
ed that there had been a long-time
feud between the Carters and the Mc¬
Donalds, but when the younger Mc¬
Donald was put on the stand he de¬
nied emphatically that he had been
near the Carter home on the night
of the tragedy.
Miss Carter was probably the star
witness of the day. 'She swore point¬
edly and positively that she looked
through a bole in the hearth and en¬
countered Milton Rawlings' face just
on the outside of the chimney, trying
to look in. She was positive in rec¬
ognition of him; she had known him
for years, and could not be mistaken.
It was Miss Carter, too, who was ab¬
solutely sure that she saw the Mc¬
Donalds that night in the yard, and
that one of them had a gun.
CRAZED CLERK DEALS DEATH.
Shoots Employer Dead and Mortally
Wounds Fellow Clerks.
Crazed with frink and the thought
that he was to be discharged, William
F. Wlill'ams, a salesman in the cloth¬
ing store of John White, at Pensaco¬
la, Fla., walked up to the office where
Mr. Wtite waa sitting reading anu
shot him dead. He turned his revolv¬
er upon another salesman, Ed Dansby,
and inflicted a mortal wound in the
back, then fired upon James While,
the manager and son of the proprie¬
tor, the bullet passing through the
lungs and causing a would from which
it is expected that he will die. Another
clerk was fired upon, but the bullet
went wild of ihe mark.
The only statement .made by Wil
liars wai that some one in the store
was endeavoring to do him an injury
and that if White had attended to his
own business he would never nave
killed him. White was one of the
most prominent business men in the
city, having engaged in the haberdash¬
ery business thirty years ago.
BOY LYCHED IN CELL.
Mob Members Thrust Guns Througfi
Grating and Riddle Prisoner.
Wednesday night a mob battered
(low r n the doors of tbe county jail at
New Braunfels, Texas, and lynched
Sam Green, a 16-year-okl negro boy,
who attempted a criminal assault on
a four-year-old white girl.
The mob could not break into thd
cell, so the leaders thrust their guns
through tbe opening of the steel walls
and shot the boy to dea h.
HOME WRECKER GETS LIMIT.
Man Who Shot Captain Park in Tam¬
pa, Fla., Given Year in Jail.
Harry Bomford, who seriously shot
Captain C. L. Park, when surprised
by the latter in his home with his
wife, was sentenced by Judge Gor¬
don, at Tampa, Fla., Friday, to one
year in the county jail, the maximum
penalty for aggravated assault, In
sentencing Bomford the judge stated
that the jury would have been justi¬
fied in convicting him of assault with
intent to murder, in which event the
court would have given him the max¬
imum penalty under that charge —
twenty years.
WHOLESALE MURDERERS.
Bulgarians Attack Two Villages and
Not a Soul Allowed to Escape.
A report received in Salonica says
that a large Bulgarian band attacked
the villages of Baltina and Grade
shuitza, in the Morinovo district, at
night, murdering the entire population
indiscriminately and that the carnage
did not end until morning. The num¬
ber of victims is not known.
THIRTY-NINE DEAD
j Disaster Wrought by Burst¬
ing of Boiler on Gunboat.
EIGHTY OTHERS INJURED
The Bennington Was Torn Almost to
Pieces in San Diego Harbor and
Many sailors Mangled__Hor¬
rible Scenes Witnessed.
Thirty-nine members of the crew
of the United States gunboat Ben
nington were killed and SO sailors
were injured, 24 seriously, at 10
o’clock Friday morning, by a boiler
explosion that disabled the vessel in
San Diego, Cal., harbor. Fifteen sail¬
ors are missing. There were more
than 250 men aboard the warship
when the accident occurred, and many
men were hurled or forced to jump
into the sea by the terrific explosion
which lifted part of the deck and
compelled the beaching of the ship.
The Bennington, at the time of the
accident, was lying in the stream jfcst
off the commercial wharf at the foot
of H street. The warship had receiv¬
ed orders Srom the navy department
at Washington to sail for Port Hart¬
ford, where she was to meet tho mon¬
itor, Wyoming, and convey the vessel
to Mare Island navy yard. Steam was
up and everything was in readiness
for sailing, when suddenly and with¬
out any warning whatever, the star¬
board forward boiler exploded with
a deafening roar. The explosion was
terrific, people standing on the shore
saw a huge cloud of white steam rise
above the Bennington.
A number of boats were in the vi¬
cinity at the time, and these hurried
to the rescue, lending valuable aid
in picking up the wounded sailors
and transferring them to the shore.
At the time of the accident, Com¬
mander Lucien Young and Surgeon F.
E. Peck were on shore. The two offi¬
cers, as soon as they learned of the
disaster, hurried to the water front,
where Commander Young imme diately
took charge.
On board the Bennington were pre¬
sented terrible scenes. The force of
the explosion had torn, a great hole
in the starboard side of the ship, and
the vessel was already commencing
to list. A section of the upper decks
was carried away from stem to stern.
Blood and wreckage was distributed
over the entire ship, the after cabin
and the vicinity of the ship adjacent
to the exploded holler resembling a
charnel house.
A dozen or fifteen men were blown
overboard by the force of the ter
rific explosion. Captain Wentworth,
who was looking at the Bennington
when the disaster occurred, says he
saw human bodies hurled over ahun
dred feet upward.
The bodies of many of the men tak¬
en from the wrecked interior of the
ship were mutilated almost beyond
recognition.
For a long time the hot steam pre¬
vented access to the space between
decks, where most of the dead bodies
lay, and it was not until late in the
afternoon that the last were removed.
Several bodies were so tightly wedged
ln by a bulkhead, that the woodwork
had to be hewn away to free them.
Most of the bodies yet unidentified
have been mangled almost beyond
hope of recognition.
The boiler which exploded, it is
said, was regarded as unsafe. Com¬
mander Young stated that during a
recent return from Honolulu the
steam pressure was kept reduced in
that particular one.
When the explosion occurred the
engineer was inspecting the boilers
as a preliminary to the vessel’s leav¬
ing port and be was not seriously in¬
jured.
The following is the list of dead:
J. Newcombe, B. A. Hughes, A. Ben
sel, A. Kamerer, W. W. Wright, C.
Hoggboom, E. Dresch, W. Parish, M.
G. Quinn, G. Brownlee, J. L. Burns, W.
Chefrey, E. G. Gelss, C. Kuntz. seven
unidentified dead on board, seven un¬
identified dead ashore. Fifteen oth¬
ers unaccounted for.
MERCER ELECTS A PRESIDENT.
College Finally Secures a Head After
Considerable Difficult.
The board of trustees of Mercer
university, at their meeting in Ma
con, Ga., Friday night, unanimously
elected as -president, Charles Lee
Smith, recently of William Jewel col
lege. Missouri.
Dr. Smith is a full graduate of
Wake Forest college, North Carolina,
and doctor of philosophy of Johns
Hopkins university, Later he was
elected to the professorship of his¬
tory and political economy in William
Jewell college, where he has taught
for fourteen years.
TOWN ALMOST WASHED AWAY.
Cloudburst Whelms Georgetown Caus¬
ing Great Property Damage.
Georgetown, Ind., on the Southern
railway, was almost washed away
Friday by a cloudburst, The water
in the main street of the town was
three feet deep and great damage was
done to stores and other property.
So far as can be learned no live?
were lost.
yellow jack appears.
Suspicious Cases at New Orleans De¬
clared to Be Genuine Disease.
Quarantine Quickly Applied.
Drs. Goldthwaite and Moore of the
Mobile board of health visited New Or
leans Friday on the invitation of the
Louisiana hoard of health to investi¬
gate two cases presenting symptoms
of yellow fever, and gave it as their
opinion that it was yellow fever, with
the result that the Mobile board of
health immediately put on a quaran¬
tine against passengers and household
goods. There will be no quarantine
against merchandise, as the ship¬
ments of that will be under regula¬
tions of the conference of southern
healtth boards.
Dr. White of the marine hospital
service has been ordered to the city
to take charge of a detention camp,
which will be located at Avondale,
where travelers can go and remain
five days and then, with a certificate
of non-infection, will be admitted to
any city.
Up to date there has been no au¬
topsy, and until that has been heid
the state board of health will h6t
make any announcement.
Quarantine against New Orleans
was put on at. Mobile Friday after¬
noon, and quarantine inspectors were
placed on all south bound trains leav¬
ing the Alabama city for New Orleans.
A special from Houston, Texas,
says: State Health Officer Tabor Fri¬
day night issued orders to all roads
having lines between New Orleans
and Texas, positively prohibiting the
entrance of any person from New Or¬
leans into Texas.
Dr. Tabor will go to New Orleans
to make a further investigation be¬
fore formally declaring a rigid quar¬
antine against freight.
According to his information, there
are several cases of yellow fever in
that city. The interdiction of the
passenger traffic was made effective
Friday night.
FREE PASS BILL DEFEATED.
Hall Measure in Georgia House of
Representatives Lacked Two Votes.
"With but two votes needed to send
it over to the senate, the anti-free
pass bill by Mr. Hall of Bibb went
down in defeat in the Georgia house
Friday, because it fell barely short of
the required constitutional majority.
Advocates of the bill declare that
they needed but one vote more to
pass ft; that if it had received 87
instead of 86 votes, the vote of Speak¬
er Slaton would have made the re
quired 88, which would have meant
the passage of the bill. Speaker Sla
ton would give no intimation as to
bow be st0 od, but the friends of
| the measure stated that they had ev
ery reason to believe that he was with
them and would have so voted.
It was believed for a time that the
bill would get S7 votes on its passage,
because that was the vote by whic h
tbe adverse report of the committ
of the whole was disagreed tOr-^8”
72—and a vote disagreeing to
verse report of the committ
almost equivalent to a vote
bill.
When the measure came
ly on its passage, however
was 86 to 72. a vote 1
friends of the was t
Cureton of Dade, who vr
the adverse report, and
voted against the bill.
The vote on the bill
after four days of debat<
large amount of fillbus’
opponents. Mr. Hall gr 4
he would move for a -*9
he
BOYCOTT WELL
Ban On American be
Now in Wo
A Shanghai spe<
cott of American
ing, but it has VI4
completion of agv
will be allowed
Chinese shops r
goods, includir^iH ba
schools and cebee and
discard all Al ait Aug.
FREE P/
vanpab,
Dilatory Tact.
Georgia Hoi rcgarti
The warme reserva.
on in the Bog , e>
sentatives arest Ticket
bill is f
wrangle,
are Hr sewing
side s mat
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The > went on a
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busteri^ of the f
in prevt tfrapher and
inf to i
to an ex
schw ted the idea
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