Newspaper Page Text
MR. CLEVELAND
Will Remain in Washington Until
Disposition of Tariff Bill.
WILL POSSIBLY GO THROUGH
Bv iSth—Bill Passed Admitting \ew Mexico
as a Slate—Anxiety for an Early Ad
ournment of longresa.
I From Our Regular Corespondent.!
Washington, June 29,1894.
President Cleveland has decided
to remain in Washington until the
conference committee disposes of
the tariff bill. So says Private Sec
retary Thurston, who ought to
know if anybody does. The presi
dent thinks the conference will
complete its work within ten days
after it gets the bill, and that the
bill will he sent to him for his sig
nature by the 15th of July. Other
democrats think it will require
more than ten days to argue away
the radical differences between the
original Wilson bill and the numer
ous senate amendments that have
been made thereto, or to find by
compromise some common ground
upon which both senate and house
will he willing to stand. It is diffi
cult for a person who has not had
experience with a congressional
conference committee to realize the
time it takes to reconcile impor
tant differences. It isn’t only the
personal opinions of the conferees
that must he overcome. The jeal
ousy between the house and senate,
which is as old as congress, is al
ways an important factor in the
deliberations of a conference com
mittee. In this case those who are
disposed to he impatient should ;
bear in mind that tlx* senate
amendments number more than |
four hundred, each of which must
be to a certain extent discussed by
the conference committee, and
voted upon, and the republicans on
the committee will he certain to do
all they can to retard an agreement
just as they have unnecessarily
prolonged the debate upon the hill
in tlx* senate, although they knew
from the first, just as well as they
do today, that the hill would he
passed.
The loss ot a day by reason of ad
journment as a mark of respect to j
the memory of the assassinated
president of France will, unless
present indications are at fault, !
prevent the passing of the tariff hill
before next week.
It is well known that there are
hundreds of employes of the gov
ernment who are credited to demo
cratic congressional districts with
out the consent or knowledge of
any democrat residing in the dis
trict and that many of them have
never b'*en within 500 utiles of the
places which are given upon the
department books as their homes.
Of course this is unjust to the resi
dents of those districts who wish to
enter the government service.
They are met at the start with the
statement that tlie qucta of their 1
state Is full, while as a matter of
fact it isn’t full; that is, not of bona
fide residents. Democratic con
gressmen have long been trying to
get this wrong lighted, ani now
success is in sight. Lists of all gov
ernment employes credited to each
of ttie states are to be furnished
tin* congressional delegations of
those states, so that those who are
improperly credited can be pointed
out and removed from office, mak
ing room lor an actual citizen of
the state.
President Cleveland’s nomination
of Mr. Cnarles De Kay, literary edi
tor of the New York Times, to be
consul general at Berlin was dis
appointing to a considerable num
ber of democrats in both senate and
house who had endorsed working
democrats for the place. But as
Mr. De Kay is competent to fill the
place and is said by his friends to
have voted for President Cleveland
it is not probable that ar.y attempt
will be made to prevent his confir
mation. Mr. De Kay is a brother
in law of Mr. B. \V. Gilder, editor
of the Century magazine and it is
supposed that it was Mr. Gilder
who secured the place for him.
The democrats of the house re
deemed the last of their pledges to
the territories by passing, this week,
the bill for the admission ol New
Mexico as a state, the bills for the
admission of Arizona and Utah
having been passed months ago.
There isn’t much probability that
either of these bills will be parsed
by the senate at this session, as the
reguiar appropriation bills have all
to be acted upon, and everybody is
anxious to adjourn at the earliest
possible moment.
Coxey says he expects the demo
cratic congressional convention in
his district to endorse his candi
dacy for congress. Democrats here
find this difficult to believe, and if
the democrats in that district ask
the a lvice of the democratic con-
! gressional campaign committee,
and heed it, they will let Coxey and
| his candidacy severely alone.
The new Nicaragua (’anal hill
has been approved by the commit
tee and favorably reported to the
| house. It provides tor the issue of
$70,000,000; in 3 per cent, bonds to
| be used by the United States in the
| purchase of 70,000 shares of stock
out of the 89,000 to he issued; for
tiie purchase at a price not exceed
ing $4,500,000 of the interests of the
| present canal company, and for the
! construction of the canal by U. S.
engineers, under the direction of a
( board of eleven directors, eight of
them to he appointed by the presi
! dent.
Give Object Lessons.
“Heaven helps those who help
i themselves” is an old proverb that
makes a good text for an article
ttiat the Manufacturers’ Record
writes about the work done by the
Georgia Southern & Florida road in
developing the resources along its
line. The Record says that:
When Major Glessner undertook
to induce people to move south he
carried a number of well-to-do peo
ple from Ohio to points in Georgia
with a view to inducing them to
engage in fruit culture. “This is,”
said he, “a splendid region for rais
ing peaches.” But when they look
ed around the country lor a few
days and found that nobody was
raising peaches they rather ques
tioned tlx* truthfulness of Major
(Ressner. They could not believe
that it was a good region tor raising
peaches when nobody was attempt
ing to do it. He tried to get other
people interested in other lines of
agriculture, and found the same ob
jection. No outside man would
agree to undertake to do what local
people who had lived there all their
lives had never done After many
efforts to accomplish something lx*
was finally able to get local people
to go into fruit raising and thus, in i
connection with a model farm es
tablished by the Georgia Southern
Florida railroad for the purpose
of showing what could be raised in
that section of country, he had an
onject lesson before every man
whom he brought to Georgia. Hej
could then say to them, “this is a
good section for raising peaches,”
and prove the truth of it. For five
years his work amounted to com
paratively little, because he was
working with conditions against
him. When local people and the
railroad had demonstrated the de
sirability of the country for fruit
production, then outsiders com
menced to settle there very rapid
ly, and in the last five years over
9,000 well-to-do people from other
sections have been induced to lo
cate along the line of that road.
Sometime ago it was extremely
difficult to get northern people to
believe that the south was a good
place in which to manufacture cot
ton. “If,” said they, “the advantage
for cotton mills are so great, why
don’t the south build mills and
manufacture its own cotton.” Ar
gument, statistics and everything
else proved unavailing, but after
the south commenced to build mills
freely and demonstrated to the
world its unequaled cotton mariu
facturing advantages, then outside
money commenced to turn to
s nit hern cotton mills very liberally
for investment. a
Every careful student of the situ
ation will recognize the fact tintt
while there may be exceptions, it is |
generally true that it is the wide-;
awake country or the wide-awake j
town that secures the location of
outside men and money. The place
that is content to wait in idleness,
trusting for others to come in and
utilize its resources and create
wealth, may be a place of wonder
ful advantages, but in the race of
progress the place that makes its
; attractions and advantages known,
even though they tie some vhat
less than those of other places, will
win.
NOT I NREASON A BI.K.
h
lie) jt ' A
, > '
“Excuse me, but were you at Mrs
j Highblower’s reception just now?"
"Yes."
“Well, may I walk with you as far as
the corner under my umbrella?"—Life.
HOUSE-TOP LIVING-
Loti* E xisttnee of People in Cities Cleverly
Described.
Ttx* City on the Housetops, in the
July Atlantic, thus describes a phase
of life in’ the tenement quarter of
New York:
Then the evening comes; and in
summer this is the fashionable hour
, for the denizens ot the housetops.
! It is less stifling up there than in
i the houses, or in the streets below,
j Often there is a breeze, generally
j from the south, with a whiff of the
| ocean in its breath. Then the
scene on the housetops becomes ani
mated. \\ hole families arc en
camped up there; there is singing,
stories are told, sometimes there is
dancing. Musical instruments are
not at all rare, and the accordion is
chief among them. Now and then
the merriment of separate parties
becomes extinct; all pause to listen
to a single voice that rises high and
distinct above the hubbub. Some
times it is a hymn of the synagogue,
caroled forth upon the night by a
j hoy’s quavering voice; sometimes
!it is an air from an operetta, deliv
ered in stentorian tones by a “pro
fessional” man singer. The ap
plause, when the performance is
over, comes from every roof in the
neighborhood. When there is a
saloon “on the block,” —and what
block is without itsdrinking-house?
—sounds of carousal make their
way, from time to time, to the city
on the housetops. An impromptu
orchestra, in attendance at some
wedding or birthday festivity in
the briliantly lighted apartments
of a family “on the block,” glad
dens with its strains the hearts of
tired mortals on the roof. Some
times a burst of mad melody, full
of the weird cadence and passion
ate abandon that characterize the
dance-music of the peasantry of
eastern Europe, awakens sad mem
ories or passionate longing in some j
immigrant ( “greenhorn,” the older 1
immigrants call him) lately come
from far-off country. The poor Jew
who finds his way straight from the
immigrant station on Ellis Island
to one of the innumerable “sweat
er’s’ dens of this neighborhood
breaths for an hour, perhaps, the
air of the night, and gazes about
him at (tie strange city that his toil
leaves him no opportunity to in
vestigate. Perhaps lie does not
even care to do this, the dull, hard
grind deadening all sentiment of
curiosity in his soul. Wild un
thinking gayet.v alone can arouse
him lrom the lethargy in which his
life is wrapped. Late into the night
the merriment lasts,and then, when
good-nights have been said, it is
only about one half of the company
that descend to take their rest in
doors. The others roll themselves
in sheets and blankets, and prepare
for a night under the stars. A
thunder-shower coming up in the
middle of the night disperses them,
and there is a great noise of scuffling
and running, as each one awakes
to take up his lx*d aipl walk with
it. Between two and three o’clock
of a fine morning, the moon looks
down upon a bivouac of shrouded
motionless figures, and the city on
tiie housetops is turned into a shin
ing necropolis. Little children and
women sleep thus in tiie open air,
sometimes on the roof, sometimes
on their own fire-escape; but the
majority of the out-of-door sleepers
are young men, accustomed ail
I their lives, many of them, to hard
hunks and uneasy surroundings.
l'he glow of a cigar or a cigarette
from one of these shapeless heaps
; of bedding might disturb the night’s
slumber of an apprehensive person.
I Dawn conies to awaken them early,
for the most part, but it is no un
common sight to see their out
stretched forms when the sun al
ready rides high in the sky. Other
men anil women pass in and out
| among them w ithout disturbing
them, and when they awake a\id
j open their arms to the day, no com
plicated toilette awaits them; they
are half clothed already, and a few
instinctive touches do the rest.
Digs as Snake Eaters.
I St. Louis Globe-Democrat. ]
‘*riu- impression is prevalent
throughout the United States,” said
Edward L. Scullins of Pueblo, Cot.,
“that our common domestic pig is a
sworn enemy to all kinds of snakes
and ttiat it is capable of receiving'
the bite of the most deadly serpents
without experiencing the least in
jury or even inconvenience. This
same immunity from harm seems
to exist in other countries as w ell,
i A friend of mine who passed several
years in India told me that the
pigs in that country are very fond
of eating the cobradc capelio, and
| that he had repeatedly seen them!
in conflict and noticed that the pig
'would be bitten over and over!
again in the snout and about the
face by the w rithing reptile before
; the latter was overcome, and in no
instance, did the slightest injury
j result to the pig.”
a r->
P. P. P.
- PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT
; AND POTASSIUM
: Wakes ,J|
: Marvelous Cures
; in Blood Poison a
: Rheumatism
and Scrofula
P. P. P. purifies the blood, builds up
. the weak and debilitated, gives
strength to weakened nerves, expels
• diseases.giving the patient health and
. happiness where sickness, gloomy
feelings and lassitude hrst prevailed.
. For primary,secondary and tertiary
syphilis, for blood poisoning, mercu
' ria! poison, malaria, dyspepsia, and
. in ail blood and skin diseases, like
blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers,
" tetter, scald head, boils, erysipelas,
eczema we may say, without fear or
contradiction,that P. P. P. isthebest
• blood purifler in the world,and makes
positive, speedy and permanent cures
in all cases.
Ladles whose systems are poisoned
’ and whose blood is In an impure condi
. tion. due to menstrual irregularities,
are peculiarly benefited by the won
' derful tonic and blood cleansing prop
. ertlesof P. P. P. -Prickly Ash, Poke
Root and Potassium.
Springfield, Mo., Aug. 14th, 1893.
—I can speak in the highest terms of
’ your medicine from my own personal
. knowledge. I was affected with heart
disease, pleurisy and rheumatism for
1 33 years, was treated by the very best
physicians ana spent hundreds of dol
lars, tried every known remedy with
out finding relief. X have only taken
, one Dottle of your P. P. P., and can
cheerfully say It has done me mm-e
good than anything t have ever taken.
I can recommend your medicine to all
sufferers of the above diseases.
MRS. At. M. YBARY.
Springfield, Green County, Mo.
Nothing in This World
Is so cheap as a newspaper, whether it he
measured by the cost of its production or by its
value to the consumer. We are talking about
an American, metropolitan, daily paper of the
first class like THE CHICAGO RECORD. It's so
cheap and so good you cant afford in this day
of progress to be without it. There are other
papers possibly as good, but none better, and
none just like it. It prints all the real news of
the world—the news you care for —every day,
and prints it in the shortest possible space. You
can read THE CHICAGO RECORD and do a day’s
work too. It is an independent paper and gives
all political news free from the taint of party
bias, in a word—it's a complete, condensed ,
clean, honest family newspaper, and it has the
largest morning circulation in Chicago or the
west — 125.000 to 140,000 a day.
Prof. J. T. Hatfield of the Northwestern
University sags: “THE CHICAGO RECORD
comes as near being the ideal daily jour
nal as we are for some time likely to find
on these mortal shores. ”
Sold by newsdealers everywhere, and sub
scriptions received bp all postmasters. Address
THE CHICAGO RECORD, 181 Madison-st. (2>
A Viek's Floral Guide,lß94,
* L The I’ioneer t'alnlogue of Vcgrtable, nud Flowers.
ss. £ Contains 112 pages 8x 10 1-2 inches, with descriptions
that describe, not mislead | illustrations that XOYELTIES
instruct, not exaggerate. ..
nV-\ The cover is charming in harmonious blending of water Brandling Aster,
flfflorir \ \ color prints in green and white, with a gold background,— (Often sold for Chrys-
J tftuljlL .1 a dream of beauty. 3-pages of Novelties printed in 8 dif- antuemum.)
i 'fYfjiriQiiyi ferent colors. All the leading novelties and the best of the Hibiscus. Sunset,
\r\Uhrn'Vi old varieties. 1 hese hard times you cannot afford to run Dahlia Vllnd Vir-k
z' \ M any risk Hny HONEST GOODS where you will receive . V , .
FUIL MEASURE, it is not necessary to advertise that L * w ■orningGlories,
I uIGLI Vicks’ seeds grow, this is known the world over, and also Double Anemone,
Art AA th * t the harvest pays. Avery little spent for proper seed Charmer Pea,
VOOUrUU will save grocer sand doctors bills Many concede Vick’s „ . , ,
Floral Guide the handsomest catalogue for 1894. If you Maggie Murph) and
i-COIIr FliEJ)sjKl Jove a fine garden send address now, with 10 cents which other I‘otatoes.
VlCk'S F Otal Guidvi ma y he deducted from first order. * * <
- ROCHESTER, N.Y. JAMES VICK’S SONS.
"""'" -T—™™ -—"" ” ■ ■■■. ,■■■ ■ —— I
MANHOOD RESTORED! iwf!SSMfSSK
f -ad K--.Kf-K.ra
* TJ W ness, a, 1 drains ami lots of power In Generative Organs of either sox caused
\j S/ajf A3U by oyer exertion, ynu thlul errors, excessive use of tobacco, opium or st'im-
J 1 ulants, which lead to Infirmity, Consumption or Insanity. Cun be carried in
X P f >°ket.#l per box. for SjtS, by mall prepaid. Vlth aSS order we
a written suai anleeto cure or refund the money. Sold bv all
.£££*AA9jMnttn&££a&;'druKKists. Ask for it. take no other. Write forfree Medical Book sent sealed
LiiOUKA.Nb AtflilllbiM.. ,n plain wrapper. Address SEItVI SUED CO., Masonic Temple CHicioo
For sale in Caitersville, Ga., by M. F. WOOD, Druggist.
—————irnrmii TT-T-Tnnniinirr- — r~nrr—miu
JOHN T. NORRIS.
REAL ESTATE iJ INSURANCE
Office Up Stairs, One Door Below Howard Bank.
f _ if* 0 ? * ,
apiH $1 f y sipAi-arii;--:! I
1 J< n> ■i, w sKssaas*""" I
* Chicago. Oct. 5. lfAt 1 (. V ** w V . ,
§ ** I tv.os troubled with emis-ion* YN^' * Vr-* y* 4. sl *- -; t*bre and j£
i end • artcecele, ana La,: * \ *•
" - : • V '( ~ '' y / 9 - NJ ••:>?riiiut'.v• Vur!. h
E? tned every remedy th..r v: .>o!d as he was. as he is. U
S cSVtmXq . tf ~ , . RESStfKfcLMt vigor. B
S fr1 Tj se it Sc pay it satisfied. I
M Address VQ& figQHL CO,. Stiis American Ansnts, ft I
Pimples, Blotches
and Old Sores
Catarrh, Malaria
and Kidney Troubles
a|H|UßaalaußMkaaaßnHa miaatJanMwa>
Are entirely removed by P.P.P.
—Prickly Ash. Poke Root and Potas
sium, the greatest blood purifler ou
earth.
i/I Aberdeen, 0.. July 21.1891.
’ Messrs. Lippman Bros., Savannah,
Ga. : D£ar Sirs—l bought a bottle or
your P. P P. at Hot Springs, Ark. .and
It has done me more good than three
, months' treatment at the Hot Springs.
* Send three bottles C. O. D.
Respectfully yours,
JAS. M. NEWTON,
Aberdeen, Brown County, 0.
* Capt. J. 1>- Johnston.
To all whom it may concern: I here
by testify to the wonderful properties
or P. P. P. for eruptions of the skin. I
suffered for several years with an un
sightly and disagreeable eruption on
my face. I tried every known reme
dy but in vain,until P. P. P. was used,
and am now entirely cured.
(Signed by; J. D. JOHNSTON.
Savannah, Ga.
Skin Cancer Cured.
Testimony from the Mayor of Sequin. Tex.
Sequin, Tex. , January 14, 1893.
Messrs. Lippman Bros., Savannah,
Ga.: Gentlemen—l have tried your P.
P. P. for a disease of the skin, usually
known as skin cancer.of thirty years’
standing, and found great relief: it
purifies the blood and removes all ir
ritation from the seat of the disease
and prevents any spreading of the
sor>-s. 1 have taken five or six bottles
and feel confident that another course
will effect a cure. It has also relieved
me from indigestion and stomach
troubles. Yours truly,
CAPT. W. M. RUST,
Attorney at Law.
book on Blood Diseases Moiled free.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT.
LIPFEVIAN BROS.
PROPRIETORS,
Lippmin'i Block,Savannah, Ga
AGRANDOFFER!
MME. A. RUPPERT’S
riICE FACE BLEACH
‘•.AT* that there are ninny tti ~
p sands of lad ies in the Un it ed
StHlesthat would iiket >trv
. ll my World-Renowned Facb
V tfty Bleach: but have been
.\l > kept from doing so on ac-
K (. ***■ countof price, which is v> ov
JfsAsE- ifrJ per bottleor 3 bottles taken
/53AWV > / •wether, $5.00. In order
Mss that ail of these may have
•fPgffg an opportunity, I will give 4
NffTX ~ to every caller, absolutely 1
N free, a sample bottle, and
to supply those c ut
v —of city, or in any part of the
world.l will send ttsafoly packedin plain wrapper
all charges prepaid, for 26cents, stiver or stamp.”
In everycasesf freckles, pimples.moth, sal
-1 owness, blackheads, acne,eczema, olliness, r 0,,,.),.
ness, or any discoloration or disease of the skin"
and wrinkles (not caused by facial expression)
FACB BLEACH removes absolutely. It docs not
cover up, as cosmetics do, but is a cure. Address
MADAME A. BVPPERT, (Dept. O )
No. 6 East 14th St., NEW YORK CITY.
Southern Baptist
CONVENTION.
Dallas, Texas.
May lltli to 15th, 1814.
One Fare For the Round Trip.
The Western and Railroad and the
Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis
Railway have arranged a delightful trip
for the Baptists cu-route to Dallas to at
tend tiie annual convention in May.
Special train will leave Atlanta 8:20
p. m. May Bth, in charge of Mr. J. W.
Aieks. The route will be through Mid
dle Tennessee, and the finest portions
ol Arkansas and Texas.
Side trip has been arranged from Mal-1
vein over to Hot Springs, at round trip
rate for sl,lO. B’ you desire to go to
Texas this will be youi very best op
portunity to do so during this year.
The rates are cheaper and the accom
modations will be better than will be
offered at any oilier time. For further
particulars, write to
J. W. HICKS,
T. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.
J. H. LATIMER,
G. T. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.,
Or 0. E. HARMAN,
G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.
Belter than Two for One.
Send for free sample and judge thereby
The Courant American
AND
CINCINNATI WEEKLY ENQUIRER,
Both one year for only $1.50 L
The Enquirer is now issued twice a weel|,
Tuesdays and Fridays. Is an 8-column, 8-page
paper, large size, or 16 large pages every week,
equal to Oils ordinary papers a year that usually
cost $1.00; ail large type, plain print and white
paper. A complete new departure from old time
journalism.
Call oraddress all orcers to Courant A merman,
Ca rtersvtlle, Ga,
I)K. K. E. CASON,
Resident Dentist,
Cartersville, Ga.
Why Do You Pay Rent?
Wiiy do you pay rent, when you pay
out enough in seven years to have
bought the property?
Why not improve your property and
make it pay for itself in from 5 to 7 years
You can borrow the money to do this
hy applying to,
J. W. JONES, Agent.
Atlanta National Building and Loan
Association.
VITAL TO MANHOOD.
Dr. E. C. WEST’S NERVE AND BRAIN TREAT
MENT, a specific lor Hysteria, Dizziness, Fits, Neu
ralgia. Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by
aicohui or tobucco, Wakefulness, Mental Depression,
Softening of Brain, causing insanity, misery, decay,
death, Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Lose of
Power in either sex, Impotency, Leucoirhoea and ad
Female Weaknesses, Involuntary Losses, Sperma
iorrheea c aused by over-exertion of brain, Self
abuse, over-indulgence. A mouth’s treatment, ?!,
il for eS, by mail. With each order for boxes, whir
$5 will send written guarantee to refund if not cured.
Gda ran tees issued by agent. WEST’S LIVER PILLS
cures Hick Headache, Biliousness, Liver Complaint*
Sour Stomach, Dyspepsia and Constipation.
GUARANTEES issued only by
M. F. WORD, Cartersville, Ga.
i e ; *•
-c those diseases of ii:3U-mittf-UrinaryCr
! requires no charge of dies cr
nauseous, merer.: i?i or f.o:s mous insd
*„•%£** iciue3to bj taken iuisiii&iiy. When
™ K ® used
fiL g!a AS A PREVENTIVE
hy either sex it is impossible to contract
any venereal disease; but in the case of
—— thoce alreadyUffFt>sTLji a*kli Arn.irrxx>-
r-cpyi with Gctioi i licc.r and iL-tt, we jctrcui*
£ P Bf® tee a core. Price by mail, postals pau*
Siair £k‘si per bxii., or u Loses lot §4,
M. F. WORD, Cartersviile, Ga.
CITY GOVERNMENT—IB94.
Jno. H. Wikle, Mayor.
BTASDING COMMITTEES.
Finance—G. li. Gilrenth, Ch’n; A. M. Puckett.
G. A. Howard.
Street—M. P. Maxwell, Ch’n; I, \V. Alley, F C.
Watkins.
Cemetery—G, W. Waldrop. Ch’n; M. P. Max
well, W. F. Baker.
Ordinances —W. F. Baker. Ch’n; G. H.Giheath.
A. M. Puckett-
Public Buildings—G. A. Howard, Ch’n, G W
Waldrup, F. C. Watkins.
Relief—A. M. Puckett, Ch’n; W. F. Baker G
W. Waldrup.
Water Works—l. W. Alley. Ch'n; G H, Gi
reath. O. A. Howard.
Sanitary—F. C Watkins, Ch’n; M. P. Maxwell.
I, W. Aliev.
Gaines & Allison,
DEALERS IN
Scotch and American Granite
and Italian and Georgia
*i-7VTHRBL.e.*
If you need anythingin the wav of Mon
uments or Tombstones give us a call.
Why You Shotildfßuy From Vs.
V. e use the best marble and do f lie nest
work and buy in car load lots ai dt an ,
give you better prices. We ca, notem
pioy agents, so we cau sell to* you at
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