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Established in 1872.
VOL XXXI.
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Address all letters to The Lumpkin Inde
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BUSINESS DIRECTORY
j AMES, HOOPER & DYKES,
Attorneys at Law,
(i umpkin and Americus, Ga.
son -
\\ ill practice in all the Courts.
Office in Court H*use. ’Phone 60.
July 12-02.
m T. HICKEY,
Attorney at Law.
Lumpkin, Ga.
Office in Court House. Practice
in all the Courts.
Jan. 15-1900-tf.
w. C. BATEMAN,
Physician and Surgeon,
Lumpkin, Ga.
Office up stairs in F. S, Singer
Building.
Phone 36 at residence.
All calls answered day or night.
Nov. 9-ly.
L. Grier,
Physician,
Lumpkin, Ga.
Office west side public square.
Residence Mrs. Susie Siddall’s.
Calls attended promptly day or
,4 night. Telephone 44.
•Ian. 11-02.
s. W. LIDE,
Operative Dentist,
Lumpkin, Ga.
Office in Bank Building,
Jan. 1 1901.
ORBETT HOUSE,
M. Corbett, Prop’r,
Lumpkin, Ga.
Every attention given to the ac¬
commodation and comfort of
guests. oc!6
BANK OF STEWART COUNTY.
CAPITAL, $50,000.
Surplus and Undivided Profits, $4,000.
A. H. SIMPSON,President.
.1. T. PATTERSON.Vice-Pres.
W. L. MARDRE, Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
A. II. Simpson, .1. T. Patterson,
J. B. Richardson, F. S. Singer,
J. D. Richardson, W. L. Mardre,
B. F. Hawes, J. M. Stevens, Tom¬
linson Fort.
Jan. lst-1897.
W.L. MARDRE,
Fire Insurance Agent, Gin
House Insurance a Specialty.
Best Companies represent
jd.
Jan. lst-96
CHURCH DIRECTORY.
Lumpkin M. K. Church, South,
I.. W. Coi-son, Pastor.
, Preaching every Sunday morning
,nd evening.—Sunday School—9:30
t. m.
Junior I.eague—Sunday afternoon,
juvenile Missionary Society on 1st
Sunday afternoon.
Epworth League every Tuesday even
ng
Prayer-meeting e\ery Wednesday
sveniug. Kegular Church Conference
tn Wednesday evening before 1st Sun
ay in each month.
Past-day Service on Friday morning
* .fore 1st Sunday in each month, iook
g to the regular Communion Service
i 1st Sundays.
Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society
i Monday afternoon after 1st Sun
ys.
Voman’s Parsonage Aid Society on
mday afternoon after 2nd Sundays.
‘O come, let us worship and how
wn: Let us kneel before the Lord
.r Maker.”—Bible.
Are you a subscriber for the Home
ud Farm? If you are a farmer you
should be. There is a vast amount of
Valuable and useful information to be
found in twelve numbers of it. We
vili furnish Home and Farm and The
ndependent to any subscriber for one
.
year for $1.25.
THE LUMPKIN INDEPENDENT.
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, PUBLISHED IN THE POLITICAL, SOCIAL AND AGRICULTURAL INTERESTS OF STEWART COUNTY, GEORGIA.
CURIOUS RELIEF OF A
TRIBE IN MINDANAO.
Washington, Aug. 3.—Sixteen
different tribes of very remark a I !o
savages, without counting the
my Negritos, dwell in the interior
of Mindanao, numbering
not less than 300,000 in all, and
government ethnologists have al¬
ready started in to make a study
of them. Inasmuch as nothing
worth mentioning has been known
about them hitherto, there is plen¬
ty to learn, but a good many facts
have been collected and a “race
map” of the great island has been
drawn, to accompany a report on
the subject which will be submit¬
ted to congress next December
One of the most notable of the
tribes is that of the Bagobos, who
dwell, according to their own be¬
lief, at the gates of hell. They
offer human sacrifices to the Devil,
who lives with his wives on the
top of an active volcano in their
neighborhood. The monster's name
is Mandarangan and it is necessa¬
ry to appease him with regular
supplies of blood, which is his on¬
ly drink. Inasmuch as each Ba
gobo has two souls, one of which
goes to Heaven and the other to
the infernal regions, he feels par¬
ticularly anxious to placate the
arch fiend.
The origin of these tribes is un¬
certain. Presumbly they came
originally from the mainland of
Asia, though some authorities are
of the opinion that they voyaged
all the way from Madagascar, and
they certainly arrived later than
the Negritos. They settled in Min¬
danao, however, long before the
MoroS, who in recent times have
preyed upon them, carrying off'
their women and enslaving the
men. They are tall, well develop¬
ed, intelligent, and rather light of
skin, with aquiline noses. Some
of them are fierce and warlike.
The most numerous of these
tribes are the Subauos, which num¬
ber about 70,000; the Tagadaus,
which are estimated at 30,000; the
Mandayas, who are reckoned at
30,000; the Monteses, who are put
down at 20,000; the Monobos, who
are 20,000 strong; the Atas. who
comprise 21,000 souls, and the
Bagobos, who number 12,000 souls.
These are only guesses, however.
The Tirurays (in the neighborhood
of Cottabato) are approaching ex¬
tinction by starvation, and two or
three of the other tribes have been
either enslaved by the stronger
peoples or else wiped out almost
entirely in war.
The Bagobos are very strong and
tierce, and one of their peculiari¬
ties are that the girls are as pow¬
erful muscularly as the boys of
this tribe, and it is hard to tell
the sexes apart. They keep slaves
chiefly for the purpose of sacrific¬
ing them to the Devil. Equally
ferocious are the Mandayas, who
offer human sacrifices with extra¬
ordinary cruelty, cannibalism be¬
ing sometimes incidental. They
believe in two good divinities, a
father and a son and two evil ones,
a husband and wife. Earthquakes
they suppose to be caused by the
reckless movements of an immense
crocodile in the center of the
earth. They bury their dead in
holes in the faces of cliffs.
The Manobos are ferocious and
treacherous. They build their
homes in tree-tops near the rivers;
so as to be safe from their enemies.
It is the same way with the Bagan
is, though sometimes the latter
place their dwellings on inaccessi¬
ble crags. Among the Hagans the
costume varies with the number
of murders a man has committed.
When a man has committed from
five to ten murders he indicates
the fact by wearing a flesh-colored
handkerchief on his head. A scar¬
let handkerchief and shirt deco¬
rate the person of the warrior who
has murdered from ten to twenty
people, while for more than twen¬
ty murders scarlet pantaloons may
be added.
Thus it will he s.*en that some
of Uncle Sant’s new wild folks
possess elements of attractiveness.
When a Bagani has murdered
somebody he cuts off a lock of the
victim’s hair and attaches it to
file edge of his shield, being thus
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1902*
[ (your scriber. A own FREE Only selection) >) PATTERN cents to every a year. sub¬ 1
I jl * in
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j -fi!
A LADIfS’ MAGAZINE.
A gem; beautiful colored plates; latest
(aanions; dressmaking economies fiction, .fancy
work ; household hints ; etc. Sub¬
scribe to day, or, send jc. lot latest copy
I.ady agents wanted. Send for terms.
Stylish, Economical Reliable, Simple, Absolutely Up-to
date, Perfect-Fitting ;t; l
Paper Patterns.
MS CALL/ B QigO -<=>
■Patterns" M BAZAR* -r=v
i
Ml Seams Mloweil and Perforations shoo
the Basting and Sewing lines.
Only lo amt is cents each -non. higher
Ask fur them Soli) In nearly every city
end town, or by mail Iruin
THE MoCALL CO.,
113-115-117 West 31st St.. SEW YORK
enabled to keep account of the
persons he lias killed. He wears
armor of split rattan and one of
his methods of discouraging a foe
is to drive sharp pieces ot bamboo
into the ground whore the enemy
is likely to step on them and maim
himself. Spring bows, also are
set in the jungle, so as to shoot
anybody who may happen to come
along. The Baganis are undoubt¬
edly cannibals.
The Volcano near where the
fierce Bagobos dwell is called Apo,
and is about 15 miles to the west
of the Bay of Duval. It has three
peaks, the highest of which con¬
tains the crater and towers to an
elevation of about two miles above
the sea. Long before reaching the
mountain the ears of tlie traveller
are stunned by deafening, inter¬
mittent sounds, which, as he ap¬
proaches, become so tremendous
that it seems as if the solid earth,
would disappear under his feet. It
is not surprising, on the whole,
that the savages in the vicinity
should regard ‘tlie fiery peak 'as an
appropriate location for the throne
of the Arch Demon.
Among the savage tribes both
men and women chew tobacco and
pierce their ears, distending the
lobes of the latter enormously by
means of plugs of bone. It is cus¬
tomary to tattoo the children,
chieily for the sake of identifica¬
tion in ease they happen to be
Stolen, kidnapping being very
common. A man pays for his wife
in advance by working for her
parents from four to six years, and
one of the methods of solemnizing
marriage consists in t he giving of
a handful of boiled rice by the
husband to tlie wife, and vice ver¬
sa, in token that they are mutual¬
ly to sustain each other.
Concerning the Mores, whose an¬
cestors probably came from Bor¬
neo and Celebes there is a good
deal of contradictory testimony.
It is admitted that the Moro is a
man built for the fatigues of war
He excels in the use of lance,buck¬
ler and sword (having small knowl
edge of fire arms) and these weap¬
ons are his inseparable compan¬
ions. He sleeps with them and he
lights equally well on foot, on
horseback, or in his fleet war ca¬
noe. Jt has been charged that he
is absolutely indifferent to blood¬
shed or suffering, and that he will
take the life of a slave or stranger
merely to try the keenness of a
new weapon. Looking upon work
its a disgrace, his scheme of life
consists of making slaves of less
warlike men, to work for him, and
taking their best looking girls for
his harem.
On the other hand, some of our
observant army officers recently in
Mindanao declare that the Morns
are very like the best of our North
American Indians, such its the Nez
Berces and Northern Cheyennes,
in features and manners, in their
love of independence and in per¬
sonal dignity and pride. They are
apt to be courteous, light-hearted
and improvident. Their sense of
humor is strong, and they are
amenable to argument and rea¬
son. Their dislike for work is
rather the warrior’s contempt for
labor then mere laziness. As an
almost invariable rule tln-ir slaves
are well treated, being regarded as
retainers rather than as s rfs.
While n.ot at all disposed to inter¬
with other people’s religion,
they will tolerate no meddling
with their own faith and religions
practices.
Though no reliable figures are
obtainable it is believed, that there
are about 500,000 Mores in Min¬
danao. Seine authorities say only
300,000, however. They are found
all along the- south and went coast
of the island, but the greatest as¬
semblage of them is in the neigh¬
borhood of Lake Lanaoi It is the
present policy of our government
not to interfere with the practids
of slavery, which is likely to be
gradually abandoned. The
as a rule, are disposed to lie very
friendly when treated as equals,
and by following out that idea tlit*
Americans have accompanied with
them what the Spaniards, who be¬
haved very haughtily toward them,
could not do in 300 years. The
recent trouble seems to have ceas¬
ed and our troops are being grad¬
ually withdrawn. We have built
a town called Malabong, on the
coast, not far from Lake Lanao,
chieily for a market.
Before long quite a lot of inter¬
esting information will be gained
about this new island of ours,
which comprises one-third of the
land area of the archipelago, and
which contains so many curious
peoples, not to mention huge croc¬
odiles, boas of extraordinary size,
and a creature called the “cagu
ang,” which is a sort of cross be¬
tween a monkey ' and a bat.
RENE HAGUE.
Cninteil Fariigraphs.
No woman is a heroine t< her
dressmaker.
Deaf and dumb brides an tin
speakably happy.
A man isn’t necessarily an angel
because lie flies high. *
Any woman with a dbntinuous
smile usually has new j-d'e teeth.
If there is anything ridiculous
about a wig it is the head it cov¬
ers.
Fortunate is the young man who
possesses a full set of good habits.
Most men would rather borrow
than bo caught, begging or stealing.
One active cause of a shrinkage
in values is the assessor’s visit.
The poor girl thinks it’s posi¬
tively wicked for a man to marry
for money.
According to the small boy’s
version a thin slice of cake is bet¬
ter than no bread.
A true Christian is a man who
loves his neighbor’s small boy ns
he does himself.
When two men are unable to
agree they usually leave it to the
man behind the bar.
Many a man makes a fool of
himself because he hasn’t the mor¬
al courage to do otherwise.
It is but natural that the board¬
ing school girl would rather board
than keep house after she is mar¬
ried.—Chicago Daily News.
(Jen. Evans’ Charity.
Atlanta, Aug. 4.—Gen. Clement
A. Evans of the prison commis¬
sion is very much interested in
Arthur Elliot, tin* 12-year-old boy,
who recently served a term of two
years in the penitentiary for steal¬
ing watermelons from it store in
Atlanta.
The young boy is at homo with
his parents, hut Gen. Evans has
determined to lake him in charge
see that In* goes to school. He
will lie start'd to the public
schools in September, and will he
kept there. lie is a bright young¬
ster, and will no doubt do well.
“1 do not believe he was guilty
of that crime,’’ said-Gen. Evans
to-day. “While lie might have
been connected with it, 1 think he
was led into it and that he
was not responsible. 1 am very
much interested m the boy, and i
will do all 1 can for him.”
Elliott served two years at tin*
state prison (arm. He would have
be,*n pardoned by the commission,
t>iit bis parents declined to accept
it, on the ground that he would
have to be sen! in a reformatory.
Alvin, Tex , Aug. li.—Fire to-day
destroyed two blocks of business
houses, about fifteen linns losing
all of their stock. Loss $100,000.
»#tir *
■s w i
e
v
MR.S, L. S. ADAMS,
Of (.nlvimiuii, Texas.
"Wine of Cardui is indeed a blessing
to tired women. Having suffered for
seven years with weakness and bear
eral ing-down doctors pains, and having tried sev¬
and different remedies
with no success, your Wine of Cardui
j was the only tiling which helped tne,
! and eventually cured me it seemed to
build up the weak parts, strengthen
the system and correct irregularities.''
By “tired women” Mrs. Adams
means nervous women who have
disordered menses, falling of the
womb, ovarian troubles or any of
these ailments that women have.
You can cure yourself at home with
this great women's remedy. Wine
of Cardui. Wine of Cardui has
cured thousands of cases which
doctors have failed to benefit. Why
not begin to get well today? All
druggists stomach, have $1.00 bottles. For
any liver or bowel disor¬
der Tliedford’s Black-Draught
should be used.
For advice and literature, address, j?I vlmr
symptoms. The Ij&dles' Advisory Depart¬
ment. The Chattanooga Medicine ('■
Chattanooga, Tenn.
WINEo'CARDUi
Cotton Crop.
Washington, Ang. 4.—The month
ly report of the statistician of the
department of agriculture shows
the average condition of “otton on
July 25 to have been 81.9 as com¬
pared with 84.7 oti Juno 25, 71.2
on July 25, 1901, 76 on August 1,
1900, 84 on August 1, 1899, and a
ten year average of 82.8.
Except in Texas and Oklahoma,
which report averages of condition
on July 25 4 points higher than
last month, Indian Territory,w here
there has been an improvement
of 6 points, and Missouri, where
there is no appreciable change, a
more or less marked d dcrioration
is reported from the entire cotton
belt, the decline amounting to 1
point in Virginia, 2 in Arkansas,
4 in Louisiana, 5 in Mississippi, 6
in Tennessee, 7 in North and South
Carolina and Alabama, 8 in Geor¬
gia and 12 in Florida. There is a
marked absence of uniformity o ('
condition even in the states mak¬
ing the most unfavorable showing,
not a few counties reporting far
above the average and some even
reaching the high figure of 100.
The condition in the principal
states is reported as follows:
North Carolina, 86; South Caro¬
lina, 88; Georgia, 83; Florida, 84;
Alabama, 77; Mississipi, 80; Lou¬
isiana, 81; Texas, 77; Arkansas,
92; Tennessee, 92; Oklahoma, 94;
Indinn Territory, 95.
Rome, Ga., Aug. 4.—Itouusaville
& Bro., have closed a sale with a
Cincinnati (inn for 10,000 crates
of Liberia peaches from one orch¬
ard of 20,000 trees. The price paid
was $1.25 per crate.
The fruit will be loaded near the
orchards at Chamber’s station on
the Southern road, six miles from
Rome. This is the large,t single
sale of fruit ever made in Floyd
county. This is the first year the
trees have borne.
Nashville, Tenn., Aug. 4-Arm
cd with dynamite to blow ins way ;
out of prison tilts llvatt, t rain j
robber and d< sporadn, to-night led j
a desperate band of sixteen con -1
victs to liberty from the Tennessee !
penitentiary. Fifteen of tlie <*«- ;
raping party got entirely dear I’d-! of j
the premises, and only one, i
ward Carney, a safe blower, sent
up from Nashville, paid the
ty of death in the hold iinder(ak-i
ing.
,, Covington, , ,, (hi Aug. , (,.—Since ,, ■ I
The Journal's publi . ’ation of |
ex-1
tracts from the article written to !
Prof, Andrew Sh'dd, of Emory
College, Oxford, for The Allantic
Monthly, indignation here
been growing more intense each
day. 1 he condemnation , , of the nr
tide with its views on Ibe negro
question culminated last , )ig | )t
when a stulfed effigy of Prof. Sledd
was burned in public by a crowd
of citizens.
A TALE OF TWO CITIES.
The Perils of Living Near tlie Me*
ienit Boundary Line.
“Some peculiar conditions prevail at
the twin cities of Nogales, Mexico,
and Nogales, Ariz„” said the Detroiter,
who recently returned from a visit to
Mexico. “The international boundary
line is formed by a street that divides
the two towns, and tlie boundary
stakes are set out with a very nice
regard for technicalities. There is a
saloon there which lias more than a
local reputation, and ilie proprietor is
certainly an enterprising individual.
Ilis saloon is located on the street di¬
viding ilie two counties and at a point
where the dividing line is not dearly
deiined. The patron of this saloon
buys his drink in America, and, step¬
ping across the lmll, he buys his cigar
In Mexico. In this way the proprietor
avoids the duty on imported cigars
and can provide his customers with
the best make at lower prices than
most of his competitors.
“They tell an amusing story about nil
American who imbibed too much light¬
ing whisky at tins saloon. When lie
arrived at a certain stage, he allowed
his prejudices to get the better of him,
and, standing near the boundary line
of liis own country, he heaped anathe¬
mas and hurled defiances at the people
across the border. A couple of Mexi¬
can officers stood across Ilie street al¬
most within reach of the pugnacious
American, hoping that lie would stroll
across into Mexico, lie did get over
there after awhile, although the trip
was wholly unpremeditated. During
a harangue against Mexican institu¬
tions In general and the police in par¬
ticular he happened to lurch too far
over to starboard and fell into Mexico.
The alert cops promptly grabbed him,
and, though lie didn't get a chance to
take in the sights, he paid quite an ex¬
tended visit to tlie country he had so
eloquently maligned.”—Detroit Free
Pt;ess.
LONG RANGE BAPTISM.
Chrl.t.iifnii’ In Seotliiml Was Con-
ductotl Under DUHciiltiex.
In wide and sparsely populated high¬
land districts of Scotland it not infre¬
quently happens that a parent is oblig¬
ed to walk a distance of five or six
miles with an infant for baptism.
It is related of a ininister'of the
north that he agreed to accommodate
a parishioner thus situated by meet¬
ing him at a stream midway between
tlie parents' house and the manse and
there baptizing the child at the run¬
It so happened that by the time the
parties came to opposite sides of the
bourn heavy rains had swollen it into
a rapid torrent, so that neither party
could approach tlie other.
Unwilling to turn hack with tlio
“bairn" uubuptized, tlie farmer pro¬
posed that the minister should splash
water across. Accordingly the minister
stepped down to the stream and en¬
deavored to throw handfuls of water
on the farmer’s baby,
“llu'e ye got ony o’ that?” lie cried
at each successive splash.
“De’il a spuirge,” was the reply.
At. last a few of the splashes wore
communicated to tlie infant’s face,
and the ceremony was then concluded
In the usual form.
Before retiring to their respective
homes the farmer produced a bottle of
whisky, crying across, "As 1 cumin
offer ye a glass owre the lieid o’ this,
here's the bottle—kopp!” And lie threw
It across tlie stream.
The bottle was caught, it is related,
with a precision that betokened on tlie
part of liis reverence, if not considera¬
ble practice, at least considerable dex¬
terity.—Stray' Stories.
CuuKht u Tartar.
Like so many of liis learned brethren
in (lie Church of England, the late
Canon Carter was the terror of com¬
positors. liis was perhaps, after Dean
Stanley’s, (lie very worst handwriting
of the last century.
About 18S0 tlie then bishop of Lich¬
field, Dr. Maelagiin, surprised one of
liis secretaries by saying: “I have
hardly ever received ail anonymous
letter, but 1 got one this morning. It is
very badly written, and I can hardly
make it out, hut from tlie signature it
is sure to he abusive. The man has
signed himself ‘A Tartar.’ See if you
can make it out.”
The secretary, who knew tlie hand¬
writing, rather startled liis lordship by
rejoining: “It’s nothing alarming. It’s
only a note from Canon Carter of
Clewer!”—London Tit-Bits.
Lira of III** While Kind.
TJ)e w , i0 , e fa|)I , c of BOclal int ,,„
coln . se j s interwoven witli what wottlil
be lies iieeonling to a strict code. Some
are pleasant fictions that deceive no¬
body. Most of them have their genesis
in a kindly, cheerful desire to avoid
Riving pain. These polite untruths are
the lubricant of society. They wear
away the rough edges, take away tlie
sting out of uncomfortable facts. They
«re the flower Of courtesy, “the pine
apple perfume of politeness.”—Wash¬
ington Times.
The lies ( Litter.
Hiram—That hoy of yours wliat wont
to college could do some powerful, lift
lag * with the clubs and dumbbells.
)as Yos , but j aIwa y 8 thought more
of the other one’s lifting powers.
Hiram-DId he lift dumbbells and the
Bee?
Silas—No; he lifted the mortgage.—
Philadelphia Record.
" ill ‘ cv< ’ ly oxol,ion 11,0 1,081 mon
can do hut a moderate amount of good,
])Ut !t SC ems in the power of the most
contemptible individual to do incalcula
ble mischlef.-Washlngton Irving.
The man who gets up to make tlie
fire docs not always get ids share of
the heat.—Saturday Evening Post.
Terms, $1.00 Per Annum
NO. 25.
BUY THE
SEWING MACHINE
Do not be deceived by those who ad¬
vertise a $60.00 Sewing Machine for
$20.00. This kind of a machine can
be bought from us or any of our
dealers from $15.00 to $18.00.
WE MAKE A VARIETY.
THE NEW HOME IS THE BEST.
Tlie Feed determines the strength or
weakness of Sewing Machines. The
Double Feed combined with oilier
strong best points Sewing makes Machine the Stew buy. If nine
tlie to
Write MRCM showing ferent tlie dif¬
Hewing styles of
manufacture Machines
we and prices before purchasing
THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO.
ORANGE, MASS.
38 Union Sq. N. Y., Chicago, Ill., Atlanta, Ga.,
£t» Louis,Mo., Dallas,Tex., San Francisco, Cal
FOR SALE BY
T. L. TRAMMELL.
The Commoner.
(Mr. Bryan’s Paper.)
Tin* ('oftuitoruM* has attained within
six moiilhs from ilate of tlie first issue
;>. «■ i ren Lit ion of 1000,000 copies.
;'i regoril probably never equaled in tlie
history of American periodical litera¬
ture. The miparaleled growth of this
paper demonstrates that there is room
in th- newspaper field for a national
paper devoted to tin* discussion of po
lit ieal, economic, and social problems.
To t lie col u in ns of The (loin in oner M r.
Bryan contributes his best efforts;
and his review of political events as
they arise from time to time can not
fail to interest those who study public
quest ions.
The Commoner's regular subscrip¬
tion price is $1.00 per year. We have
arranged with Mr. liryan whereby we
can furnish his paper and 'I'hk Isint
I'UNDKXT together for one year for
$1.50 The regular subscript ion price
of Ilie two papers when subscribed for
separately is $2.(HI.
Til K CKITKKION.
The Hunt UliiKl-rHtwd Montiily M:ig;aziin*
The Kind Publisht'iL $1.00 u
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