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r> A. i l y ^MS EVENING
Savannah Recorder.
VOL I.—No. 95.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
R. M. OEME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
JSk-t 161 BA.Y STREET,
By J. STERN.
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ters of interest solicited.
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twelve months a liberal reduction from our
regular rates will be made.
-- All correspondence should be addressed, Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
the pjace of the Saturday evening edition,
which will make six full issues for the week.
*S-We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
An Artful Widow.
It is universally conceded that wid¬
ows’—and especially young widows—
are the most artful creatures in the
world. They seem to know intuitively
all of a man’s weaknesses, and to play
upon them remorselessly. Some ladies
a few days since were discussing a lit¬
tle incident that recently occurred, in
which this peculiarity was conspicu
ously displayed. A wealthy young
widow had won the affections of a cer¬
tain youth, speedy and there marriage, was every when indica¬ the
tion of a
old —unexpectedly gentleman—the interposed young man’s decided father
a
negative. He was a staid old deacon,
and himself a widower. His objections
in themselves were trivial. He had
disliked the widow’s father, and the
feud of a long time ago he sought to
revive for the benefit of the descendants,
who, perhaps, had never heard of it.
Still the old gentleman was implacable,
and there was nothing left but to yield
an apparent But acquiescence reckoned in without his com- his
mands. he
host when he thought to circumvent
that pretty little widow. The young
people laid their heads together, ana
the result was a plan of operations
which, could the old deacon have
known the true'inwardness of it, would
have given him additional reason for
believing in the total depravity of
human’ nature.
The dutiful eon ceased his attentions
and went about gloomy and dissatis¬
fied, while the widow bloomed out into
a radiant picture of loveliness. When¬
ever she-met the old deacon, which was
often, she lavished upon him her sweet¬
est and most bewitching smiles. He
came to reward her attentively* and his
tender eyes were always sure to encounter a
pensive lace, which ere long
begun deacon’s to play sober wild work with the old
affections. She threw
herself in his way, and won upon his
heart fast and irresistibly. It was only
a few weeks before the old gentleman
was compelled to acknowledge that he
was head over ears in love with that
charming relict. The scruples which
he entertained for his son never oc¬
curred to him as being of sufficient im¬
portance to influence his own conduct.
And so he proposed.
such “Oh, thing,” Deacoft, protested I never thought any
the beautiful
woman.
“But you must have thought of it.
Yon have surely seen that I was loving
you.”
“But I thought you objected to my
family. You said that none of my
father’s olr'dren should ever come into
your family.”
“Who? me? Why I never thought
of such a thing. It would be the proud¬
est hour of my life to see you one of
my “Now, famTy."
Deacon, is that really so?"
“It is, indeed."
“And you would have no objection
to a marrriage which should make me
a member of your family," inquired
the artful woman, looking tenderly at
the old man, while delicious thrills of
joy rippled over the deacon’s heart.
hope "Object! Why, I tell you it is the
1 cherish most in life.”
the “Why, I am so glad !” and thereupon
widow threw her arms around the
old man’s neck and smacked his lips
with a kiss that fairly took his breath
away. If there ever was a man on
earth who felt that lie was standing heaven, ou
the threshold of the seventh
the deacon was the man. He was none
and of your Lie bashful Carpet-Knight widow back wooers, good
gave the as
as she sent. When she thought he was
wrought up to a pitch ot fondness
equal to the announcement, she mur
mured:
*Tm so glad. Will and I had begun
to think that you never would
to our getting married, and we loved
each other so dearly,” and agaiu the
widow # s soft white arms clasped
were
around the deacon’s scrawny neck, and
her little rosebud lips fluttered against
his lips.
“Hey !” exclaimed the deacon, start
in ig back in overwhelming surprise.
“What is that you say ? Will and you!
why, bless my soul, what do you
mean ?”
“Why, that Will and I have loved
each other a long time, and I’m so glad
that you will now consent to our getting lady.
married,” murmured the demure
However much in love, the deacon
was no fool. He saw that he had been
artfully entrapped, and his sense of the
ludicrous enabled hint to appreciate
the joke. I’ve made little mistake
“I reckon a
here,” he soliloquized, rather sadly, had
"But it’s all right. You and Will
better get married as soon as possible,” widow’s
and the old man left the
presence with an overwhelming highest sense
of defeat, but with the very
possible appreciation of the artful
devices of widows, and of this widow
in particular.
Attacked by Grizzlies.
Four of which Ferocious Animals a Hunter
Kills in as many minutes.
[From the Trinity (Cal.) Journal, 3d.]
Several weeks ago, in the neighbor¬
hood of Hettenshaw, in this county, a
remarkable bear hunt occurred. It
appears that Dr. Stanly, while on a
visit to desire Hettenshaw, expressed an
earnest to go bear hunting, and
accordingly one morning he etrated in
company with Greene French, George
Burgess and Joe Lightfoot.
Arriving at a thicket, the dogs gave
notice of their near approach to a bear,
and the party decided to station them¬
selves at certain points and let the dogs
go in and drive the bear out. This was
done; but the doctor, becoming impa¬
tient, entered the thicket himself. The
heavy undergrowth made his progress
slow, but he fought his way ahead un¬
til he came to a fallen tree lying in a
little limbs gulch. he arrived Helping himself the along by
the at upper end
just in time to be confronted by a huge
grizzly bear.
been Retreat with the was impossible, as it had
doctor had advanced utmost difficulty far; that the
so there was
no tree in convenient distance, and, as
the grizzly showed fight, there was
nothing deliberate left for him to do but shoot.
Taking rifle, doctor aim and with his Henry
the fired the bear fell
mortally wounded. Another load was
sprung from the magazine into fche rifle,
and the doctor, looking toward his
prey, bear in was the surprised to see a second
same spot. This he shot
*lso, and quickly reloading was yet
more astonished to see a third bear in
the same place where he had shot the
other two. Again the lever moved and
a fresh charge went into position, and
again the doctor looked up and dis¬
covered a fourth grizzly coming toward
him from the same opening in the
brush. Whang went the gun again,
and down went bear No 4.
By this time the doctor had got
warmed up and excited, and he kept
moving the lever and firing into the
bodies of the bears until the sixteen
shots in the magazine were exhausted.
Meantime, his companions, hearing the
shooting, made and presuming the cause,
their way to where the doctor
wa», with the intention of assisting
him, but found him on top of the largest
bear, with the others strewn about,
swinging One his hat and shouting lustily.
was an immense grizzly, so large
that the hunters could not handle him,
and the other three were good sized
grizzlies, probably about two years old.
The shooting of four bears by one man
without ever changing his position, is
something hitherto unheard of even in
the most highly-colored annals of the
Western wilds.
United States Currency
The following is a statement of the
United States currency outstanding on
the 1st instant:
Old demand notes $62,035
Legal tender notes old issue 346,681,016
One year notes of 1S63...... 50,265
Two year notes of 1863...... 14,600
Two year coupon notes,1863 23,750
Compound interest notes... 268,760
Frae’l currency, all issues... 16,108,158 i
Total, $363,208,584
Contrast this beggarly sum with the
two thousand millions of curreucy con
gtantly changing hands in France, and
making the thousands of her small farm
e rs and vine dressers independent and
happy. Let our crops be never so
abundant- and business reach its maxi
mum here, there is not cash sufficient
afloat for the necessary exchanges in
the premises. We starve for the lack
1 0 f money in the midst of plenty. And
yet the population exceeds of the France.— United At States
Largely Te)c<jraph that of aeon i
and Messenger,
A Canadian woman whose husband
the rheumatism, didn’t give him a
sand-bath, as she hadn’t time, but she
rubbed him with sand paper until the
1 friction was heaid a mile and a half, i
SAVANNAH, TUESDAY, JANUARY 21 1879.
BY TELEGRAPH.
NEWS FROM ALL PARTS.
Assaulting British Officers in
Candahar.
BANK DIRECTORS ON TRIAL.
$250,000 Fire in Philadelphia
ASSAULTING BRITISH OFFICERS IN CAN¬
DAHAR.
London, January 20. —A dispatch
from Candahar dated 10th January,
says: “Major St. John, ot the British
army,who was fired upon in the streets
by a fanatical native, is unharmed. The
man was arrested. A lieutenant of the
Royal Artillery was severely, and two
other force persons Candahar belonging to slightly the British stab¬
in were
bed by a religious zealot, who will be
hanged to-morrow.”
THE GLASGOW BANK DIRECTORS ON
TRIAL.
Edinburgh, January 20. —The trial
of the directors of the City of Glasgow
Bank is proceeding tosday. fraud, The pris¬
oners are charged with theft snd
embezzlement, The court room is
densely crowded.
FIRE—LOSS $250,000.
Philadelphia, January 20.—A fire
at the woolen mills of John Brown &
Sons, Eighth and Tasker streets, de¬
stroyed bare everything, The leaving the only the
wall. loss on building
and machinery is a quarter of a million
dollars. Covered by insurance.
ELECTION OF A BULGARIAN PRINCE.
Tirnova, Jau. 20.—The Assembly
of Bulgarian aoblea which was to have
met elect in this place has on the 18th inst. to
a Prince, been postponed to
the 25th or 27th. Deputies now here
think Prince Alexa, of Battenburg, will
be elected as ruler of Bulgaria.
ACTION AGAINST SOCIALISTS.
Breslau, Jan. 20.—The police have
prohibited the collection of contribu¬
tions of money solicited by Socialist
leaders, and have arrested a man for
in violation of the prohibi¬
tion.
CONKLING TO BE HIS OWN SUCCESSOR.
Albany, N. Y., Jan. 20.—The Re¬
publican caucus to-night unanimously
nominated Roscoe Conkling for the
Senate. The Democratic caucus is in
secret session.
A PENSION SWINDLER ARRESTED.
Bath, Me., January 20. — Capt.
George Prince, an old resident of Bank,
was arrested to-day on the charge of
obtaining a large amount of money
from the pension office on fictitious
names, which, it is alleged, has been
going on for years.
murdered by his wife’s former
LOVER.
Pittsburg, January 20.— Nicholas
Jacoby, while who was shot on the street
early accompanying Thursday his wife home
terday. on He morning, died yes¬
made a dying declaration,
and stated that Frank Small, a former
lover of his wife, was the murderer.
New Method of Curing Fish.— If
any of our fish dealers are enterprising
enough to go to the exhibition of fish
which is to be held a year hence in
trouble Germany, they may be paid for their
by acquiring an insight into the
method of preserving fish by means of
salicylic acid. The great objection that to it
the use of salt in curing fish is
not onl£ deprives them of certain high
ly desirable virtues, but imparts to
them qualities which to many palates
are by no moans attractive. There is
not, for instance, the least resemblance
between a fresh No. 1 mackerel and a
tish of the same species that has been
pickled, and hence, as iar as taste is
concerned they might be classed as
But by the" means ot the wh^ch process has'been of cur
ing led referred to above,
in Germany for more than a year,
fish of all kinds can be nreserved as
to retain nearly all of their original ex
cellencies. Itis understood that the
expense of preparing fish by the use of
this acid is not much greater than the
cost attendant nn the nld^r rnothna
while or? the result inntw is infinitely 11™.^ more satis’
fee But
the fish business which this discovery
seems likely to produce, is the saving
which can bv its mp»n= ha •tFaptod
the cost of sending fresh fish to market.
At present our fishing vessels go out I
laden with ice, in which what they
catch is stored, but at no distant dav
this may be replaced by a far more
economical outfit. <
The Mayor of St Louis is a German;
so is the President of the Merchants
Exchange; so is one of the Federal j
so is the Lieutenant Governor |
of the State and its representative in
the Cabinet; so was the last Republican
candidate for the Governorship. And
of the seven morning dailies four are
German.
From Washington.
Report on Chinese Immigration—Trials by
Jury in the District of Columbia—The
Yellow Fever Investigation.
[Sepcial Dispatch to the Baltimore Sun.]
CHINEE IMMIGRATION.
The House Committee on Education
and Labor has prepared an interest¬
ing report on the subject of Chinese im¬
migration. The committee assume that
there is ample power in the legislative
branch to correct the evils caused by
Chinese immigration. They say that
for several years the attention of the
has treaty-making power of the government
been drawn to this subject, the first
occasion being in the second se ssion of
the Forrty-first Congress; that the
President has twice been requested by
joint resolution of the two houses to
open negotiations with the Chinese
government with a view to the restric¬
tion of the landing of Chinese or. our
shores, but so far as the commit!re is
informed no practical effort at -f t ion
has been made. “So long a period of
non-action proves either the un
willingness or the inability of the
treaty-making power to cope with the
question.” The comrr’ttee say further:
“No self-governing cour:';ry can afford
to diminish or destroy the dignity, the
welfare and independence of its citi¬
zens. Justice to the people of the
Pacific slope, the dictates of common
humanity the and benevolence, as well as
plainest suggestions of practical
statesmanship, problem all demand that the
of Chinese immigration shall
be solved while it is yet within the
legislative control.”
The committee accompany their re¬
port with a bill prohibiting the master of
ted any vessel from bringing into the Uni¬
States more than fifteen Chinese
passengers on a penalty of $100 for
each passenger and imprisonment for
six months. The bill is to become
operative after the first of n'- ;t January.
TRIALS WITHOUT VERDICTS.
The difficulty of obtaining verdicts
in criminal cases in the courts of this
District is becoming somewhat serious.
Cases are not rare when even after two
or three trials juries cannot be brought
to agree. The the difficulty seems to occur
mainly from drawing of invariably the color
line. The juries are almost
mixed, and some one or more of the
members seem to think the proper
thing for them to do is to “hang the
jury.” This condition of affairs adds
immensely to the expense of the admin¬
istration of criminal justice in the dis¬
trict.
THE YELLOW FEVER INQUIRY.
The yellow fever experts who went
South with the Congressional Committee
are now here engaged in the prepara¬
tion of their report, which, it is under¬
stood, will be elaborate and interesting.
The experts argee in the opinion that
the yellow fever, which started in New
Orleans last summer, was imported
into that city from Cuba. The mem
bers of the Congressional Committee are
said to be unanimous, or nearly so, in
the belief that Congress should enact a
comprehensive and stringent national
quarantine The commercial interes s
iu New Orleans did not seem to be very
enthusiastic for a national quarantine,
in^avoring 1 lU^The Mississippi
f e ° P j e informed the committee thatm
h e ab sence of a natl0 nal quarantine in
case of another yellow fever visitation
in New Orleans, they would establish a
^ lftr s h 0 t-gun quarantine of their
Q n against that city, burn down the
ra jL roa d bridges, &c. The sanitary con
jj^ on 0 f Orleans is said to be
frightful, and the experts have know
ledge that there are still isolated cases
* “* f 'e pvpr ver ; m n that ma^ eitv aty.__
Duller and Davis.
_
Ben. Tells Why He Voted Fifty-seven Times
f or j e ff_ the Charleston Convention.
[M „ lim , poll , T ri ,,„»«,]
The following letter was received a
fe "' *8° b y a gentleman of this
Clt { :
Boston, Mass., „ Jan. _ o, . 1879.—
Dear Sir : 1 do ^t know as I ought
to write to you to decide a bet, because
7 0U ou * hfc uot U to het \. But set you
r, 8 u ht 111 a “ be atter of e history in which
y ou seem to interested, allow me to
sa y that in the Democratic Convention
at Charleston, South Carolina, in the
p ar m 0, I voted fiftv-eeven times, a.
[ Mississippi, r re ‘? ember lt afterwards ' for rresident of
J he Confederate States, as candidate
the Democratic party for President,
H * ™ not before the convention as a
candldate > for m y vote and that of
one °, f my colleagues were the only
ones be bad ' 1 b m ieved bim to be a
representative man of the South, and
subsequent events have shown that I
was right. And I believed then, and
believe now, that if he could have been
nominated for President and elected,
the war would have been saved, and
the attempted been disunion prevented, for
he would have chosen to be Presi
dent oyer thirty-two States, rather
fifteen, and my experience has
been that the North always got more
consideration on Snutlipm questions of human
Kkni'fv liberty ft’Arn liom a a ooutnern fltPMm statesman a n as
President belore the war than it
from a Northern doughface, and
remains true down to the present time.
JdENJ. r. BUTLER.
ITEiS OF INTEREST.
The gold and silver ornaments of the
French people are worth $100,000,000.
The number of deaths in New York
during the year 1878, were 26,194.
Gen. Tom Thumb was forty-one years
old on Saturday last.
New Orleans has a debt of $20,000,
000, and the Mayor favors scaling it 50
per cent.
Elopement, marriage, twins and di¬
vorce, is the one year’s experience of
an Indiana girl.
Four emmigrants, Clark Hubbard,
wife and two children, en route to the
west from Sherman, Texas, froze to
death on the 5th inst.
There were buried in soldiers, Turkey, in
Europe, 129,471 Russiau and wounded and
out of the 126,950 sick
sent home, 42,950 died, Total, 172,421*
Seven thousand six hundred and
twenty-nine marriages during the past
year do not look much like hard times.
A negro lunatic in the Danville
(Va.) jail claims to be George Washing¬
ton, to be 2000 years old, and to be
worth $2,000,000.
It is stated in Washington, as the re¬
sult of careful computation, that the
states which are now increasing fastest
in population are Minnesota, Kansas,
Nebraska, California and Colorado.
The Rev. Jack Walkinstick, the Rev.
Poor Wolf, and the Rev. Mr. Whirlwind
are members of the Cherokee Indian
Baptist Association in the Indian Terri¬
tory.
It has been calculated, they say, that
honey in order to produce would a single make pound of
a bee have to 2.500,
000 voyages abroad in search of mate¬
rial.
“I have gone through a great deal
since you saw me last," were the final
words of a plumber through to his skylight mate, after
he had lallen a into
the first floor.
A four-year-old Urbana, girl, left Ohio, alone said with
an infant in to
its mother on her return, Oh, baby’s
all brok.” The baby was dead, having
fallen from the little girl’s arms and
had its neck broken.
A rural editor has lost faith in the
luck of horsehoes. He nailed one over
his door, recently, and that mornin
there came by mail three dune an
seven “stops,” aDd a man called with
a revolver to ask “who wroae that ar¬
ticle ?”
When a woman gets a red spot on the
enc j 0 f ^er n08ef the world charitably
remarks that her blood is out of order ;
j e ^ re( j spot appear on a man’s
n0 se, and every one will declare they
eme ]L whisky as soon as they get with
j. a twenty feet of him.
Francis j. Oliver, of Somerville,
j^ a>g ^ jj e p t a can( jy 8 tore, and about
^ pweetea t thing in it was Grace
Matthew8> the clerk Although Mr.
° 1 ‘ T er 7 l ° ld ’ and ^ ° Q l 7
~°’ r he 1 ^ ou 8 hfc ehe “ eftnt when « he
**”**}*• He 8 av f h er
* 50 to K buy a wedding dress , and she ,
ch V ut . °“ but t as though returned, to make the pur
" e, » never
When thousands of our people lay
burning , with fever $60 last summer ice
dealers put ice up to per ton. Now
kind'nature comes into a fellow’s bed
room and freezes ice half an inch thick
in bis water w!, pitcher for nothing. This
„ imp l r !ho the difference between
monopolists and kind nature, though
it must be said kind nature has been
very slow in coming X’OUnd. —iV. O.
Picayune
The recent wedding of a daughter ot
the Bev. Dr. Schenk, of St. Ann’s,
Brooklyn, with the young Albany mil¬
ll0 " alre ' “L. Er,s tu ?. Corning, Jr
made some talk in fashionahle f circles
on account of the new English style ob
served in the ceremony, 1 “stead of
eecortiug his bride to the church the
bridegroom appeared <coming^ out of
the rector s room, as the lady and her
bridesmaids entered the consecrated
building, and. hat in hand, and follow
ed by groomsman, marched down the
3 “
The woodrun . „ scientific . ... exhibition ......
around the world is announced to sail
from New York on the 8th of May
next. The term of the voyage is to be
sixteen months. The purpose of the
expedition _ two-fold. Its primary
is
object is to furnish students an oppor
tunity to pursue a scientific course of
study under advantages rarely offered,
and by the help of a faculty thoroughly
learned in the several branches of
science in which they are to give in
etruction. A secondary object of the
expedition is to offer to tourists every in
possible advantage for sight-seeing the
all the most attractive countries in
world.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
To Rent.
HHO ± RENT.—A sro&ll R&rm t on tli© Whit©
Bluff Road, (8^ miles from savannah,)
containing 15 acres of cleared lana, under
, 6fi , . h
son and Charlton streets. deo31
Wanted
W ANTED—Two Furnished ROOMS with a
stove, for a Professional man and his
sister, located. with References privilege of cook stove. Centrally
J. E. C. 136 HULL ST., exchanged. Address
Savannah, Ga.
Business Cards*
VAL. BAS LEU’S
WINES. LIQUORS, SEGARS and TOBACCO
The best Lager Beer in the city. The well
known TEN PIN ALLEY reopened. Lunch
every Square day House, from 11 to 1 o’clock. At the Market
174 BRYAN ST. Savannah, Ga.
JOS. H. BAKER.
BITTOHEB, STALL No. 66, Savann
Market.
Dealer in Beef, Mutton, Pork no
All other Meats in their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Ship
and Boarding Houses. aug!2
Theodor Grontoald,
TAILOR.
No.BO 1-2 Wliitaltor St.
Suits made to order in the latest styles.
will Clothing wMfh cleaned and repaired, Ail orders
meet prompt attention. Jan 13-1 m
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippmau’s Drug Store,)
JanlXt.t SAVANNAH. GA.
FttANCELIUS’ COPYING INK.
In Pint and Half Pint Bottles.
Doez not mould or thicken when exposed
to the air. Saves the Pen. Copies excellently.
TRY IT.
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS. TOBACCO, Ac.
The celebrated Joseph Sclilltz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker Street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah,
Ga. FREE LUNCH every day from 11 to 1.
r-z31-lv
Clothing.
The Popular Clothing Blouse of
B. H. LEVY,
FFERS for the next thirty days his entire
Children’s stock of all styles Men’s, Youths’ and
duced prices: CLOTHING, at the following re-
203 Men’s Cassimere Suits, dark or light, solid
colors or striped, formerly sold at $16 00,
now $12 50.
Dress Diagonal Coats and Vests, ranging
from $6 00 and upwards.
500 pairs Cassimere Pants, different colors and
Children styles, ranging from $2 00 and upwards.
and Boys’ suits from $3 00 and up¬
wards. Great reduction in Overcoats I
300 Overcoats at the low figure of $3 00 and up
warde, must bo closed out, rather than to
carry over the season. Anyone wishing
to purchase will find it profitable to call at
this popular Clothing House. B. H. LEVY,
Jan3 Corner Congress and Jefferson sts.
Stoves and Tinware*
%
%
THOMAS J. DALEY,
PRACTICAL TINNER an.l dealer In HTOVK8
House Furnishing Goods Willow
and Wooden Ware,
manufiieturer of
Tin Ware, Tin Roofing, Gutters, Leaders, &c
177 Congress Street,
SAVANNAH, novl0-6m GEOn, lA
Plumbing and Gas Fitting*
CHAS. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. 48 BARNARD STREET, one door north
ot South Broad treet.
Bath Tubs. Joboing Water Promptly Closets, Boilers, attended Ranges
to.
Also, Agent of “ BACKUS WATER MOTOR.*
ebll
T. J. McELLIN,
PLUMBIN AND G a S FITTING.
Whitaker street, One door North of State st.
N.B. Houses fitted with gas and water at
short notice, Jobbing promptly attended to,
and all work guaranteed, at low prices.
33R:Zgy
Carriages*
A. K. WILSON’S
CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY,
Corner Bay and West Broad sts.
CARRIAGE REF WTORY .
Cor. Bay and Montgomery streets.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
The largest establishment in the city.
and Fainng Top Baby car^e^ aiiw amn
e^gaged^iu'myabc < u>ry a fhe raost^kiiirui^mo^
aud at #nort notice. mayis-iy