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VOL IV.—No. 98.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
B. M. OEME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
161 BAY STREET*
By J. STERN.
The Recorder is served to subscribers, in
every part ot the city by careful carriers.
Communications must be accompanied by
the name of the writer, not necessarily for
publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
Remittance by Check or Post Office orders
must be maue payable to the order of the pub¬
lisher.
We will not undertake to preserve or return
rejected communications.
Correspondence on Local and general mat
ters of interest solicited.
On Advertisements running three, six, and
twelve months a liberal reduction from oux
regular rates will be made.
All correspondence should be addressed Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
tne piace ol the Saturday evening edition
which will make six full issues for the week.
4®*We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
Ike Pecorder is registered at th
Post Ofiee in Savannah as Second Class
Matter.
MEMO AMORIS.
RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED TO C. H.
I Written for the Savannah Recorder.]
’Tin sweet to remember the days of the past,
When those of the present are glad,
As nature in sunshine oft tells of the blast,
And storms which her sunny skies had.
And as o’er her Rowers the raindrops will
fall,
Making their fragrance more sweet,
So^are the remembrances then we recall
With noblest of feelings replete.
And tiniest tokens awaken to life.
The love lying dormant within,
As birds in the springtime with melody rife,
Arouse from long slumbers their kin,
And as these sweet songsters loso nothing of
mirth,
Imprison’d or caged within bars,
M d O WA the crushed heart with thes e memori es
Find pleasure in what It abhors.
The laugh and,the Jeer, of a voice that was’
dear,
May forever embitter the mind;
But sweet words then spoken, and now sadly
broken,
Doth leave a charm’d echo behind.
The morning of love may bo rosy and bright,
And at evening be darkened in gloom,
But thoughts in its night time, will break on
the sight,
Aud star-like its memory illume.
Nai.ksod.
Savannah, July 24tli, 1880.
Loving A Whole Family.
“I don’t want to make any trouble,
but thero is one man in this city who
ought to be gibbeted !” began a blunt
spoken woman of forty-five as she
stood before the officials of the Twenti¬
eth street station a day or two ago.
When they inquired for particulars
she handed out a letter and said:
"Observe the envelope. That letter
is addressed to me. You will see that
the writer calls me his jasmine, aud
he wants me to set an early day for
the wedding.”
When the captain had finished read¬
ing the letter she was ready with an¬
other, adding :
"And this is addressed to my daugh¬
ter Lucretia. You will see that he
calls her l\is rosy angel, and he says
ho can’t live if she doesn’t marry him.
It’s the same man.
So it was, and his letter was ns ten¬
der as spring chicken. That finished
she handed out a third with the re¬
mark:
“That is directed to my daughter
Helen. It’s the very same man, and
in it he calls her his pausy, aud he
says he dreams of her.”
"Why, he seemed to love the whole
family,” remarked tbe captain.
"That’s just it. I’m a widow with
two daughters, and be was court ng us
all at once and engaged to the three
of us at the same time. Oh ! what
wretches there are in this world.”
"Yes, indeed. Its lucky you found
him out.”
Yes, it is. If I hadu’t he might
have married the whole caboodle of us.
If Lucretia hadn’t opened one of mj
letters, and if I hadn't searched the
girls' pockets while they were asleep,
wed have thought him an innocent
Kmb."
"And do you want him arrested?”
Xo. 1 guess not, but I want this
matter to go into the papers as a
of warning to other women. Just think
his sitting up with tne Saturday
night, Lucretia on Wednesday night
and Helen on Friday night, aud calling
each one of Us his Climbing rose ! Oh
sir, the women ought to kuow what a
deceiving 'Aes, animal man is!”
he s pretty tough.”
"It has learned me a lesson,” she
said as she was ready to go. “The
next man that comes sparking around
my house has got to come right out
and say which he’s after. If it’s the
girls I won’t say nothing, and if its mo
it won't do ’em a bit of good to slam
things around and twit me of burying
two husbands!”— Detroit Free Dress.
Remarkable and Valuable Discov¬
ery.
It has always been easy for house¬
wives who are troubled with rats to
poison them, but the problem has been
to induce them to die upon the field of
honor, so to speak—to-wit, the kitchen
floor. They have usually preferred to
retire to their inaccessible retreats in
the wall as soon as they have felt the
symptoms of arsenical poisoning, and
the low state of sanitary science pre¬
vailing in their communities is such
th at poisoned rats are never buried or
in cinerated by tbeir associates. The
problem has been how to kill the rats
without bringing unpleasant odors in¬
to the house.
Mrs. Benedict has solved the diffi¬
culty and is entitled to the honor we
give to an inventor and benefactor.
She was engaged it appears, in the do¬
mestic manufacture of plastsr casts of
various kinds. Complaint having been
made Benedict of the fragility of these wares,
Mrs. began a course of exper¬
iments with the hope of giving dura¬
bility to his casts. One of her devices
was to mix wheaten flour with her pul¬
verized plaster of Paris so that the
gluten of the flour might make the
paste less brittle. On one evening she
had visitors, who rang the door bell
just as she was sifting the mixed plast¬
er and flour for the third time by way
of mixing them intimately, as the
chemists would say. She had already
set a dish of water at hand, intending
to make a cast at once, and when the
door ball rang, she hastily removed her
apron and went to welcome her guests,
leaving her moterials upon the kitch¬
en floor. The guests stayed until late
bed time and then they bid her adieu,
Mrs. Benedict went to bed without re¬
turning to the kitchen.
What happened in the night was
this : A rat, sniffing the odor of flour,
made up the legs of the table to the
top, where he was speedily joined by
other iorage a-rdHaJarethren. Thedjsh
al plaster was and easily hastily reached,
and the rats ate freely of
it, as it is their custom to do. It was
rather a dry supper, and water being
at hand, each rat turned from the
savory dish of flour and plaster to
slake his thirst with water. Everybody
who has had to do with plaster of
Paris will guess at once what happened.
The water drank first wetted the plas¬
ter in the rats’ stomachs, and then, in
technical phrase, "set” it; that is to say,
the plaster thus made into paste in¬
stantly grew hard in each rats’ stom¬
ach, makiug a cast of its convolutions.
The event proved that, with such a
cast in existence, it is impossible for a
rat to retreat even across a kitchen.
The next morning thirteen of them
lay dead in a circle around the water
dish. Mrs. Benedict, like a wise wo¬
man, kept her secret and made profit
of it. She undertook, for a considera¬
tion, to clear the premises of her neigh¬
bors of the pests, aud succeeded. It
was not long before the town was as
free of this sort of vermin as if the pied
piper of Hamelin had traveled that
way. Then Mrs. Benedict advertised
for agents to work up the business
throughout the country, selling each
the secret for a fair price— 1Sew York
Evening Post.
A , ...... Skinny „ Woman ,. r Who iri W«iuts , ir .
<0 Get Fat.
In inns its "replies replies and anu decisions" aeo lsions to io cor- cur
respoudentB, the Jownzl of Oomma-u
has this curious question and answer.
New York, July S, 1S80.
Editor of the Journal of Commerce:
A lady who is very thin, weighing
108 pounds, five feet uine inches high,
has requested me to inform her how
she can get stouter. She is very
healthy. I take the liberty of placing
her trouble before you, and hope you
can give her some consolation.
Anti-Fat.
PWd Tltpr, •» ,t rU ^ H aPP r A Ki
alike to a 11 conditions and
tions. A lady who is live feet
inches in height may come of a lean
and bony race, and defy all attempts
to fatten her id her early vaars. Bwtshe
may try. Omit vinegar, lemons, soda,
pickles, and the like. Avoid an ex
elusively meat diet, late hours, danc
ing, and all violent exercise. Eat milk,
vegetables and farinaceous food, and
eat regular once in four or six hours,
Go to bed always at au early hour on
a well filled stomach, eatiug the last
thing before retiring. Leave off corsets,
heavy clothing hanging to the hips,
and light shoes. Fear God keep bis
mandments, and spend the chief
.of every day in useful industry. If
this does not increase the flesh nothing
will doit but the lapse of time, and
perhaps not even days.’ this, as she may be
all her
SAVANNAH, SUNDAY, JULY 25, 1880.
The Death of Albert Sidney John¬
ston.
[A Georgia Colonel in the Cincinnati En¬
quirer.]
On Sunday, the Gth day of April,
1862, Johnston, with his eager army,
began his fateful fight. He handled
bis ardent army with brilliant skill and
impetuosity. Whenever there was a
pause in the onward movement he led
the charge in person. To those who
saw him that day, as the writer did, in
all the glorious fever of that delirious
success, mounted upon a magnificent
steed, his massive figure seeming to
enlarge to gigantic size with the ardor
of battle, his face aflame with bis in¬
domitable spirit of fight, he was the
ideal eoibodimint of the fiery essence
war. He threw himself with reck less
indifference into danger. And the last
charge that broke the Federal position
was led by him in person under a per¬
fect blaze of flame and hail, his horse
shot in four places, his clothes pierced,
his boot-sole cut by a minnie, but his
person untouched. It was in this su¬
preme moment of victorious onset, a
decisive triumph seemingly and surely
in his eager grasp, that a fatal bullet
struck him, a small wound uuder the
knee, severing the popliteal artery.
Governor Harris, of Tennessee, who
was on his staff, rode up to him, see¬
ing him reel in his saddle, and holding
him steady, asked him : “General,
are you wounded ?” He replied d e
liberately and with emphasis : "Yes,
and I fear seriously.” tie was lifted
to the ground. His boot was full of
blood and the life current pouring out
beyond recall. He never spoke again.
Gen. Preston knelt by him, and asked
him passionately : "Johnston, do you
know me ?” Gen. Johnston smiled
faintly. Lying in a ravine out of the
reach of merciless bullets, he was dead
in a twinkling.
Could Gen. Johnston have Lad im¬
mediate medical attention he would
have survived. His staff surgeon was
D r. D. W. Yandell, cf Kentucky, and
he was away from him under circum¬
stances that constitute the most touch¬
ing and beautiful feature of this ro¬
mantic death. The Federals in re¬
treating left, of course, their wounded
behin d. In riding forward Gen. .Tnh««
ton cams'.....TmroBS a squad of wounded
Federal officers and soldiers. Stopping
he kindly addressed them, and asked
if any were wounded. Then turning to
his staff, he remarked :
“It nearly breaks my heart to see
men in that uniform suffering. Doc¬
tor,” addressing Yandell, do stop and
see if you can do something for these
poor fellows.’’
Dr. Yandell stopped on this humane
mission, and Gen. Johnston owed hi.
death to the absence of skill and in¬
struments, and this absence was due
to his tender humanity to the wound
ed foe a humanity the more striking
because it was exhibited in all the ex¬
citement of battle.
A ... writer Australian . ....... lite the
on in
Boston CommercialBulletin tells how a
sick man was found by his mate at
diggings murdered and his gold gone
The culprit was found, but contrived
that night to escape with the money
which for safe keeping bad been plac d
in the house of detention.
could be heard of him, but a few 'Hy rf
later came the tollowiLg . Mr. ^ a
lstrate : Jem Bell Jhe murdered man )
was once a mate of mine. lie was a
good man. i on will find his
at the head of Dead Horse gully. 1
have kept the gold tor a re ' va •
Kangaroo Bill, captain of the , bush- ,
rangeis. They found the murderer s
remains—-a fieshless skeleton, every
b °ne picked clean. He bad been sIak
e d down on the ground, with his hack
to an .nt hill, and left for the ante to
eat him alive A more awful retribu
bution can scarcely bo conceived;
Cincinnati Kj mcinnau can^well can wen claim ciaim to io be do a a
great trading and manufacturing
j Her iron manufactures are now valued
at $17,000,000 yearly, while of other
.metals she produces wares to the value
.'pork-packing of over $5,000,000. The extent of her
is shown by the fact that
jher 500,000, food supplies while her are beers valued and at wines $20,
are worth $26,300,000 yearly. In wood
manufactures her annual output is
j d fc 0. §1 5 000 V 000 Her '
, • oils’Jhe’ 1nnnnnnA ,
9 '^ ‘ e an * d k * V 1
l , _ f 00ft
'
bales of cotton this year.
. _ __
i OOl Once More,
to ^For uer _ bed ten with years such my wire a complication was confines, ^
ailments that no doctor could tell what
the matter or cure her, and I used
l )P a small fortune in humbug stuff, •
months ago I saw a United State ;
with Hop Bitters on it, and I
0U o^t I would be a fool once
I tried it, but my folly proved to be
: wisdom. bottles cured her, she is
n0 7 as we -* an< ^ strong as any man's
wife, and it co?t me only two doUars.
, Such folly
t pays.— M. TF. Detroit, V4 4--
Hancock’s Hickory.
Henry Kuester Has a Strange Dream and Plants
an Inauguration Tree.
To the Editor of Philadelphia Times :
About the middle of January, 1880,
a stranger passed my place of business
and asked me if I wanted to buy some
hickory nuts. I asked him where they
were from. He said they were from
where General Hancock was born. As
I didn’t want to buy any he made toe
a present of eight of the nuts. I threw
the nuts aside and there they lay for
gotten. On the evening of March 3,
18S0, I had a suauge dream, dreaming
about Mr. Hancock, and also that I
was on horseback and one of his aids.
In the distance I saw a large house,
with a large banner, with the inscrip¬
tion on ^it: "A glorious victory for
General Hancock,” and while riding, in
my dream, a party said : "Kuester,
what is the matter ?” T I at once told
him that General Hancock was to be
inaugurated President of the United
States. When I awoke I related the
dream to my wife at the breakfast
table. She laughed After arriving
at my shop I had quite forgotten about
it until about 10 o’clock on the morn¬
ing of March 4, 1880. Then I had
occasion to look into the place where
the hickory nuts had been dropped,
and that again reminded me of my
dream. At thi3 time there were five
gentlemen in my shop, two of them
radical .Republicans. I then took ODe
of the nuts, held it up, and said : “To¬
day, 4th of March, I will plant this
nut coming from Hancock’s farm, and
I hope it will grow a tree of such size
that I will be able to put a small flag
on it to celebrate the inauguration of
General Winfield Scott Hancock as our
President to-day a year, March 4,
18S1.” Taking off my hat I gave three
cheers for General Hancock. Then ono
of the Republicans said, laughing :
“Old Kuester is getting crazy all of a
sudden, and it would be a very good
thing if we would put him to Harris¬
burg.” The tree is growing fast and
straight, just as the old Democrats will
be next fall (I hope this fall all of the
old roosters will come to the polls and
cast a solid vote for Hancock). The
tree to iqJaaA j IAO O UC
straight as Hancock is himself. I in¬
tend to put a fine flag on the tree just
as soon as it will allow. I can give
witness to the above facts. Every word
is true. The feeling I experienced
during the night of this wonderful
dream I shall never forget. On March
3 I felt very drowsy—everything ap¬
peared dink, and ou the morning of
March 4 I felt quite relieved—never
felt better in all the days of my life.
Henry Keuizer.
Bethlehem, July 14.
The Youth ol' Judah P. Benjamin,
Benjamin was a native of Santa
Cruz, one of the islauds of the British
West Indies. Ilis father emigrated to
Charleston with a large family when
JuJah waa an infant Settling in
Charles ton, the elder Benjamin devoted
assiduously to the support and
education of bis large family, composed
j 0 £ gong an q daughters of remarkably
bri Ut and promising qualities. Judah,
j ;lIiaost froin hig in f anC y, displayed Lis
won j er f a l gifts of memory, quickness
m acquiring knowledge, his versatility
the vivacity of faculties and tem
j p er that have been preserved to nearly
; three score and ten. He learned
’ ev thing with a rapidity which
astounded his family and friends. Be
i fore he had entered his teens he pos
gesae( j an ttmcun t of literary acquire
: men ^ w hich would fit him to enter any
co ][ e g e . His parents were poor, but a
^ 00 j 0 fj Israelite, an uncle, attracted
£ ^ J h ' 8 sent'to
t tbe of sixteen, Yale
i ege> j u a b r i P f period after his en*
trance at \ ale be achieved the highest
, • ft ii i,;«, « n( ] ama/od
V™ f ps " - org u L v k; 3 J proficiency ‘ jL and ca
erit de P ar a rtment tment
i
\ QL ■ •
Invoked through somelof bis asso
ciates . “ 1 in =‘ or a college u ° e o scrape^Benjamin ecome a mar yr
! tbe / olly and recklessness of his
P anio !H and .^ expule.on taere-
1 ^ H:S withdrawal from the college
wa9 deeply , . regretted by the professor,,
who regarded him as their
P u Pil- He was offered restoration,
j ' through pride refused, and betook him
..H to some village in Vermont.
i ^f^Vschod jYtUsTnmble and
wearisome occupation he passed
years, carefully laying by his
warnings to pay the expense of
home. Finally he returned
; charleston and reioineJ his family,
His good old uncle, Jacob Levy, again
proffered his aid to embark his
nephew iu a new sphere.— New
Democrat.
Manufacturing clothing in
g.ves employment to 30,000
and the va.ue of the goods mad ■
000,00*.. This industry has '
m lour yea.
The Nature of God.
I believe that God is unsearchable ;
that His being lies outside of human
comprehension in this state of exis¬
tence ; that nevertheless, we may ob¬
tain a partial and fragmentary view of
it with the certainty that in every di¬
rection the divine nature is nobler,
purer, more admirable and lovable then
reason, imagination or experience can
conceive. I believe that God revealed
Himself gradually as well as partially,
and that He is still revealing i..umself,
through the experience of mankind
and through the revelation of His ma¬
terial kingdom. While in the Old
Testament as against a plurality of
Gods, Jehovah was revealed as one God
in the New Testament the intimations
are that God exists as Father, Son and
Holy Ghost. This is a condition of
being transcending our experience, but
net Without without forelooking analogies.
fine the attempting Divine to aaalyze and de¬
nature of Existence, I
accept as the best idea I can get of
the interior economy of God’s rature
the unity of God in a trio personality.
But I do not regard the acceptance of
this view as necessary to growth to¬
ward spiritual manhood, or to accept¬
ance with God. The church did with'
out it for 4,000 years ; men may live
without it and yet be good men. For
myself, I accept it as the easiest inter¬
pretation of the varied representations
of the New Testament, and I therefore
believe and preach the Trinity.
I believe heartily in the Divinity of
Christ. I reject as unscriptural the
doctrine of a human soul and a divine
soul, as set forth in the Athanasian
creed, and believe that the essential
nature of Christ was divine, simple,
pure, uncompounded, and that so much
of divinity as could be manifested and
expressed under the limitations of ma¬
terial laws and in a human body,
were made known in Him; but that the
earthly existence of Christ did not
give forth, nor could, the whole of His
divine nature. He was more than He
appeared. But I do not demand of
any a technical adhesion to a fact
whose philosophy is obscure, and must
alwajs'Tie; but I do insist upon the
duty, the privilege, an and me the nolnage salutv ol ol
icuueiiug iu obedience of
love, fidelity and which
the soul is capable; and spirit, the assuming disposi
for our own lives His
tion, doctrines and precepts. I regard
them as the very essence of Christian
religion. Holy Ghost. I
I believe in the re¬
gard the Divine mind as an active in¬
fluence, pervading the universe, and es¬
pecially as the source of figure all superior He
human activity. In a may
be said to be, with the Son, the source
of all growth. The Divine spirit is
universal, imminent, revelatory, stim¬
ulating and life-giving. I regard the
whole of physical nature as but an
effect, and as a storehouse of educating
influences; and I behove that the study
of nature is as necessary to the under¬
standing of God s word as the study of
His word is to the moral understand
ing of nature. They are not enenres—
the Bible and Science’s revelations of
nature. They are net even antago¬
nists. They should not he mad- so by
narrow and timid theologians, or equal
ly|narrow and bigoted scientists.— II.
W. Beecher.
General Robert Toombs, says the
Sun, is one of the best farmers in
Georgia. He made this year three
hundred and fifty bushel- of white
rust-proof wheat on eleven acr-’S of
land. He gave one haul red bushels,
worth $10 a bushel, to tho State for
j distribution r.mong the farmers of
Georgia to sow for tbe crop.
----—— -
United Memphis is the only city in (he
States which shows a positive
decrease of population during the
| now is 33,200. } ° The ( Nation contrac- a a*
tion of the city limits and the ravages
of y fcllow fe7er account for this re
Financial editors should not be al
i owed to write up purely statistical
, news. They slide in the dollar-ma.
with whlch their thoughts are full.
For mstanee, the Providence Journal
d remarks that the population of
that city i 3 $104,760.
___ -m m m- __
The packages of tomatoes put up
j last year fotal in the United States reached
1 the of 19,968.000, of which New
J Contributod 5 ' 5f2 000 “"*•
The Army of the Potomac at the
close of the war contained, according
to rosters, about one hundred and six
ty thousand mm.
i Poison.
It is an unde:-: od fact tint s ‘diow
Fever and its com ions Intermittent
and Remittei.t Fevers r- tne results
of poisoued blood, m d'i urn ure bv
breathing an i tect.-d atmosphere. No
medicine in exi-tern'-e will so qub aly
purity the bio d, a- Warner* Sale Kid
nev and Livei Cure, used in connection
i with TT* arnex ■ a *;«*« c .•- riua, PHia
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Business Cards*
JAS. McGXNLEY,
OA-RPEISTTER.
YORK STREET, second door east of Bull.
furnished Jobbing promptly attended to Estimates
when os 1 red. jel Him
BEEF, VEAL AND LAMB.
JOS. H. BAKER,
BITTGHEa,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
A LL market other meals rates. in Orders their season promptly at lowest tilled
aud delivered. W ill victual ships throughout.
Give nim a trial ociil-tf
ANDERSON STREET MARKET
AND ICE HOUSE,
J. 1’’. kinds PHILLIPS, of Meats, Butcher Fish, Poultry and dealer and In Mar¬ al
ket Produce, Families supplied at their
residences, and dispatch. ail orders executed with
promptness and Satisfact ion guar
ante ed. np6-l»m
C. A. CORTINO,
Hair Miss, Hair Bressits, Cuiisf sad
SLAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
iler 1G6J4 Planters’ Bryan street, Hotel. epposite the Market, uu
and English spokon Spanish, italiAD, Gor f
man. selK-t
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store,)
Ianl3t,t SAVANNAH. GA
Plumbing and Gas Fittin* a*
CHA8. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas a Steam Fitting,
No. 48 BARNARD STREET, one door north
ot South Broad troet.
Bath Tubs. Joboiug Water Closets, Boilers, Ranges,
Promptly attended to.
ebll Also, Agent of “BACKUS WATER MOTOR
McELLINN & McFALL,
PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING.
Na. 48 Whitaker street, corner York st. Lane
..J$i£uJtAoy, and sft guaranteed, s JlU/iii 'p\UhiW5r> low prices:. " n h suited to
all work at
sepitl
W. H. COSGROVE,
East side of Bull street, one door from York,
Practical Plumber and Gas Fitter
JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
AU work guaranteed to give satisfaction,
tf*- Prices to suit the times. mh7tf
Paints, Oils and Glass*
JOHN & BUTLER,
Wholesale aud Retail Dealer In
WHITE LEADS COLORS, OILS, GLAUS,
VARNISH, ETC.
Ready Mixed Paints, Railroad, Steamer and
Mill Supplies. Sole Agent for Georgia Lime
Calcined Plaster. Plaster, Drayton Cements, Hair and Land
No. 22 street,
Janl6tf SAVANNAH. GA.
ANDREW HANLEY,
—Dealer in—
Doors, Sties, Blinds, Mouldings
Lima, Piaster, Hair and Comont,
STEAMBOAT,
Railroad and Mill Sapplies t
Faints, oils, varnishes, glass, &o.
No. 6 Whitaker & 171 Bay St.,
SA VA N.VAjr, GEORGIY |
rn v2(i-t,f
JOHN OLIVER.
Dealer in —
Steamboat, Rail Hoad and Mil! Supplier,
PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, Ac •i
DOORS, SASHES, BUNDS, MOULDING
Balusters, Blind Trimmings, &c.
No. 5. WHL J'AKER ST.,
$A VAN NAB. GEORGIA
•loMfHf
W \ i £ s pr
CfLEBRA.
yr ^
-Y>-i * \ \
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