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VOL IV.—No. 114.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
B. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
t 161 BAY STREET*
By jr. STjBity.
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lers of Interest solicited.
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regular rates will be made.
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I'okdkk, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
tne prace of the Saturday evening edition
which wilt make six full issues for the week.
4®-W e do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
2he Recorder is reyistwed at the
Dost Office in Savannah as Second Class
Matter.
Origin of th© Two-Thirds Rule,
A Bit of History.
A nu&rbkf 6f interesting articles have
recently been published in relation to
the origin ot the two-thirds rule. Its
motive, and the date of its first appli¬
cation to conventions, have doubtless
been wrrrectly 1 given. But its origin,
from the authority we quote (Barber’s
History of the Uuited States, published
in 1828), occurred in the notorious
Hartford convention, in Connecticut,
ial8l£. .ft
will be remembered that, during
the second war with Great Britain, the
people of the United States were di
... ... ____ ... .
condemning and the other approving
the'war. The EnJ^UhdStates. opposition was greatest
" in A con¬
vention Hartford of delegates from December those States 15th.
met at on
1814, and sat nearly three weeks with
closed doors. After their adjournment,
the convention national published an address,
charging the government with
pursuing New measures hostile to the inter¬
ests of England, and recommend¬
ing amendments to the Federal con¬
stitution.
These alterations consisted of seven
articles. First , that representatives
and direct taxes shall be aflpoitioued
to the number of free persons; secondly,
that no new State shall be admitted in¬
to the Union without the concurrence
of two"third8 of both honses; thirdly,
that Congress shall not have power to
lay an embargo for more than sixty
days; fourthly, that Congress shall not
interdict commercial intercourse with¬
out the concurrence ot two-thirds of
of both be houses; fifthly, that the war shall
not declared without concur¬
rence of a similar majority; sixthly, that
no* person who shall be hereafter nat¬
uralized, shall be eligible as a member
of the Senate or House of Represents*,
tives, or bold any civil office under
the authority of the Uuited States; aud
seventhly, that no perion shall be elec¬
ted twioe to the Presidency, nor tho
President be elected from the same
State two terms in succession.
The committee in charge of these al¬
terations, which were to be submitted
to Congress, arrived iu Washington city
the day that the news of peace was re¬
ceived. The proposed amendmeits
were submitted to the several States,
aud rejected by all except Massachu¬
setts, Rhode Island and Connecticut.—
Cor* Macon 2c icy rap h.
An Ocean Horror.
Poumleritig of the Steamship Jeddah—Over one
Thousand Perseus Drowued.
London, August 11.—A Reuter tele
f rana from Aden reports the steamer
cihlah; freitt Singapore, as thundered
off Gnardani o»the 8th, with nine hun¬
dred and fifty^tkree pilgrims for Jed
- d»h* AR on hoard * perished except
the Engineer, Captein and his wife, tbe Chief
the chief officer, au engineer
and sixteen natives, who. were picked
up and bttxYfcht to Aden by the
steamer dispatch Synda.
A to Lloyds from Aden
says: .“Upwards and of one thousand
passengers crew were drowned by
the foaoderiotf of til. steamer Jeddah TlJ
on the 8th, ou Cue Gnardaui.
Jeddah, T'ji 1 h W "Th°e ih. U jidihb Jeddah belonged . Singjpor. to the
WM^ui^if Zil aniJm Thrmhartoo ° Sootland and 1 ‘
*
a net lonnsgo oi vuo ana
gross tonnage
Horses That Can Count.
There is not much stimulus to men¬
tal activity in a life of plodding on a
street car track, and yet instances are.
known where horses have taken alively
interest in the road, the* methods of
carrying on the business, and especial¬ involves
ly that portion of it which
their time and labor. They have
thought it all out, ai)d have actually
been able to tell the number of trips
assigned for their day’s labor and when
it ends. When a horse is able to tell
how much v/brk is required of him
each day, and when his day ends, the
achievement passes beyond the range
of mere animal instinct and attains the
plane of reason and intelligence. marvelous
Horse car drivers tell
stories of the intelligence displayed dri¬ by
the animals under their charge. A
ver on one of the Fourteenth street cars
is strongly of the opinion that horses
know how to count. If this rather
unusual statement is questioned ‘‘Well, they the
driver simply says : if
don’t, how are you going to explain
this ?” and then he goes on to say that
each car makes 19 trips per day. There
are four horses used, three making 5
trips and one 4 trips. At the end of
each trip the car is driven into the
stables and then turned upon the
turning table. After (he car is turned
the horses are changed if it is the
proper time, befor the cars start back
on the trip. The horses will make the
4 trips going in and out of the stables
without any difficulty. At the end of
the fifth trip, if for any reason it is
necessary to send the car back, it is
almost impossible to get the horse out
of the stable. He holds back, resists,
and it requires the united exertions of
several men before the animal can be
induced to move.
The horse has kept a strict count of
the trips, day’s and knows that he has fin¬
ished his work and ought to go to
his stall. The same thing occurs if the
attempt is made to make the horse that
has only four trips take an additional
one. With the drivers and stablemen,
who frequently witness such exhibi¬
tions, there is a firm belief in the
mathematical ability of horses. The
street car men also tell an interesting
tf few * fill fin'l-'-fiPu.
on the lr between New York avenue
and H street. His time for stopping
work is taken very irregular, aud he is some¬
times to the stables with one car
and sometimes with another. But the
horse knows perfectly well when it is
the intention to take him to the stable,
and when he comes to the top of the
hill, instead of stopping, he starts off
on a run. If the time for his going
home was at all regular this singular
intelligence might be explained, but
whsther it is early or late the horse
knows when he is going home. Until
that time he plods along steadily, and
has never been known to make a mis¬
take. One of the drivers explains it by
the fact that the boy who has the horse
in charge usually sits on the dash
board, with feet on the outside, while
going up the hill. But when tbe boy
is going all the way to the stables he
gets all the way on the front platform.
The horse sees that the boy has drawn
UU legs iu instead ot dangling them on
the outside, aud, by the inductive pro>
cess of reasoning, he concludes that it
is time for him to go home. He ac¬
cordingly goes. Another horse always
shies when he passes a certain corner
after dark, because some four or five
years ago he was frightened at that
place.
A Happy Restoration.
I can truly say that I owe my pres¬
ent existence and happy restoration to
the hopes and joys of life, to tbe use
of Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver
(Jure, and I say to every one suffering
urinary hom any trouble, manner of “Use kidney, liver or
this remedy
and recover.” W. E. Sanford.
Holley, N. Y. t Feb. 25, 1880.
The Washiugtou Dost says : Owing
to the large accumulations of the stand¬
ard silver dollars in the San Francis
co mint aud sub-treasury, amounting to
about $18,000,000,. the Secretary of the
Treasury is contemplating the removal
of a portion of it to the East. At the
rate of transportation allowed by law
the cost would average about $20,000
for every$2,000,000, and the Secretary
P ur P oses to invite proposals for the
transportation of these silver dollars in
order to secure, if possible more fav
orable terms,
One of the opposition members of
Parliament brought out in la a a speecn speech
^ i ^^ i
arm 7. w hos « war atr.Dgth ^ does J he En do “ Hsb ex
-
400 ' 00 ° h&a 00 «*
Li.ut«mt OeumU
and 2*2 U.jor 6e»ff»la >; a total of 026
ot “ or ® ^ aD ’ our the
number . in the Russian army, which
r ^,W men constantly under
SAVANNAH, THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1880.
A Criticism of English Girls.
Why cannot English girls be taught to
move, walk, stand, and even laugh?j
Even if they manage to enter a room,' lack
with'ease and self-possession, they
that gift of grace that when it is not
natural, can be very well imitated by
tp.iuing As to “standing at ease,” not
one Englishwoman in fifty can do it.
They are given to resting their weight
on one foot, and then transferring it
to the other. A little training would
show them that it is much less fatig
uing, and incomparably more graceful,!
to balance the weight equally upon
both. It would not then be necessary
to wear the head upon one side, as
though they had brought out son e oio
else’s in mistake. As to laughing, how
seldom, except on the stage do we hear
a really musical laugh. Some girls
make dreadful grimaces when they
laugh. A little education in the art
would not make their laughter artifi¬
cial, and they would surely enjoy it all
the more if they could realize that they
might indulge in mirth without mak¬
ing themselves look so very ugly, as is
occasionally the case. It runs in fam¬
ilies sometimes to distort the counte¬
nance in laughter. I know a family
who laugh a great deal. Their eyes
always Bhut up when they do so, and
it is the funiest thing when one dines
with them, and something amusing is
said, to look around the table, and see
exactly the same distortion on every
face. There is not an eye left in the
family. Three sisters whom I know
show quite half an inch of pale pink
gum when they laugh. In their pres¬
ence like Wendell Holmes one “neyer
dares to be as funny as one can,” for
fear of seeing this appalling triple vis¬
ion of gums. A little training in child¬
hood would make their laughter a
pleasant thing to look at, for they have
all pretty little square teeth, very
white and even.
Playing with a Rattlesnake.
Several days ago a party had gath¬
ered at the house of B. A. Register, in
the fifteenth district, so we are inform¬
ed, for the purpose of eating water¬
melons. In front of the yard is a
i yo. a nd a little thrge^year
u MrV^rtSgTWtr^ wandered
out into the grove, while the crowd
were gathered in the front porch ot the
house. After some time Mr. R°gister,
who bad been watching the child, saw
that it was playing with something, he
approached the fence and looked over,
and was astonished to find a very large
rattlesnake playing with the child,
twining around its arms, laying its head
lovingly on its breast, and twining
around its body, and seemiog to be
child delighted with its new friend. The
was in the highest glee, and was
as happy as in the its mother’s arms. Reg¬
ister called to crowd, who went to
the fence, and were ailed at the critical
position of the child. A plan was con¬
trived by which the child was enticed
away from the snake. On the first
alarm the snake sprung its rattle and
was ready for fight. It was killed and
found te be quite large and had fifteen
rattles ,—Amcricus Republican.
Cl n ni? ESE S o f OEMAEERS *~ About . , , 0:1 j
iR the Chinese shoemakers will be
from North Adams, Mass by the end'
of the present month, lheir reason
for quitting the plra is that they can ,
earn more money at laundry work in,
the large cities. It is eight yeaisj
since Mr. Sampson a weal tny ^ 0 ,
manufacturer brought them from San|
Iraucisco to displace striking Crispins, j
A correspondent of the Boston
savs; “Schools were established for the j
dusky visitors, and the good ladies of!
the town turned missionaries,
taught them to read and speak the ,
language of the country Some were !
apt pupils and quick to learn, while
others were stupid and appeared to
t.ke little interest in the work that
was beiug done for their enlighten
ment Housed and fed at the shoe
shop, taught by the white ladies, en*
couraged I®! by their employer, brought
Tnr'h 1Dtluence of a Christian
cLurek and Sunday school, some ot
th. Chinnmen became enlightened and
to a certain extent educated, uniting
in fellowship with the church, and, as
a general thing, behaving themselves
iu a quiet, orderly manner, while others
cluDg to the customs of their fathers,
worshipped the pagan idol, and re»
tained the garb of their country;’’
- - -
In Bavaria . a man who allows himself
to be killed in a duel is considered as
a suicide. Not long ago an ex officer
?! th f ar ™y ^ught with a Bavarian
and !, bo ^ bjm dead - The police
forbade a Catholic celebration of the
tUDer a1 ’ and h e 0I T s f handed
oyer t to one oi f * the K w Munich hospitals lor
dlMectlo n -
. .
Skins with the h.tr on ^ere fre
qo , ot lj, used iu the Middle Agee as,
according to the passage of Musonias
quoted by Causaubon, they had oeeu
l he Tb fy » re frequently
( as having . been worn by
ia Euglaad.
What it Costs to Livo.
The Mimber of dollars _ „ One Eat up iu Fifty
Years.
Mr. Soyer, who in his lifetime gained
so much fame as a cook and food econo¬
mist, made a calculation as to how
much of the finer wines and meats
were vivant consumed by a professed bon
in the course ot his lifetime.
This cuiious feat of calculation is based
on a lifetime extending over sixty
years; the life of a bon-vivant ’’s esti
mated as enduring for three score years
and tec; but—though he might have
extended the number—the first ten
years are not taken into account, as
during that period the boy is not al¬
lowed to consume anything but what
i3 placed before him. Taking the round
figures of the accumulated “services of
meat and drink,” it appears, by Mr.
Soyer’s calculation, that a professor of
good living will consume in the sixty
years allotted to him. about sixty tons
of viands, which he probably washes
down wit’, a hundred hogshead of
wines and liquors of various kinds.
The following are tbe materials
which, according to Soyer, composes
tbe daily dinner of the average epN
cure—namely, half a pint of soup, four
ounces of fish, eight ounces of meat,
four ounces of poultry, four ounces
of savory meats, two ounces of vege¬
tables, two ounces of bread, two ounces
of pastry, half an ounce of cheese,
four ounces of fruit, one pint of wine,
one glass of liquor, one cup of coffee
or tea. The solids, it will be seen
which are consumed at this meal
amount to thirty and a half ounces ;
whilst at luncheon time, eight ounces
would be consumed; and calculating
the eggs, fish, or cutlets eaten at
breakfast, an additional twelve ounces
would fall to be added to the account,
equivalent to forty-eight ounces
of solid food per diem ; and there
would be at least three pints of liquid
material in the coffee, soup, wine aud
liquors.
drinking At present prices, the eating and
of a professed good liver could
not- be accomplished for less than twelve
shilhngs sterling ($3) per diem, in
and liquors. TL&t may
sew k large sum ; but the^hRfriey
w Fecessarily expended in cook
L/J , dinner epicure would
a as an
oi’S'W is considerable, and necessarily
failsAo be included in the bill of costs ;
wb«e if high class wines be selected,
twelve shillings will hardly cover the
expenditure. Twelve shillings a day
for a period of three hundred and sixty
five days amount to two hundred aud
nineteen pounds ($3,096); aud in sixty
years at that rate, the good liver’s com
missaiial account will sum up to the
very handsome sum of thirteen thou¬
sand one hundred and forty pounds
sterling 700).
A War Relic*.
The following letter addressed to
the Adjutant General of Georgia,
was few days received by Major Baird a |
ago, and he requests us to
publish it hoping to be able to find some
trace to the party alluded to. Anv
having information on the subject
will phase address Adjutant General
B Bair(1> Atlanta, Georgia, and be
f Lrwar( j tbe information immedi
,
hIrrisburg, Pa., July 31, 1S80.
Tq (ke Ad/ulant General of Georgia •
g 1R . b have in my pc8 g ess i on a <3Iuall
Bible that was found upon the body kifled ofr
a Confederate soldier, who was
t ,i * • • 1 lgfU T vr® .
1 nfla0 haiJ , h in8cr ; l5(ion
B Husband pj G^rcmVe^imenf’ Georue E Kellv Ar?"I Ccm 1
Lith am^uite^nxfor^tw
L J * restored^o I
ifc sho lc £ be the lady if Hv
j t b
-ji Have vnn anv moar a StahfbU' f i
m f roni what S“ction of vnr
f rom me r n i newspapers j. _
advertisement in then- thePne^e- In
order that they ( may [ learn of
abouls 0 , wha to hem wou ld certain
j u be « a i near and dear . keepsake'of one
en fh “ “ e P °.j ‘ he hro braTe „ ..
-
Crafton Fnv
TT«r™,h»,™ 7ama>
m
* Another Sforv J nf 1 inrnln
General McLernand and Commodore
of Pittsburg, during the war
originated a Mississippi campaign. The
Secretary .after went Stanton to Washington and enlisted
in his favor.
ttio waited on Lincoln, and Stanton ex
pUined the project and named McLer
dmu to lead the troops l ‘ But, said
Mr. Lincoln, I hate to put McLer
U<ird °, V ?. r ^f ant: Grant is d °iP s weI1
eoouga, Yes, „ retorted -, btanton,
b "‘ V“ JE
m S?m“’Liticol»
usud
piied: "O. ,’f yod-want a dashing man
I'll send for Pope. He came dashing
into manhehiod Washington, you know, w:tt> not a
Wasnmgton him, and when no tnr»n in
had the least curiosity to
him]”
An Out-Spoken Democrat.
Some of the Principles Animating Judge Price,
of Missouri.
TFrom the St. Louis Globe-Democrat.]
Springfield, Mo., Aug. 4.—Judge
W. 0. Price, a Democrat of 40 years’
standing, and once an office-holder in
the Treasury Department under Bu¬
chanan’s Administration, announces
himself in the Daily Extra to-day as a
candidate for the Legislature from
the Eastern District of Greene county.
Among other things, he publishes the
following principles :
3. That pro-slavery is the law of
God and a factor in the scheme of
human redemption.
4. That secession under the cir¬
cumstances superinduced by and the facts
in my first proposition is wus the
truth of God, the law of heaven, and
will stand.
5. That the honest part of Ameri¬
can society, as between the two old!
parties, as a rule, is the Democracy,
the Southern wing being the most vir¬
tuously That intelligent. Republican
6. the element in
the United States stands in our social
philosophy to the Democratic element
iu the same relation that black does
to white in the natural or moral phil¬
osophy, the extremes ranging from
snowy white to sooty.
7. That while it is true that Demo¬
cracy is the virtue as a rule, it is
equally true that differing the same difference only
exists in kind, in degree
between the Northern and Southern
Democracy as between the Republican
and Democratic parties, the cause be¬
ing the difference between pro-slavery
and free States.
8. That the two theories being an¬
tagonistic, can never be harmonized.
9. That the American States being
originally pro-slavery, constituted the
third theocratic predicament of the
worlds history, and was a fulfillment
of that prophecy; “God shall enlarge
Japhet, and he shall dwell in the tents
of Shem; and Canaan shall be his ser¬
vant.’*—Genesis ix.: 27.”
Chinese who Wouldn’t be Count¬
ed. —Mr. Suksdorf, General Supervisor
of theF Census for the District of Ore¬
gon, states that much difficulty has
been and is experienced in the enu
meration of the Chinese. There are
known to be between 4,500 and 5,000
Chinese whose residence is in Portland,
but who are scattered over the country,
working on railroads and other public
improvements. It is very difficult to
find these Mongolians and enumerate
them. One of the enumerators was sent
up a short time since to enumerate the
Chinese employed John Day on the Willow railroad Creek. work
between and
The Chinese refused to give the enu¬
merator any iuforraation whatever, to
answer questions, or give their names.
They were very suspicious, and thought
the enumerator was some tax collector,
Tbe or,l y tbin 8 he C0l ! ld do w M to
COUQt them » which be did » aQd , fouad .
bere employed _ that ol
^ are on part
the road 905 Chinamen. Mr. Suksdorf
sa .7 3 that there are at least 1,000 China
rGen working on the Northern Pacific
Railroad, whose Headquarters is Port
land - Twelve hundred Chinamen have
al ' ead y been enumerated who are
working among the various fisheries on
the river. With all possible diligence
0D tbe of the enumerators they
will not be able to get all the Chinese
population .—Francisco Call.
„ On w Bodies After Death —Within •
a very near approach to truth, the hu
man famil y inhabiting the earth has
estimated at 1.000,000,000; the
annual loss by death is 18.000,000.
Now - the weight of the animal matter
f this immense body cast into the
grave is no less than 035,000 tons, aQd
lid decomposition product 9,000,000,
Th * "*•
productions of the earth clear
avva y fr ° m the earth the gases thus
« enerated - de . "°“P 0Sin S aild
t be “ [° r their own increase. Ibe
circie of chan ^ €8 haa ‘‘ een 0D
ever since • man became an occupier of f
the earth. He feed, en the lower
animals and oq the seeds of planta,
which in due time become a part of
himself. The lower animals feed upon
tbe herbs and grasses, which in their
turn, become the animal, then by its
death, again pas 3 into the atmosphere,
b y plants, the earth or bone substance
alone remaining where it is deposited.
Be Wise and Happy.
an d wrong notions in doctoring your
se jf aD d families with expensive doctors
nr hnmbur» and" cure-all* that do harm al.
ways, use only nature’s simple
remedies ioi ail your , is—you
*«’• >» wise, wf-ll a- «1 happy, aud save
ufl J.tL/coh.Jo VS i^o B, f ' ti.£J£j.S- ’ ‘
,
The population of Cahloruia is 863,
000, a gain of 303, amce 1870. The
of Hefci
# ' - ^
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Business Cards*
JAS. McGINLEY,
CARPENTER,
YORK STREET, second door east of Bull.
furnished Jobbing promptly attended to. Estimates
when desired. jel4-(lm
BEEF, VEAL AND LAMB.
JOS. H. BAKER,
BUTCHER,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
A LL market other meats rates. in Orders their season promptly at lowest filled
and delivered. Will victual ships throughout.
Give him a trial. ociil-tf
ANDERSON STREET MARKET
AND ice: house,
J * Produce. F, kinds PHILLIPS, of Meats, Families Butcher, Fish, Poultry aud dealer aud In Mar¬ al
ket supplied at their
residences, and all orders executed with
anteed. promptness and dispatch. Satisfaction ap66m guar¬
...
G. A. CORTINO,
Bair Outline, S&ir Dressiae, Carliae ui
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
166V4 Bryan street, cpposlt* the Market, un
der Planters’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger
man, and English spokon. seltt-tf
_
W. B. FERRELL'S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basemen -
(Opposite Llppman’s Drug Sts re,)
lanlSU SAYAN > KH. QA.
Plumbing and Gas Pit ing*
CHAS. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. 48 BARNARD STREET, one door north
- ol South Broad Greet. >
Bath Tubs. Jobbing Water Closets, Boilers, Banges,
Promptly attended to.
ebii Also, Agent of "BACKUS WATER MOTOR
McELXJNN & MoFAIA.
PLUMBING AND GAB FITTING.
Na. 46 Wbitaker street, corner York st. Lana
N.B. Houses fitted with gas and water at
short notice, Jobbing promptly attended to
and all work guaranteed, at low
W. IL COSGRO 9
ESaot old* of Bull' street, one door from York.
Practical Plumber and G-aa Fitter,
JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
All work guaranteed to give satisfaction.
49- Prices to suit the times. mh7tf
Paints, Oils and Glass.
3 OHN O. BUTLER,
Wholesale aud Retail Dealer In
WHITE LEADS COLORS, OIL8, GLASS*
VARNISH, ETU.
Ready Mixed Paints, Railroad, Steamer and
Mill Supplies. Sole Agent for Georgia Lime
Calcined Plaster, Cemuuts, Hair aud Land
Plaster. No. 22 Drayton street,
JanlGtf SAVANNAH, ga.
ANDREW HANLEY,
—Dealer in—
floors, Sties, Blinds, Mauldings
Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cement,
STEAMBOAT,
Railroad and Mill Supplies,
paints, oil-h, varnishes, glass, &o.
No 6 Whitaker & 171 Bay St.,
&A VANN AH, (4RORQ1Y
my2<i-t,f
JOHN OLIVER.
— Dealer 1 u
Steamboat, Rail Road and Mill Supplies,
PAINTS, Oil*!, OJ.ASS, &c •»
DOORS, SASHJslrt, BUNDS, MOULDING
Balustersj Blind Trimrniuis, 4o.
No. 5. W . it IA KEX S-:T.,
SA VAN NAB. GKORG1A
*' ilmlDtr
CELEBMTED
n r
o
y jtijg
A, .•«
...
vv
SpTj
WOMACU-
Defensive • Medication
r» a ptaoaulinn which siiouM n®v«r be »*r
lected whan Uamr«i' is present, and therefor*
* eourse ot the 111 iwt s at tbit H*ason U par*
ticuJarly dasjrufjfc. especially *lltOo«n**«.dy*- for th* fc«bl*
and sickly. A* a-f*»ner*y f,,y
pepsia, utrtuUtuua, auJ bowel «impiji!nt*„ lb
there La %»of Tting ootnpamble to la whole¬
some rally. For Mle^by 4rotiri*t*eeti** ft&l-tf
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