The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, July 18, 1884, Image 2

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rCL0TTD CHIEF
l C. N0SME& filHsfcer.
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3tED CLOUD.
. - NEBRASKA.
A WEEK'S NEWS.
Gleaned j Telefrapli and Mall
COXGRESSION'Afc. ""
I?r the Senate on the 7th & message was
received from the House announcing non
concurrence in the Senate amendment to the
bill making temporary provision for the navy.
A long debate sprung up, a portion of it being
of a political character, and at It close a mo
tlon to recede was agreed to. The House Joint
resolution providing for adjournment was
taken up and amended so as to make the time
of adjournment two o'clock, and then passed.
Mr. Brown asked if the Chairman of the Ap
propriation Committee could state the aggre
gate appropriations this year. Mr. Allison
replied in the affirmative, stating the amount
was 193,301, (187. In respect to one or two
features of the Naval bill this amount was
estimated, but the variation would probably
bo less than $200,000 from the amount he
had stated. This aggregate did not include
reappropriations. which for pensions alone
this year amounted to over $66,000,000. rais
ing the aggregate to fiW.301,087. After a
few closing remarks by Vice-President Ed
munds the Senate adjourned until December.
....In the absence of Sneaker Carlisle, who
had lert for Chicago, the House was called to
order by the Clerk of the House, and a sboit
recess taken. After recess Mr. Randall
offered resolution appointing J. C. S. Black
burn Speaker pro tern, during the temporary
absence of the Speaker. Adopted unani
mously. The session on Monday began at
.noon, and on motion of Mr. Randull the House
concurred in the Senate amendment to the
adjournment resolution, fixing the hour of
Una adjournment at two o'clock. On motion
of Mr. Woolford, a bill passed increasing the
pensions of soldiers who have lost an arm at
the shoulder Joint to the amount received by
those who have lort a leg at the hip Joint.
The House then adiourned until December.
-WASHINGTON XOTK3.
The Spanish Minister at Washington
nays that the reports afloat of the proposed
sale or transfer of Cuba by the Spanish
Government are untruthful and absurd,
A tremendous Newfoundland dog, be
longing to the Russian Minister, bit a child
severely about the face and head at Wash
ington the other day. The dog soon died,
exhibiting strange symptoms, but a care
ful post-mortem examination failed to dis
cover any evidence of hydrophobia. No
explanation could be given of the animal's
strange attack and death.
A recent Washington special said:
Logan telegraphed to Blaine his letter of
acceptance as ready and desired to know
when Blaine proposed to issue his, so that
he might make his public at the same time.
.Logan's letter, in addition to a formal ac
ceptance of the nomination, will treat
upon the results accomplished by the war,
and urge the necessity of maintaining the
same in accordance with the principle in
volved in that struggle.
The Comptroller of the Currency has
directed that an assessmantof one hundred
per cent be levieti on the shareholders of
the Marine National Bank of New York.
The American Lacrosse team, which re
cently returned from England, were again
defeated by the Canadians at New York.
The score was C to 1.
The Secretary of the Treasury on the
9th made an advance payment of $333,333
to the President of the World's Exposi
tion, at New Orleans.
The Comptroller of the Currency has di
rected the assessment of one hundred per
cent on the shareholders of the First. Na
tfonel Bauk of Monmouth, III.
rTHE President recognized J. C. Bam
berger a Consul of the Swiss Confederation
at Louisville, Ky.
Tan Secretary of the Interior has re
quested the Secretary of War to cause the
arrest of Payne and such of his party as
enter the Indian Territory. It was re
ported that the numberwas fifteen hundred
or two thousand now upon the Cherokee
outlet lands of the Indian Territory. It
was desired to expel all other intruders
now upon the lands before the movement
assumes more formidable proportions.
THE KAST.
The failure of A. Dyatt & Co. was an
sounced on the New York Stock Exchange
recently. This was the firm with
-which John C. Eno, President of the Sec
ond National Bank, transacted his stock
operations.
David Joxes, of Petersburg Junction,
H. Y., was found dead in bed the other
morning. Ho used paris green in his po
tato field, and was supposed to have in
haled the poison.
The racing at Monmouth Park, New
York, on the 8th, was sensational because
of accidents. In the.third race Himalaya
threw a jockey, who ruptured a blood ves
sel in tho head, and was carried off the
track unconscious. At the close of the race
the horse 'Orator, coming in fourth, dropped
dead just as he was being pulled.
Philip Hamilton died at Poughkeepsie,
2. Y., on the 9th, aged eighty-two. He
-was the youngest son of Alexander Hamil
ton, the famous statesman, who was killed
In a duel with Aaron Burr.
The strike of themolders at New Castle,
Pa has ended, Baldwin & Co. withdraw
ing the notice of a reduction. The same
action was taken by Bradley & Co., of
Pittsburgh.
In the South Boston iron foundry re
cently a tweaty ton gun had jusj been cast,
when the mould burst, completely ruining
tbeeastang. The gun if finished would
have been worth $12J00.
Boaro, whojsjtjilled from the Boston
XJnion BajfeBoll Club, has been emrarod
tfcejAvidenoe Cluh.
EV&vis, a salesman, was ar-
FNewTork for forging the names
mors of .newspapers to requests for
"theater, roilreadasd steamboat passes.
Ubwk Bishop, an actor, aged thirty.
shot himself at New York the other night,
probably fatally. He played las season
ia the Kate Claxton company in the "Two
Orphans.
.ATCeatralia, Pa., recently, John Kia
mas. Aimer Rice aai Borie Sponemith
were fatally injuredlby the premature ex
plosion of a blast.
The worst fire ihat.exer occurred in the
history of Bradford, iPa took place on the
lltb. The fire originated in the bakery of
Jirs. Charles Reibley and it burned ten
houses. Mary and Lizzie Reibley, aged
two and six years respectively, and a
Swedish servant girl were suffocated and
burned to a crisp. Jars. Jfeibley, in her
efforts to rescue her babes, was terribly
burned and died in a shrt time. Lena
Gerwitr and Mary Touhey were asleep
when the fire broke out, and they escaped
by jumping from a wiadow. Both were
severely injured and Miss Tt'wfaey it was
thought would die. John Hold'en and H.
Gerwitz were also badly hurt,
was the father of Mrs. Reibley.
Jiie latter
THE WEST.
A mysterious disease within two weks
swept off fifteen hundred hogs ia the vi
cinity of Vandalia, HI.
J. B.s)owx, a farmer aged forty year.?,
as orownea ine other day while bathing'
Licking Creek three miles east of New-
Ohio. He left a wife and nine ehll.
r, a blacksmith employed ia the
lwaukee & St. Paul ronad-
, Iowa, was drowned the
ipsixing of asldif while
Taller, fifteen miles north of Deadwood,
Dakota, toother afternoon. Ta storm
track was about one mile wide and de
stroyed everything in its course. The house
of a Mrs. Boomer JJWn down, bury
ing her In the ruiniH
The Ohio Coal Exl decided to
import Swedes and Huagariaas to take the
place of three thousand miners now on the
look-out in the Hocking Valley; also to
tart mining machines
The Union Pacific Railroad has made
arrangements to run a fast freight train
from Kansas City to Denver. The train
will leave Kansas City at 7 o'clock in the
evening and arrive in Denver at 1 o'clock
p. m. of the day but one after, thus saving
six hours by the new schedule.
Lewis Marks, a Polish Jew boy, seven
teen years old, while riding a horse in the
river at Des Moines-, was drowned. The
horse stepped suddenly into deep water
and began plunging, throwing the boy from
his back.
Charles Walker, a prominent citizen
of Goshen, Ind., died recently from the
effect of morphine taken with suicidal in
tent. His wife was to have made applica
tion for a divorce. He was well known on
the Board of Trade at Chicago.
Thomas J. Navin, the absconding Mayor
of Adrian, Michigan, has mailed from a
Cuban town a letter opening negotiations
for a compromise with the estate of E. S.
Clark, which he robbed of 5W.030.
In the Circuit Court at Milwaukee, the
owner of two houses in the Twelfth Ward
has applied for an injunction to restrain
the tongue of, a neighbor named Louise
Troegel, whose scolding kept the adjoining
residences vacant.
' The City Council of Rockford, 111., unan
imously sustained Mayor Taggart in his
recent action in removing School Inspec
tors Perry and Bronson. The latter deliv
ered a lengthy protest against removal.
At Toledo recently a fire was discovered
in the lumber yard of the Mitchell & Row
land Lumber Company. The flames com
municated with tho lumber yard of Nel
son, Holland & Co., and thence to that of
J. B. Kelly's. In four hours twelve acres
containing 20,000,000 feet of lumber burned.
The losses were as follows: Mitchell &
Rowland Lumber Company, $280,000, in
sured for $255,000; Nelson, Holland & Co.'s
loss was $70,000, fully insured; Kelly, $15,
000, fully insured.
AT Baraboo, Wis., recently a disastrous
fire, broke out in Bender's. large brewery
near the headquarters of the Chicago &
Nortwestern Railway. The brewery and
its contents were destroyed, Along with
three dwelling houses belonging to J. H.
Hal stead and one owned by William
Hoxie.
Lilly J., a trotting mare with a record
of 2: 25 and valued at $7,000, was bumed
at Columbus, O., in her stall at the fair
grounds the other night. She was owned
by C. Stewart of Chillicothe. The loss on
the stables was not over $2,000. The fire
would not interfere with the State fair.
A rabid canine attacked a number of
swine at Rockford, HI., recently, and a
large number died. A hog bitten by the
mad dog would exhibit the same symp
toms as the dog itself.
By the explosion of a boiler in Wolf's
saw mill, four miles west of Nelsonville,
O., Barrock Wolf, aged thirty-four, was
instantly killed, Eugene Wolf seriously
hurt, Hawley Howard badly scalded and
Roy Blackburn seriously wounded.
In exercising Maud S. at Cleveland the
other afternoon she trotted a mile in2:12,L.
The settlement of tho difllcultles an
nounced between the whites and Southern
Ute Indians, in Eastern Utah, will be left
to the Seventh Infantry, stationed at Fort
Lewis.
Great floods of rain fell over parts of
Illinois rocently. Much property was dam
aged, crops-being beaten into the ground.
While John Baker, who lived four miles
north of Glenwood, Ind., was driving a
wagon loaded with a self-binder, recently,
the horses became frightened and ran off a
bridge, upsetting the wagon and machine,
the latter falling on Mr. Baker, killing him
almost instantly.
William Hart was at Cincinnati ac
quitted of tho charge of arson. He was the
only person indicted for burning the court
house during the late riot.
Schuman & Teagle's oil works at Cleve
land burned tho other day. The loss was
$20,000.
J. M. Smith & Co., wholesale canned
good dealers of St. Paul, failed recently.
Three men were banged at Fort Smith,
Ark., on the 11th. They were Thomas L.
Thompson, a white man, John Davis, a
Choctaw Indian, and Jack Woraankiller, a
Cherokee. 'All three were guilty of 'brutal
murders.
At the Chicago Driving Park races, on
the 11th, Jay-Eye-See trotted a mile in
2:11'. It was a special race to beat the
record of Maud S. 2:10.V.
William and Charles Hamilton were
hanged at Warrensburg, Mo., for the mur
der of Carl Steidle, whose body they placed
on the railroad track, where it was mangled.
The motivo was robbery. The real names
of the murderers were Ed Aultman (Wil
liam) and Charles Malsky (Charles), and
they were not related.
The other evening as the four-oared shell
of the Modoc Club, St. Louis, was passing
up tho river opposite the foot of Spruce
street it attempted to cross the bows of the
ferry-boat N. Mulliken, and was run down.
One of the crew went down with the shell,
and the other four sprang to the bow of the
ferry-boat and clung to her guards, but be
fore assistance could reach them two lost
their hold, fell back into the river and were
drowned.The names of the lost were Vincent
Angelo, a somewhat noted amateur sprin
ter; J. C. Rose, an insurance agent, and
Harry Jasper, late of Quincy, III. The two
saved were W. B. Hazeltiue, Jr., and
Cockswain J. J. Miller.
The Collector of Customs of the District
of Arizona notified the Treasury Depart
ment recently that the Mexican Govern
ment had entered into an agreement with
a steamship company to give a bonus of
sixty dollars for Chinese laborers to
be landed at Gaaymas, Mexico, under
labor contracts.
THE SOUTH.
xNroRMATlON received from Coleman
City, Tex., reports the revival of
fence cutting in Callahan County, where
a pasture fence was cut a few days ago.
The Bohemian resideats of Baltimore,
Md., on the 7th celebrated the 4G9:h aunP
versary of the death of John Huss, the
evangelist.
In Baltimore W. T. MeGown was killed
the other morning in a fight with Augustus
Slater. HcGown was a gambler.
At Petersburg, Va.. Patterson. Madison
& Co., one of the largest wholesale firms in
the city, was closed by the United States
Marshal. The liabilities were 330,000 and
the assets, $150,000.
Manuel Leopez while returning from a
dance in Kenner County, Tex., was way
laid and shot five times, killing aim. It
was supposed that.it was done by horse
thieves whom he prevented from stealing
stock from ranches.
At Mobile the other day, the assignment
of- the Bank of Mobile caused a short nut
oir two of the banks. Both stood the strata
sacoossfallv.
of thtraia wreckers wao'have sads
attempts to throw the cars of the
Central Railroad from the track
arrested ro
ot
that he confessed to her that tie belonged te
the party-
The National Colored Press' Association
at Richmond, Va., issued an address to the
country congratulating the colored people
on their progress and advancement. The
colored people were appealed to to main
tain and improve the present public edu
cational system and the colored youth
urged to enter industrial pursuits.
In a quarrel on a street corner in Balti
more, recently, a sporting character named
William McGowan was shot dead by Gus
Slater, a nephew of the most prominent
gambler in the city. McGowan last year
killed Qteti.Gorter on the same spot.
Ex-Goternor Lubbock, of Austin, Tex.,
has forwarded to ex-President Jefferson
Davis an invitation from President Mitch
ell, of the ex-Confederates' Association, to
be present at the Confederate reunion
soon to occur at Dallas.
JuogePaul, of the United States Dis
trict Court at Danville, Va., on the 9:h
charged the Grand Jury on specific crimes
agamst lue elective irancmsc, out saiu ice
inquiries must be confined to Federal elec
tions. GENERAL.
A five mile foot race, at Toronto, Ont.,
the 9:h, between David Bennett, of
on
Toronto, and Edward Case, of Hamilton,
for two hundred dollars a side, was won
by Bennett. Time 2G:.'G.
The London Times hays of the Franchise
bill that the House of Lords have nullified
four months' labor of the House of Com
mons. It was rumored that France and Portugal
had concluded ' a secret treaty against
China, by which France would be allowed
to make Macao the base of a land attack
on Canton. Action would be taken to com-
FC V " r," t .: r r ;:, . . ' .
iruese lerruory, wuicu aux miucrto ueeu
refused.
The cholera has driven thousands of
Americans frcm French soil to London.
Any infectious cases in the latter city will
betaken to Gravesend hospital.
Cornwall, Secretary of the Dublin
Post-ofHce, has fled the city since the fail
ure of his suit against O'Brien, as have
also several other persons involved with
him in criminal acts.
The steamship Lincoln City, of the
Furness Line, from Stockholm, for New
York, with a lurge number of passengers,
was ashore near Isaac Harbor, near New
York recently. It vras the first passage of
tho Lincoln City.
The Grand Lodge of Masons passed a
resolution that it was not desirable that
fermented or spirituous liquors should be
placed on the refreshment tables of private
lodges.
A dispatch from the steamer Faraday,
laying the Bennett-Mackay cables, states
that she has picked up on the Irish const
one end which was two hundred miles out
and that she has laid two hundred and
fifty miles.
The Pope had one or two fainting fits re
cently, caused by excessive heat. These
caused a dissemination of rumors that he
was dangerously ill.
A Dorchesteb, N. B., dispatch says the
recent rain culminated in a freshet which
caused great damage.
At Vienna twenty-six workmen from
Bohemia were arrested fcr holding secret
meetings and having seditious letters and
prints from America.
At Brookville, Ont., tho first Odd Fel
lows International demonstration ever
held in Canada opened on the 0th under
the most favorable auspices.
An explosion in a powder factory at
Como, Italy, recently, killed six persons.
A number were injured.
TnE interior of the Royal Armory at
Madrid, Spain, was burned recently. Most
of the contents were destroyed.
The French cabinet has decided to limit
immediate demonstrations against China
to a great naval demonstration. There
will be no military movement until the close
of the hot season. Transpoits were col
lecting at Brest.
Ten deaths from cholera occurred at Tou
lon on the 10th and twenty-five at Mar
seilles. The panic at Marseilles was in
creasing. The exodus is now twenty
thousand persons. Many persons were
knocked down and trampled upon by the
great crowds seeking tickets at the rail
road stations.
The failures in tho United States for
week ended July 10 were ISi, and in Can
ada seventeen.
Italiax troops were blockading tho
roads leading into Italy from France tc
prevent tho introduction of the cholera.
All travelers, including those from Swit
zerland, were quarantined.
THE LATEST.
A Caldera dispatch recently received
at Galveston, says: The steamer Mnjoca,
belonging to tho South American Com
pany, struck a rock off Caldera light house
hva dense fog. The steamer being in a
sin! I ig condition was run ashore. The
passengers and nearly all tho cargo wew
saved.
Four men were severely injured and
one, Charles Cruta, killed by the upsetting
u a oar of a gravel train on the Lackawan
na Railroad, at Boonton, N. J., recently.
The firm of Halstead, Haines & Co., im
porters and jobbers of dry goods, of New
York, filed an assignment.recently for the
benefit of their creditors, to Lewis May,
with preferences $418,000. The announce
ment was receive! with much surprise
among business men. The liabilities were
said to foot up $2,000,000.
Coroner Muscroft has ended the in
vestigation upon the dead bodies of the
persons killed in the late riots at Cincin
nati. He enumerates of these that he finds
Captain Desmond was killed by unknown
persons in the mob; one man (Goetz) shot
himself accidentally; another (Smalz) was
unlawfully shot on the Sunday afternoon
by the miljtia, and all others were justifi
ably killed, they having failed to obey the
commands of the Sheriff to disperse.
Considerable damage to crops from a
severe hail and rain storm was reported
from various sections of New England on
the loth.
It was reported that Patenotre, the
French Minister to China, had 'granted the
Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs a de
lay of two days, but if they failed to give
assent to the terms submitted by France
Admiral Courbet's squadron would bom
bard the forts of Shaughai and Admiral
LesDes, would disembark his forces at Foo
Choo and seize the arsenal there. Two iron
clads have left Brest to reiuforce Admiral
Courbet.
A SKirr containing eight men capsized in
xhe Monongaaela River at Pittsburgh, Pa.,
the other afternoon and August Schrieber
was drowned, The others were rescued
with difficulty.
Jer&t Partsaade, aged sixty, and son
Frank, aged aineteen,were instantly killed,
and Joseph M&scotte, fatally in jured at Cat
lings stone quarry sear Burlington, Vt-, re
cently, by a powder explosion . The Par
trasdes were blows sixty feet in the air.
Mascotte was thrown Ifty feet and buried
under amass of stoae.
As the traia which leftFola on the after
noon of the 13th, after the one ou which
was Esaperor Fraacis Joseph, was passisg
through a gorge mear Podgeeitaa it was
discovered that the rails ha&beea mis
placed. The discovery, however, was
aaadeiatiBM to stop the traia. The criss
iaals had evidently sabtakea this traiff or
the os coataiaiag the Eaaperor.
POLITICAL BREVITIES.
n Blaine this great big America
of ours will hare a big American Presi
dent. IssTMr.
demanded
Advertiser.
JTNow
Blaine's romination was
by the . people. Elmira
that the "independents'
are counted,
well proceed.
the campaign might as
fOrThcre is auother bolter in New
York. Upon hearing of Mr. Blaine's
nomination Tilden has bolted. He
knows better than to ran agaiun the
Man from Maine. Chicago Tribune
nsgrWe would iuggest to the Sehurz-Godkin-Times
combination of sublimate
kickers that :hej go to Eugland for a
candidate. Therje doesn't appear to be
' anybody rood enough for them in this
icountrv. it
''rcnion (X.J.) Gazette.
a3?--That tired feelinc-vou have, do
vou know what causes "it?" asks a
patent-medicine advertisement-
- i. - i ..
We do
' indeed.
It comes from listen dz to this
!
fairy-tale about Mr. Blaine not being
able lo carry Massachusetts. rhila
dcljihia Pa.) 'Press.
'
fS?Thc Memphis Appeal, since Til
, (en,s ain; saV3 Access depends
, Qn the Democrat: nominatjn,f the
"right man." The Republican Con
vention at Chicago nominated the
"rijrht man." and his name is lilaiue.
Knoxville (Tenn.) Chronicle.
JeBrFrom Ma'ue to Cal'fornia, from
Lake Erie to the (iulf of Mexico cornea
the same refrain this morning. Aud
the refrain is, in effect:
Vhlch I wish to remark.
And my language Is Ulnlne.
Iribune.
JeFWhat tho effect of the Chicago
nominations has
been upon the Demo
i .. . .
cratie party in Ohio is evidenced by the
i report, oi me jnio uemocrauc conven
tion "the smallest convention held in
the State for years." The talk of Ohio
being a doubtful State is the tale of an
idiot, "full of sound and fury, signify
ing nothing."
jeFTliere is no greater evidence of
inherent asin'nity, in our opinion, than
the repeated attempts of-t he Democratic
party to pose as the soMier's friend.
History is made on that question, aud
the constant attempt to unmake it, to
reverse deeds by words, simply calls
attention to what, in self-defence, the
Democratic party should be glad to
pass silently by. Indianapolis (Ind.)
Xews.
Je&History repeats itself. In 18G4
the Democratic party in its platform
denounced the war for the Uniou as a
failure. But it wasn't. The Demo
cratic party was mistaken ; that was
all. In 1S84 the Democratic party is of
the opinion that the Republican party
" must go." It is mistaken again : that
is all. The Republican party will con
tinue business at the old stand.
Indianapolis Journal.
The Tattoo or History.
Every man who ever amounted to
anything at all had his enemies. Even
George Washiugton, "the thyt, the last,
the best; the Cinciunatus of the West,"
had contemporaries to envy and decry
him. His enemies are dead, their cal
umnies are forgotton, but the FaJer ef
his Country lives on. immortal and im
perishable, enshrined among the great
names of the world.
Abraham Lincoln was in his day the
target for unmeasured abuse: his very
nomination was regarded as an outrago
and an insult by those who thought
that Seward should have been the chosen
of the Republican convention. At the
receut convention, which nominated
James G. Blaine" there was a handful
of so-called Independents who thought
that Edmunds snould have, been the
nominee, and. failing him, they desired
nobody. The Edmunds following in 1884
was by no means as large or as respect
able as was the Seward following in
18G0, but in James G. Blaine the
country has a man from whom it may
expect as much in time of doubt or
difficulty as. ever it received from Lin
clon. Seward is gone. Edmunds is
buried out of sight beneath a mountain
of Republican votes, but in Blaine we
have a man in whom the glories of Lin
coln will live again. 'lhe very spito
and venom of the attacks made upon
him show how formidable he is in the
eyes of his enemies. With such weap
ons Washington was assailed nearly a
centun- ago; they were turned against
Lincoln; they were leveled at Garfield's
breast but asked the country (as it
will be asked in November) how much
they regard them. No more and no
less" than Blaine regards them to-day.
Part' spite will have its tling; no
quarry is too noble for the campaign
raud-slingers.
But take the majority of the party;
take the great concensus of public opin
ion, and see what it thinks of Blaine.
Take the great political papers of the
West and read of Blaine. He is no
half-way politician no shirker from
his party's ranks in the tents of Inde
pendence. He is a Republican of Re
publicans, and represents all thai is
noblest in the grand old party. He was
in it at its birth, and so fixed in
his principles that he will be in it at its
death if it dies within his time. Hi is
hated by the opposition more intenely
than any other Republican, because he
is the most intense Republican living.
He is not onlv in accord with his party.
but is in the extreme advance. He
hated slavery with a hatred that had
no limits, and he hated all of its out
growths. He is a believer in protection
to American industry; he is a staunch
upholder of National integrity: he is a
champion of equal rights and of honest
money.
No wonder his opponents are afraid
of him. No wonder that weak-ki;ecd
Republicans shrink from the path that
he treads so boldly. He is the ablest
statesman in America, and .the bravest.
He never held a principle that he was
afraid of: and he never shrank from its
logical consequences.
Of course, he has been maligned as
few men have. He possesses a power
that makes him dangerous to his ene
mies, tlis greatness has invited at
r-i!- - "
tne Snmmrr marK J
tacks, and he has been
that scandal loves.
has been poured out npon him in tor
rents, but to no purpose. His integrity
has made him proof against attacks.
The people know him to be honer.t
know him to be great in his integrity as
-'w ' ......, -j
ifr e I
in his other magnificent qualities, and
thev fcave never lost confidence in him
Is it the slur of a partizan press that
, : .. t ...
can
utiutM &ucu a man as
th
w:
Is it
the anonymous whisnerimr of accnaa
tions fiat have never been proved that
can shske the people's confidence in
him? Wit till aext Novemiber, aad
the American Nation will vindicate at
the polls tkft justice of their choice aad
the character of their favorite leader.
Tber will force the malkkxu slandenrs
j to"awaDow tber own We, as the slan
derers of Waskixigtoa, of Lincoln, of
Garfield, have be4' fbreed to swallow
theirs; and. if God
Blaine's life, the U
nave cm
may be
fcOod. The
The Figure.
The Republican ticket has now been
long enough before tlis cottttry to call
out whatever opposition it is "likely to
meet. The Democrats have no hope of
success against it in anv State west of
Pennsylvania. The feeling in its favor
at the West is marvellously strong.
promises to the liquor interest ami toi
the wool-grower-. The promises to
both have all been broken. The Scott
law is not to be repealed, but the Dcm-
ocrats have contrhed. by means of the
Supreme Court UecMon. to take the
only course that could Le more uopopu-
Uir than either the repeal or the enforce -
nieut of the law. Tne party not o;ily
refused to restore the wool-taritV, as it
"' .J " . '. , , UL 2w'.-""- " J"
Tr?,!"' ,iu"nT.r u.c-
- Lvjiri iiuuusi din I'lrcunisianccs
eiin-
ceivable those things made Ohio
I ,? ,,. ,,, T?.k.,..M :i .. i ...
LttlU IV'l L1JU IkUIJUWIlL.lII LIl'KI'l. I11IL L..I17
nomination of a friend of President
Garfield has aroused a feeling which
nothing can resist. Tho same in-1
tluences and interests prevail to a great
extent in Indiana, and the popularity of '
General Logan in both State-, with
public approbation of the manly Ameri- I
can policy of Mr. Hlaiiie, seem "to have
settled the matter as far as it can be
settled before the votes have been
actually cast and counted. It
is sir-
nuicaiit. too, tnat no Democrat now
talks of the oos.-ibilitv of Mieurinir the
votes of any Pacific States.
Pennsylvania, f course, is bevond
tlfiiitit. In X.v Knrtnil tlm W..i,.
lican ticket has shown less trength.
Maine, doubtless, will give a heavy ma
jority for it, and no one doubts the re
sult in New Hampshire, Vermont or
Rhode Island. In estimating the prob
abilities in Massachusetts, it mut be re-
- --- - --..,.., ... .-w..,.w
menwereu tnat tne itcpuoiicau major-
ity for President Garfield was 47.818.
General Butler gained maiiv votes
which no other Democratic candidate
can. As against any other, the major-
ity to be overcome is too large to per-
mit the State to be considered doubt
ful. The protest of 1,iOO voters, half
Democratic, does not mean much in a
State where a transfer of 20,000 votes
would not change the result. Con
necticut is exceedingly slow to change,
and its majority of 'J, GOO for Garfield is
really more ditlicult to overcome than
the majority of 47,H)0 in Massachusetts.
The States already enumerated cast
W.i electoral votes, and would elect
Blaine and
Loran
if no other State
should bo carried
But the Republicans have
better
chances of success than the Democrats
in New York and New Jersey, on ac
count of the taritl" issue, and because of
the remarkable strength of Mr. Blaine's
American policy with the people. Other
reasons will occur to every well-informed
reader. It may be said with
strict truth that it is more probable that i
Mr. Blame will carry either of these
States than that he will lose any one of
those above enumerated as easting i03
leotnr'il vntix.
In addition, there is West Virginia,
in which the Democratic majority in
1880 was only 2,061) in a total vote of
112,71.'J. Within four vcant a treat
number of new mines furnnen. cnl-i
new mines, Inrnaces. coke
'
wwrks and
other iiianiifactoritsi have
been opened, which employ laborers
who are directly interested in the pro
tective policy. The number of work
men who are thus employed, and were
not four years ago, is more than 2,000.
Brides, the development of industries
has given new ideas and aims to thou
sands of other voters, and particularly ,
to farmers, who find a new market for
products. The building of railroads,
also, has brought into the State nvw
men and new inlluences. Those? who
promised the Electoral votes of West
Virginia to Mr. Blaine were not care
less or ignorant
In Virginia, there has been a similar '
oiiange m the clement.
. . . .
tion. The majority
in a total vote
lan;e to be overcome
lina. too. the nmioritv was onlv 8.JIH
unio. naturally a u-puuiicaii btate in j American citizens, native and adopted
Presidential contests, was twisted over alike caa rely for protection in their
to Democracy in the State election by nhi snd for" the promotion of their
of 217,l.i. and is not too' " c minoniy; out, too moral puu-sopny , but Mr. Tilden had Miereedrd In rarrvbw:
in a total of 211.218. "With a frcaaud t,,:it not a"dance. but scarcity-, ol
honest vote, there is the best reason to! V(,,os ,a ll,e tn,c lL' l,i a candidate
believe that Mr. Blaine would earrv w"rth anl availability. Hence, the
these States, ami the circumstances jus- failure of nine-tenths of the Convcn
tify hope that such a vote may be had. t,on 'C'-'bi to the preference of one
There remain Florida and Louisiana, , timtli justities the truly earnotand vir
where new influences threaten the Uein-j tuous Pnot in turning Iwilter.
ocrats. New nonnlation in Florida '' attitmle of ir,rrN WrrJt, b
aiisrht easily overcome the small ma or-
ity of
P
4.290 in 1880, and the intense
feeling in Louisiana on the sugar ones-'
tion makes the protective
- -.
policy
strong:, and the course of the
Demo
cratie partr during the last session pe- lk"ul victories and promoting Republic
cniiarly unpopular. an pnncijdes and Ropt.blic.nn methodif
But Republicans know that it would
not be wise to count upon a simrle
Southern vote, because there can bc'no,
question :is to'the remit in every North
orn State. Jv Y. Tribune.
The Onlj National Party.
If the Presidential election could be '
decided wholly by the votes of irenuine
Amnmnnnc nntn.ji nml n !.,.! 1).
.....v...v,MUo. uau.i. .inn .wuivii, "t- '
publican victory would be ccrUtin by
t.u.m,.-, "jwi u. i uicic ai.
especially in the Eastern cites, and, to
iiiu e.ieiu, caiiereu an over me
certainty that the election will boTrco fpjncaii voters comuci wim uu own owli. from the inMiUi and would juio
i t. nt - t t.riilfinnd rind ..vnlfcd nutmrni ii tUm . .. V "? ,,,, viu luiup.
wr itutiusu x ney can carry every onu- y-. - ,; , -; ' ;-; -" aome oi inetu, many ftet u the air.
ern State, and that is enough. They c,J",ce of a. candidate for President. J.m 1
ought to carry without a doubt, agaijist ; ' 1 "c. nn,n!ltion of Mr. Blame is ,m,i rr CM.pirr-
any candidate that can be named, 203 . doubtless agreeable, it says, "to the Prmm-witu Va., July 1!.Ajwljcn.
electoral votes from the Xurth, be-1 n. ?nty of.ttic party. ' This does not Warner, of the i'em, Bank, ent-rcl su for
sjdes having the best chance in XcJjgn conspiracy a.n,t Ildent lUddh, rubier
lork and New Jersey. Take awav the "- PPn, or lue wiioif part, accord' iu..lb.-r and oil broken, m it uuV.m... r
foreign influence ami the possibilities ! " to Harper' lluklys on the cm- Wat SJ T ?L M K? &, i
of fraud within ten miles ot the New iy, that paper declare., it -ought to Uffl J J Lni
York- fifv Tloll nn,l thri urmitd ho n . alarm honest Republican., ai showing iinwn u n.n - , J. ZZ? .
countrj-. considerable classes of voters, the manife- inconsfstcnev, Kophistry
both native ami adopted, who are not. and nonsense of such talk" as the; pa
and probably nver will be, re:tlly tr are usin to explain and justify
Ameruans. They are the men whose
interests all or mainly li? in foreign
goods, foreign customs and foreign
commerce; also the class who are al
ways admiring everything English or
Parisian, and always" decrying Ameri
can institutions; to whom may be added
tlve Communists. Socialists and others
who -re so thorourhlv saturated with
foreiga notions that genuine American
iderj; iH'ver xwnftratn their tind-i-.tinil-
Jiancioussiamierimgs. There are etty newspapers ia
nearly all of our cit.es which are so un-
American that the-y are eternally prat-
ing about how much rer and wiser in
th ir paltry opinions the British Pari.a-
. .. t . .
Congressional and Pres d-nt:al svstem:
mi'nLirv svsicm : rnin nnr x rvt.nt-r :
and who are as dudLsh in their aninir
af foreign political ideas as are the dinitlon of individual -smbe and opin
mimic swells of Boston and New York ions to the will of the majority: and the
in aping English costumes and cocknej- same rule Is applicable to parties. The
language and manners. These classes, v chief purpose of a convention is to de
who are ashamed of the United States termine what the majority think. it
and of whom the United States are , wisest and best to do for the party's se
ashamed. contribute a large vote to the . cwritv and welfare: and that detefmlna
Deinocratic party. Some of their foreign J tion k absolute. There is no valid sys
ideas hava taken so strong a "bold of tem of reasoning by which a man can
the Democratic party that a majoritr of i bolt a nomination thus formally and
that party in a number of States a fairly made. and still vindicate hw d
reat deal more British than American j votion to the party. The candidate and
in its notions about the tariC and takes the party are not to be ooMtdcred .
- J
intpoliSscs largely from Cobden and
r British clubs. If these foratn
un-American elements coold be
mated from the canvass, the Re-
woold sweep mH
only wry f
Northern State, but almost if not quite
evcry Northern Congressional District
The Republican party is rapidly be
coming, if it ! not already, tin only
really National party; the only partf
governed by National ideas, and poUV
cirs. and "purposes; the only part
which truly represents the American
the nnlv nam upon wnicn
lirotnotion
:n?(.rc.t, both at home and abroad.
j Take nnt lhe un.Atnorican vote of the
j cj:v 0f Xew York, and that State would
i be'solicll v Republican, as everybody
know. 'Take out that vote from'other
c.4ljc which are now Democratic, and
tuev WOuld become firmly Republican.
1 Therefore we repeat that if tho election
. coum decided onlv by the voters
, who lH,HeVo i our National system ol
, government, in our .National pouuc.ii
ideas, and interests, anil prwRre. ami
hope, and the result would be a Kepuu-1-can
victory so sweeping a to astonish
the country and the 'world. Detroit
Post ami Tribune
The Losie of the Kickers.
Tne theory upon which tho kieken
against Blame 'attempt to justify their
course woiiiu ne lauguauio u n. "V
nut m uiMHuictt mm iviuuon?iuiu
- .l.,I.. . ... M B. k K.lll.lltl.l
Thev arc not desiroui). they av. to in
jure" the Republican party, but to
benefit, purify and strengthen it- No
party has ever existed, they freely
idmit, that could bo compared w;th it
for soundness of fundamental purnose.
' and for splendor of service ami achieve-
ment. Ihovare nroud and happy in
, . .. ...-
the conciou'ne' of belonging to a
party that has done so much for the
country and for mankind, ami their
souls yearn with anxiety fur its preser
vation and prolonged usefulue.-s ami
glory. Therefore, they propose t" vote
airaiuat it anil do all thev can to defeat
l m i coming election, and turn the
iiovernmeni over to tne party mai n.v
' steadily antagonized it at every step ol
ts gre:,t U1 hlmng career. That ij
the argument, stripped of all disguise
and stated in plain, candid terms.
We are told by the New York Tim-,
for example, that it is no le-s a Repub
lican paper because it refuses to sup
port the Republican ticket. The party
is sick, it says, and oppreed with nox
ious influences; therefore the Timci
will "act the part of a physician," and
exert itself industriously to purge ami
' heal the organization of these ailment
- u uenouncmg ils canumaie ami per
suadiug the people to deny it any furth
er lease of power. That Mr Blaine
' W,IS fairly nominated is not questioned.
un tne contrary, it is readil admitted
1 tfttt ttib te tlik latisfk -f In" utti iiti.
Haiti iiu j vnv .u'iv,w v?t a t"u iAit:wt
of the Republican voter of
"
the country that no cnudidat
has ever been selected whe,
so clearly met the prevailing desire ol
the party as a party. To the miml ol
the average citizen, this would seem tc
I Wt a iKtllillll JM'il k It'lll It ik (ttlal
... ....... ....,.. ......... ......m
be supported for the party s ake and
aiHiiiropriety. But, sinirularlv enouirh.
i this is the very reason why the Twin
"Pposes him and urges that ho should
"e defeited.
A similar position is assumed by the
p ' . .
CW 1 Ol'k hl'dlM' I Oil. It
-.... '-.mI i.x,-. . - . -.. f I ,. ...... 1...
i,u" " cv -. l ""' mu
! Rejuiblican party deeply and fervently.
and doesn't see how we could yet alon
without such an organization but the
party needs doctoring, aud tho Even-in-1
Post is going to physic it by doing
all that is possible to put it out and
install in its place the party that the
Eveniny P0.1t lias been aeeiMomed t
regard as the sum of all that is erronc-!
oiis, vicious and nasty in our polit'cs,
There would have bc'ii no room for
complaint, we are told, if Mr. Edmuudi
had been nominate I jtntoa l of Mr.
Mlaine. The sickness of the party con
sists entirely in the fact that the Even
uu; lost din not get tin; ca
...... .
andfdatr t
wll il desired. It has h-en suppovid
l,..M,.l..Mt !... l. .............. ....... - - .
wisdom resides wit li the remnant, and
substantially the same. It is thorough-
lv devoted to the interests of the Re-
Pwcaii party, it claim-, and felicitate
.....! ....... !...--.-. 1. .. .1 . T 1 II.
iiM-ii upon n;mii oana couHiiieraoic
share in the honor of winnimr Remit)-
r:. t ..
of administration.
But it has to
the line of moral
duty at the
w"re the views of the great body ol j
WUJII,
the Republican
standard has fallen," and put them in
a humor to give aid and comfort to tho
; Democrats, because the great object!
" of the Republican party arc not to-tws
expected from RenubHcan mictmi "
The nartv needs medieino: tlierofor
tt .t Sf--f.f fl i ?. .,. ,
(irnrr ncsK-r win nose il wun neroir
in'ections of suchntuffas shall prevent
n irom maiinaimug iw supremacy and
perpetuating its existence "
it is not necessary 10 enlarge iinon
their singular course. Mr Blaine U
the candidate of the party bccaui the
be.-t judirraeat of the party as exempli
fied in the free and deliberate action of
the people's repreirenta'ives hx made
him such. It is not logically jKjssjblc
to vote against him and jet'utam a
sincere and faithful relation to the par
tv for which he stands, and whieh m.t
gain or lose as be shall succeed or faiL
n.. u.r. ..,.. .u-u .i.,. as -
of the majority of a party conven-
tion i held to be binding and
conclusive upon all who belong to
,,a. J)artv jj the fame in effect a
that upon which free jrovernment
- .
of the people and 'bv
- tr.....i ..i .... ..
ijovemment
iwyir! snu ov tee reni
Tinu?t!cahl onlv bv reason of rJie rtL,r.
t m- "" "" "
Kratciy. xaej are ose ana ine same
for voting purposes; and no war ha
been fouad to oppose thn candidnr
wiuHXK-at tne saaae toe cntnr aI
the irtT-t
i r.nnlo?
s oi the noiniia-I "vv,,"u V'" "' "''." "J '" "V'-'-ilIanj. In ts7rt hU frb.f.d- ...,.ilm.fiv
in 1880 was 12.810 likely U l- right m such matters than M,..u,l bin nomination for the ITwIdenry.
. In North C'aro- OI . l ,,! r.vcmmj toi teaches that alll New York, wis very ioi.uhtr and .iierittil.il
IIU u.ii"t:iuii"i iiti
I. v a -mt . l. 1 m m
TME DEMOCRATIC TOJUSEE3.
."rorrr C!trrliinl, lWimcnttc N.m i,r,
(Jiover Cleveland, iVtnocr.it.c v.t; j
i ,r iv.4!iliit anil tirwsnt (.ovrrnor ..f .
otk v&. born at CaMwrll, Ex lu,
J. March 1 1J7. HU tnlit
J .iiaiVU t" l.. inn WUKT WM i
1 "
jilnbter, and Mr. Cleveland ho.s lhi rr'A
:lvnJ prominent aimmsj the. Pnt9t!.:
;)erjry, not to speak of his mimenut ,-r
al ancestors. After rtvrivtm; sh m
ttructlnn 3 was pneuraNo f n t
Jie emunwn chool In .-.
ahtce of the imrenta! rdden wo
Cleveland wa.SM.mttn th Aewlmiy .x "Iu
ton, Oneida County, N. Y. Cjxin U-avm
this Mt of learninc, he went to Nov or
City, whvro mAlllcd for Mime time Uw p
itWm of clerk In an Institution of charm.
He ubMiirntly smarted Wtt, but laitinc
while- on hfe war, an uicK ntJtllmr m
IlutTaJo. he w;ui Induivd to rrtunin
in that city, a.s clerk in Ue un
of his relative. He was HcM-n
year of aye at the thin, uu ambition mft
fellow jKviM"ved of tle earnest lesw !
tccuitio a Micrcvfitl lnwyer. HH uic-tf
favored this aspiration, and vcurrl ltlt a
place as clerk In .the oflle? of a protniuiit
law tinn and at the same time ho tMtJoyt-d
tho comfort of a j;il home ut hs iwl.v
tlljs hou. He wai ndtoltUil to the tar ui
IS.V.. lib. first political olheo wm A
twit LH-trict Attorney for the County of
Krl. He held tlw joltlu thm;
years, until the end of hi Mijrwir"-
ierut of ofTtce. when he n:ls nomlnnU-d nr
District Attorney on the iH-tnoeratie ticket,
hut defeated. Ill lb70. fle yew afVr th.
failure, he was elected MieritT of Ktv
Ouiitty, ami In November, tvsi, W fHvf id
LMavor of Butfalo by a decLsie mnjortU
In iVJ tho DettHKTitlc State ComenUoii nf
New Vtwk iiomltiareit him for (iovrtin.r
ami he defeated the Republican caiMlltU
Mr. Kolyer, the imr'iil Sceary of U
Treasury, b nearly tvro huudrcl thoustiil
majority. Thb brought hlin prouilmmtly
forward as a enmlhl.ite for tho TreoliU-ncy.
Mr. Cleveland h a buehclor.
Thr Nominee for Vli't.rtllriit.
Thoiiiait A. Hcndr1ck-, the noiiifm-i- for
Vhwl Trident, was lH,m 1
roUMtVt ()hi(t Sentemtr 7.
In MtiMiitim
I Ml. Three
ver later his father movml with hit family
to Indiana. Mr. Heiidrieks KrofiMlrtt :tt
South Hanover College In 1H41 and lmi
Jiately eommencitl tl ,st4ly of Uvr. llo
wiLsnilmitteal to the Invt in 1H. In lM'V
he was eleeted to the Indiana Ij-lslttire,
3nd In lHr,o was a member of the MaU
Uoikstitutloual Couyentlon. Ho repre
teuted the liidJaajMli"i dNirirt hi
dm Lcichlature from IhSi u
HM, when he wa.piuUl Ounnilfwloiter
of the tleneral I -nod oilier, by I'ntsWlerit
rierce, which ottlet; he held until Wl. In
I he rati for ( .'ovenmr of Indiana, but
v:l. Iwiifii hv Hi'tirv S t-iiii. It.. .-'
- elrcte.1 trnitel SUU N-uator In lrt:t, mid
Kervcd
iijhih Kuiurai inij-irwni commutee-i
nun unwily, mi'i ie-Miiiu reeoptiMti a a.
parly letuler. In I.ntVS he mwUx ran for
Ioicnior, and was mN a prominent candi
date for I'n-sHniit In the name
year and eitme near re-'civlnir the
I I)CtlrOcnlic noiidnatlon. He uu. nimln
'f()re t,, National Convention in X?1, and
., ' ;
oeieAiei oniy uy xno iumdii incident to lo
ic was chosen governor of ln-
" - '
In M-curliu? the nomination, with Mr.
Hendrirkft Tor Ye-I'iyddent. The event
rMMi(ctei with Unit memorablu eampaMcn
and the results of tike Klertoral CommiMitMi.
are .still fresh In the mind. of the j-ople.
Since, then Mr. Hcudricki has given Ids aV
texiUoti to the praetlceof his profmsiou.
Iltr nf lhg.
Jtoacpojui, li.i., July 11. A ntbld ca
nine ntLacked a nuriilx.'r of nwlne in Uie
northern part of the city, ami already a
larjje number are ira.l. A hoy, bitten 'by
a mail dr would exhibit the name ymj
tjms as thedoK' ItwJf. The anlmnl.s lnf-.
Utl would run wiMly alxiut, v-metlmcs with
their nosrs to tlwj ground. atI at other
time jK)lntliiK nkyward, utterhuc mimu
whllo insMdhtrlr'TiIalntlvt. im.i nt.iL,i(iimi
. - - -". ui .ji,v..t,wj uy
.iciriHuniLs, wno iijiI enurt! uiUi a rombU
nation t control and nianlf.ubito the iwtx-
7m V IU. ? nxo1 at 3'.WO each tor
JlWdle and I MUratl 15,000 for tach of
trie otlMrrs.
lmond Mlnlnr.
lift VtriiM t... ... --.
"-.. n i.. jiiiv- lo. nii. -tv
ce thai Is attending the effort ui mln
ioruiann in waakflw County ha. v
"i In the filing of articles of aLociAtioo
for the Xatfta i)imnwid.rir.;r.r. (.M.
The incorporators ar. S. it ut. i :.'.
IF'J'ZZ!1'?"1 I1lil Wll The capita!
-y-v'wv. "o"" nw two li end red h4r-s
of Sioo tacli, and the ijwt of ti, .,
ctaUon raining ami prospwting for dkuitoaA
and mineral at Eailc
An old tract mv:
twelve ra TvlopVxl
propheU were twelve,
numbered twelve, there
'Tbo jury of
lecaa3 " tho
the apostlest
were twelr
lewun wuttg. twelve jliar?i ff t&
temple, twelre patriarch?, twelve tribe
of Israel, twelve stones on Aaron's
brean-plafe. twelve nc4 of .Ivrtrotem,
twelrc months In the v.-ar ani twe vo
signs in thj zotlbc When iuri- w-m
r.t estalflishcal. tte Judo
took tno-
i
sbsssssssssssV- 9.
ilsssssssssssssv. a lassV.
fssssssssssssss'-JissssssssssF'
BBSSSSSSSSSSSsS'SSSSSSSSSBlkBv
SSSSSSSSSSsS lr"!!Sfl m
SsssssssaP'r'i-v5' ilL l
issssssst& '5 Xlsssf
HsssssssiMrF s,,JjKiBsssa.
reXcV--fiBSESSSF
srtfTBiiri
.Sssssaw asr-Jisr
BBSssssssssssssssssssssss"BBP"fc"sssssss"'r
IssssssssssssssssssssssssssW SssssTI
isssssssssssssssssssssssssssW 'iBS?!
IsssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssV i "i
BlBSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSkw 4r Hs-T
XiBSSSSSSSSSriBSSSBiBSBSSSSSSSSSSIiESSSSSSS 'X
3Hl2Bsssssssssissssssssssssk th
IBslClBSSSSSSSSSSSSiBBSSSSSSSSSSSSiBSSSSSriBSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSBil&.f
.rv atavr ntiiii mil iimi n wirn jrnztt
m iiiniia i dr ii i .a v m . -. ..b a .. . .k
- --- w m ssaa.
they agrvci. u u- didnt agre-i. Uier
I were hned and jmpriaed.
i"""-7 "vwfc wiia mni m a
ia a cart unlit
An office door In Norwich. Conn...
bears a pUcard reading 'rt,: ..tell.
b non-partisan; talking politics is sot.
r" aauer any cTTcamanc
ncitber of the occupants ha. say polit
Jcal preferences and aree!v aay fellr
looj convictions. Ba-fim?4sb what wo
want: soreheads and lijdependnu t
no consolation here. Window four
ones from Water street. -if artfonl
wC'w Jf - V1 im nadelphb
i
i
j;
V
i
h,
,
1
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