The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, January 27, 1875, Image 2

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    The Huntiugdon Journal.
It. DURBORhOW,
ITUNTINGDON, PENN'A
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY. 27. 1875
Circulation LARGER than any other
Paper in the Juniata Valley.
THE SENATORIAL ELECTION
The electioa of a United States Senntor,
at Harrisburg, by a ,Joint Convention of
the two Houses, on last Wednesday, pass
ed off quietly ; and Hon. William A. Wal
lace. Democrat, of Clearfield county, re
(Tired - the entire Democratic vote over
Hon. John Allison, Republican, of Mercer
eaunty. The State Ring, a combination
which has, heretofore, manipulated the
Republican party in its own interests, re
fused to allow its adherents to vote a com
plimentary vote foe Hon. John Scott, who
led all other candidates in caucus, because
-he was tacit of their clique. These fellows,
sleek and flit from long feeding at the
Public crib, have been able to control the
party machinery up to the present, but we
them now that they shall no longer male
hewers of wood and drawers of water of the
lleindilican masse.. of Pennsylvania. They
may have learned this from the result of
the late election. They may be able to
manipulate nominating conventions and
little Caucuses, but when they come before
the people it will he the fault of the peo
ple if the nominees set up by them arc
elected ! This thing of a dozen or two of
men dictating all our nominations and
treating those who are not of them, as
enemies of the party, must be rectified.—
As the case now stands it makes no differ
ence to thousands of Republicans, who are
outside of the Ring, whether the Republi
cans or Democrats are successful. They
are left out in the cold any way. They
ha7e no part Lor lot in the distribution of
the party rewards. Democratic triumphs
are the only corrective for this sort of
thing. Of course it will be said that if
certain Republicans cannot rule they are
disposed to ruin. We deny any such in.
tention. We only ask to by treated like
white men ; like active members of the
same family; and if this cannot be done,
(and it has net been done heretofore,) a
divided house must be the consequences.
We can characterize the treatment of
Mr. Scott as simply an outrage upon ev
ery sent:e of propriety- and decency. For
six years Mr. Scott has been a most ac
ceptable Senator to every part of the
State. No word of reflection for neglect
of duty or incompetency has been heard
throughout the broad acres of the Com
monwealth. Ile has ever been at his post
and no truer Republican ever occupied a
seat in the Senate Chamber of the United
States. Honest, able and faithful, he has
ever enjoyed the confidence and esteem of
his peers, and•simply because he could not
become a party to the filling of appoint
ments, with the members of a clique, to
the exclusion of worthy, honorable and
upright Republicans, who would nut stoop
to such political charletatary, he was "cut"
by this Ring, et Harrisburg, on Wednes
day last, and the complimentary vote,
which should have been accorded to him,
by every sense of courtesy and decency,
was denied. Is was a direct and positive
thrust at every friend of Mr. Scott in the
State. Had there been a solitary sub
stantial reason for this conduct we might
be led to regard it in a different light, but
as it is, we can see nothing but the ugly
insult of a set of honorable (?) men, bound
together by the cohesive power of public
plunder to defraud their fellow Republi
cans out of their legitimate share of po
litical rewards. It may be an honorable
and laudable purpose, but • it reminds one
very much of a pack of hungry cayotes.
THE LAW OF LIBEL.
In the State Senate, Mr. Ermentrout, of
Berks, introduced an act amendatory of
the law of libel, that from and after the
passage of this act, in the trial of indict
ments for writing or publishing a libel, the
truth of the matter charged as libelous
may be given in evidence, and if the jury
shall find that the same was written or
published from good motives, or for justi.
fiable ends, or that the matter so charged
was true, it shall operate to the acquittal
of the defendant or defendants.
No conviction shall be had of a defend
ant or defendants on a prosecution for
libel whose vocation is the publication of
a newspaper for writing or publishing
such alleged libel, anywhere, except within
the county where the paper iA edited and
printed.
That in the trial of all prosecutions . for
libel exception to any deci6ion of the court
may be made by the defendant or defend
ants, and a bill thereof shall be sealed in
the same manner as is provided and prac
ticed in civil cases, and the defendant or
defendants, after conviction and judgment
upon the verdict. may remove the indict
ment, record, and all proceedings to the
Supreme Court, which removal shall delay
or stay the execution of the judgment or
sentence until the same is reviewed and
decided by the Supreme Court.
rEta..The Senate Committee on Railroads,
at a special meeting held Saturday, decided
to report adversely on the Northern Pacific
Railroad bill and all other measures re
firt't!d to them proposing Government aid
or subsidy for railroads, with the excep
tion of Pcott's Pacific Railroad bill, which
was not acted on, but laid over until
Monday. The N. V. Tmes' Washington
special says that from what is known of
the views of the Senate Committee on
Railroads, it is considered impossible that
Scott's Texas Pacific Railroad bill can be
reported flivorably.
ter When the correspondent of the
Pittsburgh ewitnierciql, in criticising the
standing Committees of the House of Rep.
resentatives, disparages Hon. George H.
Spang. of Bedfprd, who occupies the fourth
place on the Judiciary General Committee,
by stating that he is a distiller, lie simply
shows his ignorance. :-Tr. 4pang is one
of-the ablest lawyers in' the state. lie
fills the bill in every particular.
ses. Hon. H. H. Mateer, or the House
of Representativcs, will accept our thanks
fbr a number of Legislative and Executive
LOTTISIA.I\TA.
EDITOR
THE ' ST 0 !
AN ACCOUNT OF THE ATTEMPTED UTP:PITION!
HOW WILTZ WAS DEFEATED !
The I:epublira)JS PreSel7t the!). ,‘.;!d(
of the Oise!
NEW ORLEANS, January 12.—The I'ol
lowing was submitted to the Ke110r . .2: 143-
gislature yesterday :
To the Honorable Speaket and Yeinters
of the House of Represflitatires of the
State of Louisiana :
GENTLEMEN—Your committee selected
to prepare a statement of the revolutionary
proceedings in the hall of the House of
Representatives on Monday, Januiry 4,
beg leave to submit the following state
went, and recommend that it be immedi
ately forwarded to the Congrc of the
United States.
Respectfully : Jas. S. Matti:cu.:4, ChaF,
W. Lowell, George Drury, W. P. South•
ard, and R. R. Ray.
The returns of the election No
vember 2, 1874, as promulgated by the
proper returning officers thereof, according
to law, showed that there were elected to
the House fifty-three Republicans, fifty
three Democrats, and there were five seats
for which the returning officers had mid°
no returns, which were referred, ibr the
decision of the right to hold them, to the
General Assembly. The whole number
of the House of Representatives is one
hundred and eleven; a quorum is a ma-
jority of the members elected, anti wai at
the time fifty-four. A quorum when the
whole number is seated is fi ty-six. A few
days prior to the day fixed for the meet ing ,
of the General Assembly, a posse of un
authorized persons secretly kidnapped A.
G. Cousin, a Republican member, and by
force and violence conveyed him out of
the city, under color of a pretended charge
of embezzlement, fifty miles across Lake
Pouchartrain, to a distant parish, where
they held him in confinement until after
the day for the meeting of the General
Assembly. They afterward released him,
the very men who made the charge going
on his bond, and acknowledging that their
object in arresting and detaining him was
to break the Republican majority. Cer
tain parties, meanwhile, sought, by the
payment of several thousand dollars to
certain Republican members, to bribe
three of them to vote for the Democratic
nominee for Speaker. Attempts were
made to kidnap other Republican mem
bers. Public and repeated threats were
made for weeks previous to the 4th of
January, of violence and assassination
toward certain Republican members of
the General Assembly. These threats and
menaces were repeated,„ confirmed, and
indorsed by the press of the Opposition
throughout the State. In consequence
of information in his possession, that or
ganized violence was intended, and would
be used to influence the organization of
the House, the Governor placed the State
House under the military command of
General H. J. Campbell, of the State
militia, who was ordered to assist and sus
tain the police. Under this order Gen
eral Campbell excluded from the building,
on Monday, all but officials of the State
Government, members of the General
Assembly and persons claiming to be
members, judges, members of Congress,
and members of the - United States civil,
military and naval forces. The constitu
tional provisions for the organintinn (4 .
the House are as follows:
ART. 23. The House of Eepre,euta
tires shall choose its Speaker arid of her
officers.
ART. 34. Eeach House of the Gimeral
Assembly shall judge of the qualification,
election, and returns of its members; but
a contested election shall be determined
in such manner as may be prescribed by
law.
ART. 36. Each House of the General
Assembly shall keep and publish weekly
a journal of its proceedings, and the yeas
and nays of the members on any question,
if the desire of two of them, shall be en
tered on the journal.
The law governing the organization of
the House is as follows:
Section 44, Article 28, approved No
vember 30, 1872—That it shall be the
duty of the Secretary of State to transmit
to the Clerk of the House of Representa
tives and the Secretary of the Senate of
last General Assembly a list of names of
such persons as, according to the returns,
shall have been elected to either branch
of the General Assembly ; and it shall be
the duty of said Clerk anti Secretary to
place the names of Representatives and
Senators elect so furnished upon the roll
of the House and Senate respectively, and
those Representatives and Senators wt'ose
names arc so placed by the Clerk and Sec
retary, respectively, in accordance with the
foregoing provisions, and none other, shall
be competent to organize the House of
Representatives or Senate. Nothing in
this act shad be construed to conflict with
Article 34 of the Constitution.
At 12 o'clock on Monday, January 4,
the State House being surrounded by an
excited crowd of several thousand persons,
the members assembled in the hall of the
House, and the Chief Clerk called the
roll. Immediately afterward, or a little
before the Clerk had finished the an•
nouncement of the number of members
who answered to their names, which was
102, Mr. Billieu, representative from La
fourche, moved that L. A. Wiltz, repre
sentative from Orleans. be elected tempo
rary Speaker. The Chief Clerk replied
that a legal motion was to elect a Speaker.
Mr. Billieu, paying no attention to the
protest. of the C:erk, proceeded hurriedly
to publish his own motion, against the
protest of all the Republican Representa
tives. The motion was put in a quick
and Ached manner, and not in a loud
voice, and was voted for only by a portion
of even the Democratic members. The
negative was not put at all. Mr. Wiltz
having previously taken position near the
Clerk's desk, as quick as thought, upon
putting the motion,. without waiting for
any announcement of the vote, sprang to
the Speaker's desk where the . Clerk was
standing, seized the gavel from his hand,
pushed the Clerk violently off the stand,
and declared himself temporary Speaker.
Following him was W. T. Ilouston, the
first justice of the peace in the parish of
Orleans, who took from his pocket a book,
looking like a Bible, and proceeded to go
through the form of administering Or.:
oath. Mr. Wilt; as temporary Speaker,
assumed to administer the oath to the
members en inagse, against the protest of
the Republican members. Some Demo
cratic members then made a motion to
elect Trezevant Clerk. Wiltz put the
motion and declared, it carried. Treze
cant at once sprang forward and took the
Clerk's chair. Immediately after, in a
hurried and excited manner, a \lr. Flood
was elected Sergeant-at-Arms upon a mo
tion by a Democratic member. Also, a
motion was made from the same side of
the house, that a number of Assistant
Sergeant at Arms be appointed by the
Chair, which the Chair declared carried,
when a large number of persons at once
appeared wearing badges on which were
printed "Assistant Sergearit-at-Aruns."—
While all the above motions were being
put, the Republican members objected
and called for the yeas and nays, all of
which were disregarded by the acting
Speaker.
Colonel Lowell, a Republican member,
made the point of order that the constitu
tion of the State allowed any two members
to call for the yeas and nays on any mo
tion.
Wiltz deelared the point of order not
well taken. (See constitutional provision
above.) The pretended House tnen pro•
ceeded, in defiance of law, to swear in five
additional Democratic members, to wit :
Joseph Bright, of 13ienville, Charlus
Schuyler and John L. Scales, of De Soto;
C. C. Dunn, of' Grant, and George S.
Kelley, of Winn, by which the Democrats
gave themselves a majority. The Repub
licans protested against this violence and
lawlessness, but their protests were disre
garded. The Democrats then assumed to
elect a permanent chairman. Wiltz de
clared himself elected alter going through
the usual form, after having received, as
he claims, 55 votes, which included the
five wen seated in violation of law, the
Republican members withdrawing, not
voting deeming the proceedings illegal.
About the time of the withdrawal of the
Republican members Wiltz gave, or
caused, instructions to be given to the
persons. assuming to be Sergeants at-Arms
not to allow any one to pass out of or enter
the House. Great commotion at once en
sued, and quite a number of knives and
revolvers were drawn and displayed in a
threatening manner. Most of the Repub
lican members had already left the room,
amid great confusion, when Mr. Dupree
of Orleans, a Democratic member, moved
that the Speaker be requested to call on
the United States troops to preserve the
peace of the House. The motion pre
vailed, and a committee, of which Dupree
was chairman, was appointed to wait on
General De Trobriand, and request the
interference of United States troops to
preserve the peace. In a short time the
committee returned, accompanied by Gen
eral De Trobriand and staff. Upon the
appearance of the General upon the floor
loud applause came from the Democratic
side of the House.
General De Trobriand moved to the
Speaker's desk. Mr. Wiltz stated, in sub
stance, the reason of his being summoned,
and informed him of the impossibility of
his enforcing order and preserving peace.
General DeTrobriand, in substance, (the
committee being unable to get the exact
words,) asked Mr, Wiltz whether it was
not possible for him to preserve order and
keep peace without calling on him as a
United States officer. Mr. Wiltz replied
it was impossible. He bad already in
structed his Sergeants at-Arms to do so.
Then Gen. DeTrobriand took action in
the matter, and quiet was restored with
little trouble. Mr. Wiltz then assured
Gem DeTrobriand that his coming had
prevented bloodshed, and as your commit
tee is reliably informed ou motion, thank
ed him, in the name of the General As
sembly of Louisiana, for• his prompt re
sponse to the summons of the llcuse, and
tl►e General retired.
The Republican members then signed
and presented the following application to
the Governor, requesting that the legal
members be put in possession of the Hall:
NEW ORLEANS, January 4.
To His Excellency William Kellogg, Gov•
ernor :
DEAR. SIR : The undersigned, members
elect of the House of Representatives of
the General Assembly of the State, assent
bled at the hall of the House, in the State
House, at 1? M. this day, and answered
to the call made by the clerk. Immedi
ately thereafter the chair was forcibly ta
ken possession of in violation of iaw and
an attempt made to organize the House
contrary to law. We cannot obtain our
legal rights unless the members elect are
placed in possession of the hall. Wtli.n
ever the hall is cleared of all persons save
the gentlemen elected we will proceed to
organize. We, therefore, invoke your aid
in placing the ball in possession of the
members elect that we may attend to the
performances of our duties.
Respectfully,
[Here follow the signatures of fifty-two
members, including the following ;]
I have consented to sign this document
on the ground that the Conservative
members of the House have set the prece
dent by appointing a special committee to
wait on General DeTrobriand, who imme
diately appeared at the bar of the House,
escorted by said special committee.
13,38E1tT F GUICHARD,
Representative of St. Barnard.
This was signed by fifty,two legally
elected and returned members. In re
sponse to this application, the Governor
applied to the military force of the Uni
ted States to assist his officers in expelling
the intruders and disturbers cf the peace,
and preserving order, which assistance was
rendered, and by it order was restored.
When the Republican me.abers returned
to the hall, following General DeTrobri
and, at his request and under his protec
tion, and attempted to follow him through
the door, the Sergeant• at Arms at the
door, by order of Wiltz, closed the door
in their faces, and forcibly prevented them
from entering. They were not allowed to
enter until the attention of General De•
Trobriand was called to the fact, and at
his order the Republican members were
admitted and the five intruders were ex
pelled. The Democratic members, with
Wiltz at their head, then withdrew, and
the House then proceeded to organize
according to law.
STATE OF LOUISIANA,
Office of Secretary of State,
Niw ORLEANS, January 6
I hereby certify that the foregoing fifty
two signatures arc genuine names of mem•
bers declared elected to the House of
Representatives of the State of Louisiana,
as certified by the Returning Board of
said State, and as by me certified to the
Clerk of said House of Representatives, as
required by law.
R G. DESLONDE,
Secretary of State.
I certify that the foregoing protest con
tained the genuine signatures of fifty-two
members of the House of Representatives,
whose names are upon the list furnished
me by the Secretary of State, in conform
ity with law, and I further certify that
all of the said members answerod to their
names at roll-call nude by me at 12 o'clock,
noon, Monday the 4th day of January,
being a majority of all members present..
WILLIAM VIGARS,
Chief Clerk of House of Representatives.
Pinchback Again Elected U. S. Sena
tor from Louisiana.
NEW QaLEANS, January 12.—The Kel
logg Legislature to day adopted a concur
rent resolution to go immediately into the
re election of Lieutenant Governor Pich
back as United States Senator, in order to
silence all doubts and questioning as to his
title to a seat in that body. So suddenly
was this movement made that Pinchback's
opponents were apparently struck dumb
No effort being made to check the pro
gramme, Pinebback was placed in nomi
nation and received the following votes :
Senate, 18 to 5; House. 48 to 7.
I Our New York Letter,
Becelict T' —Y7 Poct Sled 'no
Diptitpria :!;icl S-..arld fiver—R. :1-
tcnJ DVertini Fluty— Tiw
_:Ver Mayor.
NEW Jan. 25, 1875.
TIIE BEECIIER-TILTON NASTINESS.
At last Beecher and Tilton have locked
horns in the legal arena, and the world la
expected to look on breathless. Tilton
gained the first advantage by havin! , the
trial of the ease transferred front 'fudge
McCue to Judge Neilson, which both sides
appeared to consider very important.—
Beecher came into Court after the room
was crowded, and took his scat. The
newspapers speak of him as unchanged in
appearance, but I know better. I sat
within three feet of hint, and where I
could study his face at leisure. He HAS
changed. fle is older than he was a year
ago—older in appearance fir beyond a hat
a year should have made. There is a
look of anxiety, a sort of worn, haggard
expression that to me was absolutely pain
ful. Tilton is ten years older for his ex
perience, and even jaunty Frank Moulton
shows the effects of the strain. By the
way, as Tilton came into Court he pa,sed
within a foot of Beecher, and the eyes of
the two met squarely. It would he diffi
cult to interpret the meaning of their
glances, but it did seem to me that Tilton
had the best of the encounter. He kept
his eye fixed on his antagonist without
anything ugly or wicked in the look, but
with the expression of a man who be
lieved himself to be in the
And Beecher's bearin 7 was equally un
daunted.
The result of the trial cannot be pre
dicted. But from the fact that so far
nothing new has been introduced, it is safe
to presume that nothing new will be. The
public will doubtless be treated to the
same old scandals—the counsel will twist
the evidence each to his own side, the
jury will get their wise heads together,
and—disagree, and that will be the end of
it. We shall know just as much when we
tact through as we do now, and no more.
I fear the the great and important question
as to whether Mrs. Elizabeth Tilton and
Rev. henry Ward Beecher were very,
very naughty, will be one of the conun
drums that never will be settled.
ILLNESS or TILE POET STEDMAN
lam sorry to have to speak of the ill
ness of the delightful poet, Edmund (Ilar
ence Stedman, who had been ordered to
give up literary work for a while, none too
soon, as those who know his untiring in
dustry will agree. To the ti:les of maga
zine critic, editor and essayist, his friends
added that of kindest, truest gentlemen,
which does not always lead suit with the
others as it should, and he added that of
a thorough business man, ;:s if ambitious
to complete the names of honor by which
a private citizen might be known. Years
ago he described himself laughingly as in
the habit of going into Wall street and
making money enough t 7.) live three or
four years as he wanted to—writing—and
spend it all, then go to work hard and
wake another fortune to use in the same
way. He studies with &Ist, and writes
with savor, and nothing the country shows
can equal the exquisite style of his Greek
translations, which distil like honeyed
wine along the palate, and show the purple
and gold of the attic crocus among their
colors. Yet this work, which Americans
will appreciate a generation later, as the
English do now, was done not in easy leis
ure but after the full tale of banking hours
bad been told, begun in golden sunset,
with his younger son studying Latin de
clensions by his side, and continued long
after the household was wrapped in •sleep.
He is one of the men capable of editing a
magazine like Putnam's Monthly in the
broad half day which lies between office
closing in Wall street and midnight, and
no one could ever say that he did not keep
his work well in hand. He carried his
business habits into literary work, was
prompt, systematic, and got through with
an amount of it which another man would
have spread through a whole day, and
been justified in calling himself well task
ed after that. I want to hold this picture
up before young men who are ambitious of
literary success. If they can grapple with
business seven hours a day, study and
write five or six more for fifteen or twenty
years, they stand a chance of the good
things which the men who own them won
in the same way. The finest literary work
the country leas to be proud of, and that
which does it most honor in cultivated
circles abroad has been produced by such
men as the twin critics. R. H Stoddard
and Stedman. "after hours," not in the
leisure of a life set apart for such pursuits.
There is a class of young men who will
net go into business because they fancy
they have a vocation for art or literature,
and make themselves a terror to editors
and successful writers by hanging round,
beseeching letters of introduction to this,
that and the other magazine or newspaper,
and looking for a position which will at
once give them enough to live on.
UNHEALTHY FOR CHILDREN
The mild winter has proven a very sick
ly and dangerous one for childreu and
young people among whom diptheria and
scarlet fever makes ravages known only to
the health officers and those who casually
glance at such returns as seven hundred
deaths by diptheria in one week. St.
Mary's Hall. an Episcopal school of the
best order, for girls, near Burlington, N.
J., was lately broken up by typhoid fever,
thirty cases of which made their appear
ance among the scholars at one time.—
This case, which was caused by the use of
river water held in foul cisterns ought to
lead to thorough inspection of the sanitary
condition of boarding schools through the
country, few of which will be found quite
satisfactory in their arrangements to a
well-bred physician. Principals and teach
ers have too much care on their hands to
notice that the water tastes brackish, or
that there is a bad odor lingering about
parts of the house, or any of a dozen signs
which tell the experienced sense that
something is awry with matters on which
health and life depend. I have known
fever bred in a fashionable boarding
school because the chambermaids had too
much to do to empty the slops properly,
and they were left to overflow carpets and
vitiate the air of the dormitories. And
this leads to a theory I lately heard about
the unhealthiness of New York itself. It
is fast growing the home of intermittent
fever, so much so that persons of certain
temperaments cannot live there six weeks
without losing health, and are forced to
give up living there altogether. The cause
has been laid to the fault of sewers, and
to the imperfect drainage of the old
marshes about 15th street, which were
built over long ago. While giving this
fact due weight, those who have looked
into the subject do not scruple to charge
the ague and intermittent fever abounding
to bad ventilation and ill conditions inside
the homes. They say that New York is
largely made up of boarding-houses and
hotels, to say nothing of families in which
the most glaring neglect of every law of
health is the rule and not the exception.—
Houses are built 6n wrong principles and
with their cellar, kitchen and dining
rooms, and bed-rooms, their closets and
bath-rooms passing the foulest air contin
ually into the body of the house are as
fruitful of malaria as if the occupants lived
on the edge of a swamp. Comparatively
few even of the first rate hotels and
boarding houses have anything like proper
ventilation. The passages smell musty, the
air from a hundred close bed rooms pour
ing into them. whik not a window is °pli
ed in th:r halls from Oetobcr till May.—
Not plt. , a.int subjec. io speak uti but
one of ,itai impurtLacc. to,t on only to
residents, but to property holders in New
York, for it is a serious question where to
find a healthy place to live within a dozen
miles of this city, arid the most rigid sani
tary conditioas must be learned and en
forced where sl many thousand dwellers
are crowded together, or living in the city
is not to be thought of. I will say that
families who keep well ordered, well yen
tilated houses and nothing to complain
of in New York more than in other
cities.
DEFEC II v E FLUES,
The recent fire in Fifth Avenue in
• which a fine fitmily housi caught from an
over heated flue, has led to strict setrch
ings into cause and effect, which show the
fiteilities modern houses alf.,rd fur getting.
us burned in tote beds. The joists and
floors Of the finest houses ere carelessly
laid, so that the ends come in contact with
fire flues, which the heat chars them and
prepares the material for a conflagration
at a moment's notice. The Stiener nuts
sion, owned by a rich Jewish tea merchant,
took fire last year from this cause, and the
mother and daughter of a wealthy and
happy ntuily lost their lives. The man
nificent syna g ogue on Fifth avenue took
fire front a red hot nail heated by the flue,
into which it was driven. As one cannot
with any assurance of success inspect, ev
ery nail head about the house every night
betbre going to bed—the feelings with
which timid people lay their 'heads upon
their pillows may be described as the re
verse of soothing.
MAYOR W 1 CKIIA M
starts well, and that he may hold out is
the ardent prarr of every good New
Yorker. His first act was to remove Dcl
afield Smith, the corporition counsel. The
Mayor charges him with having actually
aided and abetted the ring. He claims
that his defence of the city against fraud
lenut claims was wilfully weak ; that for
ifive months he failed to prosecute the city
suit• against the ring—in brief that the
nter•ests of the city demand a man not
tain ed in that c-pewal pl ice. or emir.,
Smith denies all the charges, and there will
be th 3 usual fight over it.
The chief significance of this is the inn
plied promise of the mayor that be wi;l
use the power vested in him for th 2 people
and ag!tinst the plunderers. If he does it.
he will be the most popular man in the
city ever put in place. But I am not
going into cxtacies over it just now. I re
member how I hurrahed over Havemeyer
and how afterward I didn't hurrah so
much. There is a fatality attending He
form Mayors in this city, for the Ring
esems to be all powerful and- have means
almost Satanic for the corruption of men.
But Wickham is a good man, a::d I hope
he may hold out fiithful to the end : lie
commences well. at all events.
The Kidnapped Legislator.
Safe Rthirn of Mr. A. J. anscia—The
Stou of His Capture, Imprisonment,
and Final Release.
Annitig the passengers arriving yester
day morning on the steamer Camelia from
across the lake was Mr. A. J. Wusin. the
abducted member of the house from the
parish or St. Tammany.
Mr. Cousin states that on Saturday
morning he was standing near the Old
Basin, at the corner of Carondelet walk
and Claiborne streets, when two men seized
hi-in and declared him to be their prisoner.
On his inquiring what offense he was
charged with he was told to come along
and they would tell him. One of the men
was Jim Poole, a merchant or Covington,
and the other Mr. Cousin did not know
He asked to be allowed to inForm his fain
ily of his arrest, hut was refused, and in
formed by the parties that they did not
want him to look at or to speak to any
one. They took him to the parish prison.
and delivered him to Captain Food, who
lucked him up about ten minutes, when
he was taken out and handcuffed by Poole's
direction. Ile was then placed in a car
riage and three other men whom he did
not know, and taken to the Lake End,
where he arrived about 12 o'clock. Mr
Poole then took his handcuffs off. They
kept him there until 4 o'clock, when they
took - him on board the steamer Camelia
and placed him in the hold, in order that
he might not have an opportunity of
speaking to any one. Ile was infOrmed
that if' an attempt was made to rescue
him by the police it would be unsuccess
ful, as they were armed, and would fight
if necessary.
When the boat had left the wlraf he
Was allowed to come out of the hold, and
was otherwise decently treated. Mr. Bu•ld
Hosmer, of Covington, he recognized as
one of the men who had charge of him
When the boat arrived at Mandeville be
was placed under guard of a force of fif
teen or twenty men armed with muskets
and fixed bayonets, witl► most of whom he
was acquainted. They im.urcd him of his
personal safety, unless an attempt was
made to rescue him.
-Boy" llosmer and three other men
took hiw:in a earriAge to Covington, tint
armed guard following along on horse
back. In Covington he was kept in a room
in Mr. Thomas Lactoix's house until Sun
day afternoon, at 4 o'clock, when he was
moved to the court house. They treated
him well, except that they would not allow
him to communicate with his fri3nds.—
They reftped him an interview with his
father four times. Monday two men, armed
with revolvers, took him into the piney
Woods, nine miles from Covington, and as
cured him that if any cne attempted to
release Lim they would kill him before
they would give him up; they told him
that they had nothing in the world against
him, and their only object in holding 11'.m
was to prevent his presence at the organi•
zation of the Legislature. After that had
taken place they would let him go.
On Tuesday they received news that
the Legislature was organized, when Mr.
Bradley, who purports to be a lieutenant
in the "Penn militia," whatever that may
be, informed Mr. Cousin that he was at
liberty as semi as he should go before a
justice of the peace and answer to the
charge of embezzlement. This charge he
learned to be on the strength of $l5 in
parish warrants, worth twenty cents on
the dollar, which was in dispute when he
vacated the office of tax collector two
years ago. lie was placed under 8300
bonds, which were furnished by his amia
ble captors, Messrs. "Boy" Hosuaer, Will
Parker, and "Lieutenant" Bradley. of the
"Penn Militia."
Mr. Cousin was, at no time, in charge
of a sheriff. deputy sheriff, or any officer
known to the law
lie left the lively little town of Coving
ton immediately upon his release, and was
present in the 11 , 111 Se of Representatives
when his name was called in that body
yesterday morning to the great satisfaction
of his numerous friends.—New Orleans
Republican.
No use of any longer taking tho largo, repnlaive, K rip.
ing, drastic and 11011100 us pills, cmapoaed of erode and
bulky ingredients, and put up in cheap wood or past• -
board boxes, when we can, by a careful application of
chemical sciettea, ex met all the cathartic and ether me
dicinal properties from the moat valuable ro.As and herbs,
and concentrate them into a minute Granule, scarcely
larger than a mustard seed, that can be readily swallowed
by Thos, of the most sensitive stomachs and fastidious
it , te. Each of Pr. t'ierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets
"represents, in a molt row-entente., fi , t-nt, as ennrit rath‘r
tic power as in enit.,dir•J in any of the I or„, pill. f and
for sale in the den; stores. From th, it w..nderfel r3ther
tic Niter, in pr .portion to their Sit , , people zho hate
tit tried them :.re apt to sitpj-, , 01.0 they are ham', ..e
draitir in effect, but anrh is mit at an the ea., the 'Effer
ent active med,rinal principles ~ f 6o h they are r.An
posed being CI hartw.nized, one• by the °then, a. to pr
duce a most -,,rfliing and thorn„ h, Jrt p-ntle !awl kind
ly operating c,tliartie The pellets I.y .1.-viers in
E. F. Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron
hag net er been kni.wn t.., (Ail in the yore of wealicesa, it
tended with oymptoms; ind , sposition b. exertion of
msmory ; difficilty of breathing genenal
horror of disease; weak. nerv.iiiv trembling: dreadfnl
horror of death: night sweats; cold feet :
new of viiion universal Inenitade of the NOV
cular system ; enormous appetite. with dys,...pue sy tttrf
tom+ ; hot hand.; flualsin:r of the body; dryne.' ..f ah.
okin ; pa!hd count.in.ow? and erupthme on the fair, ',un
tying the blond; pan in the bark heaviness of Ow try.-
lids; frequent black spots flying before the •tee with
temrs.rery vollnion end loan of sight ; want of attention,
etc. Thew• ii)mpt puts all arise from a weakness. and to
remedy that ore K. F. KCIELL . I Bitter Wins of Iron. It
never fails. Thousands are now enjoying health who have
used it Take only E. F. Irscit...
Beware of counterfeits and base imitations. .1* nn
kers Bitter Wine of Iron in •n well known all over the
eountry. druggi..t+ thsnisetves make •n imitation and try
1.. L ain, it off..n their it,totner, r...- B un
kern Ritter Wine of ['on.
Kutikers Bitter Wise eI Irou i• put up only in 31 Nit-
Ilea and has e. yellow wrapper nicely pot iwa the test*t.le
with the proprietor'l pliiitograjih on the wrapper of web
bottle. Always look to the I.le,t.ivao esst..i.:e,
and yon will always be sure to get th- gennin, 5I per
bottle, or six h.r $.l .1..11er, 5..1.1 t.y ...t
-er • everywhere.
TAPE WORM REVIVE' ALIVE.
Mat! and ull r,:upleto in two lionit. No teu I,N hr •
ni•at, Pin and StonisAli Wnr mnaterrl by PT.
litnt nut, 2:,9 North Ninth St_ Mood 114
cirrnlir. For remoriag all ordinary worm., can *a par
gruggi-t and g't a hurtle ut Kr 3111.101 MOUS Pray".
$l. (Jan.2o4t. PIM Emma.
WANTED.
The ruhaeriber, brio; sit WAlevi3 r..rt,
Huntingdota eounty, tiraires rrnt, for the ..p
-ing year. a gout G.iat Mao%
to enaraeter worktnan+:.io L.:tyro upon api.i.
cation t..
April
ClILE:i' LINIMENT
IUI►II11; Or
Ciirps 1:1:11.11.01 4, FACE .ICIIE,
GOUT. ItiPSTED FEET, C I.HLA ei 'HOW.% T
ERYSIPEL Vie E. , and DA ”rrry n
in win or animal. ih- ran..erka comes ih!•
hai effected ri:owoti it .4 ot, of tit• m of imr..rtant to !
rem.lif. ever •Hienverenl to. r -I.• I
of ran.
'qbe Ainev.,,c ray Itft hand at, enntrartawl fn.a on
nblabgent4, drawing t h. finger+ inr ,, thepelttt.d the b
I applied Grim' 14111 , 14,r loDIDIS or tilllllo,tl It ;•,-
lived them t that I ran trraighten rat Mr,,. rata
my blinds WIPERM(#I,T. 4a W. 13th N
Sold I.y s ' 4 sMITII P•nti
Tv • 54-Thr cbuic,,t in the w.ml.l—lmporter.'
.."- 1 1.argeet r.unpany In Amarira—stopi.•
article—pleaert everybody—Tn.:. incre-r.,n¢
—Agentg wanted everywhere—N-4 iteltsconeent.--daa't
tva-i time—send for Circular h,
ItnnEtT wEr
Ve..y St.. N.l , P. 0. 11.,a I.
BALTIMORE FE 3IA L COLLEGE
Incorporated ipi,s9ith autln•rity to cottroo Stfogiteol. an•i
endowed by the State of Maryland Tbas foliage
i. beautifully ..itriated in a grove. a thrift the city limit■.
on a lofty eminence that mum •iota a view of the entsittry
the and river and lay far many mile* Th. I . M.O .
has a good library • chemical and philomphiral apparatmc
eabineti of mineral., medals. emit., gem, site., and the
course of instn:,•tion ii lt o Hoard and tuition
$•1,0 per annum,
PlEfßo.
DOLLARS
TO THE AMOUNT OF Two MILLION ribs ni.N.
DRED THOUSAND ARE To RE DISTRIBUTED ON
THE 27ra FEBRUARY BY THF. PUBLIC LIBRARY
OF KY., UPON THE OtvA.ION OF THEIR FIFTH
AND LAST CONcERT.
Drait;)tg r , 'llaiii ~ r .71,n y Rrfund,fl.
One Grand Ca.Th Gift 170 e
One Grand Cash Gift.-- .. Ina,"
0 e Grand Cash Gift .... 76,1110
One Gravid Caeh Gift sops
One Grand Caeh Gift . SIPO
5 Ca,sh Gifts 1.20,000 earh--....—.-.... ....... 100,0[10
10 sash Uiits 1.1,(a5) .nbch ......... —.....-- laktiai
16 lash Gins 10,0.i1 each. - I: 0 Am
20 Ca4/1 (lifts 5, 1 810 each
25 I sap.h Gifts 4,0•10 ea .h..- »...._..... 11411‘taa
-..- ..... 1011. Se
:10 Ca.h Gifts 3.000 each..-......------- insoia
50 Cash Gifts 2,0.0 earh.—.--...-.- WOO
100 Cash Gifts 1.0 41 each
210 Gash Gifts :nn each ........ .....______ !iv*,
500 Cash Oat. 1..0 each 50,1110
12,009 Cash Gifts 60 ces:ll. - . ...-. 93( Arai
before tow rase lei essaphsw. ??welaytiretar
owiei4ter• withowt Atsrie. se !Pomo to 011 tlsrahi
who WiAil to rrxa.s :t *Si.rtoal elm
lest., !apse's. awl .oh...es wimp doom, to gittao
tseratire tioploystot ot s moot rviipsertakir +MID
Patios, are orlinted to appti :we am awes, to 111114
111: 4 TORT rtr run PRIIISSITIRIAIN
CHURCH 111111.0T;i111 0 0CT TSB WOILLA
h•switoi !ergo opt.to iitoor.stor
with *tool tot r 0.1.4 ...craving-. *fob .vor ,
Pre.hyteriast !amity 2111 *sat to prows. .11,90
c.bto,sa for exeleeivit torriency Awed IMP Soap si
rAlert.* DE writ C. LINT I ft , .
PUBLIC LIBRAItY OF ENTUCKV Illeftemet A* ..•
Noir Torii.
Orval Tutst, 210,008 Gifts, all Cash, le,:400100
Whole Tichot4 to. It.liws sl3._ . Tenth or ,44-h•-• ~Mn,
c:,. tV hot.. Tio ket9,
For tickets and innirmatian, :address
Tit Os. E. BRAMLETTE, Arttnst And Mantit*r.
Nine, Ky. or THOM 4.4 IRIS 1 . 1., 19 4, 4
Spw York.
Doak of Gov. Bramktte—Artion of th,
Truste,s—A Swectisor Appointed—_% ;,
More l'ostponements--Drariny (%-rP,;ti
11 , ,,,•tt0 ry ;nth.
.1t a meeting of the Tim. !ea of the Patti: , Library .w
Kentucky, Jaiimu7 14, ins. it wan reailvta/ that C.
ling s , Eau, who ImMr the late lion. Thome, Z. Aram
tette wine the real basin.we manager of the eft easearts
already give', iu all of the Public Library of Kaataelly,
be and he ie hereby authorised to !alto tits pipes mob va
cant by the 'loath said Rnsmistte, to Ike smossipmes
of the affAire of the fifth and butt gift eeseers, and INN
the drawinK ananucel for rehrwary .7, 1/73, Wish posi
tively and unequivocally take pace ea that ttay witboat
any further riintlionem•nt delay oti say sc.-omit what-
Jonx C IN, taerretary
Here,' ter all cant at antra , / ions relating to the 3411 i
cert should be aillreved to :lir aodiersignoill, sod 1 podgy
myietf that the drawing @hall some off February Mb or
that every dollar paid fur tidies' , Motif be rottersed.
M. InfLIGO:+, Agent and Manager, ROM. 4, Palate
Lihrtry Building. Ky.
A DV ERTIBI NO, Cheap, Ikeet, .terneti , 1.,./mr.
Rho con teuiplatAy um/tine cents...oi wi th sinv.peper•
for the in--er tfon of advprtisms,nto, 'raid irrel c•mt.
to P. Rowell & Fn ~51 Park Rio., Now York, kw their
PAM NILE f-ROUK (niatte-seventh rdstio3., omega...a
Ibdm of over 2 1 450 new•piap..ri and egtistatee, .la.
r.,et. Advertwerownt.4 talirm for lealinc powers lw sway
Staten at 3 tre.men.loni reginctmn from put.ii.nere rat.,
GIT TIIZ BOOK.
IVIN TED A GENTS o• the - LIFE AND EN•
PLORATIONN GI DX- LIVING
STONE" Complete, antlirstic ; a fre,h Weis Pm, mato
Yd to the timo Addre.
B. 13. RUSSF.I3, robttsher,
$ 9Ol - 1 a month to sw....ntl everywhere. ANktpme Sl
cimslOß M'F'o CO., !between, Mk!s.
dk; y
.... a g o flay at A.m... T.rasa fr... blares*.
41 , " U.. k POf USIA. 11..
$7 7 A week guaranteA lale and
Venial. Azimut, in their loesliry. fl
NOTIIINti to try it. Partirularq Free. I. P. TICRILPIT
k Anzwita, Me.
6 6FYCHOMANCY,OR SOUL CHARMIX9.'
flow either Aez may Use inate sad Oki OR In* ail al.
remit:me of any person they elearalk Me
pie mental acquirement all tan peramal few, by NMI, for
25 cents ; tnpether with a Marriage Orside, Eaypeiro Or
acle, Dreams, Flints to isslic, A epees , ' book. Wean
sold. Address T. WILLIAM A CR, I^lhitelbem.
rAIRBANKs
* 6 _
. : „JtptLi
Tiff Ilivirsr•bartrrippem
ICALES,
h"0 savrprAEDAtiltege
rtipiniNipsprrtir4
a ' 4l.
a lso at thJ:, : t errioll
POis EAT, mq,
av©r Thirty- Aar Competitors
►mo d
at V
irix‘ l4- O A - o k
1873 Wet Ku )
ac,thookayaf /4: rig u
.OTANDARD ° LspAng
i TTairbanw
.wheshutSt.VVILRD'ZI,PHIP.
Jan.27-3m..
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE JOURNAL
Only ?.Oa ft year.
New To-D*y.
WILLIAM
N. C. 8R04.10. LL. PrestJent.
R. T. DI: Err.
Nev To
pE`.:. .-TRFVT 11.11. f.
PO- 4 ITIVELY D. oNIS
T. l ll - RSD.II . IT IR 1 ART ;. 1 f's;
TW) PERFOII3IIi6 F:-
,r allYi a
STLVS:iTXt EX
..rtyina! i
GEN EI:A I. TOM TIII'M 11 A W IFE.
C031)1 1 )04)R ant
WARIVEN.
Jest nelersete to Amer. •1. an.. threw Tears .
Tier Arwood tile vtllt syytior is • rattete et
IF.C 4 CINATTSt.
Con.ittieg et
DC E rS. DA Nr ES. DIALo6CIiA.MN
IC ACIS es•! Lt .[LT. MIA-
At ..eh estertstierst. tire Limiter *III suer "weft;
NEW AND ILIIGANT cfrs - ITAIL4.
NAGNIVIcitIT DIAMONDS. le.. es twit Al
bot.re the P.A.sistee tI. W.s4.
Ai•o.MtiOlt NEWELL. NM lam Wrlall P..w
te Its I..t.itsissig Miaow epos Prier 4 limits%
A DM!' , : ,, N 'l5 LT....._.., • v.
et* , Wlrer. *east l• ywar•
Ite.erv..l 4... fat• rest.
N to Xes.r..ll aft._ JI t . .481
1.1. 4a.1 thildivirs arr eireet4orsr...y
:o o.temM taw bay asaallaapaa„ awe Nam avesal eta
.. - .•.•1 :In 1 -oaf ;limns *4 Etosiarg /11714.101.011 P
•.F') X ITt ila Lk avitt
New Ad v ertisoneenti.
-1 i . —The r-. peeteresiat
e;:.toog bortowee lase* A
11;..wn sad U. Tim aria muse se
limiest .1 Ty burr. irry do* irr str uts
BUSIN ESA. .i rJ.s. t• trim 4111*-
44•1 rd by mutual euss.llll. XV. 1711mwst vsisisop
truss tie ins. Tb. ke Is. tie Ono si is
at Om, stir. is !iv IsnAlsoit Owe Ow a semis
ruse. whirrs all pyrs”sio .sdritsi ass svissesill
-all sad woks tssue.i.sto Mamas. sse W. Miss
haring elem.. stoup , : , los OVID, promere
..rt:,,,•
J 14. .g. annoy N.
AL. ?I Illr RAT.
..1 Vt g ow./ •
rl •At rare oi.i Arlin
Illentinrfon. .1 in. ; . .t.
VI Yr IC
_A. N
...• r.."• l •,•..rvirrr 4.3.• ••b. 111,/,
.1' Cut Di 1.0
n• r. -•• r•-•! •'..• ttitt , ;1 IP .1/ Sr
t: r , ve 1:1••-o ,
1. Fs • W 14 . r it, Rm.
../Ans 2.) • ...it
h• le M 1 0 ).%--‘; - r E I),
yucTioN otX IV ;E1.5.•110i 4 .
r E,14. at a newt 40 'few
1..: I :;•./ 411,7 •••1 ; .r as. r.••••• 4.,
nr..in lawm• • ?ha! ••49
..ass i • her•••• 7 innotr•noll wean
•h. or 1:•,•.s(;• OP: i. na4
TA.Titlift , ft 111..41) tT. :••••isii tt•
1 , ;:n •I•y of FERF.I . %RI firr a. , nye .1.1
t•• rfor!inp of •, , ,s ~• 11••••••• , •-r• •'sr.
1. L • i.. 1 rt•er:•••.
ho Il..rnltzh 0 , 1 !Inn , . her. , ./
elve git4l I .vg 1c vto-av ..b• • •1
ne'.l in natel bernitjit •t r, .
e•n••••• -
uovirr Noy 4.7.1 ~ r •h•' .•.•-.•:11
i's.. :4 .11 .I.r .1" •n-sorT.
1A75.
RDI
filliof Nett,.
:.1‘!t11:,D
T ;: It ! TT'74
Pl - 1;P: I)Ns•ENTI: ‘Ti.l , x:414
I.iF
3.m . .1e
g PUNIFYINti r arr %.•
I base rear.aity p..f.artoda • * any amorboal of par*
.ng Nay P•t•tb. or 148. sod ass ramaa pasibmi i.
.81y it Rollo. the dstrs>R et irberbr»iN angionsly
isrl Nes rajur• rho Ms,. It . parrboul ca%n or.
-.mails.; St ••.I it ••• prase asap
in ti n a.. ..ther way. =mire is gerl o . l)
f;••rnion or mahragg hard end ..ft won arch •!.
1.• , •••111,,11 . 1V •Irtrh
T R %11MITT.
Jan:9 ; 41 t.. 4 1 Worlanar..• rit . T.
A. g;ENIN 1Y.15TF.1).
.at At tn. .at. ',it. ..orb la nava, ...!in: •
attain a tat. 4:
ino. ,, *; ,6)1111[S
OnrriAss• 7. I ALP:
ny
YALU.% BLE Ri;A L YXT VTR.
WILLI. WS MILLS.
T i rt.f of an .4' ttw toprib....
Itantiorine "'onto. sitelk.r•lvw.4 s-,11
to 4.1.. •Ive presioro. ..*
.1/0.1+1).1 Y, PERRI . _II:r /.:.
er.rs. , , • r...)..4P-,‘
~ • 1,01.1 proper!? Se Wit
.1 Lor
4ita Ito twv+ool%l ~( AMA, h.p. Ilimrteg
ecnisty. fr•mtini arty !WA ass saa or.
ranlie r”-.1 1.-ad:ft from +bode 449
Borst Cab's*. ..1 &staiwiise 'orb was hiss
awl itty feet. to !awl of I. 1. Ileac siejsmikie
Mr.r IQ ti. rortb.. rad in se MP UMW
.sist Chien& es Ow +oink sea Ihnollift
erw-t•••1 a two- story efts. OW SLUM.
1101 SR. se.l •Atimrs. lIIIROV[IIIII.II/3.
TERMS .)f . 01M.11.—.)50- Woolf Oho peoner
moor" lo •ositroootiolo of oak, as. 4 A,
...slaw, pa new y :bum...nor "nab ..arrest. ••
os.•%r•-1 :.7 s n.. 1..e4 sts4 =ow gate of tie poorwiltoom
WILLIAM CLY 31.1,10.
A•fooiwtrator of Witham 11,Uo.
.1 4.1.20,141 - I*.
TIIE REX, PAPER. 11:11 IT
lintbirle Pr... Brans"' folly 1rf ,, 0,-14.4
I/1E ACIENTIFir 11111XFIC IN. o
Alb year, esjeye tire soileie •f as
feebly sererrepor et •! iii 'kiwi! is Ow siert... A
•viiiiate J savarry S.
toelosta essairei-• ?be lie:eee sad sire( gore
sting isferenstiiis pertrisese w tbs
deettasiesi sit 4 ''lnestvie prwervve , •1' • *it iftet'
Deseriptioess, witA lorsetifsi mersv•sto. .1 see
,iieestissii seer iserbrsines. or* pressing oft
irproT.J inseatrim.• of sill Weis ; sesfiel false
receipt., •sgseeci.sa 4.4 sebeiee, pesselow
irricsre, wiertisses eitil ineylmeesii is sit :ha •s.
hire! nrts.
TM Arisesver is dos Almoverse sod hew
illsstrale4 wetly imps' pelstisfer4. am"
bet costs:we hose Is in I envies' esessisis.
sew neeibiapery se4
-EMIL% V I N Illaierse ins iworwwwcwwww..46o
enverors sort importing irssits: psitsissog sew*
w*
suiellimarrol essgssrsgriel. sllihl, . stem, sod
rest/Mery : mover .1 Ow Isar as per.. so Or
App of *rinse. Amos resismovists, rogivrorr.
Air hoit.iint, adourspby.
rirptripity. HOW seill
M.!
V.% R a:. ingisperm Ormiears.
4.+w+ 4 iwirimik gai r at.
*Tr *. .4.nryoors, lawyer.. boa people of aN
• w=it 1144 tho grirovifkit Aosorioopo osollof to
Mole. It giboold bo. a aaarr
library, obbly. ode. Sabi •-.8.0 , 11fg....." • ND 'P.."
amino( room. moan.. atewilainy.
.1 )oor'e itooolorre roosts 9.1 parr se.. favor
21 :Tomblrol gaifrovie(. lboommodb of v.lomboo
▪ proo,,rool inapt teir sea rirfervi,•.
pr truest roe"), to are 'rood. los troop* two
gottd , rilotryo pri•o. Tome. 113.:* s row by gawk
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