The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, March 11, 1869, Image 2

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    int littoh* Gap
"I HOLD iTELL."
•
• •
IMON TUZ GEZDIAN,OP anr}lll.
Pa'n's furnace heat within me quivers,
God's t Teeth upon the flame cloth blow.
And all my heart In anguish shivers,
_ And trembles at the fiery glow:
An 4 yet I whisper, "as God - wl.H "+
And in Its hottest Are hold still. ' •
Hicomes and lays my heart, all heat d,
On the hard anvil, minded so
Into his own fair shape to beat It
With his great hammer , blow en blow,
Atli yet I whisper, "as God will!"
'And at his heaviest blows hold still. 1
He takesny'sbftened heart and beats It:
HeThe sparks fly and every blow;
turns it o'er o'e: and heats it,
And letklt cool and makes It glow: •
And yet I whisper. ,-"as God will i"
And In his mighty hand hold still.
Why should I murmur? for the sorrow
Thusbnlyloege,lived would be,
Its end may, come and will to-morrow,
When bo
nds has dose his work In me;
Lo relay trting. "as (Sod will!"
And trusting to the end hold 8111.
He ldtidles for my Profit purely,
• Allitction's glowing fiery brand, '
And all his heaviest blows are surely
Inflicted by a master hand;
Loo °a ' , Waving. ”aa Goa will!"
And hope in Him, and suffer still. •
• —Presbyterta4 Banne r
EPHEMERIS:
--Mobile has Humpty DumptP.,
—Longfellow is expected home in
August,.
Seward's little bell went home
with him. ,
—Verdi is at work on a new opera of
"Falstaff."
—An illustrated edition of Horace is to
be published.
—Rosa Bonheir has refused to be deco
rated by Biala.
—Harrisburg rejoices in a lodge of Gerl
man Odd Feßowe.
• —Miss - Matilda Herron has concluded
to become a lectures'.
—Bothern is engaged for threci years a
the Hay market, London.
.'Thomas Thumb, Esq., and lady are
now performing in Minnesota.
—5150,000 worth of diamimds have a
bride at the Fifth Avenue Hotel.
—Ftm asks how were art-unions con
ducted in: the days of the pre-ratlie4tes.
—The evening TrZune is at piesent
MB paper of the immediate future inll3os
.
to . n. '•
• '
_"Old rat" is the pet name which the
Boston Post at present lavishes on: Wr.
Cindy.
—The most ;popular conindrum now
going the rounds of the press is ”Who is
Itorier
—ln a public school at. Fill River,
Massachusetts, one of the teachers is a
negroes...
• . —Velvet trousers are now allowed ..at
the English Court receptioris instead of
,breeches.
--.Last Saturday the mercury at Lewis
/to-n, Me., pOinted to twenty-two degrees
- below zero. •
—Chit) has a bridal . pair aged eighty;
e. tbe groom is twenty years old and
• the bride sixty.
—The President of the Hamburg Sen
ate was formerly a dry goods clerk in a
Philadelphia store.. '
. —The New York Times is 18 years old,'
so in a few years we may hope to see it
arrive at years of discretion.
—Down in Nashville the Republicans'
had a meeting and cordially endorsed the
inaugural of President Grant.
- —An lowa paper advertises another
mysterious disappearance--that of 'an as
sistant editor—a pair of scissors.
—The 'Harrisburg prisons are trans
formed into churches on Sundays and the
prisoners become congregations.
—lt is announced that during the com
ing summer the seventeen year locusts
will pay us their usual annual visit.
—A Kentucky father keeps his daugh
ter chained to a log in order to prevent
her marrying contrary to his wishes.
—An English paper, disgusted with
the exhibition of the Siamese twins, ad
vises them to cut and not come 'again.
-Quantrell is in Memphis, and a Chi
cago paper suggests a permanent resi
dence enforced by a rope around his neck.
—The 'Massachusetts Legislature has
refused' to pass a bill authorizirur the
Boston' Public Libiliry to be open on
Sunday. .
' —The latest idea is to confer the boon
, of suffrage on the Utah women. It is
. - suggested that in this way polygamy can
be disposed of.
• —,ultiseret has started a new paper in
Paris. Judging by the reports we hear
~everybody must Start a new paper there
every now and then.
—Houdin, the retired magician 'and
agreeable mechanic, has been speculating
on the Bowie, and now has Stopped be
cause he has no more money.
—A• son of Gov. -Throckmorton,
- Penis, tried to poison, himself for love
the other day, and only succeeded In
making himself very unconifortable.
—;Ati Engliik Judge, Baron Alderson,
on being asked to give his opinion as to ,
the proper length of a sermon, replied:
"TwentY ixtiptttes, with a leaning to the
'.nide.of 'mercy." •
•• _velocipedes are not allowed on , the
:iddSwaliii in Newark, . Meelbar
iciws are not allowed on Pittsburgh side
*slice, but no one •who did not knciw it
wouldever
imigine.it:
ever
--Thelatest insular yarn is all about a
. 1141 in Woes mho has not eaten anything,
lON Cictober;4l397. .Jonah; we believe,
Was 0 14.1 three days and threi nights in
She interior of Whale's without eating.
2 autl(!ni paper is opposed , L to the
-education of women as surgeons. ./t
that suppose`one were put under the in
fluence of chit:olmm by such a doctor,
"What is to prevent the woman from
kissing you?" •
—Why will people say • bokay instead
of bookay 4 Why * they spell it be
*-st •
.quet instead of bouquet?. Webster and
Worcester do not warrant these errors
any more than does the French deriva
tion of the word.
--Thiny-five years ago forty days were
consumed in a journey from Philadelphia
to Chicago—nine hundred miles; but mow
we reach the Puidc, a distanCe from
Philadelphia of over three thousand miles,'
in a little more than a week.
—A scientific lecturer at Sheffield re
cently told his audience that when the
star fish, which . ,livgs principally upon
young oysters, find one too large to be
swallowed, it turns its stomach inside out
and then envelopes the oyster.
—The late eminent English astrono
mer, Sir James Smith, made an eccentric
bequest. Heleft a pocket chronometer
each to the Earls of Shaftesbury and
Rinse, in the fullest confidence that they
will carry them in the * place . where he
(the deceased) was In the habit of carry
ing his, "namely, in the pantaloon pock.
et, properly so called."
—During the past week one bark left
the port of Philadelphia for La,guyra with
1,462 gallons of petroleum, and a`pchoon
er sailed for Barbadoes with 4,000 gal
lons. Since the first of Jantgary 3,456,131
gallons have been shipped from-Philadel
phia, of_ which 1,159,161 gallons went to
Antwerp. Five vessels are now loading
with petroleum at that port:
—The affairs of the Fourth National
Bank, in Philadelphia, have, since the
suspension of that institution, been under
official examination. The deficiency, it
now seems, amounts to two hundred
thousand dollars. Mr. McMullan, the
cashier, is in custodV in default of $25,-
000 bail. The friends 'ot the prisoner
hint that when he gets a chance he will
be able to justify himself and bring oth
-
era into difficulty.
—A zoological garden is thepresent
idea of several of the New York jour.
nals. Why should not Pittsburgh have
one. There could be no pleasanter, more
instructive place of resort for, loungers,
:and if properly managed ought to pay.
Many European cities smaller than Pitts
.
burgh have very complete ones, which
are popular and, pay neat dividends to
their proprietors, who are generally
gentlemen of public spirit with a little
spare capital which they have been will
ing to invest in this way.
ar, tit the Erie Dispatch.?
A. POEM.
Fellow students and astoelates good bye:
0! how solemn rounds to the ear.
And how the tense of seeing laoleates a sl,gh,
As the hour for parting draws near..
The past has gone. yes, it has faded likla tower:
And studentsected we have been for weeks socially
- conn.
And though we have perform•d duties in their
There has been a great luny neglected.
The present is but of short duration
We should therefore listen to its musics' rhime.
And not indulge in procrastinadon
For It is the theft of time.
The future. 0! what *mysterious goald;
How dark is the veil covers thy features
It we could t aly read what thou shalt mold.;
What a bllsa It would be to us unworthy crea
tures.
lint the future we wr old not foretetl„
For wo know rot what Is In Store to; us to mor
row.
For from horizon to horizon may be sounded a
knell
that would drape a nation in sorrow.
t.
At this moment, O : how many are cheerful and
• Tes, their licentious thoughts glide like an
arrow.
Stilt do they know that ere•another day
That one ofthetr number may fanlike a sparrow.
vii.
We should prepare to meet what Were the future
may bring; • ,
And by kart of repentance wash all tarnish
from the soul,
Then death can not approach thee with her sting
For thou will be conenezer at the end of the
...goat.
Dear friends is parting on earth an ultlmaie
Igo, I f :opens may be severed by terrestrial
ml:es far away.
For we can meet in a far beantil'aller dell •
If oar hearta'are pure and holy In the great day.
The Erie editor thinks the "beautifuller
dell" is the most beantifullest idea in the
whole poem.
• WITH reference to "spiritual photo
graphy" :a correspondent of the New
York Suit writes:
"I have in my possession some of the
trick spiritual shadow pictures produced
nearly ten years ago. One of them re
presentsra grave and elderly gentleman
' with the shadow of his departed wife
dimly visible in a halo of light Just be
hind him. The trick was done by sud
denly uncovering a portrait set on a white
Surface against the dark back screen at.
the moment sitting was, completed.
While.l was in Chicago, some years ago,
a shrewd photographer there fleeced a .
well known professor of animal magnet- ,
ism, who believed that a spiritual nimbus
perpetually shone about his head, by pic
turing him , with a blesaed halo about his
venerable caput." So completely did he
deceive the old gentleman that the hitter
was induced to advance him a coneidera
ble stun of money to set up a spiritual.
photograph gallery, and was rudely
awakened from his dream of confidence
by discovering one day that the fellow
had sold eut and decamped with his ill
gotten gains.,l
AN ENelaati periodical still keeps up
the - discussion as to.the propriety of whip
ping grown-up girls. A marchioness
writes, and says she "spanked" her
daughters—three
girls of sixteen, eigh
teen and twenty years respectively, and
all rejoicing in the title of "Lady," by
patent of nobility—and to be determined
to keep on "spanking" them at intervali
.for faults, 5- •
Lnother cirrestondent, also the weir,
er of a coronet, declares that , she has
been in the habit of •whipping her .. grew n .
up daughter on all occasiobs of dis Obed
ience, with a rod particukuly selected, be
cause it was studded with thick, stinging
bulbs, capable of inflicting great pain.
A third adds to this atrocity the refined
and vulgar, torture, of calling,up
yards to witness her daughter's dis cal
A fourth - declares that she strapped her
owu girl to a couch while the whipping
process was goinrozi. and 'the fifth as
serts-the alinost incredible 'fact that she
"spanked" her daughter, twenty 0716 years
old, in the presence of her husband and
sons.
PITTSB URGE GAZETTE : THURSDAY, M
The Mystery of Editing.
Beecher says that the world at large do
not know the mysteries of a newspaper;
and, as in a watch, the hands that are
seen are but passive instruments of the
springs, which are never seen; so, in a
newspaper, the most worthy causes of its
prosperity are often least observed or
known. Who suspects the benefit which
the paper
he derives from the enterpriiie,
e vigilance and the watchful fidelity rof
the publisher? Who pauses to think him
much of the -pleasure of reading is e
rived from theskill and care of the
printer? We feel the blemishes of print
ing, if they exist, butt seldom observe the
excellencies.
We eat a heartyinner, but do nbt
think of the farmer t hat raised the mate
rial theredf, or the cook that prepares
them with infinite pains and skill. But a
cook of vegetables,' meat, pastry and in
definite bonbons, has a parasidical office
in comparison with an editor. Before
him pass all the exchange newspapers.
He is to know all their contents, to
mark for other eyes the matter that re
quires attention. His scissors are to be
alert, and clip with incessant industry all
the little items that form together so
large an interest in the news departniiitt.
He passes in review each week every State
in the Union through the newspapers'
lens. Ile looks across the ocean and sees
strange lands, and, following the sun, he
searches • all around the world for ma
terial. It will require but one second for
the reader to take in what two hours'
search produced. By him are read the
manuscripts that swarm the office like
flies in July. It is his frown that dooms
them. It; is his hand that condemns a
whole page into a line. It is his discreet
sternness that restricts sentimental obitu
aries, that gives poets a twig on which to
set and sing their first lays.
And the power behind the throne, in
newspapers as in higher places, is some
times as important as the throne itself.
Correspondents, occasional or regular,
stand in awe at the silent power which
has the last, glance at the article, and may
send it forth in glory and humility. And,
in short, as the body depends upon a
good digestion, so the health of a news
paper depends upon that vigorous diges
tion which goes on by means of the editor.
Ought they not to be honored? And
since little fame attends them they should
at least have their• creature comforts mul
tiplied. From the dark and dismal den.
residence they are at length translated.
Census of Ignorance.
Some within of the scope of an educa
tional qualification 'for the suffrage may
be formed from the facts shown in the
census returns, that in the,year 1840 there
were in the United States 549,905 white
persons over' 21 years of age who were
unable to read.or write; in 1850, 962,898;
and in 1860, 1,126,586. Mr. Cary, of
Ohio, in his report from the Committee on
Education and Labor, estimates in addi.
tion to this, 91,826' free colored persons
of the same age, and 1,682,800 adult
slaves,making an -aggregate of nearly
three illions of persons over the age of
20, in 1860, who could not 'read; or, as
Mr. Cary more forcibly expresses it. "to
whom the Constitution is a blank;"
though, for that matter, it seems a blank
to many who can read.
The pectyle th i se Northern States may
infer where ignorance is, by their
knowledge of where it is not. A reading
qualification in any, of the Northern
States would be scarcely perceptible in
its effect; but in the section which, in
1860, contained the great part of 1,626,575
white persons of the age of 20'ye,ars and
upwards, who could not read, and in
which the progress of education was
backward during the war, and in which
there are now added the entire body of
the blaCks, to whom all teaching and read
ing were forbidden, such a qualification
would be a most important part in the
structure of government. In the framing
of the suffrage amendment, it was a theo
ry that the fact that an' educational quali
fication would disfraxchise some whites,
would be security against its being im
posed to disfranchise the mass of the
blacks. Possibly this will be so; but we
cannot tell what may be carried by means
of the fanatical hate of the negroes; and,
furthermore, the ancient ruling class in
the slave 'States would like it all the better
if it disfranchised the class of poor whites
toward whom they were as hostile as they
now are toward the blacks. '‘
Milking ''a Kicking Cow.
In reply to 'your correspondent who
Inquires for some way, to milk a kicking
cow without tying her in some of the
various ways that have been recommend.
ed. I will give a little of my experience
In that line, premising that no one ought
to undertake the job just before a shower
when he has a load of hay in the field
that he is anxious to get into the barn.
To lax a; good experienced kicker with
out tying,l requires time and patience. I
once bought a cow of a man who said No
one could milk her without tying her
legs. •. I first cleared my stable as for a
dancligparty, drove the cow in. and shut
it up as dark as possible. With a milk
ing *stool made on purpose, about two
feet high, I gently seated' myself by
her side. If she was there when I
was ready' to commence milking,
she was not there long, afterward. But I
followed her to where she was, having
closed my lips firmly against the first
harsh word. :.This process was repeated
until the cow was tired of running away
and concluded to stand and be milked;
after which I could milk her in, theyard.
In the course of the Summer I was
obliged to be absent a week or more, and
the milking was done by another hand.
On my return 'I could not get within reach
tif my kicking cow, and was obliged to
give her:another dark-stable lesson, and
in the course of a few Weeks I could
again sit down and milk her in the yard
as I did other cows. Therefore, though
I believe that most kicking vows can be
Milked without being tied, I wish to add
as a postscript—it. la Moult l--Corres
pondesst Nero Bn,glaßil Partner.
EACH : successive movement of the
Spanish Revolution gives us new cause
of hope for the permanent establishment
of Liberal nstitutions in. Spain. The
latest step ollhe Cortes was to appoint a
'Commission to dtaft a newitionstitution;
and the dominant ' sentiment' and
g ° verning principle: of the ; Cortes
make, it certain that no Conotitunnn will
be adopted which does not establith
'the guarantee's of liberty. We cannot
but admire the ability 9f the Spanish
Liberal
has followed leadeunrs.
der t and heir guida tbe cOursence the nation
Tun people of St. Thomas Are reported
to be disgusted with the renewal of the
efforts to sell them to the United Staten.
T he principal Paper of the island declares'
against the scheme.
TEFrn immLi
wiTkroirr
•
,
HQ CHARGE MADE WHEN ARTIFICIA
TEETH ARE ORDERED.
A FULL BET FOR Oh
AT,DR. - SCOTT'S. • .
s T s PENN STREET, lIDDOORABOVZ HAND
ALL WORK WARRANTED. !CALI;AND E 2
AMINE SPEOLMENS op OENDINE VITLCAS.
tc.29:d&T
GAS FIXTURES
WELDON & KELLY,
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in
Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers,
- -
AND LAMP CDODS.-
Also, CARBON AND LUBRI C ATING OILS,
!BENZINE, dto.
N 0.147 Wood Street.
t
5e9:1125! Between sth and 6th Avenues.
FRUIT CAN TOPS.
- We are now prepared to supply
TINNERS
and the Prade wi l th our Patent
81 CLINLABICLING
FRUIT CAN TOP.
It la PERFECT, SIMPLE and CHEAP.
Basins the names of thews l eas fruits
• !Ramped upon the Covee, maating from
the center, and an Index or pointer
stamped upon the Top of the can. It int e
la
clearly, 01stInetty and PERMANENT
LY LABELED by merely placing . the
• • name of the fruit the can contains ob.
posite . the pointer and j sealing In the
customary manner.
°No preserver o;
fruit or good
HOUSEKEEPER: will use any other after
once seein g ft.
Send 95 centii for sample.
couriarn ilk Iranian.,
.139 Second avenue', Pittsburgh.
PIANOS. ORGANS, &o.
B - -
UT THE BEST AND (AMAP
EST PIANO AND ORG.A.N:'
Sohomacker's Gold Nodal Piano,
AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN.
The FICHOMACRER PIANO combines all the
latest valuable iniprovementt known in the con
,
struction of a Int class instrument. and has al
ways been awarded the bLithesti premitun eg
hibitedjps tone la full , sonorous and sweet. The
work= sato. for durability and beauti.
all others . Prices from to 111110. lac rp
-
to style'and flash. cheaper than' all otherat
called Silt class Piano.
MET% COTTANE ORNAN
Mande at the head of all reed initraments. In
producing the most perfect pipeguallty of tone
of any similar instrument in the United States.
It is simple and compact in construction, and
not Rabic to vet out of order.' ,
CARPENTER'S PATENT " VOX HUMANA
TREMOLO" is-only_ *
to be found in this Orgar , .
Price from $l9O to $530 All guaranteed for lye
years.
.
RABB I & AMMER,
No. it.ft ST: Ma* STRISET.
'PIANOS AND 0 11GA1118—An. J. en
tire new stock of
E.NABE , B UNRIVALLED PIANOS;
HAINES BROS., PIANOS:
PRINCE & CO , S ORGANS AND MELODE
ONS and TREAT,: LINSLEY & DIM ORGANS
AND MELODEONS.
CHARLOTTE niumn,
43 Pllth avenue. dote Asent
:f 1 . i
_____
At Very Low.POces.
Gray & Logan,
47 ST. GLAIR STREET,
B,
TIEGEL,
Asia Cutter with.w. Hespenlielde.)
atERCECANT
No. 33 Smithfield Street,Pithilmrgh.
Nostra
NEW FALL GOODS.
otendld new stock ofl
czorss, CASSIMERES,
Just received by EIEINRY MEYER.
Sell: Merchant Tailor, 73 13mIthOld street.
GLASS. CBI A. • • INA:
100 WOOD STR
NEW' GOODS.
' PINE VASES,
BOHEMIAN AND CHINA.
NEW STILES , DiNNER SETS,
BEM,
SMOKING SETS, GIFT
A large stock or ICill3,
SILVER PLATED pOODS
°till descriptions.. i
Call and imitable our goods, and we
reel &Waded no one need riar to be Tilted.
R. E. BREED & CO.
100 WOOD STREET:
FLOUR.
PEARL flit FAMILY FLOUR,
LL Three Bier Groom mood, Mod to
FRENCH FAMILY FLOUR.
Thls Floor will war oe oesit .. out whim espe
dilly ordered.
PE41114. BLUE intAirDi
Equal to best Eiti Lotto.
1 1 1ILLUF. MU AND BRAND, 6
man: s i o trit z t r, . bat Ohio lloar.
'Bs MDT Mai
OOBN MEAL,
0 " , "" / "I * 49 4 /SW Plust 311114 "
VIM
GE z V s
, •ILLNON, , • ,
-oar, or Weights and lieluitues,
No. f 70pBTH 8 CREZT.
lliqween LlDerti aid rem Ofzeets
th 4l Pra • ornattrtly attsndout cn
CEMENT, SOAP STONE,
ITARICIIANA , LARE, NO. 124
' Snalttadeld street,- Bole 3l anuftettirers of
.....s.rse r i!!sl ..
eltSelit ltitA qr&lpl
"'","1"
RCH 11, 1869
SIVE TIME ID MONEY.
AIN
111 1 FARLAND & COLLINS
New Spring Stock
Fine Carpets,
ROYAL AXXINSTER,
E
TAPESTRY VELVET,
English Body Brussels.
The Choicest Stides ever offered
in this Market. Our Prices are
the LOWEST. •
CHEAP cmapETs.
Good Cotton_ Chain Carpets
25 CENTS PER YARD.
fi COLLINS,
71 AND . 73 FIFTH AVENUE,
mbg (SECOND FLOOR.)
CARPETS..
We are now receiving our Spring
Stock of Carpets, &c., and are pre
pared to offer as good stock and at
as low prices as - any other house
in the Trade. We have all the
new styles of Brussels Tapestry,
Brussels, Three Plys and Two Plys.
Best assortment of Ingraik Carptts
in the Market.
BOVARD, ROSE d: CO.,
mh2:4121 FIFTH AVENUE.
FIFTH
CARPETS.
1 , IifcCALLUM BROS. beg leave to
call- the; attention of those in want
of Carpets, and all goods in that
line to the fact that they have now
in store the largest assortment of
goods that they have , ever had the
pleastre of offering to the Trade,
and invite an examination of their
choice stock. Oar facilities for ob
taining goods by importation and
from Manufacturers, enable us to
offer goods at the lowest rates.
m 51 41Eni AVENUE
kt
OLIVER
McCLINTOCK
& COMPANY,
Have just received and, are now opening the
target!. importation ot,themost beautiful
3E .
. ~
Zver bronght to ibis city. being imported ' by
them direct from the most celebrated =nurse.
Uri.. of !scope.
OLIVER •
BIoCLINTOCIC.
• & COMPANY,
No. 23 Fifth Avetnue. 7 I
ARO.MTjTS
Rung & Itt SER I
FRUIT ROUSE ASSocruTKIN. BUILDINGS.
Na. • and 4 St. Ciair Street,. Pittabargb, Pa.
Special attention given to the designing nd
badiast 01-00 MIT ROUSZS and, PUBLI
BUILD INGS. ' ""
UM
liaye Now Open Their
OF
A SPLENDID LINE.OF
EMI
54.
KITTANNING
EXTRA HEAVY
BARRED FUNNEL
A VERY LARGE STOCK,
NOW OFFERED,
IN GOOD STYLES.
N'ELROY,
DICKSON
& CO,
WHOLESALE
DRY GOODS,'
S 4
WOOD STREET.
1 2, 4
(11
ad
; 14
E-1 A
.11
0 c r 4 0 2 -
z g
0 n•
.44 z W e w
0 CC PI 14 WI
1 .4 g .
0
V 2 . Hw z
•
i g t ) Ch
F. 4 .• 111
or - 0
. 7 2
z 0 r 5
E-4 3
1-( F -
deo
01
I-1 IA
DRY GOODS
AT cosrr,
FON THIRTY DAYS ONLY
TO cx.osm wroc-s.
THEODORE F. mum
87 MARKET S2REET.
den
C Ann tit ealli WAsoz l k? Liag Carr a S et,P"
WHOLZdaLE DIAL= EIK
Foteign and , .Domeitie Dry t
. .ISro. VI WOOD STIDULT,
Tldid door above Diamond alley, • •2:
NEW STYLES
HATS . AND CAP:
JusTwErviD
MCCORD • & CO's,
fe,9 -
131 WOOD STREET.
f
ROCK THE B AB Y
EARNEST'S PATENT
SOLD oxvr *7
LEMON & WEISE .
P 22 0'4101 hnilture A
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11