Simplify the left-hand side with a common denominator: \(\large{{(x^2-4x)g + (x+5)h \over x^3 + x^2 - 20x } = {x^2 - 3x + 5 \over x^3 + x^2 - 20x}}\)
Now, recall that the denominators of the fractions are equal, we can ignore them, giving us: \((x^2 - 4x)g + (x+5)h = x^2 - 3x + 5\)
The only way to get an \(x^2\) term on the left-hand side is if it comes from the term \((x^2 - 4x)g\), meaning \(gx^2= x^2\)
Thus, we know that \(g = 1\).
Likewise, doing the same thing with the \((x+5)h\) term, we notice that the coefficient of 5 can only come form the term 5h, meaning \(h = 1\)
Thus, the ratio \({ h \over g} = \color{brown}\boxed{1}\)
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