-t 1 V. - V ,r . ,THE ' Subscriber ' haying pur chased : this -Establishment on III I ifi Yayctteville StreetirIare1y.t)icu LyA!4 ril bv JW'tr. f Sarah Jeter is now: rt orrnmrn'odate iTraVellerFand Boarders. He' tenders his thanks for the pa tronage and friendly support bestowed ipon him at his former stand,' ond assures the Pub lie that in his present situation, every; exer tion will be made to conduce to the comfort and pleasui'of1''fest8iHerIll be pre-j pared to accommodate, thirty Members" pf the approaching? General Assembly.! - i H-v-ff .' ifis JJnr.mW h e constantly supplied with the best and choicest 'iigwVrs. :, -C '.i -' ts li Table with'-the best the country.;, "and market -will afford.., . His ? SYa6fer?kwhich; are 'commodious and' large,, will be attehded.vby faithful and steady. Ostlers, v eSK : Raleigh,- Sept. 12,U825 .... t THE subscriber, thankful for past favors, takes this method of informing his friends and ' the' public generally, that, he still, conti nues to keep a! Houof Entertainment in Greerisboroughi4N; -Cat the Sijrn of the PLOtlGIU Having declined the Mercantile business, -his whole attention will be devoted to his Houscwiiich is supplied with the best the country affords.? .His Stables are furnish ed with provender' of every'kmd for horses, a steady and attentive, Ostler ; and he pledg es himself tos give -due attention ; to. all wjho may honor him with a cajl. , , ; - -: r pv ' -v jacoiv hubbard;; ' Greensboro N. OS August '24.'-' 4 86 3m . , DjTiHE subscriber 'siill continues to carry on - 2 the "above business tn this city, aiul has .just finishad some handsome Gigs, w ich he offers for sle at a fair prices.:;-, y: :;yii ' v N. B. One or two Apprentices to the a bove business will be ' taken r those f om 4he country would be preferred. , i L WESLEY WHITAKER. Raleigh August 29. , 86 3t J. - J, nary for Young LadiesI on the 5th' Sep tember inst. at Gen. A. Graves'. in tlie upper end of Caswell County.; The situation is ve rv pleasant an?! adjacent to the Itockihgham Spring. J- '! , - " - ' ; The course of instruction will be carried on in a regular system, embracing all the . Scientific and Ornamental liranches necessa--jy'tn complete! the Female Education. She will also "deem it her imperious duty to pay particular attenton to the morals and man ners of the Young Ladies committed to her care, j . t,- ; , . . ;: . , Tnpils from a distance can be accommodat ed with. board by Mrp, Le, wl)ose residence is quite convenientto the school hou.e. 1 lex terms of b -ard are:$35 per'sessionl,- The first 'SessTo'n will end 'on the 20th of December next ; and a propor'iooable deduction will be made in the price of tuition and board on ac count of the shortness ot the session. ' :. , " ,PBICES JOF TriTIOX.-: J " vPor the 1st Class, ! '';--l6' 00 ..: v . V f2(l., do 12 50, ' : ; ; - !3d and .4th Class, 15 00 ? All Ornamentsl Branches will be taught at tlie usual pricesV -7 i . , ' CasweU County, ept. 1 , 1825. 8373v RAN AW Ay. from the subscriber, hree Negro Men, yiz.j Frederick, Tom and F REDE RICK j of black complexion, about lo or 2K) years oi ageto teet o pro incnesnign of thin vjsag, speaks sldw when spoken to. no visible mark as I recollect of except T think that his right fore finger is stiff-be ab sented himself on the 20th ot March last. If'rederick is fiom Virginia. TOM is- of,a itawne)r complexion, 30 or 35 year.fi of age, 5 feet 10 or 1 1 inches high, blink eyed, and as well as I recollect is lame in his swelling, and a scar on, one" of his. wrists, oc casioned bvr a 'cut of a knife. Tom is from 'North-Carolina. - ' - POMPFA is very.black, and some of his tront teeth out: about o ieet o or o incnes high, has a scar over .one of his eyesor on' his fbrehead, and speaks very - quick when spok en to. I'pmpey is from Charleston, , and for merly belonged to Jphn Billings ot that place. I think it vrv probable that they have free passes given o them, as it has been prac tised in this vicinity' V ' . 1 ' Tlie above 'Toward .will be paid to any per son who will deliver the said! Negroes-' to" me living in Fairfield district, S. Clor lodge them inanyian so inai l gei mem. .. ,.:; J O II N HARRISON. August 5.'; .,' ' ' j 81eo2m RANAWAY from the subscriber, on the vlOth inst" without a faulti a Neirro Man named DAVE, about 32 years of age, is a- bont 5'feet 7 of 8 inches high, slender made, yellow complexion, down look -when spoken to, " speaks not very quick Avhen spoken to ; has not , got go(Kl' eyes, on account of having wild hairs in them at times ' It is probable Dave will try to pass for a free man ; he has travelled a godd deal with"; the waggon in different parts of ii$ state and Virginia, arid don't lack fpf want of sense I have'been told that he hiti gone t6 Virginia to see his father ; and that! his father lives on Meherrin, Va. near Gh olson's Hridei His father, I have been told, is of Indian descent, and is a free man : his name' is said to be Kihchen Tucker ; and lie will no doubt conceal him, should Dave get there. 'When he went away he had' good clothes and dressed equal to any servant ; he had a new fur hat on, and forty or fifty dollars 'in cash, about forty of which wa3 in specie ;''-. I purchased him of a Ir. Iloss Hutcheson. livincr' within; six miles i me, a man who raisetl him. - i will give the above reward if taken out of the state, aruif taken In the state; twenty-five dollars dVpiit in ar.yjjailso that I get hirn again. . Slioyld said negro man TJave be taken up in formation can be given me by letter, addres sed to: Ili'lsborbuhi or to Pleasants Grove, Orange county'," N. C. -" - " " ": " JOHN B. VINCENT, Auytst 25. ' ' - - . ' 8$ 3t . ,1 v our, au ty a io correct inem; ii js irue, vve have had' iw6si(i en deaths from bitious fever, and this no doubt has xi ven rise to. tlie. report in question. But in! both thevcases 'to which we allude; it has been satisfactonlv ascertained, tlint the disease "did not originate in Raleigh, but was brought frooi r olher places.''".; In the faipjiy where these deaths occurred, tqere ;were,(eiA or nine . sick,; allfof whom had been from home, whilst norie of the family who remained in Raleigh were at ajl unwell though equally ex posed in every respect to jmy local cause which might have produced sick ness.' ' "-'v,' " -'.r:.' ' ' . '- - Tlie venerable Lafayette is no doubt - ( - ere this, on the wide waters, speeding his .way to his native country AVed- n est! ay last, was the day appointed for hifr departure, and the foUovving ar rangements show that the demonstra tions ;of affection with which he was greeted on his'arrival, so far from a bating, continue with increasing ardor if possible, to the moment of his de-i parture from amongst. us. . He was to be conducted from the ; President's Mansion, to the Steam-Boat Mount Vernon, that had been enjrased bv the government to convey him and his suite to the Brandywine, which was riding at anchor near the mouth of the Poto mac, by a corps of Cavalry tbe Corpo rate Authorities of Washington, Alex andria and Georgetown, the Civil, Na val and Military Officers of the United States, the Revolutionary Officers, of the District, a Brigade of Volunteer Militia, and the citi7jens. -lie was to be accompanied on board the Steam Boat by -Mr- Secretary Southard, and; such Officers of the Government of the United States as could conveniently at tend ; by the Mayors of the City of Washington, of Alexandria and Georgc- town, the T Marshal of the District, and the Commanding General of Militia of th District. A Deputation from George town, in a separate Steam-Boat, was also appointed to attend him. The important regulation of the Uni ted States Branch Bank, at Fayet(c: ville, heretofore rioticed in the Res-is-ter, of receiving the notes of the seve ral local Banks, without exception, and of paying out their own notes only, went into operation on Thursday last, and has already produced a considera ble effect on the money operations of that place. The Notes of the local Banks have appreciated in value, and Drafts and Checks on the North, which have heretofore been at two or three per cent premium, can now be obtain ed for one per cent, which is a great accommodation to the mercantile inte rest. But we fear the frequent calls of the United States Bank on the local Banks for payment of their Notes in Specie orNorthern funds will put them to considerable inconvenience. We trust, however, that the Legislature willif necessary, make such an alterrition in their Charters as shall enable them to sustain the extraordinary pressure on them which this regulation may occa sion j and if this can be done, the pub lic will have reason to rejoice that N. Carolina Bank Notes will be again equal to those of any other State in the Union. At the last triennial meeting of the Stockholders of the Bank of the United States in Philadelphia on the 1st iiist. the President rendered a lucid and high ly satisfactory statement of the affiiirs of the Bank, since its former meeting, by which it appears that they had been conducted With increased profit to the Bank, and advantage to the nation. A vote of thanks was then u nanjmbusly presented to th President and Direct ors, for; thus ably discharging their dutv. : " ;"-''-' . fXs r ; ' ,;; ?f v , " We learn that at Hh Superior Court of G rah yill e,h el d I a s t we e k "j W arx eii Taylor charged with having murder ed one of his negroes,! vvas tried, Judge Norwood presiding.- The - verdict of the Jury; was Manslaighter---X he ac cused was branded in , the Jiand. and discharged r!rtTEb AT, " SEPTEMBER 13 imSU X , . -v.. , i S : Health ofvur City r AY e unUerstatKj that s cfronco us reports J rela 6 i vte to the health of our city are in circulation, and as the j .are w i thou t fotwitlationr i t is bu t v "Vrc w Fin CSSpd a pec la d c a . fetr day since which is of tooifreqent occur fr-n rr .in Vi, f iflt1 TfV.'L '.1 nnP7,.inWOt;fPj .whicli:v'c!'ncver-lcwbutyithlfeelinfi of abjiorr e nc er XVe mean Negro Tra umg, or wtiai, in vulgar parlance, 1 is stvled Speculating I A" drov . of, ne groesvon their way to a marketpasSed through Raleigh, jlast week, y and cn campedfor the night, about .GO mnes distant., . As the owne was ;aboi;t, se curing thcm;fprihe(nigh; onc of Jhe n egrqes took up as ton e, and; struck him wi th iu cliVi die rice asTel 1 eel h i v to lh e grounds ;;; In the ; confusion which en lsuedft?c. of 'thetri escaped in chains, one of whom only ha9 been retaken. The remainder are supposed to be in this Vicinity. ... f " -:::y .'-l:. - .--;.;.- i . -- Naval Court Mart iak.iSince the hon- orabl e acq uittal of Com tn. Stewart, Captain - James Ram age" has been ar raigned for trial, and is .we trust to be the last. The charges preferred against him are aa follows : ' 1 st. Neglect in the performance of his du'v. ' ;'-'-'- 2nd. Conductinbecpmingan Officer and a Gentleman. ; 3d. Oppressive conduct.' The Richmond Enquirer thinks, that the following Toast given at. the Uni versity of thht State, on, the late visit of General Larayette, expresses the "sen timent of Virginia: Our Federal Union. The chrun cable of our strength and safety: May its links soon er separate than b?melted down in one un wieldy mass; but destruction to the man who attempts either. Latest Foreign Intelligence. Th e ship TftUiam Tlwmpson which sailed from Liverpool on the 1st of August, arriverTat New-York on the 5th inst. She brought no political intelligence of any-Importance,:. and the only commer cial news of anv interest, comrounicat ed by English correspondents, is that the Cotton Market was very dull, and the price of that article declining Fate of Genius- This gift possessed by the fnw, for the enjoyment of the many, appears at the present era, to be appreciated in a higher degrce'than for merly, but carries with it this singular ity, that those authors who suffered un der privations and indigence, at the pe riod in which they wrote, are .now-held in the highest estimation; and the works of many who lived in negVct and died in distress, are now esteemed j bet ond all modern efforts. In recalling to mind however, the fate of those literary men to which we allude, it would seem, that like lighted tapers, they wasted them selves av.ry for the advantage of others. Adam Smith has observed, that'scholar and beggar .were synonymous expres sions, and really, the melancholy enu meration which follows would go to con firm the assertion. The immortal Bacon lived in great distress, Raleigh ended his days on' a scaffold, Sir Tho. Moore shared the tame fate, Spencer died ne glected ana1 forsaken, Milton finished his life in sad obscurity, Collins died in a state of mental derangement, Steele lived in constant fear of a Jail, Otway died prematurely and in want, Gold smithy was ever in fear of duns and catchpoles. Savage tlied in prison for a debtif efght pounds, Swift 4 expirel a drive11er"anl a show," Dryden lived in poverty and died in distress, Chatterton pensneti .uy.suiciue, ani ouper, tne "1 1 . inimitable jpowper was at times insane! If su ch be the fate of genius, who would wish to possess it. It1 may be gratify ing to our feelings.' to r. be praised, and the incense wafting breeze flatters xiur vanity, but the polar blast of envy, and the freezing rigidity of neglect cannot be borne by those, who, for a while, have fluttered in the sunshine of public favor. Siich unfortunates have been compared, and not inaptly, to " Boreal Meteors, this moment they blaz.e in vrvid splendor the next, they are lost in nicht and absorbed in darkless;" . Cpntrast jthe patronage of the present century, with the past. The copy-right of Milton's Paradise Lost, was sold for l5j)ounds Scott-s poetry has realized him 50,000,& his novels probably dou ble that. sum. " Byron has enriched his Printers & Booksellersr and the long list of, ephemeral poets, who, patronized by modern Maecenas's, shine theirlittje day an d th en expi re, have realized the golden hopes which escaped the grasp of their distinguished predecessors V Yet still, th Essays, of Bacon,, tlie Fairy Queen of Spencerj the iParadise, IiOst of Mil- ton,,the Lyrical 0e$- of ;CoIins, the) A fewaysjtice- wc witnessed nil lVavel!(?r, &c. df.Goldsmiih; the Task'cidentofvan alarming character, tho of:C6wyeV; &cl cvvVltlescemlMo fmt , , .. V'.o Mi driver of a Jad.n from Alabama wa pcvster.ty, . nonored;?nd iidmire when toeth-c?. w;ih onof ihc linHestruck the evanescent brilliancies of Scott and lifeless to the Ground 1SV IHitnin?. The B vron -are 'forgotten. An election for Representatives to the; nine teen th ;CongrsV tookplacein Rhode' Island biTTuesdav'iTlfe'Pni 'idence Journal 'of Thursdavi states that th e Hon . -Tris tram B it rges,i el ect ed hyiA handsome f majority 6ver M r. Edd v ;xand! that between f;l the ot her candidates Messrs. Durfee", Pearce'Sc H u n ter, : th ere probably h 0 choice ; -;- .-v. :, - ,; . ':... .-. Grccce.'Th e loss of, life, , in the war between the Greeks antl vTurks is, ter rible to think of -The fire ships tf the former are won d e rf u 1 ly destru c tive, and the idea bf fromsbb to 600 men bein blown i up at once, is horrible, and yet this sometimes happens. f One vessel of V 60 guns and 800 men, was lately thus destroyed. ' ' v; v ,y' Unprofitable speculation. -Th e Caz- enovia Monitor states, hat some, per sons who have undertaken to run down the Chenango bank, sent about S2000 ip specie, not long since, to be exchan ged for Chenango bills at the Cherry Val ley bank. " Having got the heedful in his hands, the trusty messenger set his face to the west, and the first m- form'ation the runners had of him, he was fairly under -way for Indiana. He had not been overtaken by the last ac counts. . - : - - ; . . TIae frigate Mohawk (says a packe tts Harbor paper) after laying sunk in this harbor for S or 9 years, up to her uh d ec k, i n m ud ah d wa t er, has bee n rai s -ed by Capt. R. Hugcnin, and was yes terday as completely afloat as when first launched Capt. H. raised her by in troducing a number of lifting rjumps of a large size, to which he applied horse power, ami she rose gradually as the water was cleared from her hold. This once noble frigate was commanded dur4 ing the war, by Capt. Jacob Jones t she is a beautiful model, and carried about fifty guns. Her timbers bclqw water mark appear yet to be sounds " New-Hampshire State Prison. --The following remarks on the present con dition of the State Prison, were made by Mr. Good all, at the late session of the Legislature of New-Hampshire, on a proposition before that body to in--crease the salary of the Warden (Mr. Pillsbury.) under whose excellent man agement the prison has become a house of reform. Before Mr! P.'s adminis- tration, the prison was; a constant ex pense to the State ; but by Ins judicious arrangement, it has now become a source of revenue : ; v " Go to the prison--see the order preserved there. 'Is it the hour of labq? you see no one idle- vou hear no one pitting decorum, industrv and'regu larity are all you see., Is it the hour of prayer, you see no pne lounging about the yard : no plotting j no; rudeness 5 all is ilecency and order. Is it the time tor meals r tney go in silence to ineir homely But wholesome; farci ; they eat in silence, and in silence retjurn to their labor. Go to their cells. It is not tlie offensive smel I of a prison that meets you at thje door, bu t the. white washed wall, the "clean stone floor and the pure atmosphere is around ybu. The. Bible and the Psalm book are ihere too, and the on v books you; see'. lU're are no games of chance-ho midnight revels no allurements for vice $ and the lives of several who havefleft the. prison, af ford a pleasing hope, that in its solitary cells they have reflected and reformed." "Come, Thee time,- is fast approach -f ing, says the yVmerican Traveller, print ed in Boston when the remarkable Co: met or Planet, to which the name of Kncke has been given, will be again vi sible to the earth. . Th6 attention of astronomers has been much attracted to this singular body, by the very near equality of the times of" its revolution round the sun, and by thej slow, but continual decrease of those times; which last. curious fact is generally ascribed to the resistance of the. sun's atmos phere, to the motion of ithe; comet, when in perihelion The comet was fast in perihelion on the 21st ot ay, 1822 5 its periodical time'of. revolution being 2205 days (which ; elapsed on the third of September, instant) we may daily expect to seeitThose.wliq are desirous, of a particu lar accou nt of; this interesting body, f will find its . history in an elegant article, byUHe illustrious Bowdttch, in a numberof 'thc Nordi AmeHcan Review, printed four or five years since. It, is hoped that due no ticc will' be given of the cornet as Boon, as it is observed. - :'-.; - . - j boy was standing a few feet from a t rea -bridlingthe hose,-artrl both. .fell 'oppav rently. dehtkrThe boy" clril-not exhibit any signs 'nf?;life-i-the -'horse j was seeu , 4 to.vvjiiK.a rew ume out uui not, move. tlappily, sjosnerof.thc lad ies jijcorn pa riy -V had :jrc9cncjp of niinil sufficient to order some one to 6l ow into the boy's motith,- . arid las soon a his;;lungs were inlflateU ajtidicnbu s and: tri Q i ng t h in' .f .s , c e i -. tainiy t he means, together. yvh fnctiortV of restoring the. biV -t ' iiler ; Si . ' v' lie W'as.striicKoii Tiie siuc ni ineineari, lis; hat1 was f orh tVnieccs, and jfiisneck. side and le& blijitered,nnd the toe ot his shoe comnletel burnt out. No il oubt had the . horse's 1 u riirs I been at ?o ' '; A M : . - ' ' L. - ' """ L i --."'!- ' inflated, that both lnia-hthayd -lived ; for the horse certainly" evinced fniord signs of life immediately after . the ac cident tliari the boyi As occunjenccs of this, kind frequently happen, people will do well to remember this remedy, as ' it aiiorus tne only cnauce lor restoring;' Iif . "l'hf hir fthntild lip" thWiwil iri lir it smal 1 pair of bellows, instead , of. the moutn, as it is tnen pure, anu nas ne-, ver undergone any change in thie res pi ratory organs, to un fit it fo'r th e pur poses of life.-- Geo. Missionary Jftug. 5i ' While the Oconed nvcr ,wns I'erv4 full last week, the wheels of an ox-cart. striking with violence the flu fat Holt's ferry, broke the chain that fastened t the shore." -and' suddenly drove the boaV i ri to t her a j t d c u rre h t of t he 'it v er t h oxeri being in the; flat and ; tlic; cart; in ' .1 . ' ' .: " t." . t j' r j 1 . . '.. ' in tne. river. .;xne uouy or uie cart wan just about lloating oh. trom the axlcp when fa negro boy. on shore, who droyo the oxen, told the ferryman there were two chiidrebi in : the cart-(,i . blanket thrown; over the cart tokee) off die rain ; had concealed them 'from ;vow- Thd ferryman, an athleticyoung'iugr.o tnan by the name of Fox, immcxliatclyj'sprarg . into the' cart to save, at the crninent haza'fd oC his life the , two t!nMdrin, who were white ones. ; The, body by ' . this time was separated froni the wheel and passing dovn the stream! JTlie ne gro man seized both iliecliiidrjenl "ahtl might possibly have succeedeil in sav- ing both, if the eldest, a boy of se'en years, had pot been: greatly; frightened -r-he struggled hard .got lodse anl wa 1 drowned-; THe ferrynian while hold -ing to the cart which - was , carried ra pidly down the current, frequently roll - 1 ng over, pi aced t h e ! ot he r chi id. a gi r I of about it four years old, on his backslid r-tb holu' fast She did so, and told her. in this way thev' were carried by the stream about five miles, when passing nigh some limbs pf ("rocs that overhung the river., the man caUght a t wig, and byit$ assistance extricated himself and brought out the cliild in safety. ':.; '3fllic3gevffle:Rtc&rder. , On the 21st June last, Mr. T 103 .William- son, of Caswell county, N. Ci tO Mrs. McLe ron, daughter of Thps, Farishjjlisc of Cha.1' ham county. ; T - . In Person county, on the 3' th ult. Mr. WmVillmes, to M'iss May Cochran, young est daughter of Simeon Cdcllrari, Esq. all c f said county, : '"i'"X lf::" 1 ' Ijr Guilford, on tlie 1st irist-'Mr, Sedgwick county.. .. . v'-- ( .. .:.;- In Caswell county, on the 30th tiltl In the 23d year of Ms ag-e,. Day id. Johnston, of a violent attack of the bilious r fever ,: ' At the residence of John Mfulllfi, Esqj in Caswell county, on tlie 28tli ult. Mr. Jas. Hadley and Ids AVifeJ They died within five minutes of each oilier, of 'the same dls easei and : were- both .' tfuried' in the same gtave.--They were residents of Orang-e coiin- ty.- ; i'.- 'r 'lr v v' L : -.i VT.: , : " I On the Cth irist. in Waicnj cguivty, of a consumption, Mrs. Nancy ' Harris, wifi of Mr. Burwell Harris, a respcctableplanteK f In the same county, on the 30th lilt, aftc ? a protracted illness of the IJropsyi' Mr. ''m. Verser, Jun. -, t'.' . .:':, , ,. i ,. ;:': '.'''.. ;'" '-In the same coUnty, Ir.vGep.' Pog-rarn, Sen'r., at an advanced age ; a man hitrhly respected by a numerous , circle of fricucrt and relatives. 'V. ;?''" .': x. j'v- "i :-!;; ' C In Pasquotank couhty, o"n the1, . 2 1st jiilt. Mrs. Mary fSeorereuct ot the late Ca t ir ui x x. v. x v- On the 5d Inst. at Wilmington, 3Iis Su- - " san, daugnter of Mrr Johrt 'McAiislin, agx'tl ' 14 years ; the premature death of this'intcr esting' fcmale4 has blasted-the fond -expectation of relatives and friendsC - But, to the venerable,; and respected father, the dispen sation is .most severei forf Ve understand that nine times death has entered his mai h sion for a similar purpose., j - T " ' Oji the 3d insL at Wilmington, Mrs. Har riot Stevvartj'formerly ofNew-York but for5'" some years past a resident pf that town. On the 4th inst at Wilmington, Win. M. ' RLarkin, a native of Charlestown, (Mossl) , inthe 18th year of his ae. ! ; In Duplin county, on the 23d of August, Mrs. Margaret Carr, aed 71; years, consdrt of Wm.,Carr Sen'r. v T ? i Departed this life Tew day's since, wlrtl-t 1 a visit to her friends in Virginia, vM-s M:i- on riam Massenburg of Frankl.n County. In. the death of this young lady, society is de prived of a verypromisintf member In th- morning" of Jfe, not a sullen cloud appearing in sig-ht, vfilh female honours , arisj ng- 1 Voirt her Academical .'Studiesfirst hi her classes, first in. the afTectiOn of her tutoress, and first in the" estimation of hsrdemale acquaintanc es 5 she was proTe'ssmg with that female, dignity' which animates the virtues 8c; whlci portends a happy and ibrilhant eve, but er she reached her noon-day bri.ihtnesj, ipjovu was ecanjejo. jnw ruerai. .. . - f ' k - j - . . " . - . . . " ' ... . i - ' : - . ' :'- . - ' - " ' ' - -' "" ' ' i-' - '" - ' - i . " . ..'- ; ! -"' "' .- . : ! ,. -" ; ' 'j' m : :.'.'- .' - ?'Jf j:;:'. s - v -r'J"

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