t - - ' lMM,,MMajMMMMaMMaMaaaMMaarMaMMaa ' "55' JI'TLLf'-' - JC1-V HAH: f n TtmUMt ii Afield &u Ufff OT "W J w - -' - ! 'n. th rv)1i.. 1-iVrfa. lxr. : f ihe President .tad Virtxrt lioruiT itt- ::a Rilrtad-CooDPaaT t tla aJbi Aa 4h 11th mat.. . and raiet that I ahalt b diwppointed.in lha pleasva of being pre? Mnt at thii fnterestins ceremony, As well aa to mv Duisose.: for .tome time entertained, of attending the annual meeting of the atockhol- dera. l. ' -V-A' ';' To the finendi of thii enterprise, with whom I hate been proud to cooperate in the dar. kestbowt1! Its rate.iti weU aa to all the gooa iitfzena of the Sta?e Vho shall paxici oata 4 in the,, celebration ofits happy com mencement, a-"-offer aj hearty jcongratula tkmaand good wishea.iiTbat.ao much has been accomplished aa Ihe subscription of the whot4 capital stock, the organization of the cowfrtnr, ta inrrey of the ebtira route, the Ietlbg'iDCtt'tcTrt.-a78i'w con" atrucTon thrdughoutthe same, and the actual breaking of ground, ia the face of all the dis couragements and ppositioBV -encountered since the first assemblage of the friends of the wotk at Salisbury two years since, afifords itmAr in pccajtoajor mutual felicitation and pejoiang; anTI look forward lo the daytf its itnal cihupletion, as hi time of deliTeraoce, DM mnly front the shackles of commercial bondage, but from the dominion of prejudices ' a&4 eiror, which, howerer honestly enter taiaeoV have been the bane of our prosperity. Iu the beautiful allegories of Golasmith, ,pblbed nearly a century back, certainly 'SeJore railroads were buirt or thought of, we read of t be Minister of an Eastern "Queen, whose administration of afiairawas so much xomplained of araongher sunjects, that a day 1 waa appointed to hear those making accuse tiorr against him, and vhen be- should stand "poafia defence. The day being arrived, the fiat who. compUIsed was. a carriei who .applied -the city with, fish. He exclaimed tthajil was the custom, from time immemorial, -foe barriers te bring their fish on a horse, in ' tamper; which being placed on one side, and balanced by a atone on the other, was thus conveyed with esie and safety, but that ' .the prisoner, raoTed by a spirit q( innovation, rperfaapa bribed by the hamper-makers, lad obliged al carriers to' use the stone no lopjer, but balance one hamper with anoth enaa order entirely repugnant to all the cus- loss of antiquity, and those of her msjeity's kmedom in particular. "TThe carrier finished, and the whole court t shook their beads at the innovating Minister. Next came the insp ctof of city buildings, "who charged hira with having ordered the - oemohUon of hji ancient ruin, wbicn obstruc ted the passage through one of the principal atreets.- He observed, that such buiJdinp 1 rvere aoble monuments of barbarous anliqui- Xj f contributed finely lo shew how little our ancestors understood ox arcnueciure, ana ior that reason should be held sacrea and mffer- ' ed gradually to decay. The last witness who appeared was a wid ow, who had laudably attempted to turn herself on her husban'i funeral pile. But the innovating Minister had prevented the execution of her design, and was inse nsible to her tears, protestations and entreaties. .-Thtwo- first offences -might have been pardoned; but for injury to the sex, so con trary to the customs of all antiquity, the Queen (says the story) ordered the criminal to be banished from her presence forever. T acknowledge my crime," said he; "and einc j I am to be banished, let it be to some JXLudlownorruireJ mil age in the country 1 have governed I kball find some pleasure in supswving the soil snd bringing back a spirit of industry among the inhabitants." This request, " seeminj reasonab'e, was granted, and courtier was ordered to fix a place of banishment answering the .Ministers des cription. After six months' search, however, the inquiry proved fruitless; neither a desolate town or ruined village could be found in the whole kingdom. Then, said the Minister, how can that country be i'l governed which bat not a desolate town, or ruined village in it f.' The Queen perceiving the justice of .'tth4,resnonstiance, remitted hiasentence and restored him to favor. ' The projectors of this Railroad are certain- , ly lritbjn the terms of the first count of the indictment against the innovating Minister. They do propose to carry at least two bam paaa of fish up the country, and two bales of cotton or hogsheads of tobacco down, by means at least as simple and cheap as one was carried before. Considering1 also that they design to cut clown, mountains and lift up vallies, so as to form a path for a fiery monster, carrying a weight of fif'y tous and running with more than race-horse speed over hill and dale, they arsras heinous offenders against ( barbaront , antiquity as he who removed tne venerable tuin from ihe atreets of the city. i How. like him, they shall do injury to the aex by the introduction of those novelties, pts perhaps more difficult to .defi..e, unless it be that "time and space1' are about to be annihilated by the rapidity of travel, and love to lose its reward for want of troubles to en ceomer; or that education and accoroptitb ttenUttbe graces and refinements of life, are .&hCme. so generally diffused, byObe more general diffusion of opportunities and means for their acquirement, that competitors will become more numerous and the prize of ad miration more difficult to win. If, however, for any or all of these offences, we shall be doomed to banishment, like - the offending Minister,-, and shall be graciously allowed the condition of place,' permitted to him, I trust wo shall find, by. the time this Road shall be completed and brought into full operation, that there will not be in the, State, at least in thai large and populous part through which - it runs, a desolate town, or ruined village, or tarm bouse, or camlet to claim us as exiles. In surveying, as I have recently had op. portunity to do, the public works of New York- and othe riStates north of this capital, and contemplating the manifold advantages ujey conier on me lnnaouanis oj loose states, itbas been tome a matter of wonder how we, Is the interior of North CaroIinaT with but utile better means of travel and irauiporta tion than when the thunders of tih, can- oo were beard on the spot .where you now ktBd. can hold our band' in 4be competition . business with those who baveHmedied Wasaiural disadvantsges by w'6ribf Infernal toprovemenU Standing on the wharf atBuf Wo, where canal boats weie being loaded HiUh. floor at the rate of from 650 la 550 bx- . jeh) tO tb boat. I iaanird-wk Creighf. m barrel, from there to iho city of ITAi. - ' Qi,ianc raora than 509 miles 1 fry must f feM. thef FnoL oi o4,ieceived for answer, 48J cents)e;byweaem " ' tV W 101 !30 pet eeat.rtri if-Ti HillsborrrVtq Kale" fand? th r j mak noth ing al IhaUVet Ui pief e tf good f -tuai, the Erie Ca"il,rai not rained do n" on eiienrNew York, 1t jfc-PwrideDC which nil denlM .Lir tieitinrtlU W ki com uo FStan twtntv Add million! Ol oouara vt w- " J - - lectio i4 ta a'or afrto rum tb SUte and paprix,th. sj. but by lha inlre oid atiUanihia ci chatda and bia awo f?Tent!V7:lrV::: sVa tha of awUtbeaerac(or tbfbughout the land. But the people of that griat btate are not content" wH this. , "By the fime this letter' reacbeayou, if ,no( nowr a law will have rusedhwglslature to "borrow and expend nine millions of dollars more in en larging the grand Canal, so at to carry twice as much as ia now carried on ita wetere, at tha same cost and consequently to cheapen trans portion probably one-half below present ratetT . '' " But with the innumerable advantages or the Canal, it affords oo .slow a passage lor our progressive age. A superb Railroad has been laid down by its side from Buffalo to Alhan. and ! beinar extended alone the ihoree or that natural canal, ine nuusou . r 777 7 . . ti J river, ia the eitv of New York. ' Tbts ia exclusiye of 'the New York and Erie Railroad, the neatest work of the kind vet completed in the world, which shoots off from the Hudson river thirty miles aboe ihe citv. andfToaainsr the waters of the Deleware, ihe Susquebanxu, of lake Ontario, the lilt-, isvippi, and lake Erie, strikta the latter Iake sf Dunkirk, 45 miles only from Buffalon-a total distance of 460 odd miles. A traveller who shall pass by one of these Roeds from the city of New York to the Lake, and fail to get through in 16 or 17 hours, and at the rate of 2 cents or less per mile, will be rare to take the other on his next journey. We set out after six o'clock in the morning on the Erie Road, , and with all stoppages from the holiday occasion, and the desire at various points to offer respects to the Presi dent of the United States, we reached Elmi ra. where we tarried for the night, a distance of 283 miles, half an hour before sunset. ( Or the numerous Railroads connecting these two together at convenient points, or uniting as branches to the one or the other, and the plank roads which every where greet the eye, I have not room for description. iioining is more certain man uii iu icnu to the popular taste for works of this kind, "iKresMoappetitedoth grow by what ItfeedsoBi and as soon as you confnee the people, by at public, demonstration,-that they can be made without ruin, they will demand them, as they do comfortable Routes to live in, or improved tools of trade to work with. I cannot here forbear to mention, for the consolation of those among us who take so much to heart the misfortunes and blunders of the old Raleigh and Gaston Railroad, that ihe N. York. and Erie Railroad, from inex perience and bad management in ita early history, proved a dead failure, at a loss -of more than six millions of dollars, one-half of which fell upon the State and has never been repaid: or rather, has been relinquished as a bounty to a new company, who took it in hand under better auspices for carrying it through to completion. But that it has now been finished and equipped at a cost of seven teen millions more, and promises to be a paying stock at the whole sum of twenty three millions. , We have not, it is true, the wonderful re sources and advantages of New York, and it is with no hope to rival her great works that I recite these outlines of her system of im provement; but to show that oar undertaking is not disproportioned to our means or our ne cessities. When a citizen of Mecklenburg or Cabarrus shall be enabled to breakfast at home, dine in Raleigh, and aup on the same day and at no very unreasonable hour in Wilmington, Beanfbrt, Newbern, Norfolk or Petersburg, he will accomplish no more in overcoming distance than ia now done daily by hundreds, not to say thousands, in N. York, as well as in other Stales of the Union-1 And be will readily perceive what benefits will accrue to him when he too can accomplish in one day what now requires more than a week. The time and circumstances are all propi tious to the commencement of our work. We are in the first year of the latter half of the nineteenth century. We have just fin ished one of those decades appointed by tbe Constitution, When. the Federal census ex hibits to-ns anew the population and statistics of the country. -Th pruMHt o Nerth Car olina during this period is less cheering than tnat of several other States, but more so than it has been during any former one. Her population, now 70.000 tools, will easily attain to and exceed emilEoo by the next census at tbe samdrate of increase as during the last ten years. . With the discourare- menls to emigation, by reason of tbe greater distance of the fresh Unds at the South and West : the encouragements and rewards to industry in the expenditure of three millions of dollars in the construction of this work a- lone, (not to speak of the' impovemems on the Cape Fear and beyond tbe Blue Ridre.j in the grand result whschis to flow from its completion,-that oar internal resources of mineral and agricultural riches are to be brought out as , permanent and increasing contributions to the national wealth,! trust she is entering on this new era with a brighter destiny. The second State of the South in geographical extent ; the second in population frpmjhe revolution downward, until she has been outstripped by her young er sisters, Tennesse and Kentucky, she pos sesses elements otopulence and power which require dui me general extension ot a sys tem of improvement to enable her to vie with the proudest members of the Union, to which none is more devoted, constant and faithful. I remain, dear air, very truly yours, WILL. A. GRAHAM. Hon, J. M. Moxchiad, PreVtN. C. R.R. Co. PaTHXTrc. Some poet that evidentlv thinks "our wrongs t intolerable" probably nimseu tne unfortunate husband of a Bloom er comes out in tbe Carpet Bag in a dozen stanzas of profound grief most eloquently uune in rnyme. i oe ioiio.wing is nis de scription of the gradual encroachment of wo mankind on the tern tones of pantaloon Sv Hefsays:A . 4 . " A-'1" ; v Thef tootaor bats at frsf wwhardly aalseed C O. them ... . . i. , :K v asm taea toey aped oar 4waeye. a Ml meats ; -And stole oar sacks we only laobe and kpsed kOCm . . .1.1 -j ' EmhoUeaed thus they Wore- our very ,'hats ; UehL by alow and sere degree, the witches H sakn.alt mm coax, kis. hoeU mmd hnn-t I i Oar poet wieda mp w it baa iadifaaBianitest Igaiasr uurpiiocs; and tbe fitcerdactara. tieo Ibatw.-n ;'J.j?z'sm'? V-a'-rt---. Tbe cents are eare.watea nel SInr nf,-.fy nn f - aafttoailf cans? UO o actual ly .cangt k ball rred7ora a et. teeth. -cut off the end of his ton rue. and. ed Into bu lued ur ww hWiHltr it tntrt hii thro!. He raised it, went to tne liitmenL and returned bome witV ine bultat in bis pocket--iJAang'e Pipat1 - r ' The New Orleana Picayune,' one of whbs editors was an; eye-witnesa , of t most of tho leading battles in Mexicd, topiefc the forr go, ing parsgrapb acd appends to it the following relation:, -f.f We can relate an incident even; more strange than this. At theiiegebf Mdnterey, in 1848, and while CJer. Wprth'a troop were advancing to atormMie amall fort known as La Soldada, a man named Waters, an excel lent soldier belonging to Capt. Ben McCol loeJi'a R&nirerm. caught a laree erOB shot di rectly in his mouth. It was fully Ihcjuze of a ben's egg, was rough, .unevem iouanape.. and in Its course completely carrie! out the four upper front teeth of the ranger od part of the iaw.: cut-off the four lower teeth as with a chisels snlit his ton rue in twain, car ried away his palate, went through to the back of his head, and striking a tendon gtany ced down and todeed under the skin on the boulder hW&tL where it wss extracted by a surgeon, -and safely ,ptpyced,in.the pocjcei oi Waters lor fut are reference. . 1 No men thought the wounded ranger could liTe he could swallow neither food nor wa ter. We saw him two nights afterwards, in a room in the Bishop's Palace, which had hn converted into a hbsDital. sittine bolt UDriirht amone the wounded and the dying, (or the nature of his terrible hurt was such that he could not lie down without suffecat ing. His face was swollen to more than twice its ordinary size he waa speechless, of Course his wants were only made known by means of a piece of broken slate and pen cil. and he was slowly applying a wet sponge to his mouth, endeavoring to extract mois ture, which might quench the fever and in tolerable thirst under which he was suffering. Bv his side lay youn? Thomas, of Maryland, a member of the same company, who was mortally wounded the morning after, and who was now dying. Wounded men, struck that afternoon in Worth's advance upon the Grand Plaza, were constantly being brought in. tbe surreons were amputating ani dres sin the hurts of the crippled soldiers by a pale and sickly candle light, and the groans of those in Grievous pain added new horror to a scene winch was at best frtehttul. TVe . ..... recollect perfectly well a poor fellow, struck in both legs by a grape shot while advancing t-. i . , it. i , up one oi tne streets, tip was oegging ius tily, after one of his limbs had been amputa ted. that the other might be spared him on which to bobble through the world. Poor Thomas, as gallant a spirit as ever lived, fili al y breathed bis last; we brought Waters a fresh cup of water with which to moisten bis wounds, and then tett the room to catch an hour's sleep; but the recollections of that er rible night will not soon be effaced from our memory. The above incidents occurred on the night of tbe 23d and morning of the 24th Septem ber, 1846 During the early part of the month ot t ebniary following, wbtle passing into tbe old St. Charles in this city, we were accosted wi'h a strange voice by a fine look ing man who seemed extremely glad to see us, aitnoogh lie nad a most singular and unac countable mode of expressing: himself. - We recollected the eye as one we bad been fami liar with, but the lower feature of the face, although in no way disfigured, for the life of us we could not make out. 'Why. don't you know me?" in a mumb ling, half indistinct and forced manner, said ihe man, still shaking bur hand vigorously ; I'm Waters." : And Waters it was, in reality, looking as well and healthy as ever, and without show ing the least outward aign that he had ever caught a grape shot in bis mouth. A luxu riant growth of moustacbioa completely cov ered his upper lip, and concealed any scar the iron missile might have made; an imper ial on bis under lip hid any appearance .of a wound at ina point: and, with tbe exception of bis speech.there waa nothing to show that he bad ever received tne siigbtesi injury about tbe faee.-tlU tovgtie, which waa terribly shattered, was still partially benumbed, ren dering articulation both difficult and tiresome; but he assured us he was every day gaining more and more tne use of it. and in bis own words he was soon to be "just as good as new." It is needless to say that we were truly re joiced to see him to meet one we had never expected lo encounter again in sucb excellent pligh'. Any who could have seen him. sit. ting in that apartment of the Bishop's Palace, his face swollen, and with a gravity of coun tenance sDieb would nsve been ludicrous even to the causiogof -laughter, had ;ir" not been for bis own precarious situation and the heartrending scenes around, world have been equally as much astonished and rejoiced ;as we were, on again to unexpectedly beholding him. THE SENTIMENT OF UNION. The pithy old saving, altributedjqjuany ceTebrated menr buf properly, we Jbelieva to Fletcher of Salloun, has not a whit the less truth in it, because it has undergone the wear and tear of quotation for nearly two Hundred years. ''Let me write the ballads of a people," said he, "and I care not who writes its laws." We instance theTtrite epopthegm at this time, to say that ft oa rora such light maiters from songs, popular catches, chance words which, have fastened upon the general usage that we may best f lean tbe temper and the will of the people, t is from this conviction that we have' look ed, with no amall degree of interest, to .the dinner-table sentiments riven in di&rnt pans of our country, it the late celebration of or anionui aioiversaryt ; leUgbted, in deed, are we to Bud that almost every where from the water line of the fNofthTa-,Xake8 jo ue giowmg Dahkror thelRId Grande', a'ud from the ancient seats of siiooalif y, on .ho sea board to the outposts of xiyiniation jon It has a significance deeper than the ordina- y, t'wiyuiM vi auuiesuye accasions. Thnjnera inspiraiiotvoi ,Yaea,J)gbileoa brandy-and-water, would poorly account for. the coincidence oCnineout nf every teraen In Ue land; pladgiog the Union otM be SUtea, us large measure,' andWith no'atintedhpi plaose. r Letter succeeding Foiirlhof Jhly oaya btjtladi cite this feeling among thd peo I-oniinaicaio tnil tee tng among th.ej paol ne u U,,,VVV j Vr blasphemea.ur in pwipiti,ana,-jMr.i-uieu war of.1812, and while biting f end of jiiif in eloquence a-eartiidgeFToF-lhou badTnmita.e rromTOrAlh6o gun, was struck by m ball, which entered l n .t fwt ,; ifce people of America,are loo. Ift tide of hii face, knocked out eieht of hi jt&.iilrTriS.CIS-.wla- r iLiT-l too ;f eitero Irontier. the senliroen: of fjnion I bu found a generous and bt arty. eipressionJf - - was w 'swau- S.1J asav aav aa aiasmix ai ri - - i . Tbntr.T rtreason of ( T lb Matfiehy 'i rr 'rae- "say Tent:r,"lfl '.- the Wildest, t a vir 5l)y of South Car. .vorVt of. all r-'snb! of dv..numv and the I i be"ex.ibited,in ; the . - . .-.I-. l.t-J t! a J -ineionc: ioe - m n iuii dseDrv sensible' of the maen not WeivA uUersiice totbeirvwarmly thetisM poieon- were-aoimsieaj wjm iiapquMciiuu lKt th inirita of fbrtv centuries looked down' upou themTrorn" fthrft summit of the Pramidi. to the people of pur . 'Country, are conscious that the ejeaof the world are; up on them, intent upos thf , issue o nryae and grander game-tnarr na ever neejr piayea before' in the anpals of the racethat the spirits ol our" fathers -watch their actions with the-most rapt and paimut aoucuuae, ana inn toVxtineuish at this iuncturethe last .hopes ofTreedora. and to close forever the last asylum of the wretched, blighting the almost J f . t :'t.l Am, nintJ npenen irun oi age iu nuxw ur : ntII annn tkm tin -tihloaa v and dlSCTSCe such s no natiofl hsi ever yet incurred, since time; begaorf BtcAssoaa WAig.f, j I I I ,: 'g ANOTHER PROP GOllE Tne Democratic V candidate for Congress this Distriot has 1 been endeavonng to make the neoale believe that Gen;' 'Jackson recanted the Celebrated proclamation which he aimed at ' Carolina Nullifiers and SetesstoIihAeflr'they were 'endeayoring to breakup iUpniJn '32 and;t Cl KUIUB.HIQ I O. UlBpCU MUiuiuum , w the 4th instant, that Mr. A. J. Donelson, al most a son ot the Old General, always his protege and favorite, his pnvate secretary during the time oixne sou in aroina ex citement, and hew the Editor of the Wash inxton Union, had declared that Old Hick ory had modified" his views, and regretted bis course in this particular. Read the lol lowing extract from the Union, written by this very same A. J Donelson, and see what he act nail r does say about this matter We think that Col. Rutfio cannot derivt much satisfaction therefrom. It places him not distinctly, fully, and beyond the hope of extrication, in the very funny position of "adhering to the pnncipies of democracy as illustrated by the administration of Jackson," and of at the same time pronouncing a con demnation loud ana deep upon the very principle end measures which constituted tbe grand, cardinal, leading features of that aamint-irauoaTvtq vronsisiency, onsisi ency, thou art indeed a jewel, but one, alas! which tbe democracy can never possess, un til a hand stronger than that of Resurrection itself, shall rescue them and their opinions from the dark chaos into wh eh they have fallen I But read the article from theUnion: ....... C" Telegraph. From the Wasbiagt n Union. Equally unfonnded is tbe insinuation that Gen Jackaoo's proclamation was Ihe composition o federal minds, and was afterward amended in or der to sativfr the scruples of an offended democra ey. GEN. JACK80N NEVER, BY ANY ATT OF HIS- LIFE, EXPLAINED AWAY THE MBANINQOFHId PROCLAMATION Tbe publication authorized by him contains the fullest proof that all assertions to this effect were graiaitoos end anfoueded. Indeed the very pes- aasvt of that dneoment Whieh were rotsrepresen led aa being too federal wets approved by that por tian of a is rabiaH which were. never sospected ol a federal arSa ty. Tbete fs not a sentiment in that document which mimaiesarinst ihe Virginia rwo lutiotts: there IrTtot a word rn it which uen. Jack son ever consented to modify or lo change not oae hal any member et bis cabinet desired to chang. either then or since, lb t ever we heard of. Nr is it irae to sa that Mr. Livinirstoo waaibe author of that document. It Was put in form chiefly by him, because it was a document to be recorded in the State Department; but its essentia features weie drawn up immediately under the direction and dicu.ton of tbe General himself. Indeed, when predated to th Cabinet, il under went important change, and particularly in those features which refer to the manner in which the confutation waa formed, and the mode in which it bound all the people under one common and united government. Gen. Jackson was not a man of words; he stick led not at tbe phrases of rhetoric and eloquent d c tion He went straight lathe point of duty with his heart in bis band. , , He waa a so'dier of the re. voloiibo, and knew what was meant by the tyran ny and oppreeion winch jnsUfied the war fur eur inJepeadenee. uTbe' right .and the duty of resis tance, aa understand by the great men of that day, ha bad shed hat blood jot; and if hm were alive to day he voald aJrd. fer fctdj ifaeaama jusiifi cation existed. zrton? tatse logic woold ever in duce him to say that seen a justification ts afforded by the passage oTlhe Campromieeof the last ses sion of Congmevr The following i tract front his message ef 1833 to Congreas eoAtairw m a few lines, the view he always took of th'w important right: . . . . .. ; ; ... "The existence of this right, hbwever, mast de. pend upon the causes which may jattify itsexer cise. It is t he vtttms ratio,' which pr jopposeslhat the proper appeals to ajl other means of redress have been made ia good faith, and which ea a never be right folly resorted to unlees it be unavoidable Il is nottbe right of the Slate, batetthe individual, and of all tbe individual in ihe State. It is the right of mankind generally i secure, by a' I means in their power, tbe blessings of liberty and happi nessf but when rorjfcase purpose any body of men have voluntarily associated themselves under a particular form of government no portion .of them can dissolve the association wk hour ac know led ging the correlative right in thevemainder todeeide whether that dissolution can be permitted consistently with the general happiness. - Ia thia view, if is a right depending upon the power to enforce it."' v - .--- MR. MILLER'S 4Tli OV JULY SPEECH. Henry W. Miller, Esq', delivered' the nation al anniversary oration in Ralegh, on tSe 4h. His discourse was mamlt shaped with a view to the "evil of ihe day ," which is working destrue lion to tbe Republic smder the name of Secession, and jfbr this ha ia taken roundly to tsk by the metropolitan organ pf . ihe Democrat party, (the Standard) which accuses him of desecrsUng the occasion to party purposes. &c.f to. Secession, than, ia adopted he the Standard'. Wet t1,m nA. or made to fix it epon he party ; is hit ankle in the Demeratc creed. - T!ua.Then;1 Dro.osed lo be -a test-ay. aa matters stiod, the chief est of wnuyvmj . t Abu, jwra -viu, ii u a, uesecrauon of the 4th r Jnfy (or a deaecraliou of the holy ooctrme or Secession I) Iq rnske it a subject of dis Coasan anour : national aanivefsary (u . Has jt come .io tata. uunvjor aa.hqoesi antmadvernon upon a thing which ia npdermjaiog and; endan gering oar great American fabric of Liberty j nt- teredv too, on thaV biassed : oinbdsy.r of American jaMenaoence 4he orator Is m oe deoonoeetf br the erg a and oiMtbpisoa. t grsat. and: sae- cessrul party jjid we not know tbe atera fidel ry to iae vkh wDtca'jifes mine nreaataror a retpeetable4 poftiaa' wSUtw we saoald tt sable, for tbe mrtajion of oar Sute under the dis Sect ad lead of soehan orraft- and 1ta ' selfish ana resiiess COaaiuiors.-n un rn nainoiM lJema. 3 .1 1 . - . . 'raia Uwim in tim'fti'icb'5 leaders f.lheir1 fopi lstep Ivad Id f hopeUss-u-Udtioa.of me' fairest I fabric of (ameat thahe-san of heaven "er - Bat eo wondWthat'lduhdar na. Get t'r. lA.'.'.pt mnmfh . ika. OrrlKIa liKnIn m.t ' - - wvwww a w. . .w... ii&uuinis vi , u wi wsu c sas ecatnea me imii tor and jua coad fc, -.h-n Waiorm elooeU e union r-fse " 1-3 .faHovr : .traci I (tpm ;ieUmbar o. fBoaton.i foe the: present mouth ia worthy of a'careful reading and.stody- li It- a long siory u ew www :J - . -..mr; I .1: n.t..n. for fifty. v. ine same vnwv w svuun umuut r . JHOHI ajeJMiyJOTllnmais. ra.es c n, yiircn . as they remain unaggressive, disposed to litre in mac wiin ineir netznoora. ing i iuiiu w ..r ernnA niorhhnrhocid . iher must be left to staad on ineirown inaiviauai respooaiLumy, each to he supreme, under God, in managing ita iv,t-i ffm'ra ATmake them euardanfof ihe morals inydlicyacft of ihe4ttii,'wpuM resuUMDhry -4r evU. tt'woutoexcjw perpcia. inlnuiiM and heaic barninss. stive tbe strong and grasping a pretext r jnienermg wui gating the weak, reodenng peaee impossible, war. ranino. anil nnnreanon neraianeni ana uaire'su. We deny, then, the moral dbliga ion of indepen dent . StauBies H be id certain rare eases, when the very existence of society itself ss threat- nt . m nA m r rla. Siata-t ia reall v iwasing war acrainai abetal order and the eomraoa interests of maukind. and thereiote reaur anacains iue mon tight of nations to, interfere to redress even the moral wmntrs which mar oo oerpetrated in the interior of each others; Granting, then what we certainly do not grant, that slavery is a moral wrong in itself, pee State not bound 'o interfere aerre in rcorard to it a strict neotralitV . and to en ior urn aooiiuuB to autniicr . , w f - force that neutraritv on its citizens or subjects. Then, as what ia cal ed fttvintf up a fugitive slave is re.lly notbiogbut neutral welween the master aud slave, for by HUieJSiate onty ret uses to inter Dose iu territorial jurisdiction as a bar to tbe re co very of his slave bv the master, tbe State is not oound to prohibit tne recovery oi lugiuve staves , and in permuting aod compelling its citizens to permit them to be recovered it duee and requires no one to do a moral wrong, it isiaise. men, to pretend (bat the Fugitive Slave Law or the Con stitution in requmng it is nnjust, conirarenes Ihe law ot God. The Slates, tben, in forming ihia Union, bad the right to stipulate that fugitive slaves should be given up, and their stipulation binds all their citizena or subjects. " The Free-Soilers and Abolitionists profess to appeal from the State io what they call the higher law ; but no such appeal as they, in fact, contend for, is ever admissible. There is certainly a high er lawgiver than tbe Mate. God is tbe Supreme Lawgiver for States and individosls, and no civil enactment contrary lo His law ia obligatory noi precisely because His law ia a higher law, but because aucii an enactment is no law at ail, and is null and void from the beginning. God as Uni versal Sovereign ordains civil government, clothes it with authority, within tbe limits of His law. natural and revealed, to zovern, and we must never forret that it is bv His authority, that it governs. Consequently its enactments, with in ihese limits, are, in effect, the laws' of God. and being His laws, there can be no higher laws on tbe matters tbey include to overrule or annul them They are by the will of God supreme in theirprovince. and bind us as laws of God; and they can no rdore h disobeyed without sin agaiost God. than tliev can without crime agaiost tbe State. But the Free Sofler alleges that the Fugitive Slave Law transcends ihene limits, and ordains what the law of God prohibits; and concludes therefore, that it is no law, aod he is not only free to disobey, but even bound to resist iu This is not true, aa we have shown in proving that an independent State has the right to rema n neutral in ihe Question between ihe mauler and slave ol another State, and therefore the American States, in forming a federal uni n for their common we had the power lo bind themselves to give up fu gitive slaves. If they could nnt, as we know they could not, secure the advantages ef the Union without so trading themselves, ihey had the right lo do it, and a samcient reason for doing u, and this obligation is binding io conscience upon all ibetr ritiaens respectively. But let this pass. Tbe harden ol proof is on the Free-Soiler. Civil government exists and governs bv Divine ap pointment, and therefore ihe presumption is al ways that its act are in accordance with the Di vine will, till the contrary shown. Conse qaently, they who allege thai they are not, must prove their allegation. ft is not enough 'to say that all civil enactments in contravention of the law of God are null i therefore the Fugitive Slave Law ia anIL The fact of ita contravening the Divine law' rnaftt be proved as the condition of concluding its nullity. This the Free-Soiler does not even attempt to prove, or, if be attempts lo provejt, it ia simply bv alleging io proof his own pnvate opinion, pnvate judgement, or, as he says, cob science ; that is, by adducing in proof tbe very matter to be proved. The con science he altegrs is his private conscience, and private conscience is simply one's private lodg ment uf what is or is n t the law ol God, add may be tru or false. To all ge this is on y to allege private judgement, and to allege private judge ment ia la allege the very mailer iu question ; for the very matter io queation is the truth or valid ity of this private judgement of the Free soiler, that the Jrugiuve auve Law contravenes tbe law of God. "Here ia precisely where the Free Sofler breaks dowta. Hie oc buna lion is superior to hie logics He professes to appeal from tha civil eaaciment to the law of God, but in reality appeals oolv lo his own private judgmeau and-this app! i not, aomrtsiDie oecaose it is not an appeal to a niguer court, ore court competent to interpret and de clare the will of the Higher Lawgiver, The State is ihe lawgiver fox individuals, not individuals for tw uwk. , iiEjuu(iucu i urvi inuu.ia auu ins individual is bo and to fubmissioo, whatever his private convictions, unless he can back bia private convictions by an authority paramount to that of the State, and, which Statea as. well as individuals are bound to obey. Such an authority the Free Soiler has not, aa we may presume from tbe fact that he does not attempt lo allege it. His pretenre is, lha' bis private convictions themselves are the higher law, and overide all civil enactments op posed to them, which in manifestly false, aa well as repugnant to civil government itself." We call the reader'a attention to the remarks of. the Savannah Republican, which' we have transferred to our columns to-day, with some ap posite comments by, way of preface, by the Rictmpod. Republican. The Savannah Repub lican has ot'.ered our wo sentiments so exactly that it Would be superfluous fpr us to add another word". 'We concede the highest praise to Gen Scott which can bettaimed for bis milTtaTy servi eea and the splendor which he bar Teflected" on the national character by his matchless ' achieve ments . He is In.our opinion the greatest Captain of his age. But even it he were in a 1 things else the parallel of Washington himself, his depend aocajpa the influence of Wra. H. Seward and the men of bis clique, would render it utterly im possible for him to receive the support oi Sooth eru Whigs is' a candidate fr the Pr.uildency Nay, we do not see how it .cad be possible for Southern Whigs to go into a national convention to nominate a Presidential candidate, with' a nominee placed before that body through the m stramenUIUy of. Wm, B. Seward a mat who waa brought to the test of pegary by Daniel .Webster upon a declaration that them Was a' law beheld to he pararuouat to that Constitution which he had taken an ; oath to aupparU-which law if aatTied out according to his. coostraciion would. have resnlled ia'disanioD. civil war and massacre. Southern Whigs have no sectional pre j udicea. ,Thy go fat the Union; and in order to preserve it theywilteapport one foe tha Presi dency who may be justly, sanpected of, being un der the inflneace ofiWia. H.Seward, hh; bitter eaepytafibe Sooth for they can have po confi dence in him, let tie future declarations; be whav hey may r They.af e noaectiona prejadicea, we aayagaiar for 4hey are aa. ready to support tbe nomioatton pf, a.FillmeNi oe a Web-ter. aa of a lay or a jCrilieadeo-flrjWk Herild. ; . - -!,.' If sl l,,...,, .I j i. i - i , , - . . c J tun Lon fainted al her last fell. a sari swfaranaft twt. hHnyO uia wax saAked by fatirwiaod an anore- 00h the ecanes ately eoacjted ai Hartford 2a ..rjrrCl.HW? wfJ fiUrTTr rTARDTJNA TT 'C We have not thors&l t necessAry u .a detail to aur readers the abundant proofs oli a ner lutionaty spirit a : rTeA' !nM.:!": a-aa. asasva - - - the State of South C--:- , ' i ' - sary of Independence Day. -V 'uZJZ' "The ;urrebt of these Celebrations however, ioogreertaioly quite rap'id-AhJ sweepinagainst tne union, was noi -oa . ----- waa one srreen spot wbiclvil. 2 of .burn ing lara naaaed bv and Jettainscs. V; . Jyc the stronghold of attpeatric.: i at in this mountain region 'of 'the bta tli ei-nai the am inaian t. tiere w of oeools nnprecedented ttLtrTJ the cfluninr.- Neves before-Jiad. there--een hyi . - -jr.T LJ j Z! i" .n . i. T. gathSrra nv Greenruie a ajl . comaaraoie w.t; v At this assembly ot . e reopie, arory wcw Esq"whxfcwaa old enough and oearJ enough to hear and remember tbe guns of the1 battle of the Cowpens," presided. - An appropriate, beautiful, patriotic, and eloquently pious prayer was puerat up at the Throne of Grace : the Rev. Wm Capers; of the Methoaist Church, and son of Bishop Capers. "Capt,J; W. Brooks 4hen read, in aloud and animated tone, the Fare well Addess of Wash ington. A. Report and Resolutions, expressive of the sentiment of the meeting, were submitted aod unanimously adopted ; A patriotic uue.iroru ine Rev. Thomas Frean. waa then' read, addressed to tbe"Moantain Men." which drew forth barsU of applause. A n umber of letters received from in vited guests not able to attend were exhibited. Gen. Waddy Thompson, being then called upon by the Chair, addressed the assembly for' nearly two hours in a Speech, of which and the general effect of the meeting, the "Southern Patriot," the sterling Union paper published at Greenville, speaks as follows : " Gen. Thompson addressed the vast multitude in a train of ara-oment. eloquence, Snd scathing sarcasm whieh have been setdomaurraased. rHe probed the disease' and the remedy of secession to tbe cure. Never did a speech tell1 better -on an audience. All except a few incurble. cases. went off repudiating secession with an its folly, heresy, and madness. Greenville knows how to defend her constitutional rights and maintain the Union of the States. Her position, alter this day's work and expression of opinion, can never be mis taken ' No secessionist or disunionist son ol hers oted ever aspire to her favor and affection," Of the Letters from enlightened and distinguish ed men. received at this celebration, a few have been published, and on the preceding page we have given several of tbem, and shall hereafter give others. Nothing can be more worthy of res pectful attention tban such Letters as these, eman ating from such sources as they do. We are happy to say that these Letters and oth er coincident publications show that tbe upper country is rousing itself from hs trance, and that, even in the lower country, tbe tneods of the Union are daring to speak out. "uaring" may seem a strange phrase to express tbe action of a true hear ted American in ex pressing nis attachment to his Country and its Government, it only expresses what is true, however ; for, umillately', with some exceptions, the frienda of the Union, in ihe lower couuires of South Carolina, at leaft, Dave been de terred by fierce clamor and denunciation from say ing openiy all that they think and leel on this sub ject- An incident which occurred on the Anniversary at Clinton, in South Carol na, has produced, very naturally, a great sensation ia the City of Charles ton, and opened the eyea of the people to the fact that tbey stand n the very brink of ruin. This incident was first made known to us by the follow ing publication in the Charleston News of the 8lh of the month : " It is stated, in tbe Southern Standard of this morning, that Edmund Bellinger. Esq . engaged in a diseossion at that place (Clinton) on the 4th, on ine penning controversy, in the course ol which he asserted 'that if the commercial interests of Charleston were a clog to ihe sta te. then he agreed with Capt. Allen that we had better maAre a teeond Jdoteow tf the tily. We presume that Capt. Alien was tne nrst utterer of this inboman senti ment. The endorser stands of course in the sa me predicament as the utterer. We hope there is some mistake in this. We cannot conceive that there exists a public man .who would address aa audience in South Carolina in such a strain. . If it is otherwise, we have fallen indeed on peri'ous times, tinctured with the worst spirit of revolu tionary phreozy, at war not only with true patri otism, out ordinary humanity. ine suQstaniiai truth of this representation seemanot to be denied, and the' effect upon the people of Charleston may be much better imagined wan oescnDed- ivef. ttu CHAPEL HILL ACADEMY. . : 'T'HE Sixth ensuing Session of ihia institution a wm commence on tbe 14th of July. Tar ins (per session.) . Classical department, $15.00 English do $10,00 J. B. LUCAS Jans 27th, 1851. 53 REFERENCES, Key. Da. K Mitchell R. H. Lac, Job. KiaxxAiio, Josa Watsor. ' Wa.J Ho, .at 3 h fr- DISSOLUTION OF CO-PJUtWER- v SHIP. - . . TK WING U the ooatiaoed. Ul-hMlth efPeter W. UV Walker, tha partnerships mow eabtiae in this Cuaadat Otstoo, NC, under the firm aod atria of D- a a a.: an . m r . . rauareoa, Mopcra at retersDarg, aad Walker, Cooper A Co., at Gaston; are this day dissolved by mutual content The business in Petersburg will ba sauted by Patterson $ Cooper, snd tha basineaa at Qaston by Peter W. Walker. The nsma of tha concerns will be used by either party ia liquidation. JNO.H. PATTERSON, i. H. COOPER, P.W.WALKER. Petersburg, July 1st., 1831. w4w 54 fQTATB OP NORTH CAROXiXZTA Gaaa ISJ vlls ConsrrT, In Equity, ta September Term 1851. . " . Joseph B. Littlejohn, Sen'r. et. aL j Original Bill. James Nnttall, and others. j The Bill states fa subatsnce, that Thomas B. LUtlejoha, by deed bearing date the SOth day of October, A D 1827, conveyed certain real esiato therein mentioned to John Nut tall ii treat, lose cure the payment of a debt duo by said Thoa. B " j w kii tne said property tor ine purpose of pevine said debt that Jonn nuuau naa since eeparted this 1tf with, out executing said trust, and that the legal title to said real estate has descended to, and js now vested in the defendant, who are hia heira-at-lawtbat aaid heirs.aMaw are numerous, and certain of them ' in aaid bill named are infants, sod otters of tbem therein named ate femes covert that they reside in different places, and many of, them, to wit ; the defendants Isabella Webb. Mary Webb," Lewia Webb, Maiy Nuilall, John Nottali and John Black, nail and Mary J. hia wife, reside beyond tha limit of tbi Stale that the pUintiffav, are desirous of having aaid Unat executed, but that by reason of tbe matters aforesaid., the oieeutwa of the ame has b-coaae mpracticabie, or at all event, caonot be effecwrf without great erpe delay, aa difliculiy and tbe prser af the bill Js, lotha end, that the said trust may ba carried Into eieipn that aotne suiuble peraon asey beappoiatsd iraatMln the room aad stead of the said John Nattallr jWjfarthar retief.' -. ; . 'T.rV?il-r- And the plaintiffs jsceording ta the Act of the General- Assembly, In aoch caae made and oided. bsVing filed with their hilt aa 'fifSdsvu that the aaid' defendants isabeiU r WabW Mary .WafeVVLewi. Weba, Mkfy Nnttall, Jehu Ru4i.ll, and ToTu Black halt aad alary U: his wife, ara aaea4dsnta of this 8 late, rhUcaaa iallay anadIW tha--aaid noM.reaidntdefadausta fcotirylf.g thm that ihey be ahd apear 10 the Coart of Equity tab, held lot the saiJ County of Granville, in tha Ceuft. Hoese at Oxford, on the irsi Monday af tfeptembsf natt and plead. aaswotae demntJa the Jaid bill. othrwiaa Ihosaato aa agaiaat them will ha taken pra ooetfesao ana or era ex pane.' - i ...-.ti 1. vt-.r; - -- Witness Jamaa M.-WijiaW, Clark end Master of said Court ef Eeutty, at afSee -A Oxiod,th Slih day ef.May, A, 1). VS" 3 to I n mam ri 1 1 ear l i SEALED Praposd. will be reeeif t4 lice until tha 96th af J.t. .... ""Of. has. of, J0.U0O doiUrT wWTJf IboX tha 8tata of Nanh arofiaiatsreN f aia-ner eeatft pt annum J-Jseni aJ aad pMnelpl;psyatJaata;and At tswattV Jssned otoder.an.ac4 of 'tha Peseral' Asanivi' North Cro?in at lha mu!u 'Vlfije . VssioarifUSJ49 f. lnraoS ttf meorfSorete 0i ayastaaiiaaa .- ffttlesgb Jane fOrd, lKUVmt : TEnniFtoE, OR A PREPARATION TO CORE OP WORMS. r is s malanchofyi fact; that more ehildre. lost from the affection of worms th.n frL thDfrwi anl ...I.! Aay phyaician of ranch eaperisace has seed tuZZ extreme violence, as fever, inflaarBatwu TJ werar0dflced from worms, that he did not dwZ aatiMtwaa almost too lata to rescue the r,- The symptoiDS of worms are r pickinir or .tXL of tha nose, poffing of the opperlip, more 0rl2 fever, with a whitish or nroeevs eont over t h. , startling jn sleep, sharp pain eeeasionally inHaVi unco auu owc,ciiiigi ui couienaace,fil4 brettl diarrhoea, emaciation, Ac. ; Some of these effecuanl readily observed in most Cases. although it ana. m be forgotten that the; moat skillful aud inuii.,! phynjcian is often deceived in regard to it. n!d these circarasunees, what Is best to be dons biti beads of families and thara who are so vitally ILkal eated? CerUialy, 1 &f a.t pretend to ijava lear-fj more upon this subject than everybody es kT do positively, declare tbe following rules to' be fu U advance of tbe .usual treatrasnt, of this disease. Jsl If you sea any symptoms of worms or sua. pect their exieteaee with the child, give the Vtrmi. fuge at ones, according to the directions. 2d. v For, if the child' really has tro wormiU medicine wilt do it bo barm, bat, on tbe coatrarv k will prove decidedly beneficial by iu mild porfj,, aad for a time insarait from an attack of worms When scarlet fever, measles, or any other inlaw, lory disease maseises a child laboring under worm it always endangers life. Convulsions, chasms, eta' often come ou before the existence of worms 'ah)! the child ia suspected heace tha importance of rj?. ing lha Vermifuge frequently on bare suspicion. Tha ernufage eaa hs given to the most delcau child with perfect safety ; besides, being a sore rta. dy, it requires no .other medicine to follow its an, JUDGE JONES' STATEMENT. Talbotton, Sept, 1848. Dkab 81a: In my family we have give your Ve mifuge in a noniber of eases, aad ind it to soeeead extremely veli; in fact, il fully a&swers thepnrpgai in relieving children frota worms wukout anrikiar else. I have also given Fahnestock's freqn,atT, bat lad yours "decidedly best " J,9 Traty yours, A- BEWARE OP IMPOaiTIOW,. . AJID AfOlD THB USB 8F ollBSTlTliTES. The fae simile of the tignatureof Dr.' W. j. tie will be found upon lbs outside wrapper ef auk of bis Medicines. Sold Wholesale ,nd Retail, BT TBS PKOPSICTOB, At hia Manufacturing Oepot Ne. 284 Market Street, Philadelpkia. ,r . ass Macow, Gaoaeia. To be had also of J, D, H.Young f Co, Fraak. iintoa,C, C Barbee, Barcljaaville. 8, J, Hinadalt. Fayettavilla, Alex, Watson, Floral Collere, NC Aad W. V Parse aad Dr.AFitch, ColoaW and Dr. P. M. Cohen, Charleston 8. C. p.p. end, Agent far Raleigh., Jul 1881. - 66 3w. Talnable Episcopal Pablicatiaur BURNET'S HISTfAy OF THE REFORMATION .The History af the Reformation of the Chares f England oy Giitert Burnet D. D. late Lord Bis hop of Salisbury -with the Collection of Records and a eoptotts lade revised aad corrected, with ad chtieaal &4 a Prefae, by the Rv. . Narei O. D ,'late Professor of .Modern History is tie University of Oxford. Cheap edition-, without the Records, 3 volants, BURNET ON .THE XXXlX ARTICLES. Exposition or Ihe Thirtv-Mino Articles of tk Church of England, by Gilbert Burnet, D. D.,hls Bishop of Salisbury, With an Appendix, costais. ing the Augsburg Confession, Creed of Pope Pint IV., Aa Revised and corrected, with copious Notei and additional References, by the Rev. Janes R. Page, A. M., of Queens College, Cambridge. Ose voL, octave OGILBY ON LAY BAPTISM. An outline of the Argumeut against the Validity af Ly Baptism. By John D Ogilby D.D., Pre lessor of Ecclesiastical flistory. Cue vol, ISwa. Hook. The Cross of Christ; Meditatious on oai 5aviaur,16mo Ives Bishop. Sermons, lflnao. , Ogilby's Lectures on the Church in England sal , Amerirs, 16mo Msrahalt's Notes on Episcopaey. Edited by Wsia Wright, IS mo. Spencer's Chrirtian Instrueted ia lha Ways af tbe Gospel and the Church. I6n0 ' Newman's Sermons on Subjects of the Dev. laaa, I Teasing oBtt Unify of the Church. 16ma. A KeapUL or ui imiUtionof Christ, conpiels 16mo. " . , r ; She?lock'j Practical Christisn;16aio. Spweks's Manoat of private Devotion, lfimo. . .Wilson's Sacra Privata complete. l6mo. Chartou's flistory of the Early English Church. Thoughts io Past Yeara Poetry. !6mo. Chrismaa Bella end others Poena If mo. Taylors Golden Grove. 16mo. Taylor's Episcopacy Assorted and Maintsinel lSmo Kip's Poahla Witness ef the Chueh. Second edi tion; lSnscv Grealey's Poitrait of aa English Churehman. ForSaU by v. j HENRY D. TURNER, . ; .... -i- Si. C. Book Store. Raleigh July 4th 1841, . STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, 1 WKS COUHTX 2JZ CXyor " A Jutiict of tfu Petff IN OBEDIENCE to a satamoas tous direetei wa, WILLIAM GEOKGE and JOSEPH aCOTT, preceeded on Ihia day to valoe nLs' wraWa eertaht 8Tray-TJtE, taken u ply Tasaoy Low. Tka said Muiels a small bsy 3 r 4 yav old tweamatl white spots a knot on tbe Wit av kle a little white spot' on left side of naclc. where the faaam forked, rubbed ty the gear ,Jf' praise said Mule at f5V Given under Ibr sesas Jaly 15th, 1851." 2tp. WU1TE St'LPIlUlt CHALYBEATE SPRMS, rr-r:yrreii, .If.C - . TUB pronrUtoref thU estab'ighmenl hii it Ufactioo ef haaonaciag te the public that, sue J" last aeasoa, ha hae greatly enlarged and improves w baildiags so aa te be able ta accommodate s larger Bumber, and to offer atill greater sttneta UAhoaa wlw Duy visit this pUaaant saa w- 'ttmuV."' s' t".. t.-i The M edical properties of these Waters TV amply tasted, for several years, by a large viaitorsed their heaescial reaulu strikingly dnfjj ed iu tha ora or relief af many disessea. or say sis, see haadhinav " -j . rMtO Personk trvsWInf en the E Wgh A roid wHi arways Ui a hack Ttrady tor '"fr lion at Henderson hhd af the Wsrrenloh VT FainTneapaymbVth, ' $l,S at hai nrioa- t ; ri , . aijot Hoiaes per month, , , , , T3u M-.v-'diy, !r . Ia that t Zrr ; rthennHlAlfrWtr'-Sre wti

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