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'f -V- - AIONDAY, NOVEMBER. 9, 1829- ' We'ailwled in a paragraph, a week or ho since, to the rich Mine of Black T,ead in this vicinity. We al&q mentioned several valuable purposes to which it might be -applied.-. Since then, we have receiv ed a letter from a gentleman in Baltimore, af which the following is an extract : I observe from a paragraph in your paper, -that Plumbago is very abundant in your State,and that the ore fff your neigh borhood is of a superior quality. Will you be good enough to inform me as soon as practicable, the lowest price at which five tonscan be delivered in this place?, This quantity is wanted for an experiment, should it answer the purpose for which it is obtained, a further order will be given. " We are endeavoring to comply with the request of oar correspondent, and will be glad to receive proposals for furnishing the quantity' wanted. It may open to the Proprietors of the Mines a market, which, -we presume, is all thatis wanting, to lead to their being generally worked. Luther. In Dwight's recent Tour thro' formally, it is stated that the traveller meets with an object of much interest in the town of Eisleben, viz : a dwelling very, humbly in its external appear ance almost as much so as that of Shakes peare upon Avon, and bearing the inscrip tion overUhe door, This is the house in ivhich Luther was born'99 You enter the door, you find yourself in the middle of a small school, the teacher of which very civilly accompanies you to two upper a partments, Which art kept sacred to the memory of Lutfrer. The walls are hung with pictures, ancient and grotesque ; & the rooms contain chairs, tables and other decaying relics of their former possessor. A swan of full size is carved in wood, which stands erect on a table with the wings a little spread. After satisfying your curiosity, and taxing the attentive schoolmaster with various questions, you write your name, with ink from Luther's in!:stand, in an Album upheld by .the wings of the bwan, and depart. The house. has been purchased hj the Kin;i; of Prussia & is presumed to be as nearly in its primitive state fas possible. No family resides in it, and it isonly used for accom modating the little school. Fire at New-York The Commercial Advertiser states, tha't a fire broke out re cently in a granary in Columbia street, attached to the brewery belonging to Mr. I? ice. The granary, brewery, stables, kc- were all destroyed. On Broome street, the dwelling house of Mr. Rice, and the soap and candle factory of Mr. O'Connell, were also burnt, down. A nun ber of at her buildings were more or loss injured, and some entirely consumed. The Post Office Department. -Many of the papers friendly to the administration of General Jackson, are expressing their gratification that at least 25 per cent, has been saved on the contracts just iade for carrying the mail in the Southern and Western States. Upon this subjert, .we recommend the following remarks of the National Intelligencer, which induce a fear that this apparent saving will prove Jui eventual ,and serious, inconvenience and Am, not only to the government, ! but to all who are concerned in the safe I a no regular transportation of the mails : A e are aware that the contracts, re T.ev.able at this season, have been made. Jovtr than heretofore, and we expected J' iiiis is the necessary consequence of .v-nnt of experience .in those who made Mem, connected with the disposition, laudable- in itself, t .tares of the Department. But the effect s bt lamentable. The contracts have ooen given, in many cases, not to those wuo are best able to perform their con acts, nor for the best modes of ' trans -1-v.rtalion, but to the lowest bidders- to ti.e men who, having nothing to risk, in- r no responsibility for undertakiri's .hich; under any nrudentfal calculi iin jvould be mere madness. Some contracts ave been taken, vc have been informed, which could not be executed for double te amount stipulated to be paid for them, t hey most, therefore, fall through- The wiole Line of the Mail will become liable to be deranged, and at last, besides the P'tbiTc inconvenience, the Department may be obliged to bribe the rejected Con tactors to take the place of the accepted es, and carry the Mails on their own terms. The Department may go on. screwing down contracts to terms on nich they cannot be carried, and thi. upon nanar " r - W - T V 1 effected nTth. "." . may . e,- ,oftM expense of maintaining fnd of it? , " ta ien mis scneme on- J to one other we remember to have read : and the result of it, if persevered in, "1 not be greatly dissimilar. We refer VV 1 : 1 a.1-'- . -i .ut. miai mil Lit iiif project of an honest Hibernian, (or tnii':"l: " r:.et h'.hi). J ,ciil me ieci i. hrs mare, AND Published every Thursday, by ADVERTISEMENTS not exceeding- sixteen VOL. XXIX. had just brought her to the point of Umntr upunuuuun wnen as ui-iuck wou d have . i ti t , . j J. ...I . ... o it, sue died, and spoiled his experiment. " Fayelteville, Nov. 5. The following gentlemen compose the new Board of Directors of the If. States Branch Bank in this town : .lohn Hnskf, . Elisha Stedman, James Hooper, John D. Eccles, Charles P. Mallett, Henry V. Ayer, Edward W. Wi likings v Aaron Lazarus, of Wilmington, , Beverly Daniel, of Raleigh. John Huske," Esq. has been re-elected President. Observer. Cultivation of the ?iie In our adver tising columns will be found the proposals of Mr- Loubat, the proprietor of an ex tensive vineyard in the neighborhood of the city or New-York, to furnish Grape .Vine Roots upon reasonable terms to sub scribers. To encourage those who wish to introduce the Vine into North-Carolina, we state, that of six or eiht hundred plants ordered by the editor of this paper for several individuals in different parts of the State, we have heard th.it almost all budded finely and grew to the length ofeveral feet, notwithstanding they were not received till the season was almost too far advanced to set them out. There is no doubt that they Will bear fruit du ring the next season. An enterprising gentleman of Chapel Hill, has 400 vines which he procured from "another vineyard near New-York, last Springy some of which, in conse quence or his strictly following the direc tions for planting, &c, have alreadv grown to the length of 18 feet. There is every inducement of a public and private nature, to those who can make it conve nient, to engage in this interesting and profitable culture, Fayette. Obs. Sweet Potatoe,VQ were Inst week presented by Ch .rles R. Johnson Esq. with a sweet potitoe of the red kind, which measured nineteen inches in length, eigh teen inches round and weioher! kf'VFMl anil a Inlf pounds", aud we think we may fairly h.illenge the Cmnfy to produce such a uother Lfdenion Gaz. The GrapeThcre is a single Grape Vme on the farm of Henry Skinner, Esq. of Perqumian County, which produced llus season 24 btHiels of grapes, from which three barrel of vvine were made ; and this, after hi family & neighbours had used as many as they wished, for the ta ble. JO id. Sugar Cane. We were shown last week a stock of cane raise. 1 in the gruVn of Joseph IW.man, Kij. of thlstown, which had ten complete j .intr, an l seemed in a'i respects fnUy maturetl there was abv.it on- hundred sto-ks raised in the same garden, most of thejji as well grown at the above. Ibid Appointments by the Presidetxt James Le.iox Kennedy, of New-York, to be Consul of the United States for the ports of Guyamas, Mozattan, and San Bias, in Mexico. Silas R. Everett, of New York, to be Consul of the United States at Panama, in Central America. John George Schwarz, to be Consul of the United States at Vienna, in the Aus trian Empire. Asa Worthington, of New York, to be Consul of the United States at Lima, and for the-ports of Peru, vice William Rad- ctLtr, removed. 1 ; Joseph W. E. Wallace, to be Consul !? u"ted states at San Antonio, in .it;xico. vice uavm iJixon, resigned. John M. Bpwver, of Alabama, to be Consul of the United States at Guazacu aleo, in Mexico, vice Charles Douglas, removed. Emanuel J. West, to be " Charge d'Af- faires of the United States to the Repub lic of Peru. The National Journal of Wednesday, contains an extract from the editorial columns of the Kentucky Gazette, of the 6th inst and by its side an editorial arti cle from the Richmond Enquirer of the 10th inst ; they are both violent attacks upon Mr- Bradley, on account of his let ter to Mr. TJarry ;,and, what is truly re markable, they are almost word for word alike. Is it possible tiiat the editor of the Richmond Enquirer sutlers any and every scribbler, ;to occupy his editorial toiumns ana even one who has a,Jl rven one wno nas notal- ent or discretion sufficient to shade .of different ra sim,l give even a iflTerence to a similar contribu tion for another editorial article ? It is said that this Siamese article issues from the G neral Post Office- Truly reforraa tion is going on rapidly. E. S., Gazette. A New Grain. XV e noticed in the ac count of the proceedings of the Aorirnl. ;tural Exhibition, just held at Brighton, 1 . '.f.timSk 4 LU. i4: NORTH - C AROUWA GA 4 - w OUrs are plans of fair, delightful peacci " UnyrarpM by party ragj to live Tike brotaers'. JOSEPH GALES $ SpN, at Three DoUars annumMalfin advance. V? lines neatly inserted 3 tfrnelj for a Dollar, & twenty-five cents for every succeeding publication MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1829. Massachusetts, the following account o a new kind of oats recently introducer into our country : " Soloman Thaver o Braintree, exhibited some straw and grain, fron chance imnbrted seed, callet by some Siberian oats, heavier than rye. Haifa bushel and two quarts, planted on one square rol, produced at the rate of 80 to 100 bushels the atre-" " Mark the dijfermce,--rhe Pittsburg Gazette says, Carriage of iron frosn B!airsviIIe to Pittsburgh bn land, u eight aouars per ton f and bv canal, freight. including to is, is two1 dollars and forty vtnis per ton.77 Hie Boston Daily Advertiser says a gentleman who arrived in the shin Dover From Liverpool,; had been absent trom Boston but a hundred davs. In that period, besides making two passages across the Atlantic, he ppent sixteen days in England crossed oyer to Havre and thence to Paris, where he spent some days visited Brussels, Antwerp, U trecht and Amsterdam, and passed some days in visiting the grqat ship canal from Amsterdam to the Helder. This stupen dous work is 50 miles long, 120 feet wide, and 24 feet deep, and has three locks. most tinely constructed It cost about five milli ms of dollars.: The expedition in travelling, above mentioned, was not accomplished bv any remarkable exer- Tton, ana if is only noticed as an illustra tion of the facility and lexnedition of the ordinary travelling in Europe. National hostilities ih our day have, it known, pur on an entirely new afp.c;. In former periods, natibns expended their bt e-ergis ioacon'Sf for -positions if a war of, post. Thirj armies sai tnem- Mves down before for'rees. and eoisun.- d months in the work of ronqusf. N w i frontier bristling with such defences is not regarded in a plan bf oR'ensire hostili ties. It wis long . jchrihd otilitiif) maxi'u to le .ve no such worns in the rear' of the invading force. N(uv thfv ar.1 pa-s-ed by the assailants who pursu. noact -u lomed routes, by rapid rnarch-. The conquest of capitals has succeeded to th ubjugatmn of Posts. Armies in our dy work out in weeks a phn of ror.quest na! it formerly took mo iths to achievr. Thi system of bold cmlpaigninz-of leaving ordinary obstructions in the refir of push ing for the capital, to dic'afe lh conquer, er's law in the heart of the emp're ren ders the scheme of hostilities in our er lifferefit to what could have been antici pated from experience in the former modes and material of warfare. -The Capital ot all the lead in- Conti nent) powe,?, have fallen within the rasp of victory within-thirty ve.';rs. And the Asiatics have felt ere! this ti:e most mor tifying visitation of cdnquest namelv, to receive the tei ms o" pace with the stand ard of ihe e-iemy floating above the heights of a proud Metropolis, j TIm Russians wiU have thus bnded it over the two mot splendid c-.pitals of Eiistem and Veserr. Europe, within 15yerfr. The. hve had it in th' ir power to imjmse tribute in P,ris and in Cou-tuntinople. T rev.) i Ori ental and Western luxury to rifle the arts of thir treasures in one extremis, vyh.le tr.ey mortify the prid,- :n.J .b,tUP the ferocity of fanitidal M.isulmen at the other. M-.ch of this too in a space ,,f t.me that would hardly suhi: e in former ptir4ods to subdue half a dozen portions wrhin a space of a few miles. Humanity oiUt have gamed by this change in-thc pr&. t.ce of warfare- The work of death '.ndde struct'.on is sooner over. The sackio"- of towns and beiogio f iined plnce's al ways Uft i the trairr of those operations, iiielanchuly vestiges of wr. When Mie Capital is surrendered, nationalf-pride re- LCIvr8 a esson or humiliation, but hiimani- ty weeps the less for the victims of a pro tracted contruyersy.r South, Pat. French Claims. Tfie Newburyport Her ald contains a letter fjom a " distinguisheo townsman,' dated Paris, Sept. if,- fri)m which the following is an extract : "Mr. Rives is daily expecred, and much is anticipated from the positive in. structions of which be; is supposed to be the bearer 5 and from his wn talents aud char acter. The present conjuncturejiowever a uniavorable, as the ministry of the count: y s 10 a precarious situation ; pursued with out mercy by a powerful opposition, "which comprises five-sixths of the we.hh, rdent and energy of the nation, asd so much oc cupied with the questions farced upon them by iho internal conditions if the country 'he pubuc documents, and the. .questions grow. ng out of the conquest of Torkev if is very unlikely .hevTwill be willing to o pen their ears to any khing coming from the opposite side of thas Atlantic. Had the late ministry remained in office, our pros pect would hav beeri better for they had assured Mr..Brown that the subject of our claims should be taken into consideration, nd disposed ot in one wav or nthr A Iate London ;Globe saTS, that in ruture the candidates for the wiui.try m Jhat wuntry are under- a TT(QillllfcNm NO. 1,383 go examination by the princlparpriacher in theology, thev classics, and the mathe- maucs ; ana it, aner a prooaiion or two years they are found deficient in. tuuse re.pects, they are to give up all idea cf officiating in the julpit.ja. Chron. Death in the Pot. A farmer on the banks of the; Piscataqua River, in the town of toxtroft, lor many years had kept a large pot near the margin of the river, for the convenience of his family on washing days It .so happened a few days since, that the farmer'had turned in to the pasture where the Dot stood, a pair of yearling steers tied together ; who. having a fancy to explore the interior or the capacious vessel, thrust both the--. heads together into it. When being ui. able to withdraw them, thev raised the pots upon their heads, and taking the d: rection of the river, plunged in. Th weight of the pot drew t'ieir heads unde water, and in that grotesque predicament they were found drowned. Another mel ancholy instance of -".Death m the Pot.' Maine Paper. Custom is, in regard to many things, a great promoter of indifference. As an in stance, in crossing Brooklyn lerry on Tuesday afternoon, we saw the noble fri gate Branny wine standing up the river. juft as she arrived from sea, with all her armament, her masts and spars on end. bat without a! rag of canvass spread, pro pelled at the rate of 6 or 7 miles an hour, by what appeared along sfde of the fri gate a pigmy steamboat the Rufus King, nelongmg to the Dry Dock Company. No one seemed particularly struck with what nevertheless, some 2 years ago, would have been deemed a miracle and which. to unaccustomed eves would be little less han one. -V. Y. American' Our Crops. Via have very little doubt tint the average crop 0! Cotton will be 1000 pounds: per acre, throughout the Western District this fall- Both Cotton and Corn will be better than at any for m.r season. From -the 14 counties west of the TennesHPe river, we should sup-, pose 3(M;0( Bales of Cotton would be shipped I hese crop, of Cotton, even at a low rate,would soon relieve tl-e embar rassments ofMie people, if. proper econo my ere used. Jackson, Tenn. Gaz. ' Prolific. Mr. I tw l Hunt of Siburv, pi int'i two b.us hid ( o 'lafo-'H th prt-,-et ve ,r fr m which he r.is-,d one hnn dred and fiffyi-seven and a half! ? phnt- -J tne po-yitces in the crmimun wav, no cuning out the eves.' A ijpot eni.in i . t'sis town of our ac- qu.'iinbi'c, planted three potatoes of a rireand su;ifrior kind, from which h; gathered three pecks. Concord Gazette. Lord Chief Justice Hale, nearly two centuries iv -marked Ihe places 01 Judication, vhi h I iiave long held a this kingdom, h ve given me an opportunity to observe the vi cinal cause of most of the enormith' th 't have beeo irotnuitted for he space f nearly twenty yers ; aud, by a du ol)set vrttiun, 1 ha-e found that, if th-' murders, and rm!ii;iu?!i!er.. thp hnr- laries ind r.ib j. ries, the 0" -'-7 w " rots and tu- mulis. Ihe aduld'rie. fv-rnicaf ioos. mur iid other jte:it enoriuiiies that ii,ve hi,. pened in that ti:ne, wt-.re divided m' fivt part, f ur of them have been hr issue and p'oUurt of excesie d; iLkinr, or of .t ivero and jivhvus ' tuun." Juu;t Ruh, in u charg'1 to a P. nnsyUawia rauti jury, ne rlv pthoe -his I declare, n ihis public mannei, .nd w th rile mosr s , ltmp rejj.jrtl to the tudi, that 1 i, not e c dlectan instunce.since my beinj; coucetu- el in the adinioistraMon of jus. ice, of a single p'TSon bt-ing pui upo.! his tmi tor manil.jua;hter. whicii did not or jo; natc j,. drutke':Ress ; aiid but few instarnN s o trials for murder where tne crime did not sprn from (he sume nnhappv caus:-." fosTsmitT. VIRGINIA CONVENTION. The question as to tiie basis of Repre sentation is still under discussion On Friday last, Mr- Fitzhugh made an able Speech in favor of the basis of white population- Mr. F. represents the district composed offjj. udviuii ami Fflirfat the firs county decided and unauimous in fa or of while represenrntioo, ihe last in f --r of a Convention, but from late demoni s'ratioiis i iclined to favor the basis of pro perty conbiued with representation. In structions had either been sent to Mr. F. from Fairfax, or attempted to be gotteji up, agaiost the basis of while represen a tto't but preierrinx to represent the whole rather i h 1 n part, Mr. F. after a vfr(ioi to the circumatoce ot thdosf ructions, x pressed himstlf more unequivocal!?, 10 fa vor' of the busi which he believtd tu be of the very essence of Republicanism-- fuui darhental principle, which if pot Observ ed, the Republic ws one in ome?Biereiy. A very mterrestinff tacenc then occur red. A long pause ertsued and thCbair mai (Mr. Powell) wa4 a boat to nut the question when Gen, Taylor rose, and in dtquc Cu. itii, edepbupei the r!iatIon lfc wliich he found hiuiil pk ed, and the Coufsg he liad determined in consequence to pursue 'Hi81dj5i)tuim h 9aid, bad been openly avowed at the time of the ejection -yet he ?had received no intimation that they weffr ih cmliict Vith those of his District; t-Notwitlitandin. the apparent acqujeseo.ee or approbatio i hi8citntituents; at the tinie, hha I within adaV of twd received iflLStructioT f frora portion of hflDisfrict whici V; was bound resectf to vote against his known and avoHved oninions. 'fhi' onnosU!.. tion to the, basis dftwlutis rpopuiatioir.''i These irisreuctions lie' couhl not tibey -lyi nicy . wei eUjUpposinon 10 Ri3i.C03a&f3C r"we sjiottitj 'ttereu antT dishonor. edas-ujhaandi)9triotr-t6'-pare' the courset!heindicated.- 'TStecircam'" iftanciCreyccaifftuIated bvMriit- loriatjnannet- to secure:tthiin the higb admiration of all who heard hi nir 'R- pexting the obligation of the renresentA- tive to reflect tire opinion of the constitu ents -as sa cred bu t feeli u ? the impossi bility of obedience in this instance. Geiu ,T- announced his determination to vacato his seat, andgive ' place to ; some other person whose opinion conformed owe nearly to those ot the District. The Con vention thus roses one of itf a blest itn em bers. ' ' ' ' '", . - ' ' Another Spanish In casion. .5 Post, J cript to the New-York Journal of Co-t merce confirms a Report received a' tew days since by New-Orleans, of the lani ng of another Spanish Ann y 4 u the terrv- "ory of Mexico. The enemy disembarl ed at Port An: el and advanced about .50 leagues. It will doubtless soon nieettUe? same fate which j befelBarradoa at Tan?-, piCQ. ' ;'" . . . ' ;V: MARRIED, In Johnston county,' on Wednesday evening tst, Mr. Christonher flfirist'nh-fc. 'f ih; ,:.; ' i;ty, to M'ss Sarah, second daughter TtJeneral Daniel Boon.f " ' ' J In Pitt countj on the 29'th-ultimo, Mr, 'James Wilks, son of Stephen'Wilks. deceased, t Mi Nancy Vines, daughter of Col. Samuel Vines. In Wdmijiton, Mr. Horace Burr to Miss Mar; :ane Campbell. , ' In Mckfenbnrer qcMjntv, on the 3th. ult. Mr.1 . !?. Eliot, ofVjrkllisttict, S..C. to 3!rs.3liaiy Smart. 3 In iJncolnton, on the'2dth olt. Col. Michael" Iteiuliardt, .f Lincoln cbuijty, to Miss Mria At-' len, formerly of w-London, Jon ecticut. In J .ckson, Te-, M- !)aw.j M'K -.'ht to M JuliaiM Feiher, daiighcer of the hue Dr. Hicliafd renner. DIED, In Salisbury, on the Jbts ult. of a biliou'a ver, after an illness of t- o ".wek, in the'30h. year of heracre, Mrs. Mary Ra kin, consort of Rev J Rar-kin, (Pastor of rTresbyte, r an Cmrch in tiat place) end ('.nuhter of tire Uv. W.ii. Pais lev, ot fiuiiord county. Toe jremtureilea:i o;"tnis amabie lady, is "a source 'f peculiar affliction to her 'relatives, and f .K)int rie; to the Church, and trie circle of tnf-ndsjamonor whom ru- cnoved ; tor she w oniaoient to the bne, and showed forth a bright example ot :di thfc, f. m .le virtues anxl C!r;stitn srriees. f.r the trrmrin, i.t - .i..- f the other. , . In li n k.- county on Sm.duy, the 25th ult. Maf. Mathew Baird; acrt.t a.,out 35. He had repeat e ly ot-en s. m-.m er o! th- (ieneral A:sembJy, nnd ha I hel l other honoKtble posts un.der the ntf .veniinen1. with n-riit in h;mir j- tisctuliie8s to his countryi " North-Carolina Eihle Society V 4, lialnhf AT02f I8::9. KiHE Anniversary Sermoa in behalf of this W- J. ciety will be preaobed on Sunday the 23tk' instant, at the Methodist Churcb, m'thia Citv by the Rev. George W- Nollev. . The annuul meeting of the Society forlVe ap pointment of Officers, and for the traiuactn oXn such Business as shall come before ii wrVbe ield in the Senate Chamber of the Capitol. 00 the following evening at 7 o'clock, when "the au tendance of the Member, and others who fee an interest m the Bible cause, is requested. , ' J. GALES, Sec'y. November 2, 1829. MANAGERS 0KK5 PirJimondy Vol Union Canal Lottery. Xo. Tobedraw-ivat Philadelphia, November 14, Gran-.' & Spi omj Schema. -830, COO iiM SlO'oa'v.-, of 30.000 1 of 15.000" 10,000 4.010 1,000 T700U 1,000 ' 1.000 1.000 600 600 G00 600 600 500 309 5,000 1,000 1,000- 1.000 1,000 1,0&) 1,000 - 600 600 600 600 600 10 10 10 400 200 Bide, SI 00 390--g80 Sfb g6Cb5 g50 S40--S30 820 & 810. Tickets in the above sfdendid acheme $19. Halves $J. Quarters 2 50. . To be had in the $jreat st variety of number at tle Managers office where, no less than if capitals uas sold 111,4 he last class. Send all your 01 tiers to 4 . , S FOn YATES & M'INTYRK. x A package of 20 whole tickets can be had for $2j0 which is compelled to draw $90 krS may draw $30,000 or any of the above canitala. YATES "Scli'INTYKE, - ttiehmofid, Va, ; Roanoke Navigation Company. DELINQUENT Stockholders in tne Eoanok Navigation Company are requested to take " nice, that the 1st requisition of 19 per cent, became due the . 2nd 3rd 4th 5th th 7tu 8th 9.h 10th lllh 12th 13th do do da do do do do .do do do do w uoxaui rcoruary, ,1815 1 5, Jo Idth I c-m jer: 1 S18 10 do 1st 'Senternber, 1819 10 do 1st February. 18J0 1823 ISOfc'r 182 1825 1S2& 1U do 1st January b do lit Feo i. ry, 5 uo 1st inunry, 5 do 1st October, 5 ,do 1st F bruary, 4 do 1st Mai -h, 4 do lt June, 4 do 1st January, ' Bv order of the Board of D rectors. A JOYNJift, TrV, V - .i - :V-"V'l. - . . ? ? i : y "if! 4 -f e 4 a. St ; 1 ' e It 3 - -it All 4T ) i fil f i I 0. H 'I 1 s 1 t. .- J. V I 4i ' f.11 1 i 1 "'if, V i .7
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Nov. 12, 1829, edition 1
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