Vincennes Gazette, Volume 14, Number 24, Vincennes, Knox County, 14 November 1844 — Page 2
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will it ro lor U;o, if your pervice aro noi hereafter required to shit hi him from ;he penitentiary. I wish you both good miniingP and presenting his arm to Eliza, and .Mr. Winlhrop. left them abruptly in the p trior. 'The impertinent young-ted' exclaimed old Pe-H; lol us co, Mr. Ridgely, and gel tin will provd. Sampson is the subscribing witness; I'll call upon him rtnd li:ve it established this afternoon, ami then I'll eoo who is t3 possc!33 tha homestead and the estate. They took their depar.i.re. In the rfternoon Pell called on Mr. Simpson. nnd producing th-3 will, tol l he. that as he Afs the subscribing witness, ho wished him to go before tho Judgo of Probates and prove the will. 'Why, replied Sampson, '1 have done that already, six weeks ago.' What do you mean. Sampson?' Jo-t as I say ill it about six weeks ago I s'.vore fo tha will before the Judge of Probates. 'Impossible!' replied Pell, taking the will out of his pocket but as ho took it out, hia eyo for tha first iim2 fell upon the following en J orseiuen: on t lie parchmen:: ' Court. ss: The within i n t r n - mcntduly proven, and by me recorded in Liber '. of Wills, pages 203 and 209, this 17ih day of June, 13 Samuel Hale, Judge of Prelates.' Pell was dumb wtUi astonishment. At length hs enquired, 'who had produced tho wiil at the 'ime it was proven f A Mr. Jocelyn, replied Sampson. The whole trtit!) no.v flashed npo1 "ell's mind. Ilis 1340 was without boun., . 1 not recollecting how he stood affected what had irsnspired, and that bis ow crime of forgery mtgh bemads to , -he mounted ins carnage and ut"M haste to Farnvngied park. v. there, he burst in:o the room n Winlhrop. E tZ3 and Tim weu. e tea table. Yon are very kind. imreJe,' s 5 i -J one's friendj do notcf.; ' :..',! : day.' Yen vi'tain' roa . Mr. Jocelyn ' the will fro six weeks escape. Y-. ncer tn-roorro Thank'ee, s; I crAy borrowed : to get it proved, the next evenin ' Old Pel! aim--'And so you m,, to rob me of the v" well, Mr. Jocelyn, ;.. i.'iin?. 'Yes,' replied Tim. S'j . cochy, 'Peter did assist m ' ' matter. I was in hi r c ., . the window of the door, : y. , v-. . . bout to commit the crime ot 1 : The last word was pronounce-.. -. s tmoarihly voice that had frighicr. " cm the evening alluded to. He sa. his crime was known, an J :ha he wai Tun's power. Tim saw Lis sitdation, anl commisvera-1 leo nun. tie promised not to uivu.ge his crime, on condition that, after s -mender-in 5 the will ami t ie eMa'.e, he would leave ihe country. This ws immediate! y tlon?, and Tim and Eliza soon .ill Fcrmingdeil Pd'k for the horn esnei 1 of her fo t h e r , ni.cre. tl.ov 5'; 1 re..ue, r-urrs.n;;;ucti by icre t!,f .',!,.! nr;. As i, r j ;nc ire frien r Ir.-non. he ni'-er ieturt-u r v, iu evct : '.-.In seen in , . a. I.oi s Hilt. A ail? ; wiial everv mid ouhi ' have, attd vvlio.t every man tense w id have but. hi sure the wife vod e.-i Knows I boil a pel a toe, a ivy o '!:.rn a stocking, nd oil .1 stake. A m-2-i:t:i in in iir-ite cireumc . i 3 n t atfdicr-! or aov ivghl a" wfil have lite original v . uim d Me.ik ts nhtCCvl in his house 3 tnost of the mod ? r 1 1 fnsdionab'.e women :t wo-.il. be tnucli better, tiya a late writer, e "Lot's Wife" standing there, :or e!;s might ensuer one useful p.srpese; sko tt'lt salt tt:s BCON !' Indut-gi. thu l't :ao-irv or C'mi.DRF.N. Sutriress not their curo.sitv r uiouiitivci! It b !'-') fo.i iiig in or of uself. j : 11 i v.hcr one of tlie tirt oger inc-Mi'.ives j pro to: !u.-t prcdninent ir. '.is to heojto ! leauied attd v. is?, it i gem. rally from ig-1 norjiK-e and pri !: :i mill oomma,K:.t h;s children to be sil or rep.-t icltt; : J liiem for r. 1 improper and reprehensible j citrii.wnv when tiiey in -pure n .)onl f -m--lliieiT, nnl ore r."t s-.stisti.nl with th-"; first 1 1 1 :. ' 1 : s a r ,Tiveii l icm. i t:. ohi-. i . o t o id use prudence -'-tiJ d Here tie a in the con;.iny of j ti .r'-er 1 w :o t.: ; :e M-nt, not 0.1 t' etr own i.eeount, butoti that of tneir puents. B..t par-'nts, gdartti.itu and tca'ners v. oah'. neiect the bt at opporidtniv of their ittruc;:on. tne.y iove their' cliiidren or pupiL. it will be their pleasure to answer iheir quest. on?; r.ot with a drv yea or no. hot in such a manner, as will convey the information they desire an 1 yield them satisuction. Yes, they w il', eiz these opportunities of ex erclstng the retleetioti of the chihl of youth by encouraging it 1(1 propose questions upon those subjects with which, it is yet unAcquainted. And shoMol t';ee question he of such 3 n.r.ure ai should render their parents or instruct ts unabhi to attswer t'lem, this tltould not n.ake ihem itn wi ling to c-n-fes3 thfir o vn ignorance upo;i the subject, or to excuse themselves through the imperfections of human knowledge, or to endeavor 1 1 make the inqmrer comprehend that ike answer to this question pro eupposes a knowledge which he has not. nor can have at present. Lut that his application to the sut ject will I 0 rewarded tl
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THURSDAY. NOVEMBER II. IS 14. At h'n o-Tice, twenty cords of wood. We would be pleased to have thai quantity furnished by our subscriber. To our Patsons. -Our subscriber a emnoi reasonably romp'aio of our running it is a thing we dislike, nnJ never would do it, were we not driven to the necessity. Such is peculiarly our case at present, for we are in need of almost every thing used in a family. Never have we been so poorly supplied by our subscribers with common necessaries, since we have been engaged in business, and we do trust t ! al they have not come 10 the conclusion that we can live upon air. We want wood, floor, corn meal, potatoes, brans, tallow, heel, corn, outs, in c''-rt almost thing producfd by ;! now hav ir: o;r - and d .-' ' - ., : . ,. be in ' ' - - Man,'. !ph Henry ' Spetiecr JetminWar re 11 ("as. Dela wa re A!'en Fulton F;ra!,'. L-)por:e .Miami !h: n- i t. J-.s.p'. W-J- isb. While 1 oov. s niijoritie J-0 12 13") 3rd 210 70 ,k) 7,"7 230 :J29 2") 27 0 147 280 olO 1 I 1-2 too 2 VJ :83 235 5o 101) 131 HI 210 276 15 3S7 420 83 49) SO 253 32 7 r 71 Benton Th ekforC Brow n F.'k'.ar: (Sran 1 1 nn;;;,g:o.-; Jasoer Jay M-vrshai; Sullivan wai ti 1 Pike fjirvrenco ( r 1 1 ; 1 Clark Wa miiigtori ( i ibs on Posey Wan'iek S'leiby M onroo Clay llancoci; Morgan O wen Fountsi.: Franklin Dubois S witzt-rlatid Dearborn Jackson Bartholomew Johnson M adiei Carroll Clinton Boon" Montgomery 66lm GS50 roll.' maiordr, ?rol6
Kes ill of tho Pffcsiiieuif.! election so far i:s 'm thcially known.
Polk. 12 Notices. We. last week received the first number of a paper just commenced at Cartislp, Sullivan county, la., called the "Carlisle Messenger." In politic3 it is decidedly loco'ocoish. From Josiah Holbrook, Esq., of NewYork citv, wo have received No. G, of his ShU Instructor."' We are hardly aMe, from one number, to express a decided opinion; but fiom the specimen sent, we tlihnk it the best thing of the kind that has come under our observation. The Geometrical figures will be easily comprehended by the child; and may nerve to throw some ligtit upon the mind of older persons. We would be obliged to the editor, if he would send 119 the back numbers. Li'Ilana. Few persons have lite moral cotirMgn (o tear olf th" trammels of even 1 corrupt and deceitful party so long -d 1 ' 'r?, as luve been en spoilsmen. . Polk ' d vote ilice of state ' ' 1 ! " v: ; ties, w ere Sill lgiHI, prove Mr. :ime will show to Houghton the legal Senator d) you hear neighbor? ;.;rr" The Baltimore Ameriean thus pre srnted a notice of Pennsylvania on the morning of the election in that state. As a picture it may servo for moro slates tiu'ii on 'The impunity with which the grossest impostures aro primed on upon tbe en lightend itctnoci (irjj of that favored Stale idJ eates. 1 decree of intelligence in some q u a r 1 n f toe Commonwealth which it m wo'ii.ertul to iliinK 01 : i lie uettys luir Satinet says that thousands of li bellous nnn.diieis, abusive of Hemiv Clay, :ire in circulation from tho office of 'Democratic Union' at llarrisburg. 'Among other?,' says the Sentinel, 'is one 'in d'etman. addressed to foreign Germans, and repreen'ing thai if Mr. Clay is 'idected President they will all be hung! And one in En::' ish that all foreigners -icili Ic ixntr if Mr. Clay is elected; and 'the pamphh-t is embellished with a cut of 'three men hanging on a gi.lows. Ilow phv.smg to th rational miiid are these he.npv devices for the better illustration and difius.on of the principles of 'dem icracy' among the 'people! Bui there is a better one yet which we have heard of as having having been u-'l with great effect in some parts of Pennsylvania. It was there told to the astonished German. w!io formed the bulk of tho population, tha the Whiirs w re all abolitionists and in favor of a malgimat on; and that if they sii hould come into nr.ver every German vo'rr would be ma ie to take a black w ife forthwith. Of course tho Wliigs Ii3ve no chance at all in that particular neighborhood. The Democratic Union, spoken of above as the souses from which such streams of libel and calumny issuo. is thej sme paper that perverted the recounts of the British subscriptions not long since. In a number of lha' journal, the other day . we saw a picture of a man in prison, half naked, chained, with bread and water on tit e "round before h'm. while he himself looked like the personification of misery. Under this graphic delineation a line of capitals informed tho reader that it was intended to denote the 'martyr' Dorr in his Rhode Island dungeon. A long and most touching appeal followed, in which it was declared that tho election of James Iv. Polk would open the prison doors and set thia languishing patriot, whose only Lit y nls crime was too great tegard for the rig
Clay. 'V 23 Iv'Mit-M'ky 12 Maryland 3 Rhode lslen.l 4 ('ontiecticui 6 nd inn a Petinsv Ivania
frage. whereby ho had incurred the displeasure of the Whig aristocrats of Rhode Island. Bf such mean? as these, and by that other device of representing Mr. Polk as nfiietidof the Tariff and Mr. Clay ea its enemy, the ascendency of Loeofocoism in Pennsylvania takes its chance ibis day, w'uh such hoees of maintaining itself as may belong to its faith in the popular ignorance and gullibility.
C7New York IVlkism is working every trick to carry that great state, in utter disregard of her interests and her patriotism. The following paragraphs fiom different papers, a fiord a Lrief glimpse of the means now resorted lo. The shrewd pe"ple, we trust, cannot be hoodwinked, and the knaves, in that case, will be disappointed: Naturalization or Foreigners. We feel it our duty to call the attention of our readers to the large number of foreigners going through the process of naturaiizatiori. On Monday one hundred and fifty and yesterday one hundred and eighty wer naturalized. In a number of instances persons within a few days have applied to hub court, where, on examination, they have been found unqualified. In order noi to be thwarted, they have resorted lo another court; and there, after making their affidavits conform and of course committing peijnry they have re ceived their papers. A case ol this kind occurred in the Marine Court yesterday. Express of WeJntsday. Nationalization Facilities A comV of sixty-eight men were brought to :t- from Unandaga county by the oco? on Wednesday, to get natural--lore the court now in session. .,odg!:t '':il.jvifS of a five ye.rs' -1 ', tin - ! : v o -. , do.iv. and ; it uver. ti lads in its el to whom it is especially adio the Natives, 'Democrats 'Viiigs,' view the appeal with .aen of all parlies and all .didemned. Indeed, so fatal us publication to ihe hopes of the 1- e Democratic' parly in New York, that the g News and P.ebian are crowded with columns of liie most fulsome flattery, addressed to the 'Democratic' Native?, m the hop of regainin them to their ranks. Column after column is published to show that Henry Clay is the especial friend of the Irish; that he holds the Romish religion in profound respect; that he is opposed to any change in Hie naturalization laws. In fact, the condu "tors of these 'Democratic' papers, on the eve of the election, at the eleventh hour, have made t he wonderful discovery that Henry Chy is upposed to every tiling the 'Natives' are in favor of: ergo, that the 'Natives' ought to vote for Polk, for the reason, we suppose, that his opinions are in perfect consonance with those of the Natives. When will these Locos learn that honesty is the best policy, in politics as in every thing else? What a world of trouble has the Arus got itself and its party into by ihe publication of this dishonest' appeal to the Catholics. Albany Ado. For the Vincennes Gazctle. The organs of the fjoeo-f reality have continually poured out much abuse upon the IN alive American nartv. whilst tiiR Vhig organs havr neglected v j , - - to make Known trie principles ot this great and groTvmg combination. tlen-e there is much ignorance and a great misapprehen sion in this vicinity relative to this paity and to its principles. Ihe following ia the declaration of the Native American Republican principles, published al the head of the papers of that party in Philadelphia and its re-publication m the Gazette may be useful, and will certainly be interesting to many. It is copied from the Saturday American of the 2G:h of October last: '1. We maintain that the naturaliza tion laws should be so altered, as to re quire of all foreigners who may hereafter arrive in this country, a residence of 21 years, before granting to them the pri vih'ixe of the elective franchise. 4,2. We maintain that tho Bib!?, without note or comment, is not Sectarian that it is the fountain head of morality and good government, anil should bo used in our Public Schools as a reading book. '3. We are opposed to a union of church and state in any and every form. "4. We hold that native Americans only should ba appointed to office, to legislate, administer or execute the laws of tho ir own countrv. "5. We hold that the innovators on the above principles have proceeded to euch ettremitiei. 94 tn rimAnc vrtr ari.-n I " J w .w,. . V 3 jovili inr t-r.i!, rVigirot nd rolictl
relations, and call loudly on every Ameri
can for reform. '0. That this reform is not to be confined to th'j mete res-raint of foreign influence, but is likewise intended to reach those ills infesting our municipal and legislative halls, that have owed their origin to the use made of foreign votes." KNOX. Tho Orcat Whij Qatlisrinj in Now York. The New York Express says: "Surely in such a display there is a moral as will as a mini. The heartbeats quicker when it sees a generous rivalsliip among men who struggle to excel only in ihe intellectual and ingenius accomplishJ 1 ments of life. Here uere arihans of every trade. Their ambition was i show wli3l their eouniry had done for them, and what they in turn might do for their country. Every evidence of maehariieal skill seemed to us an evidence of national in dependence; and so it was. for we have seen the time, a we may a.ain, if we neglect o tr country's welfare, as our enemies would have us, when we may have t depend upon foreigners as much for the necessaries and comforts of life as for its luxuries. But there was a moral beyond this the union of every profession iciti fvery mechanical art. Nor was it a holiday union for a day. but a union of freemen of every rank and condition of life. 10 vindicate those great interests which are now endangered, and whi.-h can only he saved by the hnrtv union of all cood men. Hereafter lei thut man be nurkcd who woull array the rich against the poor the. man who icork-t u ith his brains asainst the man ?i:ho works with his hands. Diversity of interest is necessary for the qood of a t. and never have we seen uch a proof of this as in the procession of today. It is a great Whij principle to protect alike the interests of agriculture, comJ meri t, p; - ;. and mauulactures, and ! j .v ril " ys done tbe procession of i to-day gave .--stionable proof." We could not, -re we to dedicate an sheet to the pop ose, give tho de- ' c truly splendid spectacle; 12 -Ui'.., - of tho "Fx press' are filled ; ibc-m. T. e Courier & Enquirer as3 the number in the procession at thousand, and the mounted nun " HUND.tED. The procession - 1 hours and a half pas- ;- . - -f Murray street and 1 . 1 i! c. mg extract from an '--3 of the Committee of Ar ' -. : .is: dr contest here has been animated, .rgetic, determined, bu; it is tiubstantialy over. Al this moment New York, so long represented in Washington and regarded generally as a frj trade emporium, is decidedly in favor of Protection to American Lab r. Nothing but the mosi enormous fraud-; can prevent the polling great lojori ty of her votes in support of ti e tarifT as it i-, tbe protective policy generally, audits earliest and ablest living champion. "Freemen of the- Union! Our opponents have notoriously different policies and dilTerent languages for diverse sections of our country. In Pennsylvania they in. sil that ihey are protective tariff nvn. and even that James K. Polk (in spise of his own explicit and reiterated declarations) is friendly to protection! In G "orjia and South Carolina they aro the avowed and deadly enemies of all protection. In New ork they obtain every free trade vote as tree traders, and as many others as they can dupe as protectionists 10 any pattern that will suit ihe immediate necessity'. Can you beiv ve that such policy will pros per? .Must not even a seeming success bring on the heads of its contrivers a certain and fearful retribution? A last appeal to you. brethren, ere we take our station for the immediate and momentous conflict: Are you for protection to your industry.' Stand, we entreat you. by Henry Clay! You know him the world knows him as tho Ajax of that policy through forty years. His opponent has ever been its bitter and boasted adversary. Are you opposed to the incorporation of a foreign nation into our own, in violation of our solemn treaties ami at the cost of an expensive and protracted war? Stand, ihen, by the Great Statesman who was among the foremost to expose and the most earnest to condemn that nefarious project. Are you opposed ta the assumption of a ioreign national debt, of unknown but certainly large amount, while many of our own States are unable or unwilling to pay their debts? Then stand by Henry Clay, who is also its uncompromising adversary. Do you think with us that, while servitude in our own States is left to the management of those States, under lha constitutional guaranty, yet it would ill become this nation, so boastful of its love of freedom, to embark in a foreign war, assume a foreign debt, and involve itself in a web of responsibilities the end whereof no man can predict, for the clearly discerned nurnoae of slavery i & u iuiying en vu.e 11 r HENRY Clay the ed versary. against James K. Polk, the creautre na tieir ot the annexation conspiracy !'' Western : Flour. -Two Commission douses in U orcester, Mess, sell 0 0"0 bbls. annually, chiefly to the manufactur.ng estab hshments in that quarter. Re. peal the I arifTand one-half of ihese Ma uacturers will .tun Farmers and make the.r own Flour. Cm. jMaSm Spurn all cunnir.g-elpT-iallv tht a;..
From the IS'ewturj- Gaiette. Th Farmer's Market. WITCH 13 THE BEST. A FORIIUN CR A ZOUT. MARKET? To odor-' the language cf an exchange paper, What say you, Farmers of Orange county, after reading all that has been written about the beauties and exc&ll?, cie9 of Free Trade and Foreign MarkoaWouhl you bo willing to exchange the little Nev York Home Mahket for all the foreign marketa upon the face of the earth? Of wfnt account r.re all the great markets of th? Old World to the American farmer? What do they buy or consume that you produce?
Do your fanners produeo any thing in the vegetable kingdom from the iofty oak to a blale of gras- suitable for the food of either man or beast, for InM or tor manufacturing purposes--Ar whirh yo: do not find a ready market in the giant city 1 What in the animal kingdom, from a bullock to a squiirel or of the feathen d race, fiom the turkey to the sparrow, lor which you do not find a market in NewYork? The people of New York purchase all your surplus produce, an I take all you bring them. It is true, a Urge amount of flour, pork, &c, is shipped to ihe South and other markets, but it is principally consumed in the United States. Bet does not New York it-'flf .-.-o .' consume the greater p.ui ! :! you hnve to part v itli? And vint can on ui- 1 more that a certain and r.a iy home mar kel'for all you have to sell? And iv by is a home market lheb;sf? Because the largest portion of what you raise consists of ariu les of nerishah!" natuie, or are too he. iv y and bn'ky to pay the co-ds of trai)sprtii) liiem to a lor, ; -' i market. Fr instance, your bees: i;. .s are quite' valuable near a goo I i:r-.rkei; hut vvual would, ihey be worm if carre-d .-"I sold at a distance, ami in foreign conn'rie-? What would your hay, lime, coa'. e : o, potatoes, t trnips, heoH, cabbtgs. t'c '.. wortd in ship to Europe' un, w ! Would buy your sheep, lambs, ea'ves. ; i.s. c fiick-1 ns, turkeys, g'e-o, do.-!;-, p'r" u-. or quails, for a Eutopean nj.- ik-..' l!, t this is not a'l. 1 be products of me u--n and orcnar i. sticii as cn-'r::. -. !,.'rnes. S.. tomatoes, melons, cucieober. r.nltli.-ln peas, beans, plums, pear-, peaches, rapi-a. sonimer appl-s, cuh r. Ca.- .. do not go !o Enrq)e. bia find a r'-fdy salt in New YerU. Is tle'io a farmer, when he rtilois upon these things, who dr.; 1...'. pr,eie how impossible it is ('..r hint evr-r 10 have a good and siitliciout ir erket in Euroj-. or elsewhere, except at lloit, f 1 die p oducts t-f his l.-rm? No tr.--.do. hove.r free, could give him a market f r tie' articles we have named: for it is no; t.ui laws cf m'U. but tbe ittiioutab'.e la.vs ot Nature, which nm-d foievir frbi.l it. If, then, 11 be true, as u tmno,fl',i. v.is. thnt a IIom:: M.a';kut i- th he-: .... can possibly have. sn'ii'n' vt e no: sonto build up, n!ai g. am! i:-: s r -1 :!... 1 mnrkei? What AV.v Yn k i : fy of Orange and iluds ni t-,.', towns, cilics. vitiates, an-l ;.ir. o,-'i. ri , establishments are to athir pirl.t (-f tu--Country The farm rs al! ii,.d a o r.,. : at iiomi: fir their surplus produce, inn--of which could not be exported, wh ci; consumed and paid for by those t -ng gi -d in (,'ther pursuits. And reflect for a moment v!ii i!o v .- th'-t furnisli yiiii this home market v.w 1 purchase your produce. A;e they 101: mainly made up of manuf.-o'terers, 1.0 -chaiiics, and operatives rmpioved in the thousand t.-a-des. whi-'h, nn .er a Proi - live Tariff, are carried on in every jet! : our country? Discharge tb rrt;t m !.- lions of manufacturers, m-' -h ar. i s, ,, ,., tradesmen now emplov ed in litis bns.'aess. and which yon now feed, .-oid what wi.i become of your Home Marki:: ? . would ynu have any market at ah.' It h vbeen already showii that the priii''ij-,.d articles a hich you raise woul l n-d. from their perishable nalure. and from 'nr bulk and weight, bear transportati'in across tiie Atlantic. And of such as weulu bear transportation, not a dollar's worth no re would be taken by foreign nst "ns d i!;e Home .Market was destroyed than thttt is now. It is every way for your interest, t , . to build up and sustain the Hum - Market! The Whigs throughout the Union are your friends in this, to you, very 11:10 rtant particular. They are for p"ro:eeiing the American maniifaciureu-, mechanic and laborer, and Home Ind-strv of ev er v lot d. By doing this they furnish a Home ' Marki-" t to the farmer, and by giving emp'o'. -inent to every class of our citi-ns, keep ihem all busy, happy, and prosperous Their opponents with Mr. Pei.t: ! ' a leader go against a H. mi: Map.ket. in ' in favor of foreigners, by striv:i,7 to cut dour, our TarifT to a horizontal so-le of duties repealing all discriminations intended to protect the American laborer, or Arnerican manufacturer, or American interests of any kind. The consequence of this will be First. To flood the country with fortin goods, to break dow n our inanui iCurt I-, and scatter the laborers, who will no longer be consumers of your prod a e, but wii;"btf driven to cultivate the soil, to become; producers themselves, and thus destroy your Home Market. Secondly. The vast amount of goals thus imported will have to be paid for: ami as foreign countries will take nothing which we produce in exchange, a targe balance of trade would soon aeci.mukue against us. which would l ave to l-e paid in specie; the country would he drained of its coin; prices would fall; and universal distress would pervade the whole na tion. A farmer might as well be guiity of si icide as to vote against -a Protective TarifT, or for the m?n ho ro p'cdjoj vs
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.f -h -T.pl- '"S j the ext?ni'.n cf tif-
