IN THE EAST.
KAfJVA AW.I rnz O.W3WEIAR-tI sLN
316 EBYE ITALY i CAW IIU 011
TU3 I LA] D.
IL the I1gesn Sea--yra, the Pirneu and
Athens--The Greeks at Home.
tipe0al Oorreupondenoe of the Demoorst.)
ATstaxs, Greece, Anu. 12, 1717.
To take a steamer at Liverpool for the
-taSvat is not the speediest way to reach
It. bat It is the way to put in the longest pos
eflbe stretch of salt water between England and
Oreeee; and this was the oontrolling motive of
My choloe of route. Bo the "Olympus," of the
Cuanard line, starting from Liverpool to Con
tetntinople the 2eth niut., had booked among her
is passengers, bound for various points on the
way. a oatizen of New Orleans. The run down
the fBay of Biscay was pleasant, a fact that ap
anoared t., strike every one as one of the most
extraordinary in natural history: accepted,
Iowever. with proper gratitude and com
~ster. In live days and a half we made
Oibraltar. Staying there twelve hours, we
etPaitaed on to Malta, where, having to discharge
4oal, We were detained two days, giving one
ample opportunity of sAoolng everything of inter
4ed t On tae island.
THE HARBorn OF MALTA
4,8 L exteptionally good one, resembling very
mitch that of lavana. The fortifications which
-oovOr its entranco are something appalling to
.ook at, and, I dare say, mnpoussile of capture.
lrom the time oTf la Vallitte, the Grand Master
of the Knights of Ht. John of the slxteenth ca)n
tury, to the present day, these defenses have
been building; and as. the supply of stone is
Very liberal on t he islnnd, the probability in the
British engineers will cout.lu. c'eonstructing
moles, bastions. curtains and buttresses for all
the ages to cone.' Not that thtirslis the slightest
toesible chance the pvrna will ever be attacked
Though onu are given to understand the
Italians east a longing eye upon it. as the Span
.dirds do on OGibraltar. to assure you of his
d pqV Athy with the English, a Maltese will
gratvly give his opinion that he does not think
4zIbtraldl could pase the fort of Mt. Elmo with
comfort. This in connection with the sup,
pose. oomplications likely to arise out of the
"eesnt war between IRussia and Turkey. The
comn.motly received theory in the East is that
Italy wishes to regults her borders ,y extend
-I them itato the dominions of Austria; that
40oaeomplish this she is qulto willing to nm
bark in a campaign against 'tht 'tht power on any
pretext that may beP faneifli enough to be
plautslble. In that event she would naturally
mad herself opposed by England, and there
fore under the painful neeos..ty of capturing
lalta.
4*_1 1
Ar 0.r an quite') Oili fItLl IIUI'5LiIyU'' lilat any
--iOn., unless it ie the ChIinse. hals men
aOMagh to spare to fill up the harbor of La Val
Besides, its possosion would have no more
ftfet on the issue of a campaign or the fats of
a '(fr tan holding the great pyramid of
COboop. ~'o Englaind Malta, like Uibraltar, is
taluable as a coaling station and a store house
of suDplies. Neither Italy, Franceo or Spaln
haanytsuch need in the Mediterranean. In
deed, in these days of swift steam transporta
tion, England herself could well afford to gave
lpGOlbraltar and Malta without injury; just as
4he taeo up the lonian Islands, after spending
,1llijotn of pounls on their fortiflcations.
The 7th inst. we again turned our prow East
Ward, and Friday. tihe llthl. were
AT AN.lCHOR OFF SYRfA.
4 ftty of Grece, on an Island of that name.
I knew I had re Icehd a land of freedom at, once;
IOr&Dpraticai looking native of copper color
-ptt his head in my cabin through the window.
r0 soon as it was light. by way of extpressing
hii desire to be sociable and of manifesting his
aative willingness to take absolute charge of
meduring the remainder of my travels. Other
members of this noble cllas of boatmen re
peated the profess fromn timt" to time while I
was dressing; 'each one apparently anxious to
put In his oaveat fo tillhe exclusive ptrivilege of
swindliag me. Bat the flrst buceaneur carried
theday, and got about three times the foe he
.hould have received for boating me to the
Greek steamer lying near by. on which. I was
to go to Athens,
Byrais the centre of the trade In the geannu.
roench, Italian. Austrian and Greek starotrs
are constantly coming 1land1 going. The pilace.
oomphratively new. is built of stone, on the
sides of an amphitheatre of hills. that rise so
abruptly) from the hartor it looks as if the
houses would slide into thl water with the
smallest encouragement, The city is nmoldrn
in every respect. Thle people look very muchl
like Italians, and tile Italian language is
.spoken quttite freely. In tilhe evning I ha1 d an
opportuntlly of "assisting" ait a prolnrlade In
one of the public squares. and if otrerving
the general style and alppearance of the citi
-ens. The men were common looklilng enough;
man generally are liable t o ta't objection. A
.sugar-loafed hat and a cane se('Iedl to t' essen
tiai to the "get up" of each one of the lords.
You remember. in ancient remor,,a. a citizon was
arrested anld fined who alrpcaredl In public
without a walking-stick. Tilh ladies, who are
4iecidedly stout, are dlrossed just as ladles are
with us. except they are given to perform on
higher heeled shoes than I had sllupposed pos
sible for any one out of acirulls company.
I cannot say much for the beauty of tile ladies,
thougll the children, romping about in high
glee at the freedom of bteing out late. were ex
oeodlngly lovely. The music of the band was
Lormenting to an awful degree. It is a remark
)able fact, the Grarks. lancient or modern, never
excelled in music. I saw here in all his glory.
that great product of the nineteenth century.
A I.IVY NEWsBOY,
dittingulshed, is he is in America, for strength
-of lungs and gentleness of manners. Though
the Greek is sonlewIlat. lacking in that insinu
ating style of proffering his wares so well
known in New Orleans, of thrusting them into
your face and holding thelm there till yur sur
tender and Hpurchase. Time. howeover, and the
nfllenoli of stlrangars will soonal imDpairt this ad
ditional grac, anlld tihe newsloy of tiLh Lvant.
like him of tihe W.st, will to o)ne of those bone
factors of his rlla that overybodly admires and
'wants to put a lIUnall alllont liver at once.
The Epplan.so as .t ii little Greae.k ste-amer.
'was to-start early Nlitarday morninglll. tll' loth
inst., fromn Syra for tia l'illlsi , the portl of
Athens, and promlll.to thue minute site was
,under way.
There were a great. many palisseelngrs on
hIoard: nice-loking, respoerabl~ It,,apl,. all
smoking (that sl, the men), ait if o)n i wager.
You never see a ClOrak without a cigarette.
'Cigars are seldoni liused. ()Ol'iasionniily, at a
ooffeehouse. you see a bubbleti-IIilbleo--an in
strument of toirture. biy which you are exp.a.ted
'to draw the smnloke through three or four niles
of pipe. and hi. rowardled by getting y ouir ma nuth
full of hot water.
There is a lustom ipculiar to the Greeks
which I here observed.
That is. the men carry in their hands a st ring
-of beads, not for any devotional purpose. hut
'solely to have something to do by playing with
them; as the German women have their knit
tnag and the Sam tlicak Yankee has his knife
and pine stick. On the street. in the shop, at
lasoes of amusement, everywhere, you will see
,grave men toying with these beads, as if os088en
tial to their peace of mind or to reaching correct
tsental conclusions. The Greeks are
GARAT TALKEI.R,
0tat is. for space and time. Their voioes, how
ever, are not pleasant: not even thous of the
a n. The th's occur so often you .a t e
rIgiarý =01 d:- ..,F mo
self, who spoke Awglish. He was a sailor, and
had been in bmerioa, and knew a great deal
about affairs there, as most Euopoeans do. iHe
wanted to know if the war was over in the
States, and if the slave trade was still kept up.
The lnst inquiry was uttered with a sigh, as if it
recalled many pleasant pas.ages connected
with that romantic traffl.
The transit of nine hours to the Plrrres was
over a sea of glass. The quartermaster at the
helm must have steered by Instinct. He made
no use of the compass. And as he was at the
stern and depended for his sight on looking
through and around all the passengers on the
quarter deck, it is a marvel how he brought ns
aeross, for the sea here is as full of islands as a
plum pudding of raisins, and all alike.
Bold, barren rocks several hundred feet high,
most of them uninhabited, ranging from half a
mile to two or three miles in extent; few of
them have any mythological or historical asso
elation. though they relieve the monotony of
the voyage and break its tedium by their fro.
iuoney and Irregularity, and lend sometimtes a
beauty to it, by the purple crowns they wear
when in the distance. When
Tui rithieS
rose in sight with its cluster of glorious memo
ries, I made sure I should experience an ex
altation, an enthusiastic excitement, propor
tionate to the scene, and domanded by the ac
tual realization of long-chorished, romantic
hopes. I felt nothing of the kind when we
turned into that renowned harbor. One never
is moved as one expects and longs to be at the
first sight of at famous plauie.
Whether the practical necassity of attending
to my luggage. and guarding it from the pirates
who boarded tile ship the instant she let go her
anchor, engrossed my thoughts, or the appro
hension of getting wet from the rain then be
ginning to deselnd, or the admiration of the
beautiful rainbow stretching rver Ihalerurn
towards Aegina, or wonder.at the neatness and
regularity of tihe stone buildingson the I'irmus,
or an xlity to catch the train for Attlhens, or all
combined, so it Is, I landed there the same as I
would in -Genoa. Naples, or any other eommnr
cial place. Prosaic as it was. the lanuding was
effected in comfort, and in a few minutes I was
seated in a railroad car bound for Athens, four
miles distant.
We had not long to wait. And over a plain
flled with olive and cyproes; by orchards of
peaches and long stretches of vineyards; and
gardons of figs anti pomegranates; ac'ross sttny
roads, bordered by sycamore and pepper trees.
and gay with the oleander: skirting groups of
factories, with long chimneys, plumed with
black smoke; and flat roofed houses, before
which children were playing and dogs hbarking;
with marble wells near by, where donkeys, with
heavy rlanniors, were waiting to be watered. we
soon wire gliding smooth and fast.
'rosently, in one of the turns of the track.
looking out of the carriage window. I saw on
the summit of a lofty rock, towering high over
ill things else in view, the columns and tedi
ments of a Dorio temple. The spirit. of the
spot then breathed upon me antd imagination
asserted her rights. Twenty-three hundred
years rollei back their scroll aind I was living
and moving among the Atheniangs when Peri
cles presented them the P'arthenon framed by
Iotenus and adorned by Phidlas. Tlhe noblest
representations in art, of grace, majesty and
beauty. plaend on the most imposing site on
earth, associated with the brightest Intullects
that have ever shone, memorials of the birth.
growth and death of races. I felt now, in the
presence of the templneis on the Airopolis no
lack of the piety and sadness congenial to the
place.
Alas, all In ruins!
Turks. Venitlans, earthquakes and Elgia
have brought them to this.
But, thank God, though this upper city of
beauty is in ruins, the spirits who planned it
are immortal. No fickle Athenian Democracy
man banish them from our memories, or hem
lock them from our constant and perpetual
worshio.
At last I am In AthetnsI
Yours truly. J. II. N.
. .. .... • .41D .-- .... .. ..
COTTON WORMS IN MOREHOIME.
BAnTROP. MonEHoUriE PARTISH, Sept. 4, 1877.
Editor Dmr,orait--I write to inform you fur
thler upon the all absorbing tl.pi of worms.
l'hey are destroying the cotton crops every
where throughout this part of the State. The
flies deposit their eggs, and in three days the
worms are at work--but. st rtnge to say, the work
of devastation goes on contlnunlly. There
seems to h, no general periods for the hIat'hing
of the lnw armins of worms; onl- glenrn lon
iivotviaLling itself into the sutci'olding. eolltrnary
t, the best worrm authorities. Thi armies seern
to Inad and fire now by rilntons. This un
r.asing dIestructin of the 'otton leaves will
allow few bhlls under the halt grown sizm to
mature. In four days the erop throughc.nt thits
part of the State will be entirely stripp,,d of its
fdliage. We will not maike. this year, mnorn tlhan
half of our usual yield of cotton. I. T.
------·e - ---
Amonng the advantages offlreld 1to passngers
by this popular and reliable line are through
I'ullinn a fala'e ars from tli foot of ('flnal
strilt, daily, running to Mt. Louis witlhllth
change. Thib is lhe line that introduc'!d the
magnilleont rnd palatial slr ping oachi's "Eu
rori"' and 'Tarthli ia."whihali .re now running sanl
logether with othersof I'Ial pa slendor comprise,
tilli line. Closeo -Oftlclit 'ins anr mnli't at HI.
Louis fir all pioints East North and West, and
baggaigei' i.'krl thronugh to distintatin. Ito
sure Ind ask for til'kts via Mobile and Ohio
RI.ti road.
Pearl Soaplna.
Ask for ,iiiiaptlia land vonll will get the host soap.
iHoapi naneotintlrtng ni, roisin is the iest soap
for washling woolen gioods, cain be found at 110
(Gravier street.
Foe Tu'r .l4b.AR Ciuol.-Plaunturs, anti ill who
have even the sllght'stl dealings in sugar. know
Beck, the chamapion "op',,r of No. 27 Peters
street. His bogsheads and barrels, his kegs
and hoop-ples,. are too well known lby dealers
to ncied eu llgim at our hands. By his 'enr'rgy
and large faullitles at his manufal'tory on
Carondeolt walk, near RHoiman street, he is now
prepared to furnish his planting friends, at the
shortest notice, with htog~lheids tandl barrl-s for
the coming urop. 'T. A. IBei'k' make is known
all along the coast. San his advertisement.
GCETTIN REtADY FOR TnE FITLD.-Now that our
game season is near at hand our sportsm''n are
getting out their tbreenh loaders and preparing
for the comlng sport.and taking time Iy the fore
louk our friend Wallace Wood, agent, has pre
pared for an active season. In order to mnleot at
on"-e the demands of our knights of the gun. he
has had loaded a largo quantity of shells with
different "harges of pouwdier and shot, t.so that
tho sportslanll need only to give his order and
his ammunition is at hand. Both the powder
and shot uscd are of the very best quality. as
aire the shells. No. 3 Tu.houplitouls str't't will
dIItibtletss bhcon'lll the gunnellrsl headquarters oe
for, the winter is over.
NeVvr LA PI'ERnaUr.--In all the late expositions
in which samples of all the tobaeeos of the
world wi'ri ofn exhibition. the peirique of
,Louisiana invariably carriedl off the first pre
mnlullu for perfume. strength anti sweetness.
Old smokers kuoiw this, and just noware on the
qni ritce to gel their supply from the crop of '77.
This ':rop. accordling to all a"counts, excells
that of any other year since '72. and as the de
Iand is htourly increasing, thosei, who desire to
g.t the fintest should at onit' IeHav' their orders
at that connoisseurs, Ettidmund Bourgeois, No.
44 I)Deatur stri't't. Mr. Bourgeois is the sole
agent for the celebrated Grand Point tobacco.
and, as the yield is far less than the demand.
those desiring this aromatic weud should leave
their orders early. See the advertisement in
another column.
D. Leech. No. 080 Magazine street. Is an ex
cellent piano tuner, and only charges 1 50.
aOall a.d see if ll Qiloskey' restanr nL .
A WOMA1W'8 '"O."
o not I 'ould not wed nyu, No;
lut I hope you won't forget
I Iovn you aR a sister shou Id
0 please. Will, don't go yet.
Yew. love you as a sister should,
Buit marry you? Al, no,,
I'm griovnd you should have thought of it.
Oh, Will! Don't learn me so
Come hack. sit down and talk to me.
Don't, don't frown, when you go,
One cannot love just when she would.
Though she's a girl you know.
And. I don't think you love me much,
I don't, upon my life;
But If I really thought you didl-
-Yes. Will. I'll he your wife.
---- ---rcf ---
HOW TO BECOME NOBLE.
A Paris correspondent writing on the
subject of titles, and commenting some
what bitterly on the way American girls
throw themselves away on foreign no
bodies who happen to possess an ances
try and a name, says :
Titlesl Why, at Fiesole you can
or, at any rate but a few years ago, you
could-have one by regular purchase for
seven or eight hundred francs ($140 or
$1(0.) The sale of them helped to keep
the poor little place going at a most
critical time. Fiesole was very hard up,
and Fiesole wanted to mend its only
high road. You know the proverb about
necessity and invention. A townsman
high in municipal office found that, by
an old feudal instrument, the grant of
the freedom of the Fiosole included the
right to a title, and another townsman
found a wandering Englishman who was
prepared to pay a cool thousand or so
for a noble natne. Victory The
road was mended, and the English
man became, I think, a count. The
discovery served to keep the place
in repair from that time forth; they
swept the streets with it; they
added to the number of lamps; they
would even have improved the drain
age, only life-long habit had left them
in a state of invincible ignorance as to
its defects. The tourist in search of a
name to add to the other nick-nacks
and curiosities picked up in foreign
travel, sighted, scented Flesole from
afar on its rocky perch; and the enter
prising townsman, finding what a treas
ure they had in their charter, were
ready to ennoble everyone that came.
They were sound political economists
and philanthropists as well; they gradu
ally lowered their prices, under the
pressure of Irregular competition on
the part of individuals in the trade, and
they at length brought their merchan
dise of honor down to a sum at which it
was within reach of the small store
keepers or the frugal working man."
-r ----- I-4. ...
DERTROYINi CHKRTNTUT TREELA.
While the phylloxera Is ravaging the
vineyards and the Colorado beetle
threatening the potato fields of France,
yet another plague is reported to have
appeared in the Pyrenean districts. This
time it is the groves and woods of chest,
out trees which are threatened. Accord
log to the Courrier de Bayonne, a large
number of these trees in the canton of
Espelette and elsewhere have been at
tacked by small black insects, having
shining bodies, with six legs and small
wings, but apparently incapable of fly
ing. these insects, it seems, eat their
way in beneath toe bark of the tree at
the level of the ground, and then work
round the tree between the bark and the
hard wood, up to a height of some ten
feet. The conducting vessels of the sap
being thus destroyed, the trees soon dry
up and wither. The insects are gener
ally followed by a species of worm,
which ascends even higher than the
former, eating channels not only be
neath the bark, but even into the hard
wood of the tree. The losses already
occasioned by these two scourges are
stated by the Courrtier to be very great.
Entire plantations have been destroyed,
the oldest and youngest trees being at
tacked as well as the young and tender.
-- --* .-
SOUTHERN PATENTh4.
Mr. H. N. Jenkins, Bolicitor of Patents, No. 27
Commercial Plae, oflioially reports to the DE.no
C;AT the following complete list of patents
granted Southern inventors for the week ending
August 14, 1877:
Louisiana--Michael Johnson, New Orleans,
button fastee,ing; Frank Von Phul, New Orleans,
and James Mallon, Baton Rouge, car starters;
Jean N. Miller New Orleans, portable furnace
stand; N. T. IEdon, New Orleans, tightening
bale bands; J. 0. Gingras, Shreveport, plaiting
irons.
Mississippi -W. G. McOreigiit, Atlanta, wagon
tire tighteners ; D. L. Murfl and D. Kyle, West
Station, bee hives.
Arkansas--J. V. Richardson, Tuckerman,
fences.
1'EIt(QUE TOBACCO.
THE CROP OF 1q,77,
MADE IN
nT. JAMES PARIMN, LOUISIANA,
BUing the finest c 7rop ince 172. will exceed in
aqunlity the crop of that years; the yield
will also he larger.
IPersoon who are delirous of obtainin a sMiDp
ply should
HEND IN THIEIR ORIDEI S AT ONCE.
so as to niiake sre of gctting all t.hy want..
These orders will beo illled accordig to date.
FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED.
As soon as the process of nan lfet 'llre is
c(omplete, by ordering lnow. better rates cnn Ie
obtained. but to walt until the tob.,aeo is ready
for delivery is to take the chance of a heavy rise
in price,.
The undersigned is the 8OLE A(IENT for all
the planters and mllnufl turers of
.HRAND POINT, nT. JAMES,
1PE. iQUE TOBAC(CO
These gentlemen comprise all those whose
tolbao took
Prizes at all the World's Fairs,
and have never yet bhen naproaehed ,y
Imnitators.
SEND IN YOUR ORDERS.
TIHE DEMAND FOIR PERITOUE TOBACCO IS
INCIIEASING( IAPIDLY, AND THE
CR01 WILL BE A FINE ONE.
Do Not Wait and Get the Refuse of the
Crop and Pay Big Priees.
ORDER NOW. AND GET THE CHOICE WHEN
IT IS READY FOR DELIVERY.
EDMUND BOURGBEOIS,
TOBACCO AND SUG l1 FACTOR.
we mismae ean
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'4 -~ 4'T L
JEWELRY AT AUCTION I
Amimn t wa.r.s A r W ar= aAa. W s .nZ 1
I. C. LEVI, Auctioneer,
18 ............................ Canal Street..................... .:..i$A
WILL OFFER, TWIOE A WEEK, HIS
LARGE AND %EGANT STOCK OF JEWELRY AT AU(EIO , ",
Lad Hall [ ll dell at Private Salea usual, from FIVE to TWUNIJ'I.Y31 .
UEL5Sthan any other estaýbliahment which advertises daily.,
Watches Repaired and Diamonds Reset
Only by skillful workmen. at the lowest rates. OU
JCUAewe$ Tsm DUA . LEVI. n ON.
A. ROCH'EREAU & CO.,
COMMI88ION MERCHANTS.
SOLE AGENTS FOR THE SALE OF
CHAMPAGNE.
IMPORTERLS OF'
BRANDIa8, WINEP, .VERMOUTHS, OILS, ETC.,
SaSouth Willilan St., New .erk. IO and I. st. Louis Street, New
ftul9m .In
GRUNEWALD HALL,
TIlE LARGEST MUSIC HOUSE IN TIIE SOUT
GENERAL AGENCY OF THE
LEADING PIANOS OF TIlE WORLD,
STEINWAY & SONS, W. KNABE & CO., PLEYEL, WOLFF & CS
(PARIS, )
And the Finest Parlor and Church Organs,
Reduced Prices. . Accommodating T m
DIIIECT IMPORTATION OF
Musical Instruments for Bands, Strings, Accordoons, Music
At Whelesals and Retail. special M ies to Country Mershaute.
Sheet Music Below Publishers' Prices,
And at corresponding low figures to Prolfssors, Sehools, the Clergy and Country
TBIAL ORDERS SOLICITED. ESTIMATES FURNISHED AND CATALOGUES MAIL'
ANY ADDRESS.
LOUIS GoRUNEWALD,
sel Brunewald Hall, 14, 1,1, 36 and 33 Dareane street, New eoMw5a
PHILIP WERLEIN,
135 CANAL STREET, TOUBO BUILDING,
LEADING MUSIC HOUSE OF THE SRRET,
DZFIEB ALL 09Mu
Best Pianos mad Orgi.s
Lowest FrIes,
N est Lberal
Larve g o es t
SOLE AGENTS FOR THE WORLD-RENOWNED CHICKEBINO
The Best and Most Perfect Planes Made,
ALSO, FOR THE ELEGANT UPRIGHT HARDMAN PIANOS,
In tone and touch superlor to the PlM.yel Pianos. of n.qual durability and selling 100 le.s,
ranted to give good satisfaction or the monoy refunded. Sold on small montl y pay
very low for eash.
Sole Agents for the elebrated Mason & Hamlin, Estey and New Eoa.
land organs,
JUST RECEIVED PEB STEAMER ALICE,
Pivu C7wmer 2Mraiomcml aXntrwumanatr,
The Trade Supplied below Northern Prlees.
h'17
....-0--
TO OUR NUMEROUS CUSTOMERS, FRIENDS AND THE PUBLIC.
-0
Having leased for a term of years the large and beautiful store in the
MORESQUE BUILDING,
forming the corner of Camp and Poydras streets, we will take poasealon 0o
same during the
MONTI OF SEPTEMBER,
--with one of the-
LARGEST AND BEST SELECTED ST
-OF
1URNIT 1 R ,, .
EVERI OFFERED TO THIS COMMUNITY. CONSISTING OF
PARLOR, BEDROOM, DINING-ROOM, LIBRARY, HALL AND OFFICE
FURNITURE
OF EVERY STYLE, DESIGN AND QUALITY.
FINE FRENCH PLATE MIRRORS,
AND A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF
COMMON FURNITURE,
OF EVERY GRADE AND PRICE.
In the meantime we will REDUCE OUR PRICES on our stock In Armory Hall to obvnle
exprense of moving. Parties wishing to take advantage of this reduction should call
we move.
Thanking the Public for their generous patronage during many years past, we hope by *$i
attention to business and upright dealings, to merit a continuance of the sme in oar
quarters.
B. M. & B. T. NONTOONMERY.
a 3.-we'w5*s Rt AIN £3 :HALL f eatr ACr !Ue sar.
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