Kingston Chronicle, July 30, 1819, p. 2

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fh* clKi*T»* of the UnifYd States of Ame¬ rica, coming into any of the ports of this 1 roviuce, the following duties, namely on all vessels above live tons to fifty tons, the tonnag duty of th ree pence per ton, on all vessels above fifty tons, six pence pet ton. Provided always that whenever any ship or vessel, laden as aforesaid, Shall arrive at any Port or Ports of entry or clearance, containing ^oods wares, and merchandise as aforesaid, the cargo or load whereof is intended to pass by such port or ports, in order to be transported to Lower Canada, the master or other person having charge or command of such ship or vessel, or the agent or ageuts for the proprietor or proprietors thereof, shall forthwith on the arrival at any such port or ports of entry as aforesaid, make a report, and declaiation thereof to the Collector or his deputy, stationed at such port or ports of entry, and such report and declaration shall be verified on oath, and such master or person commanding such vessel, or agent oragents for the pro¬ prietor, if required, shall and he is here¬ by required to enter into a bond in dou¬ ble the amount of the tonnage duty im¬ posed by this act, for the payment there¬ of, should the whole, or any part of such goods, wares and merchandise, remain in or be unexported from this Province. And provided also, that nothing in this Act contained shall extend, or be con¬ strued to extend to compel the payment of any tonnage duty on vessels exclusive¬ ly employed for the purpose of trans¬ porting passengers and their baggage. IV. Provided always, and be r< fur¬ ther enacted by the authority aforesaid, That nothing in this Act contained shall extend or be construed to extend to au¬ thorise the demand of tonnage duty on any such vessel laden exclusively with goods, wares and merchandise in transitu for Lower Canada. V. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That all monies col¬ lected under and by virtue of this Act, shall be paid into the hands of the Receiv¬ er General, to and for the uses of His Majesty* His Heirs and Successors for the public uses ol this Province, and to¬ wards the support of the Government thereof, to beaccounted for to His Ma¬ jesty through the Lords Commissioners of his treasury, for the lime being in such manner as it shall please His Majesty to direct. Provided always, that nothing in this Act contained, shall extend or be construed to extend to affect the provis- ions of any Act of the Parliament of Great Britain, for regulating the intercourse of this Province with the United States of Arterica. VI. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That this Act shall be in force from and after the passing thereof until the end of the next ensuing session of the Provincial Parliament. luiioo fo continue merely to forward their private interests, and thus reduce these regions to such great unhappiness. Stran¬ gers, and many other inhabitants, remove daily with all their wealth, and leave tho^e that remain behind in a state bor¬ dering nearly on desperation. The state is almost without funds, and is unable to satisfy the demands of the generals. Ev¬ ery body confesses, and is of opinion, that if the grand expedition of Count Abisbal should take place with tJie an¬ nounced forees1 they must all promptly acknowledge the legitimate power, Ar- tigas's conduct has this long time been sus¬ pected,and he has been, a few months ago, declared a traitor, and agent of the Span¬ ish King. The Portuguese occupy all the eastern shore of Montevideo, toaeth- er with the colony of Sacramento. It is likewise well known that the stgnora Carlota has several times refused the pro¬ position to be crowned at Buenos Ay res, by and thro' the sanction of that congress. The Provinces of Paraguay have main¬ tained themselvescompletel}' neutral, ha¬ ving war equally with Artijjas,as well as with the rebels, who have endeavoured, arms in hand, to invade Paraguay ; but they having repulsed their aggressors, commence again to communicate freely with each other. There are three par¬ ties in Chili, one for Carreras, one for the government that governs at present, and the third in favor of the malcontent* and rebels ; it is thought here, that bv the news of the preparations announced to have been made by San Martin, he will attempt an attack and landing oh the coasts of Peru, whore it is reported lie has a great number of partisan*!, as well as in the capital. Should this not take place, but on the contrary make an at¬ tempt upon Valdivia < r Chiloe, and ha¬ ving a sufficient naval force, he will be able to hurt materially our commerce. The Province of Conception, is occupi¬ ed by the King's troops, and finally, it is the common opinion that the people are convinced that they are not able to succeed in their project of independence, flfid *hrsi ♦hnv tv.MI. Hrwv^n <;it!uiiif. '«v **!m decision of the congress of Paris, or to the grand expedition. A Panorama of Jerusalem by Prerot, is now attracting a crowd of curious vis¬ itors. Letters frym Lyons, of May 20, speak of the extraordinary success, in that town, of M. Fabre d'Olivel, who, by a peculiar method of his own, had develo¬ ped the faculty of hearing in manv deaf and dumb, of both sexes and different agps. The exj>eriments made to prove the fact of hearing, were in the apart¬ ments of M. MottelDegerand, president of (he chamber of commerce, in presence of more than 200 persons—among whom were baron Ramhand, the mayor, the members of the municipal council, and man) ecclesiastics and physicians. A letter from Paris, of2fth May. pub¬ lished in *\\ English paper, says, w The royal bounty has not been invoked in vain. The king, free to follow the dic¬ tates of his heart, siiue trie rights of h«s throne are respected, has commanded the minister of the interior to present to him the report, npon which he had re¬ cently put off his deer-inn. His majesty then authorised th • recall of new exiles, upon the list of the 3S/f The list ^f the 3fl. is now reduced to 25< who will come in successively, pro¬ vided thev ask permission in respectful icrms.andbe not of the number of the regicides. The return of General Grouchy and theDuke of Baseaiio, i« deferred—not- vvith^tandiiiii the solicitations of the Duke D'Augouleme in their favor. D 07ru May 9.S. His Majesty's packet, (he Lord Dun- can. Captain HamilU^, came into the Harbor about 4 o'clock this afternoon, in three hours from folitlg, and landed his royal highness Prince Leopold, of Saxe Cobourst, and RUtfte STATE OF TIFF. I RTT1SII ARMY. A. return of thr ri*<*rl regt^^, n„are ptfaMkh-. mentoftbe Armv.exrlvia-,v* 0f the Raiments of Cavalry and Infancy, nerving in India. CAVA I *V. NEW-YORK, July 15. South America.^&y the brig Boxer, which arrived here last Monday from Valdivia, (Soutk America) we received Lima Gazettes to the 24th of March. From one of the 22d of that month, we have made translations which will shew the actual state of affairs in that country. Translated for the Nexo York Evening Post) from the Lima Gazette of the lid March- His Excellency the Viceroy of Peru has received from the General in Chief of the Royal Forces in Upper Peru, a letter giving the most interesting and impor¬ tant information, of the actual state of affairs at Buenos Ayres. The editor ob- ocittS*. flialtlu- a..*Ii..1 <>f thfd IifUi, by bis long residence in those parts, now oc¬ cupied by the enemy, as well as by his veracity and good judgment, canandmay be relied on, to have stated a true pic¬ ture of the situation and affairs of these unfortunate provinces. That he gives to his readers the substance of said letter -word for word, as stated in the same— viz.That the Supreme Director Puyredon, on pretence of sickness occasioned by the explosion of a howitzer having injured his arm, had requested and obtained his dis¬ mission fiom office for the space of two months,and had been replaced by Ron¬ deau, who had a strong party at Buenos Ayres—That it was generally believed, be would not resign the supreme authori¬ ty at the expiration of the two months-^ that on the other hand, Gumes, San Mar¬ tin, and other influential persons, belong¬ ed to Puyredon's party ; in short, that a revolutionary commotion was very soon expected to take place at Buenos Ayres that the greatest disunion and hatred reigned among the insurgent chiefs : Uelgrano scarcely obeys the Director's orders ; and Gumes was on such bad terms with Belgrano, that he will attack the troops of the latter, if a movement against Upper Peru is attempted.— Gumes, on the other hand, is much com¬ promised, being the irreconcilable enemy of the Director Rondeau, having been beateu by the same in former time. Artigas has conquered, in several en¬ counters, the troops of Baenos Ayres, and during the latter time has destroyed upwards of 6000 men ; so much so that Belgrano has been compelled to send succours constantly to Cordova, where at one time only 1 or 10Q0 men remained. The last troops from Tucuman, that were at Cordova, amounted to about 600 men, commanded by La-Madrid, which are forced to remain there, the troops of Ar* ti^as occupying the country, so that their communication with Buenos Ayres is en¬ tirely intercepted. The greatest misery is prevailing in the parts that are under the control of the various chieftains, who cause the revo- > • One day later from Paris.—We have translated the following articles from the Journal of Paris, of the 9th June, hand¬ ed us thismorning by Captain Holdridge. Some singular travellers, recently ar- rivedat Bordeaux, excite great curiosity. The principal one is Cornelius Taykaon- ta, chief of the Oneida nation to the west of New York ; his suite is composed of seven persons, three of which are women. It appears that a strong desire to visit Europe, and particularly France, has made him abandon the United States, where he received a small pension from the American Government. We may however, presume, that he will find in public curiosity a manner of exercising hospitality, less simple, but more abun¬ dant, than that which is practised in the forests of the Ohio, the Mississippi and the Delaware. These savages were to exhibit themselves publicly, the 8th of this month, in the saloon of the Athena, um of Bordeaux. A private letter from Frankfort, 26th May, says, "Among the important ob¬ jects which have arrested my attention, I have not lost sight, as you may well sup¬ pose, of the movements of the public tee- ling, which are manifested in Germany. To judge of these movements by the in¬ quietude they cause government, one would believe himself, at the very mo¬ ment preceding a great revolution, that he saw conspirators in all classes of the community, and seditious persons in ail the public places. The police *as nevermore active, more dark and mysterious. Even to the cut olthehair and fashion of the coat, all suspected. The immense number of young men who in the German universi¬ ties, have united themselves in the Teu- tonic Association* are the objects of pe¬ culiar watchfulness. It would be impos¬ sible, however, upon the whole surface of Germany, to cite a single fact which has borne the character of sedition—or a sin¬ gle word which might be considered as a provocation to revolt. All the desires of the German people have till this day been expressed in respectful petitions and representations. We cannot however dissemble, that the anxiety of government is, to a certain point, well founded. Discontent is al¬ most general, and it is besides augmented by the entire stagnation of commerce and the progressive decline of German in¬ dustry. The enormous burdens which result from immense armies, maintained in complete peace, a prohibitory System, to which each siate lias recourse, to aug¬ ment its own resources, and which tends to destroy all commerce, since, to cuter Germany alone, you mu-it pass the cus¬ tom-houses of 38 confederated slates ; such are the principal causes of the aJJlic- ting picture w hich these countries present. [The Teutonic Association has for its object the political union of Germany, by the concentration of patriotic ideas and sentiments.] In the Second Chamber of Cadcn, (as¬ sembly) a formal motion has been made, relative to the introduction of the enti liberty of the press in that Dutchy. A general commission is about to be established at Frankfort, charged with certain alterations in the German Uni¬ versities. Each University will send deputy who will set in this commission. France at this moment possesses 240 ships of war, among which are f8 line of battleships, and 29 frigates—eleven of the first and four of the last description are now constructing. 688 545 Jtnnk £f Fifa* Horses. Two regiments of Life Guards each n'giinenr CODRisrl^— „f » troops of 344 rank and file, am 873 hor-*s Royal Rc^imcnl of Hor?e Guarrs eight hoops, 1st Dragoon Gnaftfs, i*n troop?:, '20 Regiments o-fOragrnon G larnV, and Li^ht Dragoon?, ea**!i rrjff* mrtnt consisting of 8 troops «f 368 rank & file, and 273 how, Royal Waggon Train, tv. a troop;. Total, 314 460 2V* soo \i)2 5*10 130 8054 6639 FOOT CTJAftDS. First, or Grenadier Reginvm three battalion?, 33 cotnpauif* of 80 rank nud til** per company Coldstream and Third RrgimeiiN 2 baPaHon-t earfo, 40 com panic* of 80 rank and file percompan 1 2560 Ttotal INKAWRY. 78 Battalions of the Line, 2d Battalion of the Royal Scot* °,d Battalion of the 60;b ReglmtnW 2d BattalionoffliHe Krigdd", 2d West India R.gimeiH, 84 Regiment?, pact) regiment cor" sitting of'ten companies of 63* rank and file, Royal Staff Corps, 8 companies, S?00 5; 60 480 Total, Total Cavalry. ■ Foot Gksards, Infeutr), War-OJlcCy March, IS i 0. 6S0d0 8*71 576' SiOaU 89794 JALMESTON. • • • From the National tntcUig 'ieer-> 3uty17> The St. L-Hiib Enquirer, m ,he »«*• joined article, ;ealls our aiten'ion to a subject of considerable int'rest> anfJ to fewrtU i( is u hH ig5 z"^, With respect to fhe soura 1 ;..,„»• . , .' ,u"rteconclusion01 information imparted in U^ wp arctJi<_ (he article below, we cor-: m0;e n;;iai,fe posed to place somewhat l..,en(.l,- thnn 0|1 on diplomatic cowe8poi»B8sian tlde,s. the sage speculations of II oJ Rl,,sia do..s V\ e presume the fcmPerorrom aol(),g tiiaf not select h.s conhdants frf Me 8r/more class of People j and fha*s ftow<HWB||, likely to be informed of!,; w h ^ from our agents £Sr.Pers(e throu^h (1)„ roundabout the North Po:rturer< b N,,v- agency of straggling ad.ej imp0S5ible. nor ertheless there is nothing Scribed to et improbable 1H the vhwI|0. to the Emperor Alexander -n ti Zmm* be wisely and waniy ado!t'he "atioa over calculated to aggrandize f which he presides. - From the Si. Louis .^T^n!,. Progress of the Rus^ EmPire i.i America tM Lookmgto he East f« *.»« h«c <■•;,- he peopl* of the Umted ^eni thp rps, templated with astonish™ in q* and of the Itu-.s.an fcrnpire i^ht of f9oki Asia; they have not thou iai|t po„er a,: to the west to see fofej^eirown backs. ready mouu(,n? upon (t,% do not k„ow Except Mr. Wafch, we 7e„ ke of fte an American who has even our con,i„eilt. Russian establish men t on :.. u:.. Sketch re He has mentioned them \>oljticu} pover'of of the military and polity . Russia;" where he says ,ts' eT(en(] frf„n « Tnt.r establishments.^ coast cf ,\me. Kamschatka to the .V. W.,-ort moanth)i, an nca—that they have a foq,ery at Norfolk hundred pieces of ArtilU ,nat p;nce l813 Sound, tat, north 57°; tlHie coas, pavSed hey have de.cend-d t L^re hundred mi I tne------*% '..... and 3 d es tnemouthotColumb.abv,,,^ „t Bogadaia a but are profifnie bv a flai *l r *r i •. 7 7 . . ,r n,ore oorthero truitful soil to feed their r)7 possessions." P*ge j 67. .i|0n tiu. I he encroachment upo,tont ^^ of ^ ccutioeat ;a uot tjic trensiw (ion the American present gigantic growth of tlie Russlao Empire. It is the result of system and of settled policy followed by every great man, and Rreat woman, who has sat upon the Russian throne. Feler the Great began it: the Empress Catharine the se¬ cond followed up his plan ; thr present Emperor is only executing the designs of the. empire. In the course of these three reigns, tlv» Russian power has been firm¬ ly spread over Northern Asia ; the straights of Bebring have been passed ; and a solid foot-hold acquired in North America. A road over land is opened fiom $'. Pctrr>burgh to Kamschatka : and Russian ships, loaded with American fur, annually sail from the N. W. coast of America, double the Cape of Good Hope, traverse 30,000 miles of sea, and land their rich cargoes in the Gurph of Finland. And, while the public is amu¬ sed with a project of a treaty for some islands in the Mediterranean, the mod¬ ern Alexander is occupied with a scheme worthy of his vast ambition—ft^The ac- quisition of the Gulf and Peninsula of California, and the Spanish claim on the western coast of North America, $c.— We learn this, not from diplomatic cor¬ respondence, but from American fur tra¬ ders, %-\\o learn it from the Russian tra¬ ders now protected by the Emperor in carrying off our furs. i t « ■ From the Liverpool Mercury. VELOCIPEDIMANIA. The inventor of tbis ingenious and fash¬ ionable machine promifes to give rife to an endlcfs variety of plcafing and ufeful re¬ creation*. Before we faw the performan¬ ces of Mr. Johnfon, who exhibits at the Mufic hall although we were well aware of :he advantages of the velocipede to a traveller, under circumftancee favourable to the projiefs of the machine, we had do conception of the graceful movements of which it is capable 5n skilful haads.— Skaiting has always been confidered as the mod elegant recreation ; but velocipeding (ov whatever it may be called) is in our opinion, more plrafin? %% performed by the gentleman we have mentioned. We fuhjoin a few draggling paragraphs on the fubject of the velocipede, which, prorr-ifea to be as much the rage as the ha- Icidofcope was of late. This we ventured to predict in the Mercury of the I2th of Feb page 262, when we firft gave a de¬ tailed dcfcriptLn of the invention with an engraved iliuftrati«<n. 41 ilt. Birch, the coachmaker, fcas con- Articled a vehicle, called the Vclocimani- pede, or Phseton in miniature, calculated to carry three perious. The centre, or body of the carriage, is fuppofed to be for 3 fem:ile ; the front is for a gentleman to fit on a narrow fadd'e, to guide it. At the back i9 a Pnall Dickey to work the hind wheels by machinery It goes over a diliance of ground of one mile in three minutes, and can be krpt up with cafe at 8 mi!e^ an hour. It weighs only one hun¬ dred pounds." w Arnongd other pieces of mechanical hg'-.ui'v, a pedeflrian chariot has been in¬ vented which U calculated for the convey¬ ance of ladies The wheels aie upwards nf fix ftet in diameter, and run parallel to ' ich other. The feat 13 below the centre f gravity, which prevents the rider from ft«»g thrwn. or eati'y lofing the equili¬ brium, U U cal'ed |he riymnafidromift." A fubAStitfe for walking has been al¬ ready feci in ibis courlry. It has been C° itttv furp-ffcd bv an Italian, who has »i»a .e a kind *.'f P"^afuH of the hobby horle, if we may be!ieve the foreign piperi, Oijfi o? which fays, *■ a Mr. Bfianza., of :-",,.3r.. has invented a new traveliinjj n a • e? which is faid to be fir Mpc iur tu <■ - * . a uu i>£dis, anu a*ud which the trsve-ler may go backwards. In the front of this vehicle, the Milan parer.- Ciy. there is a winged horfc, by the wing* of which fche carriage is put in motion." On Tuefdny evening, while a gentleman ^%- exercifing on one of the Velocipedes of the Affembly room in Cook-ftreet, he was thrown with fuch f rce from his feat that he had three of his teeth knocked out by. the fall.— It is added that notwith- lianding this unpleafant accident, the gentleman meauo to perfevere ** in fpite of his teeth." From the National Intelligencer. Th Comet ' We find, that the Comet, which ha9 been noticed in this city for feveral evenings pall lm been obferved alfo at New-Yoik, I hil'delphia, and" Baltimore. It may be feer- in the North-Weftern direction, foon i^.erthe fun is fairly down, and fets at prefent between 9 and jo o'clock in the evening. Gentlemen (killed in Aflronomy will doubtlefs give us more particular accounts of it, if the weather is fuch as to enable them to take due obfervatione. Meanwhile we intro¬ duce to our readers a tra« flotion of a very itttercftmg paffage from La I lace, on Comets in genera), which a friend has pointed out to ui : ** A Comet may be known from the identity of the Elements of its Oibit with Thofc of a Comet which has ?ppeared before. If the Perihelion diliance the pofitinn of the Perihelion and of the Nodes, and the inclination of the Orbit, are neary the fame, it j*3very probable that Jt is the fame Comet which had appeared before, and which, after having moved to fuch a diftance as to become invifible, returns t.> that part of its orbit in the vicinity of the Sun The periods of Corr.e- atry Revolutions being very long, and thefe bodies having been obferved, w.'th care, but about two hundred years, we know with certainty the revolution ofnni ouly viz. the Comet ul iCo2; which waa t. obferved in 1607, and in f Jjf, and winch reappeared in 1759. Tll€ period of this Comet is about 75 years, and, attuning unity aa the mean didance of the Sua from the Earth, the tranfverfe or greater axis of its orbit is about 35,9 ; and as its Perihelion diliance is only 0,58, it retiret from the Sun at lead 35 times further than the Earth, or three thoufar.d three hundred and fixty million miles, in perfor¬ ming a revolution in its very eccentric orbit. Its return to the Perihelion wgs t2 month* longer, between x 53 r and 1607, than between 16072nd 1682; and 18 months {hotter between 1607 and 1682, than between 1682 and 1759. It is evident, therefore, that Cornets are affected in the fame manner, but in a much greater degree, by thofe C3ufe3 which influence the elliptic movements of the Pianets/* La Place, Sylteme dtt Monde—Vol. 1. p. 216. Portland, July 6. The Comet. The lovers of aflronomy, and thofe who view with plealurc and awe, every difplay of the magniScence and power of Deity, may now be gratified by the appearance of a brilliant Comet in osr hemiiphere. The lad previous comet which vifited our fphere, was in 1811—Remained fomctime, and its elements were calculated with great precision by eminent men both in this country and in Eujope. Its tail was found to be33,coo,ooQ miles in length, and fo tranfparent that flats were Vifible through it. The prefent comet more brilliant than that of 1811, will probably excile equal attention, and investigation. The motion of thefe bodies, different from all others in the heavens with which wc arc acquainted, rs very rapid in an elij,ti- cal orbit, approaching near the fun in one focuaof the ellipse, the tail being always on the Cdeoppofae the fun. Philadelphia, June 23. A New Comet.—-A comet has lately been difcovered at the obfervztory of Kon- It is not vifible to the naked eye. A New Theory cf the Rainbow.—Dr. Watt, of Glafgow, has accounted for this brilliant phenomena in a new way. The common explanation is, that the drops of rain aft aa a prifm, and divide the rays of the fun ; but as the rainbow is frequently feen in a quarter where no rain is falling, as the edge of a cloud is, at fuch times, al¬ ways obferved between the beholder and the fun, Dr. Watt thinks that the rays of the latter are refracted fiom this edget and thrown on the dark fky oppofite. This does net feem fo much like a new theory as a modification of the old. It still pro¬ duces the rainbow from the refraftion of drops of rain ; and the fa£t that the co¬ lours are thrown upon the fky in a quar¬ ter where there is no rain, may be confid* ered as an accidental circumstance. Grass Ropes,—There is a grafs, the produdt of New Zealand, which, fron* iome experiments made at Portfmouth m England, appears to anfvver all the pur- pofea of hemp in the manufacture of ropes. It is strong, pliable, and foft; may be cut thrice a year, and can be brought to Eng¬ land at the price of eight pounds per too, or one feventh the price of hemp. lAnen and Tread from Nettles.—The Irilb have recently made fome experiments upon the flos of nettles, for the manufac¬ ture of thread and linen ; and the refult is faid to be, that both thefe aiticles are ob¬ tained equal, if not fupcrior, to the thread and tinea from flax. • 1 . PRINTING IN PALESTINE, ii *s welt inown wiai U)C arcnDUaOB 01- Jerufa^etn has been fome time in England foliating febferiptions to establifh a pffrit- ing houfe on Mount Libanus, between Syria and Pa'eftine, for the diffusion of the chriftian fcnpttfres in the Syriac language. lie has, we team, been eminently fuccefs- fill, having been patronized by Lord Tcignmouth, Mr. Wilberfcrce, and many of the Briiiih clergy ; though on his ar¬ rival it was reported he was an impoator. He has vifited the great univerfities in England, where he was etri&ly examined in all the eastern languages, and Mr. Leet profefTot of Arabic, has certified to his aetoniflifng acquaintance, with the oriental literature prefer ved in the Bodlean library. Mr. Clymer, the American mechanic, has prefented the archbifhop with one of his patent printing pr effee ; and he has receiv¬ ed prefents of feveral founts of types. THE MODERli CRICHTON. In a fpeech, delivered fome time ago, at a meeting of the Shropshire Bible Society^ Archbifhop Corbett gave a very detailed and mokt interesting account of the almost unparalleled literary attainments of Mr. Lee ; who has with much ju&tiV*. obtain¬ ed the title ol the modern Cricliton,— This narrative which would have occupied about four columns of the Mercuiy was given in part in the la^t Kaleidofcope, and will he concluded in the next From its extreme length, it \$ not at all adapted for ! a newfpapcr, yet we cenfid^r the principal fadts of fuch importance, that w«. ftall give a brief (ketch of them in ou* prefent num¬ ber. The only education that Mr, Lee re¬ ceived, was that of a village fchool, where nothing wa** taught but reading, writing and aiithmctic. At twelve yean of age lie Was apprenticed to the trade of rarprn- ter and builder, it waa fome time after this that Mt. l.ee conceived the idea of ] riiin^ f r*.iijn language* • and then the on v time I C i«uld devote wan the eveninjj on "he tern in: ti mf hi* day'x woik. He hat Btfiih t fttnv^V villi th« clifli ul- | lice cf puvci.y, r 1 ;.i ,.u a wv^rtCj ti.»,t whsB

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