The Quebec mercury, 1 juin 1852, Supplement
[" SUPPIÆMEflrT TO JH $ TUESDAY, JUNE 1, 1852.Extracts flcom late Engllsli papers* Corretpondence of Bcll>i Weekly Materner.DISTRIBUTION Of THE EAGLES TO THE FRENCH ARMY.Paris, 10th May.The distribution of the eagles to the army, about which public expectation had been raised so high, took place to day under the most favourable circumstances of weather ; not a mist or vapour dimned the sun\u2019s rays.From five o'clock in the morning crowds of country people flocked in with their wives and children, dressed in their gaj\u2019est attire, and bearing baskets of provisions for the day.From that hour until 12 o\u2019clock the tide of human beings never ceased to roll along the Boulevards.At 10 o\u2019clock regiments of Foot, Cavalry, and Artillery moved from their barracks along the Boulevards and quays on both banks of the river, in the direction of the Champ de Mars.About half-past 10 o\u2019clock 25 Arab chiefs, mounted after the fashion of their countiy, with the short stirrup and high saddle, blue velvet housings, with richly mounted holsters at the saddle bow, pistols at the belt, and scimitar at the side, t'jeir snow-white and transparent burnous floating in the air, rode slowly along the Boulevards in the same direction.Two horsemen of the National Guard preceded them, and two followed, and they were accompanied by a French general officer.He who appeared to be the leader was a remarkably fine young man ; and the whole body rode with a gravity of demeanour that was not for a moment disturlted by the immense crowd their appearance had attracted.At 11 o\u2019clock the Boulevards, the rue de la Paix and rue (loyale, the Place dc la Concorde, the rue de Rivoli, Champs Llysées, the terrace of the Tuileries looking to the river, and the Place de la Concorde, the bridges, the quays on both sides of the Seine, were literally alive with human beings, who, however, all moved about without confusion or the slightest disorder.The Seine itself, in the direction of the Invalides and bridge of Jena, was covered with boats conveying passengers, male and temale, to the south bank, while countless booths .established in every alley of the Champs Elysées afforded refreshments for the weary.At a quarter to 12 o\u2019clock the first of 21 guns was fired at the Invalides, and responded to by the battery at the Pont de Jena, which announced that the President hod put his foot in the stirrup.In about 10 minutes those who stood by the bridge of the Invalides beheld issuing from ike gardens of the Palace the foremost horseman of the escort, and then appeared the entire squadron of guides, dressed for the first time in the Those of lesser degree, summoned to represent the corps of the general army, were selected from amongst those who had been judged worthy of the Cross of the Legion of Honour orofthe new military medal.The gendarmerie were represented by députa lions from every part of France ; those of Corsica were particularly admired.The mounted gendarmerie of the department of the Seine hung or hovered on the outskirts, and kept the ground clear from external encumbrance or impediment, and the chain of pickets and videts maintained order within.The naval force was represented by delegates from the line-of-battle ships, the marine artillery, marines, marine gendarmerie ; and the five war ports\u2014Brest, Toulon, Lorient, Rochefort, and Cherbourg \u2014sent also tbeir contingents.Few spectacles could be more spirit-stirring than that which met the eye of Louis Napoleon as he President\u2019s tribune.Special tribunes were also set apart for the judicial bodies united, viz., the Court of Cassation and Court of Appeal, the assistant magistrates, the superior Council of Public Instruction, and the learned bodies, the Institute at their head ; the members of the national bodies of the roads and bridges, and of the mines ; the functionaries and professors of the pupils educated for stafl* employments of the Polytechnic Schools and St.Cyr ; the Prefect of the Department of the Seine, and Prefect of Police, with the municipal bodies, and the Commissaries of Police of Paris and the suburbs; the Chambrr of Notaries and of Avousé, the Syndical Chambers of the Stockbrokers, &c.To the left also was seen an immense tribune, railed at the expense and at the request of the Municipal Commission of the Seine, who had prayed for permission to be represented in full strength, and not by advanced in front of the bridge.Perhaps deputation, as originally intended.Thé his memory travelled back 87 years, and lertres, or detached embankments, that par-compared what he had then witnessed, tially incloses two sides of the Champ de when a child of little more than six years, Mars, had pavilions with graduated benches the last pageant of the declining glory of the for the use of the public, this erection having Lmp.re before it sank for ever, with the been granted to private speculators; all spectacle that this day laid out before him ;\u2014 those, as well as the more official construc-to his ng >t and left the banks of the Seine, tions, being under the superintendence of the fresh with the verdure of early summer ; corps of Engineers, with a view to their so.the Ecole Militaire, with its summit crowned lidity.From the summit of every doom, with the tn-colour ; the plain itself alive roof, and mound, floated iricolourflags ; and, with warriors, the cuirassiers in (heir glitter- parallel with the rising ground on both sides, mg coats of steel, the graceful hussars, with and within it, extended a long array of lofty the embroidered dolman thrown loosely from poles, 70 or 80 feet in height, with gilded the shoulder, the gay lancers with the thou- tops, and dressed with streamers.Midway, sand pennons toying with the air, and im- and exactly in front of the central or Presi-partmg life and motion to the weapon they dent's pavilion, and about one-third distance decorate, and the countless flags, streamers, between it and the bridge of Jena, rosea and military trophies that were spread out chapel, 75 from the base to the summit ; on every side.Along the/«««fc of the and on a platform, 23 feet high, was built M litary College a double row of galleries the altar.Four pilasters, with supcrincum-ran, with the benches rising amphitheatre- bent arches corresponding to the four sides like, the passage to the upper from the of the Champ de Mars, and surmounted by windows of the building, to the lower by cornices, supported the dome, which tvas flights of steps from the plain itself.In the covered with gilded scale work ; and higl IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT.HOUSE OP COMMONS.\u2014Mat it.MAVNOOTH COLLEGE.Mr.Srooxaa thrn row to move for a Mitel all were delivered they again ascended to where the President stood up and delivered the following address : \u2014 \u201c Soldiers ! The history of nations, is, in ' a great measure, the history of armies; on 1 oroow\u201e roM l0 \u201e tneir success or reverse dr|>end8 the fate of commiite« to enquire Into th« oftdusitlo'n civilization and of the country.If con-' c*rr**,?on,,\tPromUini to «butin from que red, the result is invasion or anarchy ; R7m0i\u201eT.VhXiWtî.chi.,?i1!:! \"ound ,lhe fef,i;n«, of irvic.orioM, i, glory anj ortler.Thy.\u2019 .\"îr, nations, like armies, entertain a religious ve- ,end,,n to create immorality, and being \u2022ubvcr.ive ncration for those emblems of military hon- ,h* \u2018\u2019J*® Pr,neiP,e* of allegiance io ihe Crown.our which sum up in themselves a nast of \"** 'I'0 1eo.n,,,'tr ,0 t,,e 'Vo,d °f God, and atninnlnn «n i V.\u2022 .u,emoel'e, * P081 01 wa« a n«iion«l tin ; but on Itnl aarccr ofihe nue«.struggles and of trials.\tJ tin,, he would not then dwell.Ile d.ni \u201cd ihaMhe 1 he Homan eagle, adopted by the houae knew «H that could be known on 'be auhjrei, Emperor Napoleon at the commencement ,nd br!,*frd.,h\"1 re,y f«wwere aequainieri cation of the regeneration and of the gran- upon being made aware of the real iMiure of deur of Frnn.« l« ,i;.-__________I t Afasrnnrtlli waralwm\t_________ dciirof\tI.T- , .\ts'\"\"\treal nature of hi* «ole in alienee.Unlea.iubflanllal woof, could ileur of France.It disappeared in our mis- \"« Mtynoo.h ay.icm, répudiât, d any connection be given that all tha nbjtei, 0f the «VanT h.d tian fortunes\u2014itouolitto return whon\tI between it end their religion.Ihe lion.ineml»#»r I\tmm hnaen.4 l#% \u2014_ 1 a _ a.^a ii uisappcareu in our mis- *\t\u2022jncm, repuai«iMi uny c« fortunes\u2014it ought to return when France, !'\u2019\u2018TTo,11 «,,Ld 'nir.re,.,*io\"- Th«''n\"-recovered from her defeats and mistrei of\t,84s, herself, seems not any longer to repudiate her own glory.\u201c Soldiers, resume then these eagles, not u menace against foreign powers, but as the symbol of our independence, os the souvenu of an heroic epoch, and as the sign of the nobleness of each regiment.Take ngain these eagles which have so often led they were eager te extricate thcaeclvee from Ue lyrenny of their prieara.Ha coocleded by appaal-ing to tha houae not to leave unvearched thia canter of Mayneoih.Mr.MeneiLL would not oppoae inquiry, for he believed that the more Mayneoih waa inquired into, the more atliifaclory would be Ibe reeult.Bui be demanded a fair tribunal, not eoapoeed of thoM who had already given their verdict.Mr.Moos* declared that the Irith prieite were only ton national to olaave the oppoaite parly, who had recently complained that they were not auflfcieni-ly ultramontane.The prieate had hilharto been Ihe only friend# ot Ireland, and eoneeqwantly, hrr leader* j but if government would take up that petition, the prieata would band over the keya of their fortreM with a benedict on.Mr.ULanaroNt would «apport Ihe motion of Mr.Spooner, bat objected vo much to Ibe cpiril in which it had been brought forward, that he reuld not give hit vote in eilenee.Unlea* aubaiamlal proof* could member liflratory of inauiry inlo the «\"ytlrm.A* Vo Vile charge of breach of faith (whirh would probably be brought againat thoaa who would review the quet-lion), he con.idered that what parliament had given parliament might withdraw, if reavon were ahown.Sketching Ihe hialory of the grant, which waa originally made in order to have education carried un at home rather than abroad, but not a* any evidence of approbation of Ihe rcligioua tyetem nf education puraued, he reminded the houae ih«l there waa no regular grant until 1845.The Roman a la Lasalle.The two foremost men held, M usual, pistols in their hand, with the finger oi the trigger.Thereat ofihe squadron then came on ; and et a short distance to the rear, and separated by a short space from those who followed, rode Louis Napoleon, - \u201e OCIIV1> aruilcs glv.wearing the complete uniform of a Lieute- ing n view to the interior ; and at each side nant General, and mounted on a superb hay j extremity of the platform flights of steps charger, purchased for him in England for, ¦ reached nearly to its level.This tribune, as it is said, 500/.He rode along the avenue | I have already said, projected from the of the Champs Elysées that is close to the \\ facade of the building eeverol feet more than quay de la Conférence.Jerome Bonaparte, the ones that flanked it, and which were in the Minister at War, the Marshals with i turn terminated by two pavillions also pro-their aides-de-camp, the general officers 1 jecting, the general decorations of which specially invited, with their staffs, the military 1 were not dissimilar from those of the Fresi- centre of the budding, immediately under over all those emblems of peace or war rose the c ock, extended a gallery from 15 to 20 the Cross.Above the arches four golden feet wide, and several feet in advance of eagles occupied the angles of the cornices those at each side, with a communication and at each pilaster rose a column with n with the interior of the Ecole Militaire, and statue on the capital, and with velvet veils the galleries or tribunes reserved for the supported from the outside by lances.These great bodies of the Stale, the Senate, Depu- I veils were of alternate crimson velvet and ies.Council of State, Ac.The approach gold.The altar was ascended by three to this central gallery was by means of three plniforms turned towards the Ecole Mili-flights of step*, +8 feet in width, and at both taire.The decorations were of white ground aides the basement entrance was flanked ornamented with goldeh stars and flow-ers by two immense gilt lions.The facade of Behind the bridge of Jena rose the Tro-tlie gallery was surmounted by a semi-circu- cadero, the intended site of the palace of the ar front, in the centre of which, and on a King of Rome, and the heights of Chaillot.1 ue ground, sprinkled with golden stais, with tents and pavilions surmounted by was an immense eagle, supporting the Grand streamers, and the houses to the roof, and the Cordon of the Legion of Honour, Irom which roads, alive with human beings.However thecrosshungm the centre, and from he- the lover of peace may look with indifler-neath the talons issued forked lightning, ence or contempt or.all such martial dis-Under the fronton were figures of Fame plays, yet it may be doubted if there were supported by columns.Draperies of rrim- many amidst the multitude who really re \u2014' V.L .-^uiui.iiis.i/rupenes m rrim- many amidst the multitude who reall* «».an^r'r^Lterk;nCaPBrdthe 0,0,t8 ?onvclvpl>fring1e\u2018l\t\u201c\u2018e mamedcoldtothntspectncle, nshehcldfrom a la Lasalle.Ihe two fjremost men held.ton.or wem a-it iproil .m wi.li «.nt.inn\t1 t m a-« a! mm.I aI.a \u2014 ! 1 ! ÎT__\ta .¦\t.\u2022\t.midway between the chapel and the military school.Every corps of the French army had its representatives there\u2014those of Italy and of Africa ; ihe military schools ot Algeria, Spahis, Zouaves the native sharpshooters, each in their picturesque costumes.There were seen, ton, the ancient so\u2019diers of the Invalides, the relies of the old Republican and Imperial hosts.The deputation consisted of 100 officers, sub-officers, corporals, and privates, with the General Commandant of the Hospital at their head.The schools of Cavalry were represented by the first or second commandants, the instructing major, the captain,lieutenant, suh-lieutenant and ensign, two sub-officers, two serjeants.,\t.\t, D .1 r.- j .u.mm» ircmcie, on ueneiu irom top, or were gathered up with golden cords, the uplands of Chaillot, the hanks of the with heavy tassels ot Ihe ends; and the in- Seine, or the battlements of the Ecole Mili-tenor ofihe canopy was hung in the same\ttaire.The dark\tand masrive\tartillery,\tthe nch stulT.Along the balustrades were ns-\tlong deep line of\tfoot, the very\tneigh\tof\tthe rending niches for statues, and the upper war horse, with his eye on fire, and his di-sides were formed in a series of arches giv-\tlated nostril, the toss of his head\twhen\treined I no fl VI it in 4 1m a at\tm#b \u2022\t»% \u2022«.I «.a\t.* 1 \u2014 I \u2022\t.\t\u2022ai*\ta , .in to unwilling rest; the rider motionless as a statue, hut ready to spring into life at a sound, or a sign; the flashing swords and lances; the waving plumes; the martial music ; the floating streamers and ban-m-rs ; the plain itself, so full of historic interest ;\u2014all must awaken feelings it is difficult to express.Perhaps the President thought the same as he cast n hurried glance along the lines from the foot of the bridge.While the thunder of the cannon was still ruffling the waters, he advanced, and passed through the ojiening made for him in the line close to the river, where General Magnan received him.He paused for an instant ; then touched his horse with the spur.With the Minister of VVar, the Marshals of France, and the Generals with their staffs, a little to the rear or beside him\u2014and the Arab chiefs, who, of ancient lineage and of the purcat blood of their trbea, had quitted the desert or the mountain, to witness the power and civilisation of their conquerors, and whose snow while burnous and bronzed faces contrasted with the rest of the cortige\u2014the President dashed to the right, and passed at full gallop along the line of infantry ; wheeled to the left, and rode down before the cavalry ; galloped in front of the artillery ; and then, moving to the centre, rode slowly up, in the midst of martial music and shouting.He soon reached the basement of the central pavilion.The ascent to it from the plain was by means of three flights of steps, 48 feet in width, flanked with flags, and adorned as already described.He ascended the steps exactly at half-past 12, acccm-panied by the Ministers, the Marshals, and the staff, and took his seat at Ihe fauteuil.The banners with their eagles, for the distribution of which the ceremony uas held, had been arranged in pyramidal stands, in the space to the rear ofihe President.The deputations of the army were «r.r C II\t.\t\u2022 .,-.1.no regular gram until IM3.The Homan our fathers to victory, and swear to die, if ! Catholic* had not mtl that gram in accordance necessary, in their defence.\u201d\twiihihalr promue*.He then Cited a great variety They then, under the guidance of a staff «»idance to ehow the nature of Ihe teaching ei - \u2014\t\u2022 \u2022 -\t\u2022\t6\tMaynooih, and among the point, he touched «veie ihe doctrine *\u2022 to oaiha (which it rvai held were taken to God only, and might be reteaaed by eccle officer, proceeded in the same order as bcfoie towards the chapel, and took their places -.IB1c»wa \u201ey eCcie.on the left platform, within the closure of/,l,\",c.a* \u2022\"!h°iï'y *»hen convenient, there being 24 the altar.At one o'clock the in cannon an-\trC«ï'înmi1,M *,c,p* fro\", nounced ,l\u201e, ,|,0 roligiou, ceremony haj commenced.\t| tween venial and mental «in*, a--™ from .K.mVïnï\tami Ministers, the Marshals, and Admirals of; accepted from the hand ofihe President the France, the French Ambassadors now in 1 eagle destined for his regiment ; they then Pans had places, with the household, in the descended and resumed tbeir place».When blessed them ; and then took his sent on a throne, and asuumed the mitre.Thcntnnd-nnl-bïarers advanced separately, knelt on the ground each with the Engle in his hand, nd the Archbishop spoke the following prayer:\u2014 \u201cAccipite vexilla cccleati benedirtione ssnctificate, saintque inimicia pnpuli rhris-tiani terribilia ; el del vobis DomimiH grntinm, ut, ad ipsius nomen et honorem, cum illo hostium cuneos potenter penetretis incolumes et «ecuri.\u201d When the prayer was ended the Prelate gave for the whole army the ki»s of peace, with the words Pax tibi ; and the freinat standard-bearer, rising from the ground, pressed lo his lips the Pontifical ring nnd \u2022 lien resumed his place.One hundred salutes from the cannon of the bridge of Jena accompanied this blessing of the Eagles.The Prelate then stood erect, arrayed in mitre and in cope, and holding the crosier, raised his hand aloft and gave an universal blessing to the army nnd the people, and another salute announced that the religious ceremony was over.The Colonels to whom the standards were delivered by the Archbishop descended, and defiled round the chapel.They then proceeded to their respective regiments, delivered the eagles to the ensigns, and had them recognised by the corps in the usual manner.At this moment cries of \u201d Fur ['Empereur'.\" and \u201d Vive Napoleon ! \u201d were uttered ; the former with much enthusiasm by the ravnlry.At two o\u2019clock the Presi- ilitficul y,\tan iiti|>o*aihili'v, of oblainint ver- ilicia axaiiMl criminals Advening lo ibe hoaijlii* of Ibe Irith iirieot tolhr Prorrtianl Etisbliehmrnl, he dwell uxm ihr fol-e declaration* which, when pnMir.il I>ritibgr* wire lo be (ainrd, ihe Roman Catholics had made on ihat subject.The priests he «aid, were laughl Ihete doctrine* at Maynooih,' and taught them again to an ignorenl population) unable to ere Ihal iliey were hut drvirra of prir*i-craft for haraaarng Ihe aoula of mm.He next referred io Ihe reecnl demand try Ihe Irish pvie.ta ihal no member \u2022hnuld be returned to parliament who was not devoted lo ihe intereaie of (heir religion, and rencluded an elabora'e and powerful epeer h bv declaring Ihat alt the misconduct ofihe Iriah people waa in comonanre wilh lha reaching of Maynooih.On ihrae ground* he demanded an inquiry, without which Ihe country would not he tadified.The Matqura of Bi.*NDroai> seconded lha motion.If lire facia adduced hjr Mr.Hptmner were true, ihe houre wa* bound io repeat the Mayrn.oth grant, and he believed *uch repeal lo be nareaaary He had aupporied lire inrreated grant, but acquaint-anee nirh Ibe »ubjecl had induced him to reierse hie lormr-r opinion.Mr.C.An*txt moved m an amendment that lha houae ahould reanlve ilacif into a cummiirre for the purpose of cnnndrring a hill for repealinx Ihe May-nooth Act and ad olher ana for charging the public revenue in aid of eccieaiaaneal or religious ¦ Ur- Mr.Sciiot.Krir.LD accord d Ihe amendment.Mr.Secretarv Waltolic said that ihia question, one of great difliculij.mnst be approached wi h great eaudon.Hul Ihe stale of public feeling upon Ihe subject, and ibe mode in which it had been brought forward, rendered it nereaseiy to deal with it.The present question waa, whether they were or were no-to enter m'o «proposed inquiry, aruT ihal queeii on again depended upon whether the grant had or had noi answarrd ns purpotes.Hul he would Aral remark ihal rh-rnndi'ion* upon which the gram had been mule, bavng hern crrvrd by parliament, th«l body h«d a right lo deal wilh them.He went into the history of 'he grant from 1795 up io the lime when Sir Hoheri Peel had altered iia nature.The ohjec'a of Mir Hubert Peel in advocating it,n |,*i| l*ern threefold\u2014ihe providing eduralion (or a loyal at d dnmearic body of privai* ihe providing for ihal purpose a fund which rite Caiholir* were supposed not lo be able I » *upply, and Ihe breaking up a wide-apread confederaev atainai Rr|ii*h ronnrcltnn.||,d \u201er tltlj nul Iho-e objecta been attained I Tire firei had, lo a e-riain poim ; tut rumour said, ihat instead of a dome* ic b .dy of pried* being reared ihey wera seni abroad, having bran trained wilh Engl *h money, io preach rlieir religion elaewhere.Aa for the neeea-\u2022ny of ihe fund, ihn Homan Caihnlic* had ae'uaily been r*i*inz money lo found college* of their own.In dealing with ihe third point, he dwell upon the aggre*ei»e ennduri of the prieMe, eepecially einee ihe ¦ rrival of Hr.Cullen.The objecte originally in view had been defeated by ihote who wera acting under foreign a»d ultramontane influence, and who toughi lo keep the l*i«h people su> jeel lo Ihat h floenee.| He thought, therefore, ihat tha inquiry ought to ho grantet, a* he contidered Ihal ihe condition* of lh« gram had noi been fulfilled, as Ihe reaaon* for which r had been made no lunger dialed to ihe asm* filant at before, a* fund* had bean provided for nthov collegial* inaiiiul ona, and generally, as Sir Robert Peel\u2019s oijeel* had noi been carrrrd out.Mr.B.Osborne eor.ardercd ihr* motion a* a mean a'tempr lorai.e anew \" No Popery\" try, and he refuard lo pander lo bate fanaihitm.The boo.Maynooih, but gate élaborais dissertation* on Ihe fundamental rtncrinea of ilia Catholic religion.Complaint* h-d bernmadeef aliramonrenltm | bul would that be remedied by withdrawing (he College or Maynooih, and driving ihe Iriah prieata to he educated abroad I The root of thie metier lay |r Ihe feeling* which had been routed out of dour* by Ihe aggressive policy of Roma.He did not wonfir .B.Hors could no* re*i«i off-ring hi* protest agauiit an intlalmanl of tlaa* legislation, and againat an at'empt to open old wound* and rrra'e new quarrel* in a nation which might go on fljurithing in paten and harmnny.Mr.NcwnaoaT* dreltrad Ihal he h*d never been prnud*r of hi* colletgue (Mr.Spooner) than ihal nigh'.After tome «frieiurea on lha «peeihea of tho** who had oppoted lha motion, he imitted upon lha truthfuloea* of the description whirh h*d bean given of the conduct of ilia prie*'* in Ireland, and \u2022aid that ihe addrr** of Mr.Spooner had left tha houte no choice The country had made up iia mind upon ihe subject, hot a* tha legislature at ill \u2022earned lo require puMic knowledge, it mutt tcreda lo Ihia proposition, a> d noi aei oi nought lha feeling* of lha nation.A* for lha **RtimcRit of lha Iriah, ha would remind the bouta that at toon aa th-y emigrated, Minivtirial Parquets, fte.\u2014Thu leadiag mrmhera of tho government celebrated her M«j sly \u2019e birthday by full dress hanqoeli,al winch foige parties of Rohlrmra and gentlemen, aiippnrieie of the present administration, aaaemhled.The Karl of Derby, at Fiiet Lord »f the Treasury, entertained a eery large and ditimguifhed parly at hit oftcial residence in Downing-atreet, the banquet bring tueceeded hy an asirmhly, ai which neatly 800 lesdiug memheia of iho aiinocracy paid Iheir reapectu to the Couateia i f Derby.The Chancellor ef the Exchequer received a largo P*riT at his mantion al tîroaeei or-gai*.The kail of Mal-mrtbury, at Forrig i Secretary, enlivened, the gloomy walla of the Foreign-office with a Urge parly, at which the whole of the Foreign Mr-matera aatemhleil.The Colonial Secretary, Sir John Parking'on, gave hie political frieede and employee ihe beei dinner the Clarendon cnuld afford ; and Ibe Right Honourable Spencer Walpole, aa Home Secretary, assembled ibu judges and law officer* of thu Crown ll (tnllinn\u2019a Hotel.Alhematle-alreet.Tha Duke »f N«r '/¦>?.v ' I : - \u2022\t¦\t.\t».I \u2022 *\t1 '\t\u2019\t\u2019\t*\tV * ¦ V .\u2022 \u2022 - i .\u2022 ' ./ '> \u2022 \u2022 - «y >?t '\u2022> \u2022\u2022 .\t««;#«< i w "]
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