JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN. UJP AIO DOWN. A 2Ve o" more Truth than Incident. u Hit him again he has not any friends!" used to be a famous war cry, or rather fun cry, in our school boy days. So it is still ; and more than that, it is the gener ous motlo upon which the world proceeds. Your rich fellow may thrive in constant iniquity, your man of powerful connex ions may do with right and wrong as lie pleases, always keeping the blind side of the law, to escape convictions of overt acts. Yet even when he is so committed, and has exposed himself, the proper amount of money, or the judicious use of influence in the right quarter, will carry him through unscathed. Not so with the poor rogue. Peccadilloes even, are luxu ries from which he is debarred, while the practice of bigger and more profitable sins is something entirely above his privilege. The wretched vagrant goes to the peni tentiary for stealing a loaf of bread, to keep from starving; the rich rascal trans fers the property of the widow and or phan to his already amply filled coffers, and we must not only forbear from ques tioning the act, but from doubting the mo tive. " Come along!1' screamed master Bur ton, as he dragged a poor ragged boy home, whom he had caught in the orch ard. " Come along, you little thief, you, for father says he will not be plundered any longer." The little wretch, who saw the folly of resisting a lad twice his size, submitted with no opposition but such a hanging hack as should compel the other to use all his strength to keep him. He ventur ed no remark, save a constant repetition of the protestation that he " had not done anything." Young i?urlon was resolute, and pulled him up to the door, just as his father came out with hat and cane to go to his office. The poor boy made no re cistance, and no attempt to escape, but stood in terror before Squire Burton, who was the magnate of the village the great man, at whose name all the youngers : i i t i l j .. quailed, and in whose legal knowledge and magisterial power, the whole tremen dous circle of six miles about his resi dence, trusted in undoubting awe. " So you've been stealing apples, sir!" said the man of authority, at once pre judging the case. " No 1 ainl." " Stoning the trees, then," persisted the Squire, in a sterner voice, as if enraged at the suspected culprit's innocence. "No 1 aint." " He was just going to, father," said young hopeful. " No 1 wa'nt." "You've committed a trespass then, at any rate!" said the Squire, angrier than ever at this admission of the lad's inno cence, by his son. " You've committed a trespass, and shall go to the poor house. What's your name?" " John Stodder." "Oh ah well don't let me catch you on my land again. Begone, sir!" John did not wait twice to be told this bui was out of the Squire's well kept j grounds in a moment. 1 fie son asked some very earnest questions, why his fa ther did not hang the poor boy at least but receiving replies about as impatient as his father's address to ragged John had been angry, he took good care not to press the matter. Squire Burton had his own reasons why he did not like to hear Stod der's name, and very good reasons they were too. So the hard-faced old man gave his coat a double button, and as he stumped past poor John, on his way the village, striking his cane vehemently on the ground, no one would have fancied that Squire Burton was afraid of the rag ged object who looked up with fear and trembling, as the man of authority walked by him. There was apparently some thing in the atmosphere of each which the other could not abide. The boy was sen sible of no feeling but a fear he could noli the costume of the university would per account for. The man knew why he ha- mit. he was a dandy : and in all matters ted Jack Stoddcr. Young Stodder was in as hopeful away to be ruined, as his worst enemy could desire. The qnly son of a widowed mo ther, al! her influence and authority could not keep him in a proper course for ve ry excellent reasons. In the first place, though schooling was free, he could not avail himself of it for if bis pride would have permitted him to attend, his comfort would not. Hi's mother could not dress him like other boys; and as in our repub lican country, lads at school take the same care as their seniors, practically to nullify the axiom that all men are created free and equal, young Stodder's ragged guife was an invitation to the others to torment him.. "Hit him he ha no friends I" was their motto, and hit him they did. John could not go to school it was out of the question. The shabby appearance which kept him away from 6chool did not stand much chance to be amended by idleness. The natural and legitimate haunt of an uncar ed for hoy in the country, is about tin teri trough and the stables of the vil Jage inij; and' to this retreat did John run as readily as ducks to lhe water. 'The horses would not insult the unfortunate, and the jolly teamsters would sooner give him a pull at their cider thaif pull his ears; a difference in inclination very consider able, when the comfort of the person most affected by it is regarded. Thai the mo ral lessons acquired in such a school were the best, we shall not undertake to say. To young Stodder they were certainly among the easiest" of acquirement, and loose morals sat as comfortably upon him as his loose and ragged garments. His notions of meum and tuum in small mat! ters were none of the most rigid ; and'if he had not actually stolen the apples, there was little doubt of his intention (o do so, as alleged by young Burton. In short, to do hun justice, though he is our hero, he was a most unconscionable little rogue, though no fault of his own, but from the mere force of circumstances The inn was directly in. the Squire's road, and his walks took him pasi it three or four time? a day. Jack Stodder had been in the habit of basking in the sun before it in the winter, and of lounging in the shade of tru large tree at the door, in the summer, ever since he could run alone. He was, as it were, a part of the estab lishment a feature of the scene, and as such old Burton had passed him a thou sand limes, without giving him a second look. Jow, however, that he knew his name, he could not apparei.tly keep his eyes off him; and as Jack br-gan to notice that he was observed, and as he remem bered the apple orchard, and the narrow 'escape from the county jail which he thought he had experienced, he could not help sheepishly reciprocating the Squire's stare. If one could have found any other lounging place, or the other any different path to his office, their mutual aversion would have prevented these frequent meetings. As it was, the unpleasantness of the position of these antipodes in soci ty, toward each other, grew every day more irksome; and Jack's fingers more ! than once itched to clasp a missile which ! k :..u i 1 - i!. i j r k: he might hurl at the head of his very par ticularly unpleasant acquaintance. At length a little event occurred which induced old Burton to declare that the overseers really ought to take charge of a boy who was growing up in wanton vice and idleness. It so happened that while Jack was holding a bucket of water to a horse's head, his old enemy of the orch ard in passing, gave him one of those sig nificant pouts, leers, or " faces" which lads so readily understand as conveying an insult, tuick as thought, the horse lost his drink, and young burton got it an external application. He was drench ed from head to foot, and ran bellowing home with his complaint. This was a matter of which old Burton found it some what difficult to make the law take cog uizance u r 1 ....i:iKo..n, ;n,.nit;.,ir ijcuuiiu iiuuiuicuuj iii an order from the overseers, himself being chairman, and ric jacto the whole hoard to commit young stodder to that tndcli nite establishment, the receptacle of the: unfortunate and the wicked, the country poor nouse. Here, for once, Jack's for tune favored him. and a yond nalured far mer who was in the habit of stopping at iHp hvfrn.anH nflPi, i.niirW ibo hnV. - av , expense and trouble, bv tak- belter or worse, until he at . - t ed the town inr him for tained his majority. Removed from his old haunts, and treated with some deceh cy and consideration; inverted in a whole and cleaii suit of clothes, and tauuht that he waas good as other people's children, John soon became a vouiu man of alto- tolgether another order, Meanwhile his old antagonist of the or chard and the horse trough, Mr. Burton, Jr., was becoming a lad of another order too. While young Stodder was getting lessons in practical farming, his old cne. mv was nominally going through college, and reallv running through his allowance - and putting his father in debt. So far a.' illegal by the code of by-laws, he was. a hopeless spendthrift. Possessed of an idea of the illimitability of his father's n A'llfll lia nMmAinM rill i.illllirItnrtC economy as the effect of mere parsimony on the part of his parent; and let pass no opportunity to show his practical con tempt for such paltry admonitions. He had not spirit enough to enact any prank which might cause his dismissal ; and by mean and dirty lies and subterfuge ward- - 1ed off the consequences of his irregulari lies, until at the end of his college term, he formed one of the units which swelled. the aggregate of the graduates of 18 . He was ready to enter life with a most enviable facility for throwing away mon ey, at the same time that John Stodder, a sturdy, blunt, intelligent and well-informed farmer, was ready to begin to make a figure in the little world in which he had grown up, unambitious of any wider one. Squire Burton died. Even country jus tices cannot arrest death's mittimus, and the terror of ail the vagrants, the bugbear of all naughty hoys, and the Blackstone of all litigious men in the neighborhood, was laid in a houses, narrow, as Stodder's mother's, whom he had followed to her long home a few months previously. The two young men retained their affectionate concern for each other or rather Burton retained his. Stodder was more magnan imous. But each had by this time learn ed something of the early history of their parents. Jac k knew that their fathers had been partners and he knew that common report ascribed the beggary of his father to Burton. He did not Jhere fore hate the son, though lit a fa from liking him. Young Buvlun Kikw fiim certain e idtwe which he. neur lode pains to communicate., th:.t his fafhei had possessed himself of all the apt-iis ot the firm and he did therefore halts Stodder. He inherited the di-lilce of his father for.. , the son of the man-he had injured, and it was. the only part of In? patrimony which did not grow le-s in his possession. Thrifty habits in the poor," and extrav agant in the rich, are your true levellers. It did not take many year to dace the two men on a level in point of wealth and it did not require nuiiy more to put Stodder in comfortable competence, w hile Burton clung to hisnnw shattered and di lapidated residence, by grace of thase who held mortgages over In in. Yet a Utile longer, andlhe man Burton was a lounger, where the boy Stodder wasted his early years. The boy could frequent ihe haunt without partaking of its pecu liar and most dangerous temptations ; the man fell a victim to them. On the same spot where the boy Jack Stodder used to creep behind the tree to escape ihe basi lisk eye of his father, died th man Burton in an apoplectic fit, brought on by rage at being over reached in an exchange of horses. Stodder felt no triumph over the dead, when by successive purchases he became possessor of the of whole Burton property. Still he could not help an inward feeling that retribute e justice had ovei taken the oppressor, when under the shade of the full grown and now somewhat dry trees, he told his children what was done in the green. Nor can any one resist the moral of ihis " ower true tale" that the pos session of property acquired by fraud, curses all to whom it attaches all, we mean, who share willingly in ihe guilt as well as in the possession. To draw our tale to a fashionable conclusion, we should make the mother of Stodder happy with him in his property; but as we have only recorded Aids as they transpired, we have sacrificed a dramatic conclusion to the simple record of tnth. The cirenrnstan i tts are sufiicic th e'oquei.t in thenehes, without t'mbi-i'i-dm.ei'l. PIKE COUNTY TAXES, TVTOTiCE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that OTRftahlv In .i-i Art of Crmiernl Assnnihlv .. . J . . 0 tne uominnnwea t h o Kennsv vama. nasstsd j ,le 13ta 0f Mirch, 1815, entitled "An act amend the act entitled an act directing the mode of selling unseated lands for taxes anx for oth- er purposes" and of an act passed the 13th March, 1817, " A further supplement to an to amend the act entitled an act dirocting mode of selling unseated lands for taxes and iner porposes' th loilowmg tou-u oi - l WW he sold ot r-ubitc Vendufi, on me seoim Io(la3r ()f J"ne ,,ext utl.,!e l;"n Mdford, in the county of Pike, for , nf tavps Hiii' mill tlx rnst :uicruetl on , , . House nrrea of taxes due, and the cost accrued on each respectively. Lehmam Township ivo. Warrantees. Quautity. Acres. Per. 415 15 414 60 378 40 340 1V0 224 112 97 Albert Lewis 166 Ambercotnbie Jumcs 90 Brodhrad Richard 90 Boyd Charles 124 Brown John or Jacob 206 Benson Peter 231 Bell Joseph 236 Brotzrnan John 1 1 300 4;5 105 50 405 52 402 417 405 10 11 . 253 Baker Cathaiino i 251 Baker Georrc A. -41 Crai John 134 Caldwell David pt. Q Hills Abraham 159 Dunbs Mania 164 Dohoff Abraham 93 7 04 80 90 2.0 UoiifiUiion Joseph 300 . 215 46 416 130 201 109 346 407 40 1G2 40 440 400 95 402 115 398 130 235 135 442 120 .239-I&G 95 S3 402- 72 425 105 395 69 402 100 436 13 x 11 in 227 Eggart George to5 iiibrenzellar Jhllery 158 Funk Jacob 161 GrierJohn 100 Heimborg Thomas 167 Hoflf George 181 Hrnison Wiiliam 190 Herte Tobias 2L-G Harrison William 232 Holland Benjamin, 243 Hoover Manuel, Sen. 248 Hoover Maiuel, jr. 245 Hyndsbaw James 183 Joyce Dominic 249 Kling Ann 144 Kling Rachel 187 Layn Jacob 194 Lewis Riebord 96 Mead Robert H7 Myer Henry 177 Miller Alexander 390 425 404 I2G 17 101 205 Mushhack Jacob 223 Mushbnnk John 1-2 233 'Wefkle Pet?r , 250 MulicahMar, 257 Nyce.Willitfm; i 219 111 lt)7, 1 15 ,.43." 70., .208; 07 '190 20 Quantity, Acres rer. 219 406 62 24 275 418 100 336 401 00 420 10 400 150 412 40 M3 80 258 153 0" 20 300 135 422 120 41': 100 402 72 203 Philips Rebecca r. 04 Philips Willyu" 247. Philips John 219 Rustm TUoimjs - j ; 180 Rustm TfetfVaV-i' ;: " 04 .Smith "Michael . 133 Smith Ftaneis J. - 1 OiFliook John - -16V Miartif ofrw - '" V 8q Townes John, 184 Thompson Ricriaiil ,lb2 Van why Henry '. 98 Witer-G(!onje.i:-: . 178Wvck6 lsruTc l' 225 Wood .HC-,b ; ' 197 Yohe Michael "'" 2G7;iliy Charles 237. il eister John .. 410 409 400 393 430 109 417 00 SO 150 SO 11 14 Delaware Township. 85 Abbott John on 396 402 389 393 100 315 303 '7 4 1 19 Brod head Jaiie' 1 5 BnMhefrd 18 tuodhead'.fttajyv V, 1 7 Brodhfad A nu ' FSrtivn )arriel'H ' ? W- 22 CooHiaugh John. " 14S Carney Thomas 34 Depue Nicholas ' G3 Dili man George ' . 14 Ennis John : 60 Edsiil! David - 173 Feittnan William---.. 102 Gates John . 12 Huff Ann, Sen. v - 13 Huff Ann, Jr. ': 10 Ilartzell Jonas 23 Huff Amos 54 Morton Richard SB Hoover Emanuel ... 57 Henry Sampson 107 Huff George 163 Harvey Mathias 60 no 40 05 124 405 152 423 130 J09. 400 413 298 403 333 402 390 415 50 120 18 37 53 16 402 140 320 440 408 28 413 140 394 100 417 100 255 140 270 140 439 147 Ingraham Catharine 63 2nd Isaac Jayne 73 Kerney Matthew 62 Long Henry 74 Mingus Francis 80 nlahan Neil 82 Miller Abraham 8S Martin John 106 t ease Thomas . - 107 Alease Robert" '., 108 Mease John -f 1 16 Mason Thomas. . 53 Ogden Sarah 104 Philips William 78 Place James 70 Philips John ' 8 Rpcdrr AKsslOrfi ' 24 Smith Francis J. . Gl Scyo? John 05 rmih Elizabeth 100 Hnffer Atuahwm lQTillei Thomas 202 Thomas Jesse 39 Whitehill Robert 439 394 99 10 402 402 151 443 115 415 15 30 54 427 120 417 132 123 50 291 53 409 100 417 24 4'2 140 197 100 414 155 Wl jOO 4.T, 100 84 a hituiMn John' to Dinfffiwm Township. 97 Brown lioivri . 9 j B ron betid : Richard : 40 A 90 4 0 34d 40t 47 ofj '01 t-rink ViHuuiis act; 104 Bro-lhead Hannah the for 105 BrodUead Saiwiel 412 SO 434 - 40:3 90 433 32 43 32 137 Brod head LukV 140 Biodheari joiinf Jtv 141 Brotihead Jan 149 BroriheaW Garret lu7 Brink Hemy ' , 150 Brotthead John.-en. Blink Benjamin I f 1 Branham E- mpzm l4l Biotihead John, Jr 142 Conrad k nry . 154 Ciaig W illiam 174 Cottingre James 155 Chamners John Craig John, pt 148 Conrad I ebotfth mud in '415 15 402 109 171 3i!9 30 403 90 433 32 322 115 423 415 18 10 433 32 412 113 421 38 596 37 411 248 122 453 30 373 60 433 40 433 20 46 90 356 120 380 107 402 439 71 439 154 races lot Tax. $ Cts 6 42 G 42 5 BO G 20' J r 4 7)1 191 IMtiny WiHiam 1 164 Eyetiy Jacob 6 -54 1 61 75 6 29 - 57 0 27 t 48 6 29 4 GO frame Thomas l-z vZ Preen. an Rjchard 80 Footman Peter 175 Guindy John 180 Gnnsaules"?auiuel 108 Galbraith Josibh 152 Haz'ehurst Isuac 135 Irwin Matthew 150 Jones John - 35 177 Morris U illiam' 1 07 Mense Robert ' 90 Neligh Nicholas. . 00 10 34 30 51 170 Palmer Hannah 157 Rees fames 170 Ryerson Matthew 99 Rustiu Thomas, Jr. (it) bidmau Isaac 183 Smith William 192 Smith Francis J. Stidman Charles, 1-2 , Shimer Abraham Stidman Alexander 1-2 Thrall S. S. 399 150 104 90 415 15 6 82 6 21 4 01 G 17 5 12 6.83 2 90 57 0 21 62 04 403 98 415 15 489 89 54 142 469 42 415 155 Vanaukon James 15 0 57 102 West Thomas . 132 Will Michael 57 100 G 24 0 24 Milforcl Township. G (57 20 Beck Henry 389 27 15 55 0 5 99 92 Brink Samuel 107 Brink Henry - Biddis George g-3 25 CastMiife Thomas 33 Ho-jf-h Thomas Joice Domanio 1-3 87 Myers JVfnry s 77 Nyco;W'iiliam 117 415 434 441 G li3 6 24 3 53 87 400 130 400 100 415 15 204 76 6 70 3-2S 3 07 No.' Warrantees, 175 Ogden Gabriel' 240 Ogden Ann ' " 241 Offden David - TaxW'-Wanas. Quavtity'.'l rux Acres Per; S Cis 3 Uts l 93 G 30 83 Neligh Martin 184 Neligh Nicholas 29 Ruston Mary t .99 Huston Thomas; Jr. 112 Ritter John 78 Russel Andrew 12 Smith Francis J. Smith George 2-3 8 Westfall Abraham 94 Willing 103 Washburn Nathaniel 440 440 415 415 343 203 383 1HG -IB 80 80 4 22 i G 58 5 21 6 0 6 77 6 20 6 38 2 21 4 00 6 29 4 58 G 52 G 39 G 21 4 73 6 32 6 20 0 01 372 13 Westfall, formerly MillMd: 14 Cooper Charles 1-3 4GO IS Clark Jonathan 19 Ucpui Samuel 125 Davis John 200 20 ;,22 71 Epple Hemy 169 Ewing Themas 35 Hilleghs Michael 6 Laid Daniel 72 Mason Benjamin 7 Mease James 8 Mease John 9 Miller John 12 Philips William 42 Reed Susanna 34 iShimer Jacob 43 Smith "Elizabeth 41 Smock Robert 124 Vandemark Ludwig Vanauken Cornelius 47 Weltnor Harmon 456 404 51 30 406 1C0 410 150 '439' '43 r "25 400 425 110 439 154 100' 4?4' 84 399 30 250 104 36' 6 1 4 67 70 37 41 5 34 5 42 5 15 v 2 4 4 5 5 1 5 3 4 5 4 5 5 5 5 4 3 1 n 5 4 5 3 30 84 22 07 420 40 Laclcaivaxon 71 4 George Morton 5 Thomas Wisions 6 George Till 7 William Nyce 16 William Little 17 Thomas Willing 18 John Philips 1 9 Samuel C. Seely, pt. 24 Thomas Shields 26 James Galligher, pt. 32 Robert Hewes 33 Robert Patterson 34 John Patterson 43 Isaac More 4th 402 402 402 205' 80 296 119 446 50 40 57 02 42 25 42 34 59 43" 32 74 00 40 1G 33 64 16 481 402 51 Ephraim Vanorman 1-2. 399 140 G5 Isaac Sid man 23 45 31 54 121 120 66 John Lord G7 Sharp Delany 71 Mordicai Roberts 72 John Chambers 74 Marv Ccnnard 70 233 431 3 60 '5 90 5 90 430 120 3 78 Jesse Greenfield 86 Patrick Patten 91 Elizabeth Chapman 92 Elizabeth Roberts 95 Peter v alter 96 Abraham Singer 97 David Ridgway 99 Thomas Bullman 100 Martin JXeligh 102 Abigail Chapman 103 Rebecca Chapman 105 Nathaniel Jones 108 Betsy Wills 109 Abraham Backman 1 10 Daniel Heister 114 Henry Barnett 116 Jacob Gutshalk 117 William Gutshalk 118 Eleanor !cpui 124 Adrian Firman 131 Ann Depui 1-2 134 John Craig 1-2 143 George Tudor 1-2 145 James Boyd 1-3 147 Francis Bailey 152 Muthew Caiey 2-3 157 iicre Furman 170 Thomas Rich 5 32 5 42 5 42 5 94 427 4-5 401 401 401 401 5 58 5 2G 5 74 5 92 1 66 3 90 5 50 5 Go 402 101 422 10 401 401 401 401 400 405 400 300 401 412 433 412 4 2 5 5 5 91 66 59 47 90 12 79 11 89 10 09 11 GO 11 93 12 04 li 6S 12 55 12 55 10 30 10 04 3 S2 11 44 8 SG 12 54 9 32 12 25 12 02 2 90 12 54 11 93 12 22 14 32 11 91 7 19 13 12 11 06 12 51 9 21 1 33 10 32 11 19 11 61 12 69 12 69 78 James Chapman 79 )avid Saylor 75 John Chambers 50 John Knouse 51 Patrick Morgan 52 Peter ililler 183 no name 84 Henry Hain 88 Daniel Hicks 89 John Welch 94 Drederick Meyer 97 Blackall W Ball 98 Joseph Leghman 429 t20 415 .15 415 jl'5 415 15 443 153 199 Christian Stoner 200 Chrtstopher Stoner 202 Francis Little & Simeon AVestfall 203 James Seley 204 David Ritchcll 54 no name 158 Jacob Binder Greene, formerh 260 Arndt Jacob 108 Brotzrnan John pt 201 Barnet John pt 271 Beveridge David 277 Brodhead Daniel 8 70 2 97 12 02 290 Brodhead Thomaas pt 254 Craig William 261 Chapman James 279 Crasby John 1 78 11 07 12 02 2bd Davis Benjamin 255 Erb Lawrence 14 94 1 55 255 Foulk Adam 278 Gucrnev Francis 89 14 15 1 20 83 Hickman Adam 9 82 156 Howe & Elliot 1 63 157 Howe & Elliot 2 90 258 Ihrie Conrad 2g4 Justice John 6 90 279 Mease John 203 Martin Conrad pt 280 Praser Stephen 299 Paschal Thomas pt 287 Plumstead George 3 26 7 07 4 8 7 28 9 09 274 Plickey John 2 0 M. W, DINGMAN, Treasurer. Treasurer's Office, Milford, ) 'February 24th, 1840. j 7 07 5 70 7 28 7 27 T 08 9 f 0 79 5 07 0 85- 103 an &7 27 373 150 '6 79 53 12 ' I 47 25" 3 S7 2 47 6 5 6 5 1 6 6 71 40 77 41 18 50 79 91 6 90 6 75 6 91 6 96 2 70 6 90 4 6 75 97 07 80 4 12 46 12 4G 12 46 6 34 9 17 13 153 423 120 13 10 296 9 18 393 31 12 29 205 6 41 497 70 15 39 440 150 13 64 14 00 75 32 3 1 4 1 22 4 10 43 34 42 41 9C 30 454 140 14 07 13 42 16 4 02 00 12 42 60 12 42 GO 12 42 GO 2 00 3 10 3 21 60 12 42 02 12 42 60 24 86 GO 24 8G S3 12 58 22 12 54 12 40 18-60 00 50 142 12 43 12,71 13 58 0 40 97 205 120 3 17 392 21 1 52 391 54 3 93 414 28 4 19 3SS 27 15 62 4t0 112 80 50 T 05 403 47 12 84 399 12:35 436 100 2 28 445 70 13 84 300 9 30 141 114 8 79 499 99 28 44 438 144 27 01 389 2 S9 30 40 40 40 St 6 6 6 6 439 108 14 58 ) 99 4iT 323 67 1C 00 335 152 10 37 200 2 20 399 60 1 99 almyra. 419 55 11 31 50 1 30 325 8 75 439 100 2 98 379 80 2 55 100 ' 65 407 122 11 01 436 11 78 439 100 2 98 439 100 2 98 405 113 11 15 425 1 1 75 539 100 2 93 414 11 31 3162 124 85 37 1580 72 42 18 403. 48 10 88 439 100 2 98 439 100 2 98 250 1 30 439 100 2 98 30 42 439 100 2 98 438 100 2 98