THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. Ilmilingdon i llarclk 29. 1843. •.Gae country, one conatitutton, cne destiny.' V. B. PALMER, Esq. (No. 104 S. 3rd St.' Ph;ladelphia,)is authorized to act asAgent for this paper, to procure subscriptions and a.lvertiarnents. The Apportionment Dili. i 4th District—lilleghetty. Judge, Matthew By the Apportionment Bill which has Inspectors, D, C. Simpson.C;iioey. P' both branches of the Legislature, sth Diarect— Lower Woodberry, and is now in the hands of the Governor, Judge, Frederick Foliar. the Slate is . 1 gerry-mandcred" into Con- Inspectors,Henry Clapper,John M'Kternan, gressional districts as follows: Cat District— Upper Woodberry. _ _ _ I. Southwai k, Moyamensing, Passyunk, Judge, Edward M'Kiernan. Kingsessing, Blockley, West Philadel- Inspectors, J. E. Defebaugh, J. Feay. phia, in the county of Philadelphia, and 7th District— Hopewell. Cedar Ward of the city of Phila a. Judge, Daniel Shultz. 11. The city of Philadelphia, except Inspectors, Leonard Weaver, D. Mountain. Cedar Ward and Upper Delaware Wards.* Bth District—Barree. 111. The Northern Liberties and Spring J de Samuel Coen. Garden in the county of Philadelphia, and -e' 1 . nspectors, hos. Stewart, John Johnston. Upper Delaware Ward of the city of Philadelphia. 9th District—Shirley. IV. Kensington, North and South Judge, John -Brewster. Penn, Roxborough Germantown, Bristol, Inspectors, Jesse Tiollingsworth, Joseph Unincorporate Liberties, Oxford, Low. Gifford, Jr. er Dublin. Byberry and Moreland, in the : 10th District— Antes. county of Philadelphia. Judge, William Wilson. V. Bucks and Lehigh. 'lnspectors, John Campbell, Jas. Glasgow. VI. Montgomery and Delaware. 11th District—Porter. VII. Chester.* !Judge, Michael Sister. VIII. Lancaster.* IX. Berks. !Inspectors, Thomas Hamer, Daniel Neff. X. Dauphin, Lebanon and SchuylkilLti 12th District—Franklin. I. Northampton, Monroe, Pike and Judge, George W. Matters. Wayne. Inspectors, Win. Thompson, John Rye. XII. Columbia, Luzcrne and Wyoming.l3th District—Tell. XIII. Brad ford, Sustpiehalia and Tioga. I ,ludge, Matthias F. Shoop. XIV. Lveoming, Northumberland, Un- 'lsspectars, Peter Kern, Mooreland IVatters ion and Clinton. 14th District—Springfield. XV. Cumberland. Perry and Franklin.! Judge, Joshua Shore. XVI Adams and York. 'lnspectors, James M. Nales. XVII. Huntingdon, Centre, Juniata and Mifflin. 15th District—Union XVIII. Greene, Fayette and Somerset. Judge, John Vandevander. XIX. Westmoreland, Bedford and Inspectors, Geo. W. Hazard, Thos. Irvin Cambria. 16th District—Boxberry. XX. Washington and Beaver.* Judge, William Mateer. XXI. Allegheny.* Inspectors, Hiram :Shadle, John Ross. XXII. Venango, Mercer and Crawford. 17th District—Tyrone. XXIII. Erie, Warren, M'Kean, Potter, Judge, Arthur Moore. Jefferson and Clarion. Inspectors, Thomas M'Clain, Wm. Wilson XXIV. Butler, Armstrong, Indiana and 18th District--Morris. CI earficlill Judge, David P. Tussey. 'Those Districts marked with an Rate- Inspectors, Jesse Wolf, Geo. H. &incr. risk may be considered as certainly Whig,. Doubtful. 1914 District—West. Judge, Henry Davis. Ail' Gad save the Commonwealth!— Inspectors, John Thompson, John Rung. Justice and honesty are indeed sunk to a 20th District—Walker. low ebb in Pennsylvania. Alas, poor, Judge, Jones Buckwalter. wounded, bleeding Pennsylvania! Thy Inspectors, Samuel Peightal, James Dean glory is departed. 21st District—Tod. Here we have an Apportionment Billi Judge, Adam Keith. Inspectors, Jacob Lias, James M'Clain. that gives the 148,835 Whig voters of 1840 but 6 members,and the 143,492 Ls. 22nd District—Murray's Run. cofocoes 17, with an equal chance fur the No retur 23rd Distsict—Crctnwell. remaining 2. And this too, is the work of a Judge, Benjamin Beets. party whose leader preaches up that " nii- Inspectors, James Dever, Joshua johni. norities have rights as well as majorities." 24th District—Frankstown. Locofoco Senators had declared in debate, Judge, William Condron. in the Senate chamber, that the Whigs Inspectors, Philip Hilernan, John Smith were justly entitled to nine or ten mew. 25th District —Blair, bers, and that they would not vote for any bill which would not secure them that number. Yet, strange to say, when af terwards the Executive lash was applied to them, they jumped into the work of rubbing freemen of their dearest and inci,t sacred rights, allowing them but flve mem• bers—the lowest number that it was pos sible to put them off with. To see Sena tors and Representative--who, for the sake of 'courtesy, are called honorable—thus' forget their duty to their constituents,-- to themselves —to their country, and to her free institutions, and yield to Execu tive dictation—dictation too from such a mass of corruption, arrogance, and tyran nic scoundrelism as David R. Porter, is going down to a depth of degradation too humiliating to be long endured. Such unmitigated acts of outrage, committed "before high heaven" and in the light of day, by men " drest in a little brief au thority" might well is make tire angels weep," and call down curses upon this wicked generation! A day of retribution must surely come—a political revolution will sweep over the Commonwealth before . ten years roll round, that will hurl the actors in these scenes of outrage from the stations they now pollute and disgrace. and brand them with that infamy which their deeds of iniquity so richly merit, thus teaching them that " HONESTY as THE BEST power," even in politics. P. S.--The Governor has signed the above infamous Congressional Appor. tionment Bill -The Bucks County Intelligencer ties passed into the hands of Mr. JOHN S. BsowN. The banner of Henry Clay now Kies at its mart head. Judges and Inspectors. Below we give a list of the persons elected Judges and Inspectors of Mee tions fur the ensuing year, in the respec tive districts in this county. The politi• cal complexion of the persons elected is highly encouraging to the Whig cause. Ist District—Huntingdon. Judge, James Wilson. , Inspectors, Thomas Fisher, John M. Cun . iningham. 2nd District —Dublin. !Judge, John H. Blair. !Inspectors, Robert Robison, Win. Stewart. 3,11 District— Wurriorsmark. Judge, Abednego Stephens. Inspectors, Benj. Johnston, Samuel Eyster. No return. 261 h District—Hollidaysburg. Judge, Joseph Reed. Inspectors, G. it. M'Farlane, Wm. Shomo. 2714 District:--Gaysport. Judge, Samuel Smith. Inspectors, Alex. Ennis, Daniel Young. 28th District—Birmingham. Judge, John Calderwood. Inspectors, John Nevliag, John Graffius. 2914 District—Snyder. Judge, Thomas W. Estep. Inspectors, Joshua Burley, Wm. M'Cauley, 30th District—Cass. ,Judge, Abraham Shore. jlnspectm, John Montgomery, James Park. More of the Anti-Bank Humbug. The House of Representatives of this! State has, during the present Session, pas sed bills rechartering four Bunks—name ly, Southwark Bauk, Farmers' Bank of Reading, Bank of the Northern Liberties, and the Farmers' Bank of Bucks county. Yet the Locofocos are largely in the ma. jority in the House, and continue to stig. matize the Whigs as the Bank party ! Out upon such hypocrisy: G The Report of Col. E. V. EVER• HART, Corresponding Secretary of the Huntingdon County Washington Temper once Society, will be found on the first page of to•day's paper. There may be " mistakes of the printer" in it—the au thor being absent from town, and those having the supervision of the publication not condescending to attend to their busi ness. As for ourself, we are not very good at hieroglyphics. The Russian Minister to this country is about to return how... Examination and Exhibitson. A public examination or the pupi Is ol the Huntingdon Academy will take place to-day, conunencin at 9 o'clock, A. M. The Philomaihenti Society, connected with the Academy, will hold an exhibi tion this evening, commencing o'clock. Speeches, Dialogues, and sic—without charge—will be the order of the evening. FIRE.-011 Tuesday morning of last week the stable of Mr. Gideon Fossletnan, in Lewistown, was entirely consumed by tire. The tire is supposed to have origi nated from an ash box. The Comet—Again. This lung-tailed ethereal visiter still remains visible every clear evening, set ting later every night. It is said to be re ceding from the sun "tail foretnost." The venerable Noah Webster writes on this subject to the editors of the New Ha yen Herald as follows : Messrs. Editors—The present comet is considered as a very brilliant phentime - non, but it is far inferior to that which 1 saw when young, either in 1769 or 1770. That lose in the morning before the sun, and its stream of light extended Iron• the horizon totheinertdian, 80 or 90 degrees. It proceeded from a point and became wider at the extremity, like a dove's tail. It covered five times the space in the heavens which the stream of light from the present comet covers. This light always appears opposite to the sun, and is probs.. bly the light of the sun modified by the nucleus or atmosphere of the comet, in some measure like the streaks of light which we often see in summer, occasion ed by the rays of the sun passing through vapor in different degrees of density.— The vulgar notion is that when these streaks appear, the sun draws water, when .. • the appearance is made solely by the ligh passing through vapor, or between portion: of it. The tail of the cornet is not fire, and it might sweep over us without our perceiv ing it. indeed this is probably the case sometimes, when a comet comes directly between the sun and the earth. W. Legislative Summary. CANAL COMMISSIONERS BILL.-11 the Senate, on Saturday, the 18th, nearly the whole session was spent in discussing the biR providing for the election of„ranal Commissioners. On the following Mon day it was again taken up, and passed third reading, with amenuments, by a vote of 20 to 10, being just two thirds.— The same bill passed the House more than a month ago, by a majority of two thirds, if we recollect rightly. It went back from the Senate to the House, where the Senate's amendments were concur red in ; so the bill is now in the hands of the Governor, who, it is expected, will .veto it. According to the provisions of !this bill, the Legislature is to elect a 'Board of Canal Coutnissioners with n tett days after the passige of the law, and next fall the election goes to the people. If permitted to become a law, it would, 'no doubt, etfect more reform and :etrenclr ment in the management and expenses of, th?. Public 14 , orks, than could be attained by any other measure that could be adop- ted. The Canal Commissioners and all their subordinates and tools—"toads" and "frogs"—along the "Big Ditch," consider this a most unwarrantable need dliAg with .their rights, and it is even doubted by some whether it is " demo cratic." For our own part, we do not believe that this bill can ever become the law of the land. Our worthy democratic Gover- nor wilt estimate the whipability" of the majority in the Legislature, and then send in his veto, even should he have to quote the Old Constitution again instead of the new, to find objections. Then the party lash will be laid on, and a sufficient number to sustain the veto will be ',whip ped in" like dogs; and there the matter wilt end for another year. STATE APPORTIONMENT BILL .--T he House has for some time past been enga ged in the consideration of the bill " Ger rymandering" the State into Senatorial and Representative districts. It passed the House on third reading last week, and was sent to the Senate. The counties of Huntingdon, Centre and Mifflin consti tute one Sanatoria' district, to elect one Senator; and Huntingdon county consti tutes one Representative district, to elect two Representatives. There is one "green spot," at least. On Friday last this bill passed the Sen ate, with amendments. liumAarimENT ItErour.—On Monday, the 20th, the vote was taken on the reso lution attached to the report of the minori ty of the committee to whom had been re ferred the memorials praying that articles of impeachment might be preferred against the Governor. The resolution recom- mends that a committee he appointed to report articles of Impeachment agait.st David R. Porter, (inventor of this Coin. inonwealth, for Bribery and other high Crimes and Misdemeanors. The vote re sulted as follows: yeas 24, nays 42—. a party Ivote. A motion was then made that the mouthy report be not printed ; or in' ,ther words, that it be t' expunged."— We are glad to state that, on Wednesday ast, the exptinging resolution was voted town, in the [louse, by the decisive vote if 45 to 58. NOMINATIONS &c.—On Saturday of last week the Governor sent a message to the Renate, nominating NATHANIEL B. Ex, 'DRED, to be President Judge of the le,th Judicial district, composed of the counties of Dauphin, Lebanon, Schuylkill and Car bon, in the room of Judge Blythe, resign ed. Mr. Eldred is at present a Judge in one of the Northern districts. This is stepping over the new .Constitution as though it:was not made to be observed.-- By filling one office the Governor gener ally manages to vacate another, and we expect that before his term is up he will have appointed every President Judge in the Slate. Transferring a Judge from one district to another always gives him a new lease or commission. On the same day the following nomina tions for Associate Judges were confirmed: William Dock, of Dauphin; Gorge Rawn, of Schuylkill ; John Grayson, of Washington; and Daniel Jacoby, of Montguinery. BL:Ln COUNTY. --On Friday last, Mr. d'Williams moved to proceed to the con= ideration of the bill for the erection of he new county of Blair; but the House refused by a vote of 31 yeas to 51 nays. , ADJOURNMENT, -.A resolution has pas sed both branches of the Legislature, to adjourn on the 18th of April, sine die. LETTER From Gen. JAMES IRVIN to the Appren tices Literary Society of Lewistown, in reply to a vote of thanks for public doc uments transmitted to said Society. WASHINGTON CITY, Feb. 21st 1843, To the Apprentices Literary Society of Lewistown. 1 GENTLEM EN : --• 1 have received a copy of the Lewistown Republican of the 11th inst. which contains your vote of thanks for the public documents transmitted to your society, and which I have received with lively satisfaction. Those docu ments were placed at my disposal by Con gress and it was my duty to dispose of them in such a way as I judged most con ducive to the general diffusion of inform ation, amongst the people of my district. Being of the opinion that there was no class of my fellow citizens, who would better appreciate their value or turn them to a more profitable account than the' young mechanics of the present age, I felt a pleasure in selecting among the class of my constituents those while thirst for useful knowedge, had already led them . this early in their career, to associate as the Apprentices Literary Society of Lew istown. If the documents I have forwarded shall have the effect to stimulate, and aid you ; in your laudable enterprise, and thereby tit you the better to discharge the duties 'which are so soon to devolve upon you as citizens of your old Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; I shall rejoice in the privi tree I have had of rendering a service to those who will have to occupy the busy stage of life, when those of my age shall have retired. 1 have also to offer you my thanks for the compliment you have paid in electing me an honorary member of your society ; and 1 regard it the more as being entirely unexpected---to have my name enrolled with the Apprentices of Lewistown, as a testimonial of their gratitude for having in so slight a degree, contributed to their nn. prcvement in useful knowledge, will ever afford me the purest satisfaction. And as, my mind looks forward into future years, and considers what is likely to be the course of young men commencing as you are doing, 1 have little doubt that in the lapse of a few years, the position and character of many of you will make it a matter of pride, to have been considered your early friend. If any thing I could say would have ef fect to influence you to greater exertion in your noble undertaking, I would call your attention to the fact that Franklin was an Apprentice Printer; Sherman an Apprentice Shoemaker ; Green an Ap prentice Blacksmith; and one of our most worthy Governor's was an Apprentice Tanner; and thousands of our most use ful' and respectable men of the present day, have been Apprentices but a few years since. The situation in which you are placed is much more favorable, titan many of those I have alluded to, when first betting out upon their career of life, and through the influence of our public schools, our libraries of useful knowledge, our lyceums and lectures, and above all the glorious Temperance reformation,— the Apprentices of the present day enjoy advantages which were unknown in our country some years since. That you will make good use of thm e advantages, and persevere in the course of improvement you have begun, and be prepared to act lyour part, with honor in every sphere, public or private, in which your country may hereafter need your aervices, is the 'sincere wish of your friend, And humble servant. JAM ES IRV IN. From the Lancaster Union. James Madison Porter. appointment by the President. JANIL:S MADISON PORTER,, to be Secretary of War, in the place of J. C. Spencer, resigned This annunciation has removed the last lingo ing hope entertained by any portico of the honest people of Pennsylvania ul being able to support the administration or re-election of John TOer. it has ex• tinguished the last spell; of charity which still dimly glimit ere& amen , " a long-suf• fering people in favor of the lionebty ut the President. Even those who have long since ceased to give him credit for person. al or political honesty ; who believed him I a heartless Ingrate to his party and his friends, never suspected him of being so , miserably weak--so ignorant of the Men , of the Nation ; so totally void of the low est political instinct, as still farther to weaken his nerveless administration, by loading it with a man so utterly void of influence, and so thoroughly despised by all who know him, as James Madison, Porter! What recommended him to Executive' favor? He is a man of imperfect educa tion ; but having acquired some little rel- Clive standtag as a country laWyer, he be• came proud and dogmatical ; insolent to those he judged his inferiors, and tyran• nical to all in his power. He has loudest his memory with low and rude anecdotes,, which constitute the burthen of his die course, and which he obtrudes upon every company, until his society becomes dis• : gusting. Every party in turn, but none long, has been doomed to bear the dis grace of his companienship. He has now' one thing to console him : He has enter ' ed a faction which even hf, cannot dis grace: But he owns his present importance to no power of his own, but to the accidental position into which eurruptiol and In trigue have thrust his unscrupulous and rtekless brother. David Rittenhouse Por ter, a fraudulent insolvent, was bargained into the nomination by as unprincipled a gang of politicians as ever deceived and robbed a Nation. Fearing thatthe monstrous frauds which gave hilt a majority, would be investigated by the Legislature, if allowed to discharge their legitimate duties in peace, he and this same James Madison Porter, and uthur equally lawless spirits, organized a Rebellion against the Laws, and over- aw- ed a weak and vascillating Senate until the legal day of scrutiny was past. Sev eral of the armed cutthroats, who were engaged in that transaction, were indicts ed before Judge BLynte., and bound Over to answer fur their crimes. ‘Ve speak from absolute knowledge when we say, that it was the among the Leaders, whether the Uovernor should grant them a previous pardon; and it was, at one time, determined to do su. But it was finally resolved to force Judge Blythe to resign, and appoint James Madison Porter in his place, fur the special purpose of this. charging the culprits. He was appointed, quashed several bills of indictment and array ofJt.rors on the motion of the de fondants, and ;hen discharged them, with. out trial, because the Commonwealth had not sooner tried them, although the prose. cution proceeded immediately to send up new bills ! Having done the foul work' for which he was appointed, he resigned, and resumed his practice in the county from which lie had never removed his family. None of the old countries of Europe, in the days of their greatest rottenness, ever witnessed more unblushing Corruption than Pennsylvania has exhibited since the election of 1). It. Porter. James Madison Poi ter's Judicial career was infamous.— He assumed the Ermine, that he might' pollute it. He defiled it, and cast it from' him. The bench has never seen a more Arbitrary, Corrupt end Unjust Judge, since India groaned beneath the murders of an Impey, or Jeffries drank himself full of the blood of Englishmen! He became a Contractor, or partner in numerous large contracts, given out by his Brother's Canal Commissioners, at twice the prices bid by others, and then 'received three times as touch as he con tracted for He undertook to build the Delaware Dana for $lB,OOO, end was al lowed for extras, el ettra, $5'2,000 for it! He has received a Lion's share of the enormous bribes which the Banks have paid to this administration to purchase their favor. He advised the employment of Bribery, and of D. M. Brodhead, to procure the t. Resumption Resolutions." Whether he received as mochas his broth er--(s3s,ooo)—we cannot say. But he doubtless found a roll of notes under Lis pillow, as did David Rittenhouse! But why need we enlarge upon his mer its? He has not twenty friends, of any party, in the State. He will repel thou sands from the Athninistration ; he can not attract ten! Has John Tyler a conscience, of which he was once so ostentatious I If he has how does he south it, after having used the office, given hiu► by the toil and sweat and money of the Democracy of Pennsyl vania, to elevate their most detested foe ' to power'! Is this your doctrine—of obey ing the will of yout constituents'! Who that ever voted fur you, advised this ap. I pointment ? Was it the Ritners, the Ell makers, the DennyS, the Banks, the Bur irowes, the Pearsuns, or the Williamson?. whiten he sought to decapitate, that re cummentled this mat to you 1 What de•- cent portion, even of those who sunlit td Ikeep you out of power, sanctioned itl— the friends of JAMII.3 liucuui4AN, or of MARTIN VAN Bunmft 1 No, lie and lii4 hi oilier are the insidious foes of both theie gentlemen. No man advised it, but the actual or expectant plunderers of the Treasury; the robbers ul the 'Winnebago li•dians ; the "Dealers in Lumber," and • the Linguists of the Indian dialect 1 Let him put Soints at the head of the ludiail Bureau; and then John Tyler fur Presi- , , dent, and David Rittenhouse Porter fur , Vice President, will make a lionlogetico a* 1 . . ladmintStration ! The Earthquala. A correspondent of the Philadelphia Ledger writirg from St. Thomas, Feb. 18th, says :-1 send you a slight account of one of the most awful visitations wl►icl► has yet been enrolled in the pages of his tory.. Earthquakes, however alight, aria dreadful, ft out the uncertainty that ac companies them; but the one of which I new attempt to give you a alight descrip tion was so horrific, that I doubt it I shall be able to convey to you an adequate idea of the dreadful calamity. In the Island of GaudalLupe, it is well known, there has from time immemorial existed a volcano, which has been quies. 'cent fur a lung period. However, un the Bth instant, about half past 10 o'clock, open all nature appeared hushed in re pose, it commenced—gently at first—wand continued for about 1.3 seconds, whets about one quarter of the city fell. But the final shock, which buried the whole ,city in ruins no mortal can describe. As the buildings crumbled, subterra nevus fires burst forth, and the devoted city was consumed. By a miracle, of which I can give no account, I escaped with my son; and I believe that the whole of the ;inflates of the hotel where I was then breakfasting met with a mis erable death. The earth opened and shut, discharging volumes of water. Tu estimate the tutal loss of life and property is impossible; but supposing the populate • tion to be 20,000, at least one half have I perished. Thousands of dead bodies have • been thrown into the sea, from the impos sibility of interring them in a tropical cli- I mate. Fif,een hundred are said to Nava I been rescued from the ruins but many, of course, so injured, that they cannot stir- . i vire. From the U. S. Gazette. Disastrous Shipwreck. TiIeILEUTON, March 18, 1843, J. R. Chandler, Esq.--Dear Sic—=W ill you please give the following imperfect account of a recent shipwreck an lama tion in your paper. On Thursday night, March 16, during the severe snow storm, the schooner UM• sa, of, and belonging to Tuckerton, front Virginia to New York laden with lumber, parted her cables whilst lying at anchor in Little Egg Harbor, and drifted on the new inlet shoals, where she immediately bilged and filled. 'the crew took to the rigging, and thus remained throughout the night. The following morning they were discovered by those on the beach, and ar rangements immediately made fur their rescue. But before this could be accom- . plished, one of the men was seen to fall from the rigging, and shunt the same time, a youth of twelve years of age, a son of the captain, perished in the rigging from cold. It was now about 9 o'clock, A. M., and the vessel began to go to pieces,' and recede from shore, the sea still being very high and the wind blow ing a perfect gale from the west. It was found to be impossible to board her with surf boat. Tile anxiety of those on shore at this time became intense. They con tinued to watch her as she receded from the shore, three men yet remaining lash ed in the rigging. After having as sup posed, recedd some Four or five miles she turned over , yet their friends did not despair of accomplishing their deliver.. ance, provided they could confine them selves on the wreck, a few hours longer. It was now that Capt. Stephen Willits, Jr., Commissioner of Wreeksifor this Dis trict, made application to Capt. Amass Gardner, of the schooner Erin, of Fair haven, who promptly tendered his vessel and services, notwithstanding the contin ued severity of the gale. They cleared the inlet at 4 o'clock, P. M., and Boon discuvered a small piece of the wreck with the survivors clinging. thereto. They 'now stood down towards it, and hove too within about two hundred yards, when 'the hazardous undertaking of boarding, and taking MI the survivors, was safely accomplished by Capt. Wilfitts and crew. Much praise is due to Capts. Gardner and Willitts. Tim latter and the eleven men who accompanied Limonanifestel through out the whole of this trying scene, the ut most coolness and perseverance, and to this, it is, the survivors, their fellow townsmen, owe their preservation. Per ished, Capt. John Rutter, and sun. Res cued, Samuel Anderson,Thomas Shourda, and Josiah Falkingburg. Capt. Rutter has left an amiable wife and three small children to mourn his loss. Very Respectfully, THOMAS PAGE. JOINED THE CHURCH.—Over one hun. 'dyed persons were received for the first time into the communion of the Presbyte rian Church, under the pastorial charge of Rev. Dr. De Witt, at flarriaburg Pa.
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