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Carey, the Rev., 7. 235.

9. 21.

Carney, Addison, 4. 213.

Mrs. Addison, 4. 213. Carolina, 6. 233.

Carolinas, the, Scotch-Irish settle in, 6.9; condition of in 1664, 7. 154. Caroline Case, the, 8. 91.

Carpenter, Philip, lived at Spurwink, 1. 320.

Seth, 4- 360.

Thomas, 2. 179.

Carr, George, 4. 321, 352, 353.

Sir Robert, commissioner to settle the difficulty between Maine and Mass. 1. 173; at Pascataqua, I. 173; people of Maine desire his protection, 1. 181; went to England, 1. 1812-182n; death of, 1. 182n; mentioned, 1. 185, 376. Thomas, 9. 382.

Carrabasset river, visited by Montressor, 1. 459n.

Carrartoank, see Carritunk.

Carratuncas Carrying Place, 1. 511. Carrel, Armand N., history of the Counter Revolution in England, cited, 7. 137n. Carritunk, 4. 313, 337, 368, 369, 378, 379, 398.

Falls, visited by Montressor, 1. 459; a boundary of the Kennebec purchase, 2. 276; Indian name of the Kennebec falls, 4. 105; mentioned, 1. 505; 4. 313, 345, 346, 348. Carrying places, 1. 471, 472, 473, 475, 476, 478; 3. 321, 322; 8. 256. Carswell family, settle in Sterling, 6. 23.

Cart path of Walter Phillips, 9. 134, 151.

Carter, Nathaniel H., preceptor of
Portland Academy, 8. 165; men-
tioned, 8. 413.
Richard, 3. 173.
Carter's mill, 3. 151.
Cartwright, Col. George, commissioner

to settle dispute between Maine and Mass., 1. 173, 185; at Boston, 1. 173; captured by the Dutch, 1. 182n; counselor, 1. 376; gave an account of New England to the Council for Foreign Relations, 5. 246. Carver, Jonathan, his travels cited, 1. 412; 6. 270.

Robert, signed the treaty of 1713, 6. 255; autograph, 6. 255. Casco, beaver trade at, 1.55; Cleeves

the first settler at, 1. 61; long used as a name for Falmouth, 1. 65; Mrs. Macworth's property at, 1. 70n; home of Thomas Wise, 1. 71; Mitton constable of, 1. 88; courts held at, 1. 91, 98, 138, 185, 188, 376, 540, 547; 3. 45; the people of

join Cleeves, 1. 91; taxed, 1. 94, 368; home of Arthur Macworth, 1 94n; included in Ligonia, 1. 97; 3° 23n; Thomas Morris lived at, 100n; Hugh Mosier lived at, 100n; submitted to the jurisdiction of Mass., 1. 105, 385, 386; 3. 45, 46; to be called Falmouth, 1. 106, 387; a general name for a large territory, 1. 112; inhabitants in 1658, 1. 114; home of George Lewis, 1. 117, 383; Scitterygusset lived at, 1. 118; home of Francis Small, 1. 118; home of John Phillips, I. 119; mills at, 1. 120, 130, 269, 280; 2. 171; home of Francis Neale, 1. 129; Robert Jordan authorized to use land at, 1. 130-131; a map of, 1. 148; desired a minister, 1. 161n; 3. 10-11, 153; home of Geo. Munjoy, 1. 177; sent a petition to the king, 1. 178; described by Jocelyn, 1. 203, 551; attacked by Indians, 1. 211; 3. 107, 140; 5. 253; militia in, 1. 228; the tragedy at, commenced by Mugg, 1. 229; treaty made with the Indians at, 1. 230; Fort Loyal in the care of Gendall; 1. 231; land at conveyed to Susannah Brackett, 1. 236; inhabitants in 1675, 1. 236n; peace concluded at, 1. 241; home of Joseph Holmes, 1. 250n; Anthony Brack-. ett in command at, 1. 270; surveyed, 1. 279; feared to be the center of Indian troubles, 1. 288; deserted, 1. 291; 4.73; 6. 191; fort in care of private citizens, 1. 291292; soldiers need supplies, 1. 297n; soldiers killed at, I. 302; 3. 107; held by the enemy, 3. 303n; relatives of soldiers killed at to be paid, 3. 303n; treaty of, 3. 303; 2. 171; 3. 115; anecdote, 1.304; land at left to the children of James English, 1. 309; Thomas Reading moved to, 309; home of John York, 1. 318; home of Elisha Andrews, 1. 319; home of James Andrews, 1. 319; home of Ebenezer Davenport, I. 320; home Thomas Felt, 1. 320; Joseph Holmes, 1. 321; Samuel Pike, 1. 322; William Royal, 1. 322; John Tucker, 1. 322; Lewis Tucker, 1. 322; home of Nathaniel Wharff, 1. 323; home of Michael Milton 1. 384; Stephen Batchelor called to preach in, 1. 549n; letter to from the government of Mass., 1. 550; visited by Indian Sagamores, 2. 49a; Mountjoy a magistra e for, 2. 64a; name given to by Levett, 2. 85n; denied the jurisdiction of Mass, 3.

of home of home of

home of

home of home of

Casco-continued.

44; ordered to establish roads, 3. 128; called Acosico, 4. 103; definition of the name, 4. 115; a frontier town in 1713, 5. 298; Robert Jordan officiated at, 6. 181, 188, 189; mentioned, 1. 30, 48; 2. 35, 88; 3. 107, 111, 120, 121, 136, 332, 374, 413; 4. 109; 9. 29, 367; see Casco Bay and Falmouth. Bay, islands in to be a part of Falmouth, 1. 21; called Ancocisco, 1. 31; deserted, 1. 31; boundary of Way's grant, 1. 40n, 80; boundary of the Trelawney patent, 1. 48, 80; Cleeves the first settler on, 1. 61; land at granted to Arthur Macworth, 1. 68; George Luxton in, I. 71; a triton in, I. 77; boundary of the Massachusetts claim, 1. 100; a good harbor, I. 181; fish plenty, 1. 181; Ann Brackett escaped across, 1. 235; land near owned by Peter Bowdoin, 1. 276; surveyed, 1. 279; Cleeves held a court at, 1. 547; frozen over, 2. 218; claimed as a boundary of the Kennebec purchase, 2. 276; boundary of the plough patent, 3. 32; visited by Raleigh Gilbert, 3. 302n; many islands in, 3. 302n; boundary of Wharton's grant, 3. 325, 326; Indians summoned to a conference at, 3.377; on Hubbard's map, 5. 261n; Du Monts at, 5. 329; Sir Edmund Andros at, 7. 54; expedition to Port Royal returned to, 7. 76: described by Champlain, 7. 259; why it is annexed to Falmouth on the records, 8. 234, 234n; mentioned, 1. 54, 60, 62, 63, 64n, 68, 69, 97n, 148n, 149, 151, 166, 226, 235n, 282n, 387, 460, 541, 546, 549, 556; 2. 49a, 172, 218, 283; 3.43n, 89, 315, 316, 329, 330, 331, 332, 344, 347, 348, 377, 379, 395, 396, 411, 419, 421 424, 427, 435, 445; 4. 105, 160, 166; 5. 42, 63, 326, 327, 395; 6, 138, 185; 7. 220, 262; 8. 110, 220, 226n, 227, 230, 237, 238; 9.27 29; see also Casco. fort see Fort Loyal. Indians, Scitherygusset chief of the, I. 118.

river, a boundary of Trelawny's

patent, 1. 46, 48, 71; uncertainty of the true one, 1.49; Cleeves and Tucker enlarged their borders on the, 1. 68, 117; people of complained of winter, 1. 72-73; boundary of Hope Allen's purchase, 1. 126; sawmills to be erected on, 1. 130; Robert Jordan one of the chief proprietors on the, 1. 130; crossed by a ferry, 1. 278; to be

called Levett's river, 2. 85n; mentioned, 2. 132, 133, 221. Case, Elder Isaac, 4. 306; preached at Thomaston, 7. 225; at Winthrop, 7. 225; representative to the general court, 7. 225; died 7. 226; peculiarities of, 7. 226; father of the Hon. Isaac, 7. 225.

the Hon Isaac, son of Elder Isaac,
7.225.

Cash, Alice, 4. 403.
John, 4. 403.
Samuel, 4. 403.
Caskoe, see Casco.

Cass, Lewis, 8. 366, 436, 443.
Cassiers, - I. 529.
Casteen see Castine.
Castile, 6. 120n.

Castine, formerly Baggaduce, 2. 215; 6. 107-108; 7. 201, 328; expedition against, 3. 204; 7. 203; Arthur Bragdon wounded at, 3. 204--205; held by England, 4. 78; called Majabawaduce Point, 4. 324, 324n; 6. 107, 108; the most enduring of French settlements, 6. 3; home of Isaac Parker, 6. 99n; early known to French fisherman, 6. 109; coins found near, 6. 114; harbor of, 6. 114; attacked by Andross, 6. 191; included in Bagaduce, 7. 4; last vestiges of the Pilgrim's fort near, 7.37; formerly Pentagouet, 7. 79; Elder Jesse Lee preached at, 7. 227; common schools in, 8. 158; Indian name of, 9. 266n: mentioned, 4. 324n, 377; 5. xx, 59, 385n, 394, 395; 6. 108, 116, 235; 725: 8.319, 330; 9. 160, 161, 163. coins, where found, 6. 114; finder of, 6. 114-115; number found, 115–116; kinds found, 6. 115; examined by Dr. Stevens, 6. 116; described, 6. 117-125; supposed to have been hidden by St. Castine, 6. 125–126; one picked up at the fort, 6. 126n. Castine's fort, 6. 114.

war, same as King William's war, 6. 112; occasioned by the English,

6. 112.

see St. Castine.

Castle island, Boston, 6. 284.

of

Cormentin, captured by the Dutch, 7. 139; captured by the English, 7. 139.

pinnace the, 8. 229, 229n.

William, 5. 385, 385n; 8. 125, 229n, 242.

Caterramoggus, 6. 257.
Cathance river, 3. 313; a boundary of
the Kennebec purchase, 2. 277.
Cathay, Columbus supposed he had

reached it, 2. 13a-14a; Cabot ex-
pected to discover it, 2. 14a, 15a;
country comprised in, 2. 76a; men-
tioned, 5. 344; 9. 304.

Catholicism among the Indians due to St. Castine's exertions, 6. 111. Catholic missions in Maine, 1. 426428.

priests, their influence over the In

dians, 1. 229; see also Jesuits the. Catholics in Ireland, 6. 6; but few came to America before the Revolution, 6. 10; mentioned, 7. 219, 283; 9. 103.

Cattle destroyed by wolves, 1. 366; imported, 2. 50n; expected at Pascataqua, 3. 21n; scarcity in Maine, 3. 72, 72n; turned loose, 3. 143; marked, 3. 143, 144; mentioned, 3. 88, 120: see goats.

Cauley,

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owned the Higgins farm, 3. 16n; married Widow Bradford, 3.79.

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Cendalle, Walter, 5. 63, 64. Center street, 1. 248, 249, 315. street school house, 8. 165. Central America, coast of discovered, 2. 14a.

Chabinocks, Thomas, sagamore of Wells, deed to John Wadleigh, 1. 357-358.

Chadbourn, Benjamin, 8. 162. Humphrey, associate, 1. 165; held the county court, 1. 170: had a sawmill at Kittery, 1. 268; military officer for Kittery, 1. 369; signed the petition to Cromwell, I. 394.

Prof. P. A., 6. 347, 361; on the oyster shell deposit at Damariscotta, 6. 345-351. Chadwick, the Rev. Benjamin, married Eunice Willard, 3. preached at Dunstan, 3. 163–164; death of, 3. 164.

Jason, 2. 289.

163;

Paul, killed, 5. lxiii; 9. 204; trial of
his murderess, 8. 387.
Chain lakes, the, Col. Montressor at,
I. 436.

Chairnsay, see D'Aulney.
Chaises in 1770, 7. 235n.
Chaleur bay, 7. 49n.
Challong, Capt. Henry, 2. 26; com-
manded the expedition of Sir F.
Gorges, 2. 23a, 18; 5. 333; cap-

tured, 2. 23a, 19; 5. 333; to be met by Hanham and Pring, 2. 23a; sick, 2. 19; liberated, 2. 19; had one of Weymouth's Indians with him, 5. 333; did not follow his sailing directions, 5. 333. George, his Annals of the United Colonies cited, 1. 83, 84, 229n, 239n; 3.59n; 9. 311n, 312n; his Opinions of Eminent Lawyers cited, 2. 267n. William, visited by the Rev. Paul Coffin, 4, 318, 320, 350 352. Chalowner, see Challong. Chamberlain, Joshua L., his Maine, her place in history, cited, 8. 184n. Chamberlin, Jeremiah, 4. 369. Chamberling, Daniel, 1.556. Chambers, Stephen, 1. 531. Chambault, Father, letter cited, 7. 5. Chamblé, captured, 1. 482.

Chambly, M. de, in command at Pen

tagoët, 7. 46, 340; wounded, 7. 46; attacked, 7. 340; surrendered, 7. 340; surprised at the attack, 7.. 340-341.

Chambly's Company, 7. 45. Chamners, Henry, swore allegiance to the Duke of York, 5. 237. Champagne, the province of, 9. 99. Champernoon, Francis, counsellor, 1. 73n, 88, 364; 3. 63a; lived at Kittery, 1. 88, 177, 230; 3.55; active in opposing Mass., 1. 170; presented for renouncing the authority of Mass., 1. 171; 3. 55; appointed Justice of the Peace, I.. 177; commissioned to make a treaty with Indians, 1. 230; a relative of Sir Walter Raleigh, 2.. 63an; nephew of Gorges, 3. 55; mentioned, 1. 545; 9. 302, 355, 365: Sir Philip, 2. 63an. Champigny, —, cited, 7. 43, 43n, 62. Champlain, 9. 183.

Samuel de, sailed along the coast of Maine, 1. 25, 26; 3. 99; accompanied the French to Nova Scotia, 3: 99; 7. 249; his description of the Indians, 3.99; laid the foundation of Quebec, 5. 178; surrendered to David Kirk, 5. 196; in Penobscot bay and river, 6. 109; 7. 3, 96, 253, 318; named Mount Desert, 7. 28;met Bashaba, 7. 96, 97, 98, 252, 254; birth of, 7. 248; son of a fisherman, 7. 248; became a sailor, 7.. 248; an officer in the Royal Marines, 7. 248; in the West Indies. and Mexico, 7. 248; a man of observation, 7. 249, 261-262, in the expedition with Du Monts, 7. 249;; Royal Geographer, 7. 249, 261; described and published an account of the coast of Maine, 7. 249; where buried, 7. 249; on his first voyage of discovery, 7.250; second voyage

Champlain, Samuel de-continued. 7. 250; at Holy Cross, 7. 251; in charge of the expedition to Norumbega, 7. 251-252, 254; described Norumbega, 7. 252-253; described Penobscot bay, 7. 253; took the altitude of Norumbega river, 7. 254; at the Quinibequy river, 7. 255, importance of this voyage, 7. 255-256; not sufficiently noticed by historians, 7. 255n; left St. Croix, 7. 257; at Sheepscot river, 7. 259, 263; heard of the Chaudiere and St. Lawrence, 7. 259; passed Casco bay, 7.260; at Isle de Bacchus, 7. 260; at Saco river, 7. 260; described the culture of maize, 7. 260; made a chart of the coast, 7. 261; at Cape Porpus, 7. 261; passed the Merrimac, 7. 262; at Cape Ann, 7. 262; at Plymouth, 7. 262; at Cape Cod and Nanset, 7. 262; 8. 311, 318; met Marchim at Chonacoet, 7. 262; at the Kennebec, 7. 262, 263; met Anasson, 7. 262; hears of Europeans, 7.262-263; named the Isle of Le Nef, 7. 263; points to be noticed in this voyage, 7. 263; decided to remain in America, 7. 263, 264; his narrative the first thoroughly intelligible contribution to the cartography of Maine, 7. 266; mentioned, 7. 27, 29. 96, 97n, 98, 98n, 256, 257, 295, 313, 314, 8. 317; 9. 102, 132, 132n; his Journal edited by Laverdierè, 7. 245; cited, 2. 9; 3. 99: 6. 109n; Coasting Voyages in the Gulf of Maine, by Gen. John M. Brown, 7.243–266. 'Champlain's rocks, 7. 6. Champlin, the Rev. J. T., Educational Institutions of Maine, While a District of Mass., 8. 155-180. Champney, the Rev. Ebenezer, preached at Bath, 2. 223.

Chandler, Anson G., 9. 176.
Daniel, 2. 182.

family, the, 5. lix.

John, proprietor at Pemaquid, 5. 302.

John, of Minot, 2. 115.

Gen. John, first representative to Congress from Maine, 9. 169, 173; father of, 9. 169; his age at the time of his father's death, 9. 169; in the war of the Revolution, 9. 170, 178-182; in the war of 1812, 9- 170, 183-200; of a military spirit, 9. 170, 171; established an arsenal at Augusta, 9. 170; established the Bangor railroad, 9. 171; moved to Maine, 9. 171; prominent in town affairs, 9. 172; justice of the Court of Sessions, 9. 172; prominent in state affairs, 9. 172,

173, 175-176; self-taught, 9. 173– 174; interested in education, 9. 174; sheriff of Kennebec county, 9. 174-175, 200-205; his political opinions, 9. 175; interested in the seperation of Maine from Mass.,9.175; moved to Augusta, 9. 176; death of, 9. 176; his character, 9. 174, 175176, 176-177; children of, 9. 176; death of his widow, 9. 176; mentioned, 4.305, 355, 378, 400, 403; 5. xxxvii, xlii; Extracts from his Journal, 9. 178-205; account of by George F. Talbot, 9. 167-177. John A., 9. 176.

Joseph, 2. 177; taken prisoner by the Indians, 2. 182.

Capt. Joseph, birth of 9. 169; in the
Revolution, 9. 169; died, 9. 169.
Peleg, 2. 113.

Peleg W., 4.7; 6.379.
Reuben, 2. 114.

Dr. Seth, 2. 120, 122.
Dr.

xviii.

of Bowdoin College, 5.

Channing, Commodore, 9. 185. the Rev. William Ellery, 5. xxxiii, xxxiv, xlvi; 6. 13; 7. 408. Chapin, the Rev. Perez, 2. 125; 4. 330. Chaplin, the Rev. Jeremiah, 8. 178, 179.

Chapman, Abner, 7. 369, 371, 372.

John, of Falmouth, married Rachel
Ingersoll, 1. 311.

Lydia, daughter of Abner, 7. 369;
married to the Hon. Robert P.
Dunlap, 7. 369.

starved, 2. 101; extravagance of, 2. 101-102.

Charles I, coins of his reign found on Richmond's island, 1. 43n; Nicholas Bartlett in his army, 1. 116n; Baker active in bringing him to the block, 1. 336; Capt. John Smith presented his description of New England, 2. 35a; Morrel's Latin poems dedicated to, 2. 46a; issued an order for a general government of New England, 2. 53a54a; Maine named in honor of his queen, 2. 58n; charter of the Plymouth Company returned to, 3. 31; confirmed the charter of Gorges, 3. 31, 37; 5. xxi; gave a patent to Trelawney, 5. 170n; conveyed Canada and Acadia to France, 5. 200, 215, 231; under French influence, 5. 242n; a traitor to his own people, 5. 243; his charters designed to perpetuate Episcopalianism, 6. 183; death of, 7. 136; Mass. rejoiced at his death, 7. 148-149; denied that he gave Nova Scotia to France, 9. 110-111; mentioned, 1. 68, 543, 54n, 258, 265, 266; 3. 317, 331, 333,

4. 7, 26, 124, 139, 140, 141, 142, 146; 5. xlv, 145, 207, 207n, 273; 7. 141n, 159; 9. 101, 225, 310n, 312; Memoirs of, see Aiken, Lucy. II of England, recognized the title of Ferdinando Gorges, 1. 138, 174; insisted that Massachusetts should be more tolerant, 1. 162; death of 1. 273; 7. 158; on his accession Baker fled to America, 7. 336; his accession caused John Wheelwright to return to New England, 7.344n; Wells memorial to, 7.357, 359, 400-401; friendly toward Sir Thomas Temple, 7. 398n; restoration of, 2. 63a; 3.50; 9.328; gave a grant to James, Duke of York, 2. 232; 8. 144n, 184; his accession changed the political affairs of Maine, 3. 33; Sir John Gorges petitioned to him for his rights, 3. 33, 50; people of Maine sent a petition to, 3. 129; immersed in sensualism, 5. 257; hated by Mass., 5. 257; a traitor to England, 5. 266; his reign dated from the death of his father, 7. 136; character of, 7. 136-137; a pensioner of Louis XIV, 6. 136, 136n; assisted by the Duke in the government, 6. 137-138; created his brother Lord High Admiral, 7. 138, 138n; incorporated the Canary Company, and the Royal African Company, 7. 139n; ordered Clarendon to write a history of the Rebellion, 7. 141n; married the Infanta of Portugal, 7. 144n, 145n; mentioned, 1. 554; 2. 73a, 261, 257; 3.63n, 231, 232; 5. 5, 48, 132, 232n, 265, 272; 6. 7, 124, 150, 151, 188; 7. 141n, 192n; 9. 11, 22, 332.

II of Spain, 6. 120, 120n. Prince, Capt. John Smith presented his description of New England to, 2. 35a; 5. 162; named places on Smith's map, 5.162; mentioned, 2. 39a, 59na; became Charles I, which see.

river, a boundary of Massachusetts Bay Colony, 2. 60a; boundary of grant to Brereton, 2. 46n; boundary of grant to Darrel and Oldham, 2. 47n; mentioned, 7.489; 9. 349, 366.

the, g. 332n. Charleston, 7. 224, 413.

Charlestown, Mass., home of Thomas

Kimball, 1. 150; home of John Phillips, 1. 248; Martha Munjoy born in, 1. 256; former home of John and Thomas Jones, 1. 259; Daniel Parker moved to, 1. 302; mortality among the early settlers of, 2. 31an; home of Col. Francis Morton, 2. 50n; asked to aid in building Bunker Hill mon

ument, 3. 247, 248; compared to Kittery, 4. 205; Walter Phillips died in, 4. 210; Cadillac's account of, 6. 287; mentiened, 2. 144, 175; 3. 207, 244, 250, 254, 269n; 4. 241, 249, 261, 267, 268, 272, 373; 5. 230, 418, 422; 6. 17; 8. 209, 450; 9. 35; History of, see Frothingham, Richard. R. I., 2. 134. artillery, 3. 268. lecture, the, 9. 23. Charlevoix, Peter Francis Xavier, valuable fund of information in his works, I. 404; his Histoire Generale cited, 1. 422, 433, 434; 4. 111; 7. 41, 45n, 60, 76n, 78n, 84n, 85n, 319n, 341; 8. 9; 9. 103n, 108n, 109n.

Charnisay, see D'Aulney.
Charnock, John, 7. 138n.
Charters, their distinction from pa-

tents, 5. 206-207; of Mass., 1. 32,
78, 273; 9. 34-35, 37; Du Monts,
1. 25; to Gorges, 1. 86; to the
Virginia Company, 1. 28; to Maine
Historical Society, 1. 11; to Wells,
1. 360-361; see Great New Eng-
land Charter.

street, 2. 231; 9. 64, 65. Chase, Amos, 2. 138.

Daniel, 4. 315.

Elbridge, 8. 183n; 9. 141, 146. Elizabeth Daniel, 4. 315.

Father, 4. 351.

Joseph, 4. 315. Mercy, 4. 315.

Salmon P. 5. xxv, xxvi, xxxiv, xxxv; 9.254.

Stephen, 4. 318, 319, 320; married Mary Osgood, 4. 278n.

Capt. Thomas, 4. 219.

Capt. William, 4. 213, 216n; g. 139, 142, 154.

married Betsy Bodfish, 4. 404. Chatham, England, 3. 216. Mass., 2. 144.

Chaudiere pond, part of Arnold's

command to meet at, 1. 468, 470, 471, 473; Arnold at, 1. 476, 495; mentioned, 1. 470, 478, 482. river, Arnold to lead his expedition through the valley of, 1. 447; the place intended for the embarkation of Montressor's expedition, 1. 448, 466; settlements on, 1. 448449; depth of, 1. 449; compared to the Penobscot, 1. 453; Montressor at, 1. 465; famous for fish, 1.. 465; Arnold hoped to reach it in ten days, 1. 471, 474; Arnold at, 1. 477; meaning of, 1. 514; mentioned, 1. 459, 476, 503, 506, 507, 508, 512, 513, 515, 520n, 522, 523; 4. 86, 346, 380, 399; 7. 168, 170, 175, 193, 256, 259, 389; 8. 21, 215, 216, 220, 230, 231, 233, 235.

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