Book Creator

The Times New Roman

by Sleuth IT

Pages 4 and 5 of 13

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ADVANCE WARNING
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TERRIBLE FIRE DESTROYS BUILDING
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Many people have been left homeless after a fire in the Vicus Drusianus destroyed a series of apartments and business premises. It is believed to have broken out in the courtyard of the building, where a strong wind blew the flames from a cooking fire into laundry which had been hung out to dry across the courtyard.

The flames spread quickly, and the wind blew sparks towards several apartments, which caught quickly alight. Fortunately there were no fatalities, although several people were injured when a wooden staircase collapsed as they fled the burning building.

The building is owned by the Julius Maximus family, although a spokesman for the family assures us that it has always been well maintained and the fire was no more than an unfortunate accident. Whether there is a legal case to answer remains to be seen.
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Owing to essential repair work on the Aqua Claudia aqueduct, there will be some road closures near the Campus Martius, and a one way system will be in operation around the Baths of Helena until further notice.
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Marcus Crassus has available, at very reasonable rates, apartments in several buildings in all neighbourhoods of Rome. He also seeks to purchase similar.

He welcomes customers at his place of business, at the North West corner of the Forum of Augustus, behind the Temple of Mars, where you can discuss the wide range of properties he has available, both in the city and in the surrounding countryside. Leases, short rents, and purchases are all available. Land by negotiation.
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PROPERTY AVAILABLE
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THE MONTH OF CAESAR
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Perhaps it is appropriate that Q. Julius Maximus should be holding his Games on the first day of Julius, since the month was named for another politician of the same family name - G. Julius Caesar, the great military leader and ruler of Rome for many years. In honour of the great man, and his ancestral connection with Q. Julius Maximus, we are awarding a VIP ticket to the Games to anyone who can crack the code below, based on Caesar’s own cipher, and reveal its hidden message.

The Caesar Cipher was said to have been invented by Julius Caesar, who used it to write secret messages to his generals. It is a code by which the letters of the alphabet are shifted by a pre-agreed number, so that to decode the message you would have to look along the alphabet to the relevant letter and substitute it for the text you see. Caesar favoured a shift of three letters, although any number can be chosen by the communicator as long as he has told the recipient of his message what that number is. So crack the code if you can, and win yourself a ticket to the Games.
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VI FACTS ABOUT JULIUS CAESAR
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I He was married three times.

II He was kidnapped by pirates.

III Born on July 13, B.C. 100, his name was in fact, Gaius.

IV He wrote a lot, including poetry.

V The month of July is named after him.

VI He was never actually a Roman Emperor. His son Octavian was the first Roman emperor.

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