Northern Advance, 24 Dec 1908, p. 6

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DEATH VALLEY. _ene aumw. `am, % or M- Ba:rriellndenak%ing Establishment i. have all the ppliazfces for `the `care of funerals in transit through .town and surrounding country: Hearses and Wag-gons; Morgue and Burial Parlofs. Interntgnts in a_ll cemeteries, or shipments to 3-11 parts of.t.he world... "V5/ork of undertakers promptly and properly pared for; ; ..'PHONE 86- _ 12EADAB R The j%VO!'t1%\el3%nAdvance G. G. SMITH E `Values that appeal tn: your C1.oit.hes that appeal to your .. ~- "Progress Brand Suits and overcoats _fco 1 w_'e`m2 nt _ T time to suscrie. .\-1 4` /gm 1.5!, 1910. Y7o{U TARE- L. 0 0 K I N G v-- V -1--` ~ - . - -- . ):ix'ound. you `ore long etorehousea; packed with pulp in tons of innocent whiteness. Presently this pulp will as- sume to tan color under the nitrating process. and .then.- suddenly becoming curbonite, red cross. hercules. Judson- and giant powder. torclte or .whnt_yon order, it develops the quasi virtues. oi'f - dynamite,--dynnmlte. or blasting gejnsg tin in which -more nnturarforces condensed to the cubic inch than e.,_xi'st`V anywhere else in .crention_. Death.` 'curi.~<~d and sleeping, encircles you in gallons um]. tons. Annihilation threat-. ens at every turn in the i ortn'of poten- tial pulverizing forces. But -the man and the mercury are there"-als'o. alert. . l'e2:ponsi_ve,, -reliallle. ' ;S}IMCOE: FA V0121 TE WEEKLY pockeigook. ` Collier and Clapper-ton Streets ALWAYS OPEN. :s'rAausH:o:1ee9 _f~`Tlms Killing hrethod`ahf .Of'fig:iaA|s lull Continental Europe. `_ ".*.n:x'lcnns who grumble about hnv- ~ ing to wait a long tune for books when an1)l:.'l:1g .?"to :1 public. library." said I ;_Bos.`on literary woman, should try to` lworl; or study in at foreign library, par- >1 ;L'U!1ll'|_\"`lll G-crma-uy.- l . . A VI I._ _ . . . -LI_.-..L4I IlI____I.__ QTYRER TRY mvrrA'r1oNs V uwu-pg _ I . Itfie `making itself in bizinon retorto. "ceecndi' in; down leaden gutters and merrily tumbling in minute N-insure: Into i_'mmense_ vain,` where the deli- quescent yellow peril pursues its jour- ney. powderward, Out of one recep- . tacle *itW1'nree furiously through specinl lead coils. driven only by 'aooling blasts oi `air; and is-drawn on like draft ale and piped on to the next perfecting stage. - Gazewith the nitroglycerin ex- * pert into oneot those big culdrone. The interior. is hrllllnntly illuminated 7 `by. electricity, the only -illuminating houses. ` A-Inc.-en` unsung gm; Adnnn I-Anumnn -L -n-gl _agenc'y.~perx_nl_tted in or about the (inn- so ammo " a mu flu tho making that apt to ho- rhappointed on*viewIu' the an:-taco .'ut thing, You couk} `thou readily thunderbolt: leaping and crash- ing gtromotender blue skies than that no moat tearful forces in creation no. ` hidden under such a peaceful um-ogiycoun, a cuptul of which `distribute you over square miles of landscape. is diligently mixing around you in hundreda and thousands of gal- I40.- rt" .'.v--- Around ;ou are other houses at uni- form distances apart and connected by a series or narrow gauge trucks -wherein workmen are railroading ni- troglycerin from herennd pulp cotton from there to be compounded into dy- . namite and blasting gelatin. Greatest care is taken in rolling the product from house . to house. -As soon as a loaded cart is ready to pass out of -t he nitroglycerin house. "for Instance. a semaphore signals from an adjoining station. to `which the consignment is; carefully hurried. i n_...--.;j _--_ __A I...__ __n.___l___'_.____. '- "-9-- ` IEF'@lfTTwWIlllI'lIl.|l$II -`unto .a__Il_uy 1 -gs: ' A lI'Al*`I L-u3nAn sLow POKES, -g ' n,n_un oA1niiu.:-.owuouAtu:L wants} 0.00100-o0c`oo_u oo_co`n_ _`a' DIV.-4| `Ill `.,`_;j_` ~B`AR R I E .B'ANCH _ -ayuvn . 1 Anotherfwoman couldfnot undo`:- I stand why her chin stuck out so far , ? but she elucidated the mystery her- } soif when she` `e_xplained',.that the , m.oming of `her sittingywas th e rst 7 L high cbllar. That naturally changed [mar appear-ance.~ -- - V. -, _A .-n which `she ha.d:,_worn an-nnusully. w `[3 uj oooooOooro.ooooo'oou 0-cuss` U Utopia 3 as-auunungpto *..%..-.L.j 6`o5cutI-'*.:.- I ` ,>m`>ocoO:\o'1,,.uAt5`. I ` .> ; ` `emotion :"r*v Tonnyson. s`Humi|ity. `I`he`poet Tennyson was gifted with " '}ue grace ~ of humility. `His letters,-; `iv-sc'.ose his dissatisfaction with him- _ self and hisachievemnts. He itch- rd his ideals high, and he none more clearly, . when he failed :`o grasp what he had reached after, An anecdote contributed by the Duke of Argyll and quoted by} Miss. (Jury in her volume, `"1`ennyaon., exhibits 3 am noet s humility. " ~ r{ * The that words I heard him Int - ten, says the duke,--remain ivndelfo t!.l:.' irppxfessed upon-mymemdry.` Un Hb:'n_';x', introduced to him a.t1an7.eve' ;.ing;.:pgrty' in the house of'Lord -`I-Iussell I `fsaid, ' perheps `with ' V `In am . so glad to know . Not in ,the_,;ton.e ; -or v'o`_i`ce,;`=o lg` .v'ne;re- convenionz. repl_y_,a hut, ,i'h`,th9 i j acc=:n3a: .0! : siaeexjef ~huu_1i1i_t`y,_ -,.he".. an- -`:=w'1',t` : ~ t - ," . -v on , witaria. V.-5 +- . v . r. ...u ` v. -. `- V .sY`ou+ won't `nch -gin DOW, [Iouowmg awry uua vL_Ia_I=u uwu by` the Arhbisho_p ` `against himself. . On ~ ene` bcoasiun `ha ~ :'to__ the in an outlying jv_illa`ge_*'sugges`ting thw- ..he "should/lend. his`? church g-for _the purpoe`e`_`o! givgng the -clergy.-o 1. district a.""gniot; day ? for meditation gndu` tratemglv reunion. 2The vi,ca.r,;o1, `hie sleepy hamlet .ip'_;"_he_ I It : his career .111 mm! Luuguu ,ru1u;.__ BvIu_ out after _'ve' years" of military cor-,_; vice; and enterd the Church. '.'Thc] ,s`.,ipen_d which hedraws is: I0,0_00,,.:a ; `yea:--and, he was the rst Archbishop 1 who , earned glatyv _by'- j every, parish -in. his. immense diocese the ,rse1f-`ttnpoacd imk: , ta.l:`it:"g~_:I_Athr.ee-1= west: .91 ' ci90!Iit. 7; t.1"`sv`e,1ina.` -__".1`he ; following ; stor has often` -tscm` told "u_ .;-". "u.-xv `~`A`a.'ASiI\ ' zhinhn- LSUVCI Ipllhlo ` Then the photographer rebuked her ':gently..s _ - . ' urm'-_.._a_ -....-__1 :_ n.:.. n --:.1 L.` C gvu u_y ..~ ~ "There's amoral in this. said he} E`-`Nevor- go -to" the hairdresser before Aha photographer. It only makes a. `person look `tired. and the hair-_- olressefs art doesn't help! the photo- ~t:r.-apher." ' I n.A$LAu . .-.4-cg`: - '_.L& ucG\4`4\n_ yULJ\Il\4$II I GIVE. ZI9 VV THU CI If the instructions are; not out, as they_ sometimes are, the pres- ence of the line means take that much off-make me thinner at the waist. Allowing for the` fact that the one e e of the camera` makes a broader, atter surface than is seen by the two human eyes, the photo- grapher proceeds tc scrape or doc- tor the negative. And what is the result? The woman gets `a picture that suits her fancy, but really does. not make her so thin as .she imagines. n.` Ann-v vats` `Aunt. Ann n Oivaiavl all` \I LIIIIIIT II?` 99 UIIIII 19 `FIJI: JXIZ.-IX?!-II One day not long ago a woman sat before a. photographer after, spending -two hours at a hairdressefs. She came back in a hurry with the or-cots and said indignantly: Why. these are awful? My hair has never Zooked like that in any picture!" " ``'\:A non`: noun: Laura :0 Anna `un" . ,l"I'I'l`l2lt_BvDI_`En5InIIu- . - :5- ~ ljaclaganu. who-_Lhas V the` . exa19d""dmce ot fan-chbishoi: at, .York owing to f&,ili`_r1g_"`h9_a4lth -his caroet..in_~the' Indian ,9;rmy.._,sold,' --4A '-.I.`L-_ AS... cinnuvn" ...*z.."""* _:uoia`w?-:9: uni. sz.".'s`n.",'.`2"...':. a simple :4 maker of pxotnres. They will tell `you he is an `artist. a psychologist, a diplomat, a sin t, a person of omagnetism` and Eff! ility--indeed, a combination of mode virtues which `make him "all things to all men." i "T on-um` an On:n`uuun:`9n ling` " hncvn $5329 IIIIII Cl Ullllls `II '`I want a picture `like .tet`:" weaya Va stout demo, `holding up the like-. nose of a. symmetrical member ef her sex. who` stands erect with 9. `bunch of tone in her hand. \Y-... AL- _L -A-..___L__ ___I.I__-_ AI.._L UL IVHZ Ill LIVE IICLIIJC Now the. photographer? Arealizea that he in {ace to face with a stiff 1pro- position, one of many in the day's work. He takes a damn proofs and sends them for approval. "One is me- tumed with` an ink mark drawn per- pendicularly along the waist lme. AUUAUU LIRC IIIIGU Ill GL1 IIIUUILLUE Did you ever have it done that} way before?" was the polite enquiry. The woman was somewhat em- barrassed. 1To." aye 7adu_1ittod,_ "I never did." 4, LL. 4L_L_.___,__l_-_ _AI___I__.I I__._ bibles. ` ` capricas. . He deal: I III! IIZCED LIX $ KIDITHIID V ` I ts. Vwith human nature in thraw and is an individual wichad :muiona._ tr- I{..'_._Ll..`_. --n_.- `1.~.-_- _.._A--_--- Ho In one A h. .-oi` vaniti. fair and -vanity, unouau. but would be, ` Olugna, in ` IRA .`Iu`awII|no`nb `Ln tuna -S:v.v-CTCC 11% GRAS Minuet IE; w& :?g;nvun.'on kn` L.-3'3- '-n:A4`n`nn m-Im"ai`a %&rWI5ng1.aii; M 11', -1-_-.. _'.L4..'- 1 Iv,ll,lIvU,uIu.. vuu wvuau now. the interpreter. `the man `W .."?__E;`B"*3." ` - .I__I- Wcuuu. .l.u.I3 l;U"uu(u,uu ulcuau. uu a. nu. H." A. Lotel1t_z_;f9ntU~;the ground of his investigation;-;~in; optical and electri- cal scienoe,.il`; f;A3{royal medal to Prof. J no. Milne, _`on _tli`` ground of his pre- eminent .services. in the modern de- velopment of aeismological science. A ground of-his researches on the rejas tions_~.between., the visceral and soma- .-the different `nerves. The Davy medal ` : tg:~Prof. W. A; Tilden, on thergrogind 3 'fj,liia . diaooveries `in chemistry, espe-, `a ..e'ia1l-y on the Terpenes and` an atomic ..heata._ ,Th_e `Darwin: I'P.d"8_.l`t0 Prqt. _._Wei'asman, "on tl1'egrpund {of _ _.lua,- eminent` a_ervi oe`s} in up1 Sort'o'frtlfe Eioctrine of evolution" by means; `:9! jnatura1.selection'.. The Hughes medal to, "V-Eugen ~fGoldatein;_ ' on. the :"of:-~l_i-is` discoveries -on-' the Fture of 4.;el4ectri`e=, discharge in rareed _"__-.'n . royal medal tovDr. Hy.Head. on the` ~.-tic nerves and on; the functions "of . L... mm. ueo;-go uoxnwazus wear. uor `,m'er'ly' _I_.ady,4__Rax__1dolph Churchill); whose Beminiscences constitute oneof the ' `intere'sting`j and notablel books` 'of`1heaeason.\' is one" o! the` comparatively low society, ladies who can boast oi :hav.in been Some` years. ago, when aha was travel"- ling, in India, the idea oi = to her by Mtiihs pronoun on -a sailor at__._.the `hands `oil -a V-`She. had IA ` _ 5 a 'a`n"a_kojhold_i_n its etefitr 1 '__!_A '1. 1- ....-__`-..'_`..II~_."I..a"l"a|.'.I..'1'~ .``..`.."." ~_.`_...._ '...-g ._- ._.~.........: ..._... The" Royal 'fs3i2'y3 IsEis hm this year been adjudicated `by the L Wallace. on the" r president and 'oot1`nci\:;a i; follows: The Copley medal ?Alfred Russel ' W `,d;ot*-the great iralue 0! his nuntrergsiu contributions to - natural history ' and of?" the part he took in working out the theory of the origin of species by natural ae- l ction. The lRu mtord- medal to Prof. P. 71- I ~r-..-...A..-`N4; LI... l............l -0 `Id... D!`-031.1 HIUUILIUU ?E HUGH LU]. Iwv xuvuuua. Mr. George is at a. place near Likoe ma, in West Africa," building a cathe- ,.dral for the mission. His mother, sis- ter. and five brothers live at Ealing. ll... .....:..A-I... L..- .. ouunoi nnnu-do av- U31] uuu IIVU UIUULIUIB {AVG OI 1.3311518. The mistake has a very simple ex- planation. On Sept. 11 Dr. Trower. the Bishop of Nyassaland, `who is in `England, received a cable from Hugh- enden. Queensland, reading: _Geo1-gel died: ye'a,terdayi." - 'nA-\.nIn`g A |u'n`wn`=o HQ 1 -si ,_t } at fit . V`: v ', P3 c , __. WIWII Elle XIUWI U1 II!!!" DVD 3 I160 I `It was not till the receipt no`! the telegram quoted above that the bishop re-read the cable and decided that it referred, to; his V own brother George. whom `he ~ had not seen- for thirty ~ ` Ila: Wuhan} hut` knoll the sub. years. Mr. George had been the sub- ject of dbituary appreciations `in sev- eral papers, and` the family `received .r ever 200 . zmgsgageg :9; . egndelence. Mlsreadlng of Cable Leads to" Mourng - In; For Wfong Individuah . Ealing. England, was thlfown into a rare utter of excigement recently by the receipt of the following cable: 951".`-.0-n.-limb `Inn nnnnuunnnvnnnf. A ULIU l'C\UIPD UL 0116 SUIIUWIIJ5 Vllluwu Contradict the announcement of the death of George, In good health." VH3 UUUDII UL \J'UUI5Uo Ill 5\!l.I.l uvuxun The message wear from the head- quarters of the Universities Mission to-- Oentrel Africa, and related to Mr. Frank George, an architect, who had been mourned as dead for two months. V 10; 11...... 2. .1 _ -1-.. _..-.. TH... , uueu ycalqruay e Confusing Australia iith Africa, he` a immediately acquainted Mrs. George `the news of her son ; death. A _._'-.. ._.1. A21` 11.. ......:..t J`. `Ina ""13?" piiiiixgg .:;.. ii oedterdbner recently by a- news ape! tnenlt re- presents a turban ` potentate sitting. ` surrounded -by armbred coiittiefs and i 6' hooded priest, giving audience to a r beggar man. who is apparently, after the manner of the . times, reciting droll story to earn the largesse he ask. The picture. generally speak- ing, is. in fair condition. though the canvas ha been backed two or` three tirmee.` - .g , n_1__ _I_`_ l-_.L____-L- ___._ .I-...- ? The finder is a fortunate man.'Bome few ears ego he. bought for a more no ng what is perhaps themoet life-' like portrait of George Washington extant. Copies were accepted by tbel American Congress, and an illuminat- ed `scroll was presented to the donor from both, Houses of the Senate; 14 :. .o..+..I {ha}. 9}... arousal. "and" ll IXJIIII, QUUHUI UL DUO $1.133. lmilt is stated -that the present nd is the original of an engraving by Vostermjan, some cobies of which are known. to exist . The likelihood of `its being genuine is enhanced by the fact that the faces of the models em- ployed strongly resemble those used in Ruben's well-known picture. "The Desoent'h-om the Gross. Tilly} IIIIVUIIU IIQIUBU U three halt-ctowizs. and; when 4`nau :-- Jam. am y uuu_. % i5`Je`21" :'3`una . %e:2;.ure" %-7.3'm`'Spso lure` is now to `be sent-o Paris to ` L- _._L-.._'j _~. V i`u"Z*`i'..'3`3 i A IX.` __.!...A.l V nuuuuul: us}: Illlll Jllj. `While ._-galking through the` Gale- xxf1`tkt*' Hid attentioir of 5 was attracted} `urn 18...]... -I.7.a.L:.....~ _.:-L'.. . ..-.` -'I_ __'.~_-_ _ -_. -_. 33 'su%'s't'i"i'c? s'3ei? bin amonntnof -cleaning. '1'ho.resu1t the purchase: that he had, UM `an-aunt` Q `c4qnuc.A`.'nc|` Q Juu'A. v*'```` N` ~.. - ,'1.gay_ 1'_ql!`, q|ph L Cluy-chill Tattooed. A Vthvuki "' _:v' alike .`';._.4- ,e.___> _ 1 _,, _ J _ _'_ A A Q :1 _._' .; .` ;.:;_A ._.L '-_u._.~~ _' DEADkllMl6AllET0 LIFE. Huvpguvgvvruv -cw uncu- JV _ ,. . . 7 .. L 397 . . . 'Corn1:val1is- I -._---- -.. --- `aw- u----.v -"The ,typlc: 1l- cooutltnental. _llbrarla n takes `no-account of tlm. .The reader, wox~'.:or- or student must turn in his or hot` sum`-licutlon for books at least a day T in :1d\':1n('e.' -The men`who search for the hriuk-uppli_d= totnrb aged. totter- ing creu't`ures'. who bavejbeenf; shummg around the dustypies .df".b0ok85`1o:" "years, `and the; yiword hurry` to; not ,. their v`ocz1b\2};.1I_'y;; ._`:`s.='.~.<;::\':_ ' ' ' - I A - t ."'Ifhc u)os_t}f?"fl'Zf_Te1ss .book,S_ ad,_ll8i9 Juscrlptsl age {keptgtn-f place}. which. are. ;,domInutes`li1"gver)" ` _ _:you speak about the lat _ .`fods_.employed. the ti--Ithat they ar too. p`oor V V perfect re` 't'Eab's. " and 2 d1$,6l',Tl;' Etpre-' ' .", [:1-When _ `modern mdxes `orocatIilo""q}eh.=5?'.;- "H `at . to some `ex-tent I0, but: fact they wonl ':.vI1 ,~li_'; '" ' ,;,.i.iey `:5-had authte itnlr . ,.*3I 8ako ,' . ' ' ". hey do not with toji " ' ` Y.` 1 . -.9 W gb` (1 .:r. nnvnrnnn :'l|nAI\`A `A V It-A `M. a x." if Hm- v`|_,I_;-arg_1'LM.ehn Hnoj-.od,_ >io77'r}t':i ma" A Finland Festival. Paul Wainemants A Summer Tour _In Finland contains this pretty bit of folklore: Midsummer is the `great an-` nual festival of Finland. From every height a bonre l'eaps"to the sky in. honor otthe mating of -night and day, who are then united. '.lfhe Finns pose sees a poetical legend relating to this annual custom. K011: and Amarik; the sunset and-sunrise. beseeched the lord of. the sky to give them permission to be eternally a bride 1 and bridegroom and once a year to clasp otherr~ln;' ?`i."'73``."3 "'*," s A Lesson F`:-om'Nature. . _ Young g_eI;tlemen, " . lecturedthe em-A lnent` instructor, ion are` old enough now to pnttaviray the childish and triv- lhl u'nusen1_en1x.th:t Snced for you when you won younger. Leo.zn.a' les- ,Ion trom tliesdulnb brute: and even` from the reptiles. When they an-lveat ycox`nport.ther'nselveslw1tj;4 o.certun' 4 `." _ .e g ~ tIt 1nn'tpo, with the rattlesnake; pro.- 'feI,Io;I'.'7`%1ect.ed the itlib hid ` he E Ian - :`-_ll.I. Q " : } Otogpinfhb-Exdu_& .. -o- -vv`v ----- vv--`-w-a-i uv -vw_-v van `and En ma gel te Je nlral ma yie from the eighteenth. -In the ring which Flor!zel" (afterward George IV.) gave to the/hapless Perdlta were the words .Jo change qu en mourant-.-Unalterablo to my Perdlta through life." -'----_-, .yv_.-vv----u-3 w-u7v ucw VCVC .aboutwtoA Ia... .u.......~....;.. . un...'.n`... .-.. n" 1;- .'.`.=.;.1u.; nu In 2' .. - 'rs' `A ' ' '4 .`F ~V,,;`_. _. ` 2 ;_ M : w.....`......aw..a.;. L` Btubb-.-,N 1v,,.women ' J mac; _- , ,._. .. 4 .- :_ _.~ .- - 3'03} _,-_ is only palatable by means of large, I porous, earthenware jars, common to all hot countries. suspended. in draft: and reduced in temperature by means of the rapid evaporation of the mole- ture from the outside. . ' ` wedding may Motto. The custom of inst,-ribing within the hoop of the betrothal or wedding ring 3 motto or "posy." as it was_c'alle`tl. was formerly -very` prevalent. Hamlet asks, Is this a prologue or the may of- a ring? -' some posies were very ten-1 der and beautiful. Among the more _appropriate ponies may be"mentioned Den: 4 corps, uu coeur." My heart and luntil )1 die and "I am your!"- from sixteeeuth century rings, Love 'e~g',e'r." Love true, `ti: joy," and `Time lesseneth not my love" from the seven-_ teenth century. Love me," My soul will "keep thine company~to heaven `_..S llf- . g..- Q.I_IlA.- 1- Q_.I_.I ..._ _.l-QI .UCXCW..Z21.n .--' 1 rw-V: holding the anppoaod. .delinquent- be- fore "the" `empty; 889. beat it rather -niercilesaly; Poor ineryed_"D1,00' `onaly. but her mfstreli put her. ` . . - . Next morning, feeling rather `ed other outburst. she made inquiries about the cat. but pussy was gone. . some days later she heard a faint. mg the easement a cat crept in"`and laid a bedraggled canary at her feet. At first she. did not recognize her pet: in the two disreputable looking objects before her. When she did recognise them her delight was great. fg-'___..._LI.. A.I__ ___.g. M ---A Ann` "inaion.that_th`e `cat ; , __ able {for the bird : Ibo clmtht up her ouipide and ahutthe door scratching at her window. and on The Burning; Blasting Winds That ~ 8woop,'l'his Arid*Wuto.' -The prevailing winds in val- ley are from the west. Though origi- nating in the Pacific. ocean and sat- 'urst`ed with humidity in traveling the intermediate distance. they are inter cepted by the lofty` peaks of tour ranges or mountains, which absorb all 01! their moisture. so that by the time" they reach the" valley all humidity has disappeared. The blasts are as it heated in a ilery furnace, and no liv- ing thing can survive the intense heat. Even birds indigenous to the region All- `now It is in the months of` zreiteat heat 1 that the eandstorms of Death valley are most deadly. They rage with in- 1 tense fury. obliterating the landscape : and dimming the light of the sun, withering the scanty vegetation and covering the trails deep in powdered dust. Atall times the aspect of the valley is superlatively desolate. No.4 spot on earth it in aridity or Tophet-like heat; ' ` T\-__.I__ ' A.I__ I___L-J A____. ._ I____.. -vr--- .--v --'.. During the heated. term an hour without water tmehnsi death. Meat be- comes putrid in an, hour. Eggs are cooked in the blistering. sand. . Water I_ -_I_. __l-L-I_I- I__ _.-__.. -4 I-__._ vacuum: son nnwnngnop vvuouw _ -Presumably the. canary had gone out by the open window,` nnd..ndn liber- ty sweet, "it had own to a neighboring wood. How the cat found the bird and brought It back uninjured is 3 my! L--- ` "codamovn peopia `to use I `learned are-among the u'lftoc' " '_ the spread 'o1_th knbvled . .T-hidden [in those wondetfgl. . . Seums lg tar `tron; thc _ men at `the head of-Europe : `librarian. `There may be` `some 'dela`y`,1n:.o\`:1-if -lvl-` I Am-mes. but our ;eopfeT'V-1h`-`the*f!6`Inr'A' ` '.[,;~wa2ks of life" Ire` certainly; the common people of -th6.;9|d gnrld`i_1n1. 1the`matte1sot?htt1;ixj:;o;it;l;'_peJ3!:rf _ __ .; , want` 1th`e:p.~- iii? h'!"8e+"' A % F : .._'_ ` ` ` 96 .'r ' .. .-!`.

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