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Page 16 text:
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THF TATTI FR XX est lhe other answered lll to11es e1s1ly reeognwed 19 those of R1lph ll11l br1ck when he became heated o11 the subject of XXO111111 Suffrage Closely tfllllllg the two, came 1 sto11t, jolly lJOllCCl1h1ll, who pro1 ed to be 11o11e other tha11 Arno Sptller lwrther O11 l ee I1OtlCCd 1 l1rge s1gn 1vh1eh read, Lolhns Bros QOIISUIICIIOII Co 11111 l1Ot ftr 1l1o1e were the rooms of C F Ross, lllSII'l1CtOI' of elocut1o11 Mr N1chols retraced h1s footsteps, hnally past the stat1on, 1n search ofa 1orner, whlch 1n those t11enty lo11g years had llOt faded fron1 h1s memory He looked around for fallllllaf obyects and saw an electncal Slgll before a huge garage, Clyde E Getchell, Xuto n1ob1le Supphes Soon he passed a large ljlllldlllg glanctng through a plate glass 111ndow1 he beheld h1s former classmate, Herrtck, mayor of Rangeley , Slltlllg 1v1th h1s feet on a desk and smokmg a large c1gar Hastenmg on, he saw connng down the street a 111a11 dressed 111 black swallow ta1l coat lh1s gentleman wore nose glasses and carr1ed a B1ble u11der h1s 11111, 15 he f1ppro1ched lee heard llllll lllllllllllllg Brlghten the Corner, and greeted the lx 1 l X Porter, fOllOXXll1Q', the footsteps of h1s father Ill law He passed on and whom should he see llllt h1s olfl 111al, s1g1t, lee g111she1l h1s teet1 1nd Ilfl y los111f1 lllS sclf1o11trol rushed IIIIO tl1e Lllkjlllff ouse, wlere he found lx l Xhlbur ou 1 pled 1s1l11t,fOl' the l1re lJep1rt111e11t Xter 1 short 1hat lee departed 11d w 1ll1ed 101111111 the 0lltSlslTtS of tl1e 11ty A hef11y f1r111 wagon TllIHlJl6ll up and the d111e1 1 he 1lth1 lookmg f1YlHCI w1tl1 .1 str111 htt o11 the baclt of h1s head, hollered, Hey ther, lVll9l6T, were you lool111111 for .1 y 119 N11 hols ll21Nlll2 nowhere else to go, agreed to work for one year He 1l1mbed up bes1de the dr11er who pro1ed to be the II1ClDl1BI of T16 C1155 1f V490 I11 l lllSlJL1fy lee spent tl1e re1111111der of h1s ht , 1a1p1l1 1 11e 1 F1e11 e1en 111g howe1er, as l1e s1t ClOWll to llllllx the cows he thought of tl1e Plbdhllll tunes l1e 1111f1ht l111e e111o1e1l1f l1e l1 11l been 111le 1 keep h1s good st111d111g III 1111-1ele1 t1111es he bl1111ed hnnself for h1s lHlSl0I'tllllCS at other tunes l1e felt tl1 1t tl1e bl une rested entlrely upo11 N11 lxenneth l 1111l1, o11 WllOl1l he yowed re1e11ge lI1tl1UOIl ICIJOTIS 11111 eyer, that the two 111tago111sts 11e1er 111et, b11t that the feud between the two flIlllll6S was peacefulh settled F I 1 TO AMERICA BY ALFRED AUSTIN What lb the XOILC I hear On the XYIHLIN of the western sea Se11t111el hsten f1o111 out C ape Clear And s'1y what the XOILC may be T15 a proud free people Lilllllg lo11 to people proud and free And It s11s to them KIHSIIICH 111 We severed lldXC been too long Now let Us ha1e done Vlltll a 1111rn out tale The tale of 1111 1ent wrong And o11r fr1e11dsh1p last long 1s o11r l111e dotl llst 1llCl be stronger tl1 111 death IS strong All wer the-111 son of the self s1111e rue And blood ofthe self s1111e cl 111 Le lls spe1l1toe11h11th1rf11Lt0 111 A 1 111s111r 18 Ill 111 to 111 ln, It loy1ll1 lo1e llltl trust Llill ot 1111111 fue 111111 Now fhng thu 1 out to the b11111 S 111111111 k lhtstlt llll 1os1 lt th1 S111 S1 1111, 11113111111-1 llllllll NX 1 H1111 A 1111ss1Qet11f111111ls 1nd foes VV 11re11r the suls of 111111 111 NLtll 1111 1v 11er tl1e 11 1r 1111111 blow 1111ss 1ge to l7Ull1 lllt tl11 1ll to 11 1 1 P111 11hene1er we come, 111- 111 llll llhe throne of the TN 11111 shzll 111k 1111l 1111 1k1 ll h1 1111511111 he 1o11l 1111 11111 1 you s s 1 1111 111 1 1 of th1 Ill es tus 1 tl11 1111111 ofthe blufl M llt h ld VV1: se1er1d l1 111' been too long, l'l11t111111 11e h111 done 111tl1 .1 110111 out t1l1 The t11le11fth1 t11111e11t 111111113 11 11111 fllfllll lllri shall l1st 1s o11r on 11111 1 11' t11111f1ert ll 1e 1115 stl l2 1 , , ' , H ' 1 . , . , ' . . , , , U . . , V. V., , . 1.' 1 1 k 'A 1. 2 ' - 15 ,, V., ' . , 1 . V. 1 -b V V . 'V . V u V. tc 1 '1 1 1 ' 1 . ' 4' I1 ,'V ' P1 gf. At ' 1 L J ' ' ' ' L 1 ' V. 1. ' Y ' ' - ' .' z 1 - .5 ls 1 h 1 2 'lt .l ' 1 1 . Y 11 ' V 1 ' ' ' ' ' , , . . ' . . ,, , Ill- V 1 - I -Q . V., I .- , . va , . . . 1. y , 1 . 1 - L V V. , 1 . 1l 1 . , , . , , . V V ' ' i 1 ' ' K. 1. Lo. v y v 1 .L-. 66 l . ,l I - 1 U. 1 X V V VV V V V . V . . . , f . L . - K' f Y f 'z if 1 l :1 , 7 V A. . . .4 . V ' ' . h Gif 2 H ' J , lz'l, . ' 11 1, l 'N V V. V - 1 . E ' X. ' ,S LL. , V I , . . ' 2' l',I 5 1 '5 g V1-Q' 1 l N 1 1 b 9 5 1 S . X A. -V.: 1 . V sc ' I H 1 ' . ,., . , 'e'. .f. ' Q .' I 1' 1' -111 fx-1 -1 , -' - . . V , Il lz Q '- 1: 1 1 A 1 .Q . V A1 l 11 g' ' 1 ' .' -1 ' her 11s - l . . ' A h 1 lllll 'X ' 11111. Dwight lrlllllll, 11111111114 11 111e11t1'11rt. At thls V l 1 1 5 1 l 1 url' ,VV V N ll, VV' P 5 A 1' 1- 1 V A11 11- 1 - 1 -id ll fl 'I 'x I. . l- x.C1A' .': .' 1 1- . ', 1 Q V I. -. .amz-.V...: 1 1R.IV 1 f 1 .' t , , ' 21 'I ' 'Sa Q - 1- 1 r Q 1, A HJ: l 1 l Az ': lx ', V VV L VL V V . , , . . , , .2 , V.VhAVl V V V. V V V. VVV Z V V V. .1 1 .V 1 1, ' R .4 A1 i s 1 'J 1 1 l 11 , ' V ' I Fo' 4' are lordx of 11 .trong land 1 l -1 111'- C 3 1 ' ' ' ' . g . ' 0 lorl - 21111. 'tl YY V' , 1 v. Q - - 11 1, ' , . . . V V V- X lf s A' 1 1 yylex l 9 V Y , , . .1 .' . , . g . ,f 1,151 ' ' l 11' 1 . L , '1 lph 1 , ,. .- ,. .W- , -4 ' 'Q 2 -' A11 ' 1' 5' 2: zu I 1' l I ' ' 1 . 3 1 'I 1 . 1, . . C ls 1 1 Kl B nfl X Std- 1 V ' l:1st1111ll s ' ,4 hz 1 l ll l x 3 111115,
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Page 15 text:
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THF TATTLFR XXrxN1rr XX heyvl she must have landed a good posrtron after that Lsrr' O yes, but she drdnt ou know Lem could never strck to one thrng more than ten mrnutes XX rxwrr XX ell, where rs she now P Stsrr I frm sure Idon t know, but the last tune I he ard from her she was at the L nryersrty of Illrnors trkrng 1 specral course rn musrc and srngrng But goodness only knows w hat she s dorng bv thrs trme XVIXNIE XXell, mark my word' What ey er she s dorng noyv, I m sure that rn the end our 7elnra yyrll come out on top and some day the class of 1'll4 yy rll be proud to recovnwe the lrttle freckle faced grrl as one of rts members btsrr lhfrt s true, but rf any frrend dem rnd why felmcr never rnarrred thrs rs mv reason Nlot that she loved H less brrt P e more, not that she loved e less but e more , not that more and so on through an endless charn of athnrtres XX ell I thrnk I must leaye you and go to drnner I hope I shall see you agrrn as thrs lrttle talk h rs done me a yvorld of good hood bye I tzf Sffrzz rxrxrr l We l lhere s Rose Nelson, she s marrred Lem rs no one knows where busre told me about all the rest of the class except herself Let me see' Drdnt I see her name rn that last paper from home Q lakes paper from coat and reads X Here rt rs l Xance Oakes and Susre Stewart yorned together rn the holy bonds of rncrtrrmonv I e rt all now, they came here on therr werlclrng tour I r mrghty gltd for bue I hrd an rdea that she mrght get hrm but once rt looked doubtful fResumes readrngj Ihey wrll move to New York, where Mr Oakes rs engaged rn busrness I suppose they yvrll spend the rest of therr days rn perfect blrss MR NICHOLS RETURN TO RANGELEY VF hot summer eyenrng Iee Xrchols took hrs vrolrn under hrs arm and walked up Pleasant Street He sat down on a corner just above School Street, carefully tuned hrs rnstrument, and began to frddle lhe C rrl I Left Behrnd Me He pl rv ed so loud that he kept kenneth lamb, who lry ed a few houses below aw xke the greater part ofthe nrvht 'Xlr l amb yv rs very angry and reported the drsturbfrnce to the Men s League Ihe members of thrs yvorthy or ganmatron had, for a lonv trme , belreved Lee s mrnd to be unsettled , thrs act of hrs seemed proof beyond doubt of hrs rnsanrty e Men sl eague met rn the l rhrary and by pop rrlar vote decrded to drspose of thrs trouble some character by sendrng hrm to Augusta Ihe keepers of one of the publrc rnstrtutrons there bec une very much attfu hed to l ee, ind so compelled hrm to remarn for twenty years At the end of thrs perrod, they bought hrm trarn -Xs he passed through many ltrge crtres among them Phrllrps and Maclrrd, h had almost decrded that he was travelrng rn the wrong drrectron when the conductor shouted Rangeley All c lrange l Jur hero stepped off the plrtform of the car rnto a large stone statron where every thrnfr was rn confusron 'Nlo frrmrlrar far es greeted hs y1sr0n,and after a short trme he made hrs yvay to the street, a large thoroughfare thronged wrth people He looked for the hrll on whrch he had lrved but saw only a paved street crowded wrth yehrcles of all descrrptrons He attempted to catch a street ctr, fcrrled, and not hayrnff money enough to hrre 1 hack decrderl to yy rlk rn the drrectron of yvhrt had once been hrs home He hrd contrnued only a short drs tance when he sayy two rnen approachrng they were rather poorly dressed, were carry rng drnner parls and seemed to be staggerrng As they passed, one shouted 'I don t care what they fall me my name rs Xlr Eddre , . 11 y . . V . , , . 9 ' 1 - r J ' ' , , JF ' S f -. h, ' ' ' . Y f ' ' ' C I y ' . C ' , ' t. ' ' ' '. ' ' K , TT :. . ' ' H 9' ' . ty' 1 - ' ' ' , v. v V Y , . - ' , ' ' r - w , q 1 ' 0 .r . . . Y , C, . . .L - .' ' ' ' ' ' Th . . . v ' ' , - C I - A . . J . ' '-- w ' ' 7 ' v ' r ' I I 4 r. . K 4. C . 1 A L I . ---- t IL ' g I Y I 2 - - ' . ' L ' . I, 1. L lv. P - - L - - - - - - A c I She loved L ,,,,, e less but H ,,,,. d a ticket for Rangeley and put him aboard the . . . I , , . v ' 7 ' ' , k ' ' L t ' e C ' . 1 C I C I x I A . .1 . A I , ' ' y y y f i ' , l , , . K -- 2 . C ing. A, bv. i . ' w' 4. werr. 'rr. '- ' ' ' fe ' ' f ,, - . f - ' . I . ' ' 1 rs L , - v n . l Y . , C . .I l. , Y C Y 1 I , . , 7 . - 4 ' 4. ' ' : . ' se ' . li L I I U N . y . u ,U gl I z . 5 , ' ' 'r ' Q 'g V' 1 3 L . ' . I V H . Y Y U I .-- , 7 ' ri D ' s - V v , . ' S I V. . , . A l . A , I , ,
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Page 17 text:
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Tl-Ili TATTLICR 13 THF ANCIENT CIVILIZATION OF THE NEW WORLD F the numerous natrons yy hlch occupied the great Amerrcan contlnent at the tune of 1ts drscoyery by Europeans, the tyyo most ady anccd Ill poyy er and refinement yy ere undoubtedly those of IXIGXILO and Peru e LlXllll'itlOll of these countrres though ahke in extent drffered yy xdely rn charm ter It IS IDICTCSIIIIQ to trace the drtferent steps ly vyhrch these two Il1tlOIlS rose from a strte of IJAYIJJTIQID to place themselyes on a hygher plane rn cryrlxzatron I shall therefore en deavor to desc rlbe the character of the people and tell vou somethrng of the dlfferent l1lSf1 tutrons of the ancrent Memcans and Peru yrans lhe country of the anclent Nlexrcans, or Aztecs, as they were called, formed 1 yery small prrt of the yast terrrtory compre hended m the modern IXCIJIIIDIIL of Meyrco Its boundarles cannot be dehned yvrth cer tarnty because of the fact that thev were much enlarged durmg the latter days of the emplre, but It probably coyered an area of less than sryrteen thousand square leagues X et such IS the remarkable formatron of thls country that though not more than tyy 1ce as large as the New Fnvland states, rt repre c p lble of yleldlng nearly eyery Iflllt found between the equator and the Arctlc crrcle lhe emprre of Peru stretched along the Pacrfrc about two thousand Eye hundred mrles Its breadth cannot be so easlly de termmed bounded on the yyest by the Pam 161 ocern It spread out tow ard the e 1st, rn many parts beyond the mountarns to the barmarous stltes hose exlct position I lIll4lCtCI'IlllllCfl or yyhose n unes rre ttlar cd from the m rp of history lhls rountry his somc yery remarkable physrcrl fertures It IS hemrned in by a yery large rinofe of mountuns lhls range IISIFIU from the Stralts of Nlagellan ren hes tts hrvhest cley rtron about l 1 degrees below the equator yyhrcn IS tlae l'llgll65I on the Ameruan contlnent but flrther north It gradually subsldes mto small hrlls as rt enters the Isthmus of Panama lhe face of the country yyould appear to be unfayorable to purposes of agrlculture and of Internal communrcatron, not only becruse of .1 sandy Stflp nerr the colst, yyhere yery ltttle run falls, but also on rc count of the unpassable mountuns yyrypped Ill perpetual snoyv let the ffenrus of the IllCll3.I'l was SIIITILICIII to oyercome all the rmpedrments of nature lhe Aztecs came from the remote regrons of the North, arrrymg on the borders of Anahuac toyyards the begllllllllg of the thlr teenth century 'Ihey d1d not establysh themsely es ln any permanent resrdence, but yyandered rbout Ill dlI:fE!ICl1t parts of the INICXILAII yrlley, endurrnff many hardshlps After many adyentures, rn the etrly part of the fourteenth century they halted on the southyyestern borders of the prlncrpal lake 'I here they saw a royal eagle of eyctraordmary sue and beauty, yvlth a serpent rn hrs talons and hrs broad yvrngs open to the rrsxng sun, perched on the stem of a prrckly pear, whlch shot out from the treyrce of a rock lhrs yvls huled as the HIISPILIOIIS omeu, slte of thelr future city Hence the Aztec s lard the foundatrons by smkurg prles mto thc marshes lhey obtalned thexr lltlllof by flshlng by lillllllg the yyrld foyyl yyhych fre quented the yvaters, and by the cultryatlon of sur h yegetables as 4 ould be raised on IIICII' floatlng gardens Soon, thelr fllllltlfy drscypbne and strength ber unc sur h th rt the yery uune Xfter yy IS ferrcd throughout thc y lllcy Xfter 1 tune th Xftet rxpltal begrn to show eyrdeure of publrc prosperrty Its frarl tenements yyere supplanted by more solid structures of stone md bme Its populatron rncreased, and tts old feuds were settled C IIIICUS yy ho h rd ser erled yyere brought under one com v Is' -- . 1 - - . . . ':. X ' - z ' . c I I I I I 1 ' D I I c I 9 ' I I ' ' ' Y , V V- 1 - V . x Y V g v 3 . v v ' I 'i , K. , L Y I Th E . 4 .ic . ' ' ' Q 1 z ' ' 1 ' z z ' x , ' ' ' L L 1 . V - . ' 1' g L - ., ' ' ' I 1 ' ' L' ', ' L ' ' Q ' . . z ' L . ' D ' - J - A 1 . , L 1 ' 2 ' ' 7 ' ' 'z ' D ' '. ' 7 'a r.. ' - - C '. ' 1 ' k ., , - N , I I . I E 7 C 4 . I I 7 ' C 4.,l . , . ' C Q C A s 4 I :I ' I I . l 7 5. ' ' ' E - 7 V L .t 6 L' ' no 5 - it 2' if 1 sented CVCYY Vllfletl' Of 0111119-IC, 81141 WHS announced by the oracle as indicating the :a L f' ' 1 ' ' ' ' ' -' r - r . , , .. , . . . V ' Y , ' ' ,' v . 'A - . 4. . ' I I - ' 4' A I 'r . ' , f ' J ' 5 1 ' 5 ' t ' ' t' 3 2 , ' ' 'z il 1 ' ' lr , it J, yy' Q Jr f ' 's ., , . , , . , , b , ., . 1 I 'I L 'I Q 3 A lx V 1 s -1 1 Y A . ' Z .' I I. . . I ' C 1 '. I IL Z 2 f ' ' f I 3 I Lt. A I I A L ' . . ' V A , ' . ' 4' L D' ' Q M ' K , 5- 2 '- . , ' ' . f Q 5 ' 2 A 2 7 I L , r ' ' - -
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