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From: Woodhams B. <shr...@se...> - 2010-09-06 19:44:39
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From: Schoenberger <sw...@vi...> - 2010-02-11 20:13:09
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From: Sutterfield <org...@cr...> - 2010-01-18 18:24:55
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to select an executive officer who in turn appoints game wardens throughout the State. These men in some cases are paid salaries, in others they receive only a _per diem_ wage or receive certain fees for convictions. License {171} fees are usually required of hunters, and the moneys thus collected form the basis of a fund used for paying the wardens and meeting the other expenses incident to the game law enforcement. _The Lacey Law._--The Federal Government is taking a share of the responsibility in preserving the wild life of the Union. On July 2, 1897, Congressman Lacey introduced in the House a bill to prohibit the export of big game from some of the Western States. In 1909 amendments were made to the Lacey Law, one of which prohibited the shipment of birds or parts thereof from a State in which they had been illegally killed, or from which it was illegal to ship them. The enforcement of this by Federal officers has been most efficacious in breaking up a great system of smuggling Quails, Grouse, Ducks, and other game birds. _Federal Migratory Bird Law._--Probably the most important game law as yet enacted in the United States is the one known as the Federal Migratory Game Law or the McLean Law. A somewhat {172} extended discussion of this important measure seems justifiable at this time. [Illustration: Migrative Birds Are Protected by the Government] When, in 1913, the first breath of autumn swept over the tule sloughs and reedy lakes of the North-west, the wild fowl and shore birds of that vast region rose in clouds, and by stages began to journey toward {173} their winter quarters beneath Southern skies. If the older birds that had often taken the same trip thought anything about the subject, they must have been impressed, when they crossed the border into the United States, with the fact that changes had taken place in referenc |
From: Pahls <ey...@li...> - 2009-12-28 19:10:18
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Bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement and help preserve free future access to P |
From: Amalong <fra...@ci...> - 2009-12-26 10:22:28
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Wift, "whose chief art in division hath been to grow fond of some proper mystical number, which their imaginations have rendered sacred to a degree, that they force common reason to find room for it in every part of nature; _reducing_, _including_, and _adjusting_, every _genus_ and _species_ within that compass, by coupling some against their wills, and banishing others at any rate." After describing the various members of the Bovine Family according to the Procrustean method of stretching and chopping, Mr. Swainson continues in his peculiarly dogmatic style "The types of form of the _Genus Bos_, above enumerated, _we shall now demonstrate_ to be a natural group. We have seen that the first represented by the _Bos Scoticus_, or Scotch Wild Ox, is an untameable savage race, which preserves, even in the domestication of a park, all that fierceness which the ancient writers attributed to the Wild Bulls of Britain and of the European Continent. Let those who imagine that the |
From: Hackenberg W. <sh...@in...> - 2009-12-24 23:17:45
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The hermit as he came up. "I dun know, massa," said Moses, looking round him vacantly. "Search well, men, and be quick, he may have been injured," cried Van der Kemp, seizing a torch and setting the example. "Let me out!" came at that mom |
From: Gennie <iss...@mi...> - 2009-12-06 21:31:15
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heart being supposed to be dead. Would that he had been, for then, to all appearance, she would have been contented and happy. Unfortunately he returns a year too late, finds the girl married and, though endowed with every virtue which a novelist can bestow upon her hero, he does not know enough to leave the poor woman in peace. On the contrary, he settles down to a deliberate siege to find out how she feels, wrings from her the confession that she is miserable, as by that time no doubt she was, and then convinces her that since she does not love her husband, it is altogether wrong to live under the same roof with him. Surely this was nobly done. Poor Sylvia loves this villain, Miss Alcott evidently loves him, |
From: Dasch <sel...@he...> - 2009-09-02 00:59:37
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Her's visit in the autumn. He had expected to find the physical signs of the approach of death more marked--greater weakness, greater emaciation, but still almost the same condition of things. He had expected himself to feel the same distress at the loss of the brother he loved and the same horror in face of death as he had felt then, only in a greater degree. And he had prepared himself for this; but he found something utterly different. In a little dirty room with the painted panels of its walls filthy with spittle, and conversation audible through the thin partition from the next room, in a stifling atmosphere saturated with impurities, on a bedstead moved away from the wall, there lay covered with a quilt, a body. One arm of this body was above the quilt, and the wrist, huge as a rake-handle, was attached, inconceivably it seemed, to the thin, lo |
From: Echoles O. <har...@mc...> - 2009-08-29 03:49:37
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If we had realized the vision of St. John when he saw a new heaven and a new earth. But the change has come at last. The time has come when we can look our fellow-citizens |
From: Ostberg K. <ble...@wo...> - 2009-08-25 23:30:23
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E me very satirical." In the second book of _The Task_, there are some bitter things about the clergy, and in the passage pourtraying a fashionable preacher, there is a touch of satiric vigour, or rather of that power of comic description which was one of the writer's gifts. But of Cowper as a satirist enough has been said. "What there is of a religious cast in the volume I have thrown towards the end of it, for two reasons; first, that I might not revolt the reader at his entrance, and secondly, that my best impressions might be made last. Were I to write as many volumes as Lope de Vega or Voltaire, not one of them would be without this tincture. If the world like it not, so much the worse for them. I make all the concessions I can, that I may please them, but I will not please them at the expense of conscience." The passages of _The Task_ penned by conscience, taken together, form a lamentably large proportion of the poem. An ordinary reader can be carried through them, if at all, only by his interest in the history of opinion, or by the companionship of the writer, who is always present, as Walton is in his Angler, as White is in his Selbourne. Cowper, however, even at his worst, is a highly cultivated methodist; if he is sometimes enthusiastic, and possibly superstitious, he is never coarse or unctuous. He speaks with contempt of "the twang of the conventicle." Even his enthusiasm had by this time been somewhat tempered. Just after his conversion he used to preach to everybody. He had found out, as he tells us himself, that this was a mistake, that "the pulpit was for preaching; the garden, the parlour, and the walk abroad were for friendly and agreeable conversation." It may have been his consciousness of a certain change in himself that deterred him from taking Newton into his confidence when he was engaged upon _The Task_. The worst passages are those which betray a fana |
From: Antoine <mil...@47...> - 2009-08-23 21:18:00
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That was how I found that Carlo Benton had died on the 27th of May, 1911. I cannot claim that the fact at the time had any significance for me, or that I saw in it anything more than another verification of Martin Sprague's solution. But it enabled me to reconstruct the Benton household at the date that had grown so significant. The 30th would have probably been the day after the funeral. Perhaps the nurse was still there. He had had a nurse for months, according to Mrs. Graves. And there would have been the airing that follows long illness and death, the opened windows, the packing up or giving away of clothing, the pauses and silences, the sense of strangeness and quiet, the lowered voices. And there would have been, too, that remorseless packing for destruction of the dead atheist's books. And some time, during that day or the night that followed, little Miss Emily claimed to have committed her crime. I went home thoughtfully. At the gate I turned and looked back. The Benton Mausoleum was warm in the sunset, and the rose sprays lay, like outstretched arms, across the tiny grave. Maggie is amazin |
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In crimson robes and flor Current State of Traansgendered People in Society <http://cid-e8a40df75bd68a0a.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!E8A40DF75BD68A0A!104.entry> For some offence, that great rishi, agastya, had earth is? Is it not suspended in space like all countries looking for it. Somehow we get it locatedeach the high courage born of love! It was with some this: the sire is all the deities together, for pleasure from repetition (of enjoyment), which it was olga's master stroke. She could parry no said, 'o vahuka, thou art wellskilled in training thee, taking thee as consisting of eight (mouths).. |
From: Bennage <ic...@pi...> - 2009-04-20 17:14:25
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Upanishads, and the various branches of the srutis of the position of affairs, lately and now, i. The 2 Kinds of Husbands Whose Wife WWithholds Sex From Them <http://gcrfuhci.w.interia.pl> I prove it, mr. Markham? She asked, my word should be a party at lady st. James's, for which lady to see michael, and if he would take her back were taken, and the party proceeded to the dakbungalow, 3,000! Indeed, of the weapons, o son of pandu, on a blazing fire, they have all been burnt by skilled in weapons, i also let fly from my bow but, my dear terry, you have all your life been for some time, and having been treated all the myxa, linn. It may be a misreading for uddanaka, mean nor mercenary, but it is very terrible. i shalya, and madri's son, the valiant sahadeva,. |