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Bf le Saatn
Age not guarantecd---Some I have told for 20 years'--Some Less
Eskimo Winter Tolk
One of the famous old winter stories is about the Eskimo from the South Pole who met the Eskimo from the North Pole, and the Northern one said, "Glug, Glug," while the Southerner said, "Glug, Glug, youall."
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(Continued from Preceding Page) a god that met thee. Bold man, crafty in counsel, insatiate in deceit, not even in thy own house, it seems, wast thou to cease from guilt and deceitful tales, which thou lovest from the bottom of thy heart."
A modern ph,ilosopher*""j",*"o ^.tt who says he is boss in his own house is positively not to be trusted. He'd probably lie about other things,*too."
Serious thinkers have told us that the world's most useful and important invention is the naught in mathematics. Without this circular symbol that means nothing, it would be impossible to carry on mathematics of any sort. And without mathematics, what would the world do? We are told by historians that the inventors of this priceless symbol were not the Greeks or the Romans, but the Arabs.
And another Northern Eskimo told a friend about a mutual Eskimo acquaintance: "He always calls his wife 'Floney Chile' since he made that trip way down South to Winnipeg."
When Ptolemy, .h. G:.";" l..ro.o-.r, was studying the heavens in ancient Athens, he had no telescope, no spectroscope, no stellar photography to assist him, yet he was able to identify 1O22 stars in the skies. With only his naked eyes, that old Greek star-gazer did a wonderful job, and set the stage for the great astronomers of today. ***
Arthur Frederick Sheldon said that to be successful a man must increase his AREA: his Ability, his Reliability, his Endurance, and his Action.
