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Japanese Girls and Women by Alice Mabel Bacon (best e reader for epub .txt) πŸ“• - American Library Books πŸ“š Read (28910) Books Online Free

th to the backs of older brothers or sisters, and living in the streets in all weathers. When it is cold, the sister's haori, or coat, serves as an extra covering for the baby as well; and when the sun is hot, the sister's parasol keeps off its rays from the bobbing bald head.[*8] Living in public, as the Japanese babies do, they soon acquire an intelligent, interested look, and seem to enjoy the games of the elder children, upon whose backs they are carried, as much as the players themselves.

Public Opinion by Walter Lippmann (ereader with dictionary .TXT) πŸ“• - American Library Books πŸ“š Read (28910) Books Online Free

or Roosevelt, everything evil originated in theKaiser Wilhelm, Lenin and Trotsky. They were as omnipotent for evil asthe heroes were omnipotent for good. To many simple and frightenedminds there was no political reverse, no strike, no obstruction, nomysterious death or mysterious conflagration anywhere in the world ofwhich the causes did not wind back to these personal sources of evil.3 Worldwide concentration of this kind on a symbolic personality is rareenough to be clearly remarkable, and

Notes on Nursing by Florence Nightingale (books for men to read .txt) πŸ“• - American Library Books πŸ“š Read (28910) Books Online Free

the air without in the rooms you sleep in? Butfor this, you must have sufficient outlet for the impure air you makeyourselves to go out; sufficient inlet for the pure air from without tocome in. You must have open chimneys, open windows, or ventilators; noclose curtains round your beds; no shutters or curtains to your windows,none of the contrivances by which you undermine your own health ordestroy the chances of recovery of your sick.[4][Sidenote: When warmth must be most carefully looked to.]

A Modern Utopia by H. G. Wells (best novels for teenagers .TXT) πŸ“• - American Library Books πŸ“š Read (28910) Books Online Free

tal conflict of life, within the possibilities of the human mind as we know it. We permit ourselves also a free hand with all the apparatus of existence that man has, so to speak, made for himself, with houses, roads, clothing, canals, machinery, with laws, boundaries, conventions, and traditions, with schools, with literature and religious organisation, with creeds and customs, with everything, in fact, that it lies within man's power to alter. That, indeed, is the cardinal assumption of all

English Literary Criticism by Charles Edwyn Vaughan (smart ebook reader TXT) πŸ“• - American Library Books πŸ“š Read (28910) Books Online Free

e city council was backed by a large body of serious opinion throughout the country. A proof of this, if proof were needed, is to be found in the circumstances that gave rise to the Apologie of Sidney.The attack on the stage had been opened by the corporation and the clergy. It was soon joined by the men of letters. And the essay of Sidney was an answer neither to a town councillor, nor to a preacher, but to a former dramatist and actor. This was Stephen Gosson, author of the School of Abuse.

Shop Management by Frederick Winslow Taylor (top books to read .TXT) πŸ“• - American Library Books πŸ“š Read (28910) Books Online Free

own good it is as important that workmen should not be very much over-paid, as it is that they should not be under-paid. If over-paid, many will work irregularly and tend to become more or less shiftless, extravagant, arid dissipated. It does not do for most men to get rich too fast. The writer's observation, however, would lead him to the conclusion that most men tend to become more instead of less thrifty when they receive the proper increase for an extra hard day's work, as, for example, the