DAVID LIVINGSTONE.
j THE MISSIONARY-EXPLORER. ! HI ELECTRIC TELKOIIATH.—COPYRIGHT. | PRR ITNITKtI PREB9 ASSOOIATiON. • Received March 19. 11.1 H a.m. ] LONDON. March 18. I Many references art; made to David | Livingstone on tin* orea.xion of his reni tonary. i Ijortl Curzin (chairnfan) deliver «! a j eulogism at the Geographical Society's commemoration meeting. J Born on March 19, 101 H, Dm d j Livingstone had an honorable anecsMry (states James Collier. in the Trees'), j The greatest missionary of the 19th i century, and ono of the greatef-t ex- ' plorers, the man who added 3,000,000 j square miles to the missionary field, I and the discoverer of a world-mer with its mighty tributaries, of a chain of !central lakes, and i;f a grand pi-ii".:,; j crowned by eastern and wosteni nioiin- . tain ridges, deserves to have the < 'it- ] tonary of his birth celebrated ;iv we ; celebrate those of the greutr-t -iil' and conquerors. philosophers ami sfit m- . ir.ts. jKiL'tb and artists.
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Bibliographic details
Mataura Ensign, 19 March 1913, Page 5
Word Count
158DAVID LIVINGSTONE. Mataura Ensign, 19 March 1913, Page 5
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