Chapter
1 I | Englishman and the younger an American, and both of them were old
2 I | suspension bridge which joins the American to the Canadian bank three
3 I | Englishman stepped up to the American.~“I contend, nevertheless,
4 I | Doodle!’” replied the young American.~The dispute was about to
5 I | right; the Englishman or the American? It is not easy to say.
6 I | the observatories of the American Federation did not hesitate
7 III | leaps nimbly enough from American pockets. The funds flowed
8 IV | no whiskers, but a large American goatee, revealing the attachments
9 IV | hundred miles above the American continent, has had to give
10 IV | rejected by the majority of American and foreign engineers. It
11 IV | each hand was one of those American institutions known as revolvers
12 V | was impossible to all with American blood in their veins. Had
13 VI | ankles with his knife. An American who has not a bowie-knife
14 VI | his pocket is no longer an American.~But if Phil Evans had regained
15 VII | heavier than air,” English, American, Italian, Austrian, French—
16 VIII | from the Canadian to the American bank.~“The falls of Niagara!”
17 XIV | pardon this fault in an American, who might do worse. And
18 XVI | most southerly point of the American continent, to Cape Horn
19 XXI | price for their berths no American captain would trouble them
20 XXII | platform and hoisted the American colors. Need we say that
21 XXIII| Go-Ahead” was flying the American colors, did not the “Albatross”
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