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Show Strange as It Seems byJohnllix M ZJSj 1 JUW 9ohW, (i tV. itmustuHioii ". m , Vvt-e7 ivwRmiwiifwuiMt JvJs,' U v fA s,m ma, J If mwm 1 )) ibL RisTtoiKAHrmi ytw- B1 ' Jgucn"'-' mIJ I 12 fter n pmMETtR, was carvbp J. ! . -fHt WiRfltCT W(WtH TATli (By LwrntceTtrnttySttYeK, ft I ! firihMif4r,Cmtil936) iff l.'l a-S23Sfla3iUr' iuLrgW TREE OF LIFE PlanUd by Hessian prisoners of the American Revolution In 1781, a 150-foot-tall elm tree in South Windsor, Conn., has been carved into a living statue the tallest wooden statue in the world. Artist Lawrence Tenney Stevens was commissioned to do the work, and after months of labor has completed the piece. It stands M feet tall and is called, symbolically, "The Tree of Life." It is now at the New York World's fair. |