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The Alchemist, v.1, issue 3, Summer 1940

Page 44

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Page 44 THE ALCHEMIST it was believed that the carved image possessed intelligence, and that when it lived in its new home, the Ka chapel, it could enjoy the odor of the delicious offerings brought by the Ka priests. The food was placed on a low table where the Ka could eat. The freedom of the Ka was remarkable. It could come and go as it willed; it could live in the other world of this one. In the marvelous Egyptian exhibit of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, is a replica of the famous wooden man which is one of the most remarkable features of the Cairo Museum. In the British Museum is a wooden Ka figure of Ramses II taken from his tomb at Thebes. This Pharoah is noted principally because he was the father of one hundred and eleven sons and fifty one daughters. He honored several of his favorite children by having small statues set up beside his own Ka. S N I D E is actually out! Yes yes! Amazing, isn't it? Or is it? Anyhoo, slip a dime in the mail, pal, and get: Via Totempole, by Gordon A Gillicutty! Nothing, by Fred Hurter! Essay on the Freedom of Space, by H Pong! and other fiction, essays, poetry, & depts by Tucker, Hurter, Sullivan, and - uh- d knight, 803 Columbia, Hood River, Oregon.
 
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