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Updated: June 25, 2025
In that volume I also discussed the various theories which have been advanced in the past to explain these extraordinary photographs. The present collection is intended merely to supplement the former, and to present a number of photographs the solution for which is, it seems to me, yet to be found. In an excellent criticism of the Lee photographs, published in the Proceedings, Amer.
We now find that albinism in guinea-pigs shows an even greater range of variation, yet there can be no doubt of its fundamental unity as a Mendelian character, each grade of which is allelomorphic to every other grade and to normal pigmentation. Castle and Phillips, 1914, Publ. No. 195, Carnegie Inst. of Wash. Castle and Fish, Amer. Nat., Feb., 1915. Wright, S. Amer. Nat., March, 1915.
Offer's Introduction, Hume's History, and Ency. Amer. it. If any man hath received a gift of tinkering, as thou hast done, let him follow his tinkering; and so other men their trades, and the divine his calling, etc.
Khartoum had the advantage of the Blue Nile, that was navigable for steamers and sailing vessels as far south as Fazogle, from which spot, as well as from Gallabat, Abyssinia could be invaded; while swarms of Arabs, including the celebrated Hamrans, the Beni Amer, Hallongas, Hadendowas, Shookeriahs, and Dabainas, could be slipped like greyhounds across the frontier.
At the Wangwana village we met Amer bin Sultan, the very type of an old Arab sheikh, such as we read of in books, with a snowy beard, and a clean reverend face, who was returning to Zanzibar after a ten years' residence in Unyanyembe. He presented me with a goat; and a goatskin full of rice; a most acceptable gift in a place where a goat costs five cloths.
Doubtless the Semites of Babylonia had their own versions of the Dragon combat, both before and after their arrival on the Euphrates, but the particular version which the priests of Babylon wove into their epic is not one of them. In his very interesting study of "Sumerian and Akkadian Views of Beginnings", contributed to the Journ. of the Amer. Or. Soc., Vol.
Frequently, these structures are divided as the result of wounds; but rupture, due to strain, is not frequent. From Amer. J'n'l. Vet. Med., Vol. In some cases in running horses, or in animals that are put to strenuous performances, such as are jumpers, rupture of tendons or of the suspensory ligament takes place.
It would be easy to multiply instances of the ways in which syphilis may be spread by the careless or ignorant in the close associations of family life, but little would be accomplished by such elaboration that would not occur to one who took the trouble to acquaint himself with the principles already discussed. Schamberg, J. F.: "An Epidemic of Chancres of the Lip from Kissing," Jour. Amer. Med.
I.e., 'old age, the name given to some plant of magic power. Tû. Lit., 'good. Utukku the name, it will be recalled, given to a class of demons. See p. 260. See p. 518. See above, p. 474. Haupt's edition, pp. 67, 12. Lit., 'thou hast seen it, I have seen it. Text defective. Jeremias conjectures "kneeling." Ekimmu, another name for a class of demons. See p. 260. Amer. Or.
By the time the river commerce had become really considerable, the rich merchants, planters, and lawyers had begun to build two-story houses of brick or stone, like those in which they had lived in Virginia. They were very fond of fishing, shooting, and riding, and were lavishly hospitable. Magazine of Amer.
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