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From: Betty K. <co...@ov...> - 2010-08-06 05:15:39
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From: Herbers H. <sub...@ne...> - 2010-04-21 14:33:22
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Ument for finding longitude, and it is described in the appendix, but I can find nothing about the man. There was published some years later (London, 1751) another work of his, _A new Problem to discover the longitude at sea_. [310] Baxter, concerning whom I know merely that he was a schoolmaster, starts with the assumption of this value, and deduces from it some fourteen properties relating to the circle. [311] John, who died in 1780, was a well-known character in his way. He was a bookseller on Fleet Street, and his shop was a general rendezvous for the literary men of his time. He wrote the _Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Mr. William Whiston_ (1749, with another edition in 1753). He was one of the first to issue regular catalogues of books with prices affixed. [312] |
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From: Hierholcer M. <ju...@de...> - 2010-04-10 11:34:45
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From: Diffenderfer <ud...@mi...> - 2009-12-24 14:59:15
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Le copper land would be vastly increased. The report on the Conservation of Mi |
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From: Ihlenfeld <pe...@ae...> - 2009-12-05 21:14:26
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'Because the small vessel appears to be a piratical brig, whose commander, I am well assured, will not pass a rich Indiaman without politely undertaking to inspect his inventory and overhaul his cargo,' replied the pirate. 'I am rather inclined to think,' answered the earl, 'that he will first be favored through the medium of our guns with an opportunity to cultivate an extensive acquaintance with the sharks and other monsters of the deep. Now, sir,' he continued, turning to the pirate, 'we will with your leave, get as quickly as possible on board of our own ship.' 'Oh, certainly,' replied Blackbeard, 'only, as it appears to me quite probable, that these two young ladies will be exposed to great danger in getting on board of your noble ship, I shall claim the privilege of keeping them here under my protection unt |
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From: Graul M. <ba...@aq...> - 2009-08-31 20:27:34
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Month after the rains have started.... It is most important that rough drains should be traced.... I have just started planting Doub grass. This grass gives an ideal surface for landing, kills other grasses, and possesses deep interlacing roots which will bind the entire surface of the aerodromes, making it permanent and free from washaways and the formation of sluits." The demonstration flights, however, showed what could, rather than what should, be done, and what we look for to-day is the inception of practical undertakings, however small, in the various portions of the Empire. The most important of these is the service contemplated between Egypt and India; another instance is afforded by the West Indies, which suffer from the lack of inter-island communications, both for mails and passengers, and this could be partially rectified by an air service employing seaplanes or amphibians for the Leeward and Windward Islands and the Bahamas, and between the Bahamas and the American Continent, where an American company is actually conducting a service. Another project, given up owing to recent disturbances, was one for a flying-boat service on the Nile. Services are also being considered from Malta to Italy, Geraldton to Derby in Western Australia, Sydney to Adelaide and Brisbane, and Melbourne to Hobart in Tasmania. Canadian activity takes the fo |
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From: Knaack <re...@po...> - 2009-08-28 20:54:18
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Urner, ed., _Cotton Planter's Manual_, pp. 131-136. The routine of operations is illustrated in the diary of Thomas P. Ravenel, of Woodboo plantation, 1847-1850, printed in _Plantation and Frontier_, I, 195-208.] The roller gin was described in a most untechnical manner by Basil Hall: "It consists of two little wooden rollers, each about as thick as a man's thumb, placed horizontally and touching each other. On these being put into rapid motion, handfulls of the cotton are cast upon them, which of course are immediately sucked in.... A sort of comb fitted with iron teeth ... is made to wag up and down with considerable velocity in front of the rollers. This rugged comb, which is equal in length to the rollers, lies parallel to them, with the sharp ends of its teeth almost in contact with them. By the quick wagging motion given to this comb by the machinery, the buds of cotton cast upon the rollers are torn open just as they are beginning to be sucked in. The seeds, now released ... fly off like sparks to the right and left, while the cotton itself passes between the rollers."[35] [Footnote 35: Basil Hall, _Travels in North America_ (Edinburgh, 1829), III, 221, 222.] As to yields and proceeds, a planter on the Georgia seaboard analyzed his experience from 1830 to 1847 as follows: the harvest average per acre ranged from 68 pounds of lint in 1846 to 223 pounds in 1842, with a general average for the whole period of 137 pounds; the crop's average price per pound ranged from 14 cents in 1847 to 41 cents in 1838, with a general average of 23 1/2 cents; and the net proceeds per hand were highest at $137 in 1835, lowest at $41 in 1836, and averaged $83 for the eighteen years.[36] [Footnote 36: J.A. Turner, ed., _Cotton Planter's Manual_, pp. 128, 129.] In the cotton belt as a whole the census takers of 1850 enumerated 74,031 farms and plantations each producing five bales or more,[37] an |
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From: Fauske <sec...@vi...> - 2009-08-27 00:45:38
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faster than ever, for she must know if Farmer Brown's boy had found her house. "It's lucky I told Reddy Fox to go inside and not come out till I returned; it's very lucky I did that," thought Granny Fox as she ran. Presently she heard voices singing. They seemed to be in the treetops over her head. "Happily we dance and play All the livelong sunny day! Happily we run and race And win or lose with smiling face!" Granny Fox knew the voices, and she looked up. Just as she expected, she saw the Merry Little Breezes of Old Mother West |
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From: Barber <cl...@al...> - 2009-08-21 18:16:44
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Se ladies, in my presence, that we should be careful not to pick up chance strangers to dine, in Italy, and--and he went on to give me a repetition of his friendly warning about Paris. He hinted things for a while, until I asked him to say what he knew of you. Then he said he knew all about you; that you were an outcast, a left-handed member of his own family, an adventurer--" "It is finished, my friend," I said, interrupting him, and gazed with all my soul upon the beautiful lady. Her face was as white as Antonio's or that of my friend, or as my own must have been. She strained her eyes at me fixedly; I saw the tears standing still in them, and I knew the moment had come. "This Caravacioli is my half-brother," I said. Antonio laughed again. "Of what kind!" Oh, he went on so easily to his betrayal, not knowing the United-Statesians and their sentiment, as I did. "We had the same mother," I continued, as quietly as I could. "Twenty years after this young--this somewhat young--Prince was born she divorced his father, Caravacioli, and married a poor poet, whose bust you can see on the Pincian in Rome, though he died in the cheapest hote |
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From: Nakamatsu <sur...@zu...> - 2009-08-18 22:31:13
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Nd X ranch." "It's queer," murmured Nort, as Dick urged his horse in the direction of the vision they had just beheld. "What's queer?" asked Dick. "Seeing that town," his brother went on. "Bud never said anything about the ranch being so near a place where they had a river steamer. There isn't a boat of that size on the river around here." "No," assented Dick. "This must be farther down. Anyhow, let's hit the trail for there. We aren't lost any more, I reckon." "Doesn't seem," murmured Nort. But, even as the two brothers urged their tired, broncos forward, another strange thing happened. In the very same place where they had seen the vision of the town and the steamer, only to witness it vanish, there appeared in sharp detail a large ranch, with its corrals, its bunk house and main buildings. "There! Look!" cried Dick. "There's Diamond |
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From: Prats <woo...@bs...> - 2009-08-16 00:11:52
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E world's recognized leaders to read aright the signs of the times, to rid themselves once for all of their preconceived ideas and fettering creeds, and to reshape the machinery of their respective governments according to those standards that are implicit in Baha'u'llah's supreme declaration of the Oneness of Mankind--the chief and distinguishing feature of the Faith He proclaimed?.... How pathetic indeed are the efforts of those leaders of human institutions who, in utter disregard of the spirit of the age, are striving to adjust national processes, suited to the ancient days of self-contained nations to an age which must either achieve the unity of the world, as adumbrated by Baha'u'llah, or perish. At so critical an hour in the history of civilization it behoves the leaders of all the nations of the world, great and small, whether in the East or in the West, whether victors or vanquished, to give heed to the clarion call of Baha'u'llah and, thoroughly imbued with a sense of world solidarity, the sine qua non of loyalty to His Cause, arise manfully to carry out in its entirety the one remedial scheme He, the Divine Physician, has prescribed for an ailing humanity. Let them discard, once for all, every preconceived idea, every national prejudice, and give heed to the sublime counsel of 'Abdu'l-Baha, the authorized Expounder of His teachings. You can best serve your country, was 'Abdu'l-Baha's rejoinder to a high official in the service of the federal government of the U |
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From: Clough <tho...@da...> - 2009-08-14 06:14:07
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R us, because we had our supper before you paid us so unceremonious a visit. Of course we were betrayed." "Well, as to that," I replied, "you must ask the colonel; I only acted under orders." "Just so. Well, I am very pleased to see you, though I dislike the way in which you introduced yourself. Cut this piece of beef up finely while I fetch some salt." "Have you any?" I asked, in some surprise. "Oh yes. Your amiable brigands know how to stock a larder." Two of the wounded men were able to eat, and they were very grateful for the food we took them. Then we returned to the fire, piled up some sacks to serve as seats, and began our meal. It was all most strange to me and very delightful; it might have been a chapter lifted bodily from one of my favourite story-books. There seemed to be a piratical flavour about the whole business. "Perhaps it is as well that I gave my parole," exclaimed the major thoughtfully, taking off another potato. "Why?" I asked. "I might have felt tempted to escape," he replied, looking at the coil of rope. "You forget your jailer carries a pistol," I remarked, laughing. "An empty one," he suggested, shrugging his shoulders. "No, no, my boy; my parole is your only safeguard." "It is a sufficient one, at any rate." "Yes," said he, rather dreamily, I thought. "The honour of a Mariano is sacred; my father taught me that. And yet--and yet, do you know, Crawford," he added, in a sharper tone, "I doubt if a parole given to brigands should be held to." I did not at all like this turn in the conversation, the more especially as my pistol was really empty. I had not dreamed of taking any precautions, trusting wholly in the Spanish officer's honour. I look |
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