RMPG08MX–. Song birds and water fowl. Birds; Water birds. Cornell University Library The original of tliis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. www.archive.org/details/cu31924090251442. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916; Fuertes, Louis Agassiz, 1874-1927. New York, C. Scribner's Sons
RM2AN402T–Lectures on localization in diseases of the brain, delivered at the Faculté de médecine, Paris, 1875 . cipal branches : the first nour-ishes the two inferior frontal convolutions ; the second, muchmore important, is distributed (less commonly than theSylvian, but much oftener than the anterior cerebral) to thegyrus fornicatus (Fig. 16), to the corpus callosum, to thefirst frontal convolution (internal and external faces), to theparacentral lobule and upon the convex face of the frontallobe, to the first and second frontal convolutions (Fig. 17),and finally to the superior extremity of the as
RMPG437W–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. PLATE VIII. 52. Cucumber tree. 6. (V4) 53. Umbrella-tree. 7. ('/J 54. Great-leaved Magnolia. 15. (Via) 55. Ear-leaved Magnolia. |6. ('/.) 56. Shad-bush. 42. (Va) 215. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digita
RM2AXHAR1–Diseases of the heart and arterial system : designed to be a practical presentation of the subject for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . Fig. 126.—Initial High-Tension Pulse, from a Man, Aged Forty-eight, with Ar-teriosclerosis and a Small Aneurysm of the Arch of the Aorta. arteriosclerosis, aneurysms of the aorta, and chronic interstitialnephritis, typical tracings of which are given (Figs. 126 and127).. Fig. 127.—Sustained High-Tension Pulse from a Woman, Aged Sixty-three, withChronic Interstitial Nephritis. The following sphygmogram (Fig. 128) may be considered asfairly re
RMPG438Y–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. '4' 'y^ws THE POND The arrow shows the stardng-point and the direction of the route.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations m
RM2AN12BT–The Holy Land and the Bible; . d were not confined to water, vinegar, andparched corn, for we read that Boaz had eaten and di-unk, and hisheart was merry, before he went to lie down at the end of the moundof threshed grain ;^ and in the storj^ of the churlish Nabal we have aninstance of a harvest-feast on a very liberal scale; while Abigail car-ried to David, as his share of tlie bounties dispensed at the harvest-home, not only parched corn, but loaves of bread, skins of wine, roastedsheep, clusters of raisins, and cakes of figs.^ It is not, indeed, to besupposed that this was the everyday far
RMPG434E–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. PLATE IX. 49. White Passion-flower, tio. (%) 50. Wistaria. 115. (%) 51. Common Club Moss. 103. 52. Northern Club Moss. 103. 345. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - colorat
RM2AM833B–The Holy Land and the Bible; . inthat direction. A little fortress crowns the top, and stone walls runalong the slope outside the houses; only one door offering entrance.At the top of the slow ascent through rich vineyards, orchards ofolives and figs, and fields of grain, a fountain was flowing from belowan arch, the water in part running to waste down the hill. Numbersof Avomen Avere busy cleaning linen Avith Avooden mallets; others Averegetting Avater, some of them passing us with their jars on theirsh,.adders or heads. A string of camels, Avith great bales sticking outon each side, stalked
RMPG437D–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. PLATE XIV. 90 92 89. Ohio Buckeye. 130. (Vio) 90. White Pine. igi. (2/3) 91. Pitch Pine. 152. (V3). Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these i
RM2AXHK65–Diseases of the heart and arterial system : designed to be a practical presentation of the subject for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . considerable size does not nec-essarily preclude the possibility of long life and may not giverise to symptoms. Duroziez, cited by Gibson, discovered such acondition in a woman who died of erysipelas at the age of sev-enty-six. When not dependent upon pulmonary stenosis or other valvu-lar defect there may even be an absence of murmur or other ob-jective evidence of the patency. A defect in the interventricular sseptum may also fail tomanifes
RMPG4369–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. PLATE Vin. 43. Shrubby CinquefoU. 141, (I/4) 44. False Indigo. 153. (1/2) 45. Shrub Yellow-root. ISS- (Vs) 46. Goosebeny. 161. (Ve) 47. Smooth Sumach. 105. OU) 48. Cut-leaved Sumach. 165. C/g) 293. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page i
RM2AXJBJP–Diseases of the heart and arterial system : designed to be a practical presentation of the subject for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . bly always present, and when stenosis is com-bined there is also a pulmonic systolic murmur, so that there is adouble or to-and-fro bruit, the same as when there is regurgitationat the aortic orifice. The seat of maximum intensity of this dias-tolic murmur is at the left of the sternum in the second and thirdleft interspaces. Its direction of transmission is downward alongthe left sternal margin, and its quality is soft. Indeed, it may soclo
RMPG437N–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. PLATE X. 63. English Hawthorn. 140. (Va) 64. Nettle-tree. 43. CA) 65. Wild Apple. 47- ('A) 66. Amencan Holly. 49. (Va) 67. Silver-bell-tree. 72. (%) 68. Weeping Willow. 6l. f'/s) 69. Shining Willow. 53. ('/j) 223. Please note that these images are extracted fro
RM2AXJE1M–Diseases of the heart and arterial system : designed to be a practical presentation of the subject for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . Fig. 68.—Ehythm of Aortic Obstructive Murmur. mitral defect, that percussion detects any increase of absolute andrelative cardiac dulness to the right. Auscultation.—The first sound at the apex is apt to bedull and muffled in conse-quence of the preponderanceof its muscular element, whilethe second tone is likely to beenfeebled. Over the base ofthe heart in the aortic areathe ear perceives a murmurwhich is synchronous with thefirst sound, an
RMPFYN6A–. Song birds and water fowl. Birds; Water birds. â ti &^ SEA EAGLE. Noa3Hâ UPLAND PLOVER The birds named in the outer circle are merely representative of the groups of the inner circle.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916; Fuertes, Louis Agassiz, 1874-1927. New York, C. Scribner's Sons
RM2AN0448–The Holy Land and the Bible; . in this spot is curious in the extreme. Men and women, chil-dren and tlie very old, ])riests and laymen from every country, repeatthe spectacle and the Babel-like confusion of tongues seen and heardof old in this very city on the day of Pentecost.^ The only entranceto the church is on the southern side, and it was shut when I reachedit, but a gift to the doorkeeper having turned the key, I entered. 0)ieach side of the quadrangle are chapels, Armenian, Coptic, and Greek,the last pretending to be the place where Abraham was about to ofterup Isaac. The front of the
RMPFYN5H–. Song birds and water fowl. Birds; Water birds. . Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916; Fuertes, Louis Agassiz, 1874-1927. New York, C. Scribner's Sons
RM2AN16W8–The Holy Land and the Bible; . o the utter bar-renness of the wilderness of Judi^a, unrelieved by a tree or a slirub;the few tufts of dwarf plants showing almost the only visible life in thethousands of white snails which feed on them, and are, in their turn,the food of the larks and other desert birds. The whole country isfound to be ploughed by tlie rains of millenniums into countless gorgesrunning in all directions: occasionally mere precipitous gaps in the softchalky marl; sometimes white valleys, divided from each other onlyby towering walls of rock; but altogether a bewildering labyrinth
RMPG431K–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. 419. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916
RM2AM7PHH–The Holy Land and the Bible; . n, or Jezreel, toCarmel, was around us, showing the whole distance over which theanxious mother pressed so hurriedly to tell the prophet the sad fate ofher boy : and it was not difficult to understand how Elisha, standingon some height of the Carmel range opposite, could distinguish herfrom a great distance, so as to send Gehazi to ask her errand. The soileverywhere was evidently very rich, but wide stretches were left wild,and there was not a single village from one side to the other. El-][ahrakah, or the Place of Burning, has for many years beeninstly regarded
RMPG08KF–. Song birds and water fowl. Birds; Water birds. SEA SWALLOWS As eager and buoyant as the sparkling, dancing waves that roll beneath their fe^t throughout the summer (p. 135).. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916; Fuertes, Louis Agassiz, 1874-1927. New York, C. Scribner's Sons
RM2AXHYPJ–Diseases of the heart and arterial system : designed to be a practical presentation of the subject for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . Fig. 95 Fig. 93. 460.
RMPG436G–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. PLATE V. 2$. Arrow-wood. 62. (V<) =8. Maple-leaved Arrow-wood. 68. 26. Hobble-bush. 66. (Va) (Vs) 27. High Cranberry-bush. 67. (Vs) 29- Common Elder. 69. (Vs) 271. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digita
RM2AXJTW2–Diseases of the heart and arterial system : designed to be a practical presentation of the subject for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . seems to corroborate the view thatdropsy depends upon the state of the blood and nutrition of thecapillaries, as wrell as upon the degree of capillary and venousengorgement. This patient subsequently succumbed to a thirdattack in the hospital. Mr. B., aged twenty-nine, tailor, consulted me January 9,1900, on account of great breathlessness upon the slightest effort.He gave a history of rheuma-tism four years previous, sincewhich time he had
RMPG08MA–. Song birds and water fowl. Birds; Water birds. . Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916; Fuertes, Louis Agassiz, 1874-1927. New York, C. Scribner's Sons
RM2AKCR11–More chapters of opera : being historical and critical observations and records concerning the lyric drama in New York from 1908 to 1918 . creased from 36soloists to nearly 100, the orchestra from 65 to more than150, the chorus from 75 to 180. The company now pos-sessed facilities to give two performances a day and alsohad a working agreement with the Boston Opera Com-pany for an interchange of singers. In the old and ap-proved list were found the names of Frances Alda, EmmyDestinn, Geraldine Farrar, Olive Fremstad, Johanna Gad-ski, Louise Homer, Lillian Nordica, Alessandro Bonci,Enrico Caruso
RMPG4340–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. PLATE IV. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848
RM2AM8GCN–The Holy Land and the Bible; . being linked in the most touching way, as the secondAdam, with the first. From very early times myriads of pilgrims,accepting both legends, have streamed to this Convent of tli-e HolyCross to kiss the spot where the tree was supposed to have once stood.Simple they may be, but, let us hope, none the less sincere and earnestlyhumble in their devotion to the Blessed One. The old church is stillstanding, though now surmounted by a clock-tower built in the Russianstyle, which sounds out its invitation to prajer over the villages around,with little effect on their Maho
RMPFYN5Y–. Song birds and water fowl. Birds; Water birds. % ^. SEA SWALLOWS As eager and buoyant as the sparkling, dancing waves that roll beneath their fept throughout the summer (p. 135).. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916; Fuertes, Louis Agassiz, 1874-1927. New York, C. Scribner's Sons
RM2AM640P–The Holy Land and the Bible; . ges, peaches, pomegranates, and other fruit-trees. The memorable site of Sarepta lies only a short way fartheron, and is reached through a pleasant and comparatively fertile neigh-borhood. Herds of oxen and flocks of goats pasture here and there,and the soil is more or less fertile with crops. But agriculture at thisspot, as elsewhere in the East, is very primitive. The only processbefore sowing is the ploughing of the ground with the wretched imple-ments characteristic of the wiiole of Western Asia, half an acre a daybeing the most that ordinary labor can scratc
RMPG4392–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. .•*• THE RAMBLE. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmor
RM2AM6N4X–The Holy Land and the Bible; . the shade of trees.The omnipresent water-carrier passed with his huge jar, or leatherbottle, and brass cup, inviting you to purchase; men at the roadsidesat behind a round table-head laid over a basket, displaying stores ofthin scones, made tasty with butter and grape-syrup, and sprinkledwdth sesame-seed, inviting customers now and again with the cry,God is the Nourisher; buy my bread ! Ladies, veiled or unveiled,with Western parasols, rode by on asses, a bell or thick tassel hangingat the animals neck, and the donkey-boy, stick in hand, at its heels;gossips sat
RMPG4322–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. a b c d e f WAT. 415. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard
RM2AWTK1H–Islam, a challenge to faith; studies on the Mohammedan religion and the needs and opportunities of the Mohammedan world from the standpoint of Christian missions . age and preaching, they won overmany to the faith. In the following century we readthat many thousands of Moslems were massacred inChina, while Marco Polo speaks of the large Moslempopulation of Yunnan. Following upon the great wars of Ghengis Khan avast number of Moslem traders and adventurers pouredinto Western China. Some came as merchants, artisans,soldiers and colonists; others were brought in as prison-ers-of-war. A great numb
RMPG432X–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. . Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916. N
RM2AMXNPG–The Holy Land and the Bible; . 4,1; XV. f, 2; BeU. Jud., i. 6, 6; iv. 8, 2, 3. 6 Josh. il. 6,. Palm Trees. (See page 394.) •t XXVIII.] TjjE PLAIN OF JERICHO. 395 together to her, as if llicy had been a trifle for such a mistress! Thetree from which henna is obtained—the dye still used by the womenof the East to stain their nails—also grew here. The Son ofSirach makes Wisdom say that she is lofty as the ])alni trees ofEngedi, and like the roses of Jericho.^ Sycamores formed alleysalongside the roads, as they now do in the suburbs of Cairo.- Evenyet, the zukkum, a small, thorny tree, yields from
RMPG4359–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. . Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916. N
RM2AKT8B9–The sphygmograph and the physiology of the circulation : a monograph read before the Medical Society of New Jersey, upon investigations made preparatory to a larger work on the practical value of the sphygmograph . tions. Onefeature seems certainly to belong to them, viz: that thenearer to the ventricle the obstruction happens to be, the moredefinite, ceteris paribus, becomes the flattening of the apex ofthe first curve of the tracing, distant obstructions as in thecapillaries of the extremities seem to exhibit themselves inthe second wave of the writing or in the interspace betweenthe first a
RMPG08KX–. Song birds and water fowl. Birds; Water birds. SEA EAGLE â t^ .G^ .â e-s; s^^ :?;â¢* # â % . ''I'. '-^s >^. '^ â â 7'^; â >;s5^ ''TT N0a3H nS^ UPLAND PLOVER /^ /S S- 4> ^^'' The birds named in the outer circle are merely representative of groups of the inner drfle.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916; Fuertes, Louis Agassiz, 1874-1927. New York, C. Scribner's So
RM2AN3X0F–Lectures on localization in diseases of the brain, delivered at the Faculté de médecine, Paris, 1875 . distinction.We have already said that the symptoms differ remarkablyaccording to the portion of the internal capsule affected bythe lesion. If it occupies any part of the anterior two-thirds of thecapsule, the region where the white tract separates the ante-rior extremity of the lenticular ganglion from the head of thecaudated ganglion, and which belong, as you know, to thefield of the lenticulo-striated artery, h& paralysis will be ex-clusively that oi motion ; there will be no durable tr
RMPG438N–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. THE POINT. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 184
RM2AN2BFH–The Holy Land and the Bible; . leather strap, assiduouslygather the different kinds of melon, while the tent of the tax-collectors,pitched in the fields, shows that these oppressors are on the look-outto lay a heavy hand on the produce, for the Government. How is itthat great vegetable globes, like these melons, so full of water, thrivethus wonderfully on so hot and sandy a soil ? The camel-loads ofthem taken to the shore fill a thousand boats each summer. Indeed,if it were not for fear of the Bedouins, there need be no limit to thequantity grown. The secret of this luxuriant fertility lies in
RMPG4348–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. PLATE I. 1. Yulan. I. (Vs) 2. Oleaster. 3. (Vj) 3. European Beech. 10. CA) 4. Cut-leaved Beech. ("Native Trees," 91.) (i/j) 5. Southern Over-cup Oak. 38. 0/, 6. Turkey Oak. ap. (Va) 7. English Oak. 30. (V,) 359. Please note that these images are extr
RM2AM7N3D–The Holy Land and the Bible; . ar into which Ahazfell on hearing of an alliance against him by the Ten Tribes andSyria—his heart was moved, and the heart of his people, as the treesof the wood are moved with the wind ^ —for the lustle of the branchesin the soft air is a sound very seldom heard elsewhere in Palestine.Rich slopes appeared again after a time, with flocks of sheep and goats,tended in some cases by girls with sunburnt faces. Wild beasts—hvaenas, leopards, wild cats, and other creatures equally fierce—arefound in tiiis district, but we saw none. The hills are less fertiletowards the
RMPG4350–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. PLATE V. 27. aimbing Fern. 43. (V3) 28. Bittersweet (Ceiastnis scan* dens]. 38. (Av. size.) 29. Moody Nightshade. 44. (Av. size.) 30. Partridge-berry. 53. 31. Twin-flower. 53, n/j' 32. Moneywort. 54. O/3) 327. Please note that these images are extracted from sc
RM2AXHJ39–Diseases of the heart and arterial system : designed to be a practical presentation of the subject for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . beat at least 160 times a minute. (2) The onset and ter- ESSENTIAL PAROXYSMAL TACHYCARDIA 733 ruination of the attack must be so sudden and abrupt as to give itthe character of a paroxysm. Although a pulse-rate of less than100 is frequently observed in persons with some structural diseaseof the heart, still in essential tachycardia the number of cardiaccontractions is often vastly in excess of this number, running ashigh as 200, and in a few
RMPFYN5T–. Song birds and water fowl. Birds; Water birds. STORMY PETRELS V* hose spacious mansion of wide emptiness has 1he ocean for a billowy floor, the sf'v'i bluR concave for a vaulted roof, and for companions only winds and waves (p. 93).. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916; Fuertes, Louis Agassiz, 1874-1927. New York, C. Scribner's Sons
RM2ANDRMA–The education of women in Japan . ecognition as a Semmon Gakko. This school cannot of course be comparedwith the medical education which is beinggiven men, says a recent article, but Uni-versity professors lecture at the school, andwomen are going out in increasing numbersto practise medicine as assistants, or whatwould correspond to high class nurses, andthose who have passed government examina-tions, as regular practitioners. The record made by graduates of this schoolwho have entered for the government exami-nations reflects great credit on the thorough-ness of their preparation. The Japan
RMPG433F–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. . Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916. N
RM2AM6FN5–The Holy Land and the Bible; . S;*i H (j i /i! Ill, 1 ii. 1 IiT^l^- LI] BAALBEK ANT) THE CEDA.RS OF LEBANON. 619 vive. A gorgeous ceiling of carved stone once united this grandarcade, all round, with the temple; but it is, of course, gone, althoughits beautv may be imagined from huge fragments strewn on tlieground. The great gateway is famous as one of the most beautifulremains of antiquity. Door-posts and lintel, alike, are huge monoliths,carved elaborately with the most charming skill. Overhead, a giganticmass from the centre of the lintel, fractured by its own enormousweight or by lightn
RMPFYN59–. Song birds and water fowl. Birds; Water birds. MEADOW LARK Its clearly whistled song of three or four notes seems peculiarly suggestive of the freshness and openness of spring (p. 275").. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916; Fuertes, Louis Agassiz, 1874-1927. New York, C. Scribner's Sons
RM2AM8NPM–The Holy Land and the Bible; . Iliel of Bethel fortified thecity.^o It was here that ]:)oor Zedekiah, the last king of Judah, wasseized in his flight by the Chaldaeans, to be taken to Eiblah and blindedby Nebuchadnezzar.^^ After the return from Babylon a new settle-ment was begun by 345 men, no doubt with their iamilies—childrenor descendants of captives taken from Jericho ;^^ but they did notattempt to fortify it, for this Avas first done by the Syrian general Bac-chides in the Maccabaean wars.^^ Herod the Great, in his earlier career,assaulted and sacked it, but at a later time, when he had
RMPG434N–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. . Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916. N
RM2AMYXJN–The Holy Land and the Bible; . ll forget.The great Silseleh Gate, at the foot of David Street and thus almost inthe centre of the western side of the enclosure, admits you by two orthree steps upwards to the sacred precincts, which offer in their wideopen space of thirty-five acres, the circumference nearlj^ equal to amile,3 a delightful relief, after toiling through the narrow and filthystreets. Lying about 2,420 feet above the Mediterranean, this spot iscomparatively cool, even in summer. The surface was once a roughhill sloping or swelling irregularly. Ijut a vast level platform has beenfor
RMPG4384–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. PLATE V. 39. Cut-leaved Birch. 90. (V3) 30. Sassafras. I3. (Ve) 31. American Elm. 30. O/3) 32. Slippery Elm. 37- (V*) 33. Sweet Gum. 87. (Vb) 34. Common Aspen. 24. ('/^) 35. Large-toothed Aspen. 35. (Vs) 36. Downy-leaved Poplar. a6. (Vg) 203. Please note that t
RM2AXJJAH–Diseases of the heart and arterial system : designed to be a practical presentation of the subject for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . e heart - muscle been notquite healthy and had thatrun started a stretching ofthe aortic ring which had beenincreased by succeeding ef-forts, or had the strain ledto an aortitis or aneurysm,and this to insufficiency of thevalves ? Rupture of a cuspwas out of the question, be-cause of the absence of serioussymptoms in the weeks imme-diately succeeding his run. Aprevious valvulitis was notimpossible, for it is wellknown that the enormous secon
RMPG08JM–. Song birds and water fowl. Birds; Water birds. . Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916; Fuertes, Louis Agassiz, 1874-1927. New York, C. Scribner's Sons
RM2AN1JGX–The Holy Land and the Bible; . ; Jer. x. 14. 5 Gen. xxxviii. 18. 6 Mai. iii. 2. 7 Lev.vi. 28; Num. xvi.39. 8 Hen. xxiv. 30. 9 Judg. v. 25. 10 Ex. xxviii. 11,17: Jobxxviii.15—19. 11 Isa.xli. 7; 1 King.s vii. 45; Num. xvii. 4: Isa. xliv. 12; Jer. x. 4; Ex. xxv. 11,13; 1 Kings vi. 20 ff.; 2Cliron. iii. 5; Isa. xl. 19. 12Isa. xli. 7; xliv. 12; vi. 6; Ezelc. xxii. 18; Ecclus. xxxviii. 28; Ex.xxxii.4; Jer. vi. 29; Prov. xvii. 3. 13 Ex. xxxviii. 11 ff. 14 2 Sam. v. 11; Isa. xliv. 13; Matt. xiii. 55; Markvi. 3; Ex. XXXV. 36; xxv. 10 ff.; xxxvii. 1,10, 15, 2.5. 15 Num. vi. 15 ff.; Deut. xxvi. 2, 4; Jud
RMPG08GX–. Song birds and water fowl. Birds; Water birds. GREAT BLUE HERON Then floating off haif moodily where h could maintain, more unobserved, its noiseless, melancholy reign over its solitary domain (p. 248).. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, Howard Elmore, 1848-1916; Fuertes, Louis Agassiz, 1874-1927. New York, C. Scribner's Sons
RM2AN3T45–Lectures on localization in diseases of the brain, delivered at the Faculté de médecine, Paris, 1875 . nt information.They have been given indetail in a work of one ofhis auditors, Hugueniuj^ ^ I l||||vS? Ill I / Professor at Zurich.^/ .^.^ yUrCv vWni / They consist of dissec-tions and also in compari-sons of thin slices, hard-ened, and examined bytransmitted light. The brain being placedupon its base, the lateralventricles are opened insuch manner as to laybare the superior face ofthe central masses—thosewhich are contiguous tothe various parts of theisthmus; after that, byminute dissecti
RMPG431Y–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. v J ^ li/. a b c d e f WAT. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Parkhurst, H
RM2AMYHA8–The Holy Land and the Bible; . a few higher chambers. No one, therefore, can moveabout without a lantern, since to do so would insure a speedy fall overthe rough stones, or headlong precipitation into some gulf; not to speakof dangers from the town dogs, and the nameless filth of the sidestreets. It is, therefore, obligatory to carry ones own light, and any-one found abroad without a lantern after nine oclock is at once stoppedby the turbaned curiosities who do duty as watchmen. * The population of Jerusalem is about 30,000, who are divided andsubdivided into no fewer than twenty-four distinct
RMPG436K–. Trees, shrubs and vines of the northeastern United States : their characteristic landscape features fully described for identification by the non-botanical reader ; together with an account of the principal foreign hardy trees, shrubs and vines cultivated in our country, and found in Central Park, New York City . Trees; Shrubs; Parks. 19. Clammy Azalea. 4p, 0/s) 20. Leather-leaf. 52. (Vs) 2X. Common Blueberry. 50. (V3) 22. Andromeda. 53. (2/„} 23. Withe-rod. 58. (2/3) 24. Button-bush. 59. (i/^) 267. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digit
RM2AN2PPW–The Holy Land and the Bible; . g too shallow topermit a nearer approach to the old tumble-down quay, built of stonesfrom the ruins of Caesarea ; the base or capital of a pillar sticking outhere and there, mixed with gi-eat bevelled blocks of conjectural anti-quity. Strong arms lift and push you up a rough step or two, and youare fairly ashore, to find yourself amidst the houses, streets, and peopleof a new world. There has always been the same difficulty in landing, for the rockshave been as formidable from the beginning of time, the water overthem as treacherous, and the inside bay as shallow