Is 1893 Part 3 2002 Pdf 225

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Leana Eckes

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Jul 9, 2024, 4:29:23 AM7/9/24
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Many early Miamians were anxious to provide visitors a glimpse of the mysterious Everglades, which stood, in some areas, just four miles or so west of Biscayne Bay. Abutting the eastern edge of the Everglades were the falls, an area where sheets of water, particularly in the rainy season, dropped into a recessed area marking the headwaters of the north fork of the Miami River. From there, the water gushed over and around rocks in the riverbed, creating the rapids, ribbons of swirling water racing in an easterly direction.

is 1893 part 3 2002 pdf 225


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Emil Kraepelin introduced the concept of dementia praecox in 1893. The eventual acceptance of the concept brought a degree of clarity and order previously unknown to psychiatric nosology. The pre-Kraepelin era had been dominated by concepts such as mania, melancholia and adolescent insanity. After Kraepelin these ideas were abandoned in favour of the two great concepts of dementia praecox and manic depressive insanity, both of which remain active within modern psychiatry in the form of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. This two-part study focuses on the early British reaction to Kraepelin's concept, from 1893, when he first introduced it, to 1913 when it gained general recognition. It examines the struggle experienced by the proponents of dementia praecox before the concept's acceptance by most British psychiatrists in 1913. It argues that both clinical/professional and linguistic factors influenced the British response to dementia praecox. Part 1 of this study describes the backdrop to the development of Kraepelin's ideas and examines the response to the concept in the British psychiatric textbooks and journals of the period. Part 2 will explore reaction to the concept in the professional meetings of the period, and will also examine and evaluate the key issues arising from the debate.

The enactments described in the schedule to this Act are hereby repealed, subject to the provisions of this Act and subject to the exceptions and qualifications in the schedule mentioned; and every part of a title, preamble, or recital specified after the words "in part, namely," in connexion with an Act mentioned in the said schedule may be omitted from any revised edition of the statutes published by authority after the passing of this Act, and there may be added in the said edition such brief statement of the Acts, officers, persons, and things mentioned in the title, preamble, or recital, as may in consequence of such omission appear necessary:

Lovely tribute to your mum Janga.

Not sure that I have a favourite romance trope. Though thinking about it, I do particularly like romance entangled with adventure in the wild outdoors. Perhaps Elizabeth Lowell or Catherine Anderson brought this type of story into focus for me.

As a youngster I was simillar to your Grand who is taken with sports. I had little time for stories or girls .... much to the chagrin of my English teacher! LOL

Thanks, Q. I think the sports interest is a common masculine trait. I know my brother and nephews all went through stages where they read little because of sports. They are all readers now since their sports, except for occasional rounds of golf, are of the armchair variety. I expect the sports-mad grand will follow the same pattern.

I wish I remembered Faith Baldwin. I do remember loving the Cadell books which I borrowed from the public library. I was probably 13 and the librarians let me roam the Adult section freely. My mother shared her condensed book where I discovered Victoria Holt but also Thomas Costain's historical novels which seem romantic as I remember them, particularly "Below the Salt". But the ones that were important to Mom were the stories of Kathleen Norris who wrote about working class girls in the American west and the choices they needed to make. I'm quite sure they reflected her own life as she went to secretarial school and married someone above her migrant farm worker parents' class. She certain,y taught me to love books and I have neve understood why my brothers didn't catch it.

Gleelady, I read Kathleen Norris too, although it has been many years. I remember hers as being darker than the others.

I loved Victoria Holt's books. In fact, I wrote a piece about Holt recently for Heroes and Heartbreakers. Cadell will be the topic of my post Saturday, February 23. I hope you'll stop by and comment on your reading memories of her books then.




He was preparing the reeds, an unseen but most important part of the mechanism as by their means the air is modulated. These are made of the best Spanish cane, bundles of which stood about in the corners. The reed is quite a small affair, about the size of your finger, one end flattened until the edges almost meet, and kept in position by a stout ligature, very neatly attached. These reeds have to be renewed yearly or oftener. It depends on the player and the climate.

Bone is occasionally used for the cheaper classes of pipes, but it quickly turns yellow. Peat reek too, soon spoils the colour of ivory exposed to its influence. You can imagine how tenderly the Highland shepherd or ghillie will wrap up his cherished pipes in his best plaid and commit them to the keeping of the big kist [chest] to preserve them from the pungent and penetrating reek.

Leaving these commercial details, I found Mr Macdougall eloquent on the poetical aspect of his art. He knows all about the genesis and development of the pipes, and brought for my inspection a set of beautiful old English bagpipes, very slender and pretty, a chamber instrument with thin but pleasing tone. On this he played a piobaireachd, explaining as he did so the character of the music and the development of the air.

I am afraid that the bagpipes have all through this article rather run off with the bagpipe-maker, but I know no one will pardon this more readily than the genial Royal bagpipe-maker himself whose portrait appears at the head of this article.

Serving as both a federal and a state depository library, the UNT Libraries Government Documents Department maintains millions of items in a variety of formats. The department is a member of the FDLP Content Partnerships Program and an Affiliated Archive of the National Archives.

This growing collection of materials produced by the State of Texas includes agency annual reports, legislative publications, statistical reports, and various state government reports and periodicals.

A number of horses mortgaged to secure the payment of apromissory note of their owner given to the mortgagee were, underthe provisions of a statute of Montana relating to chattelmortgages, sold by a sheriff on the maturity of the note withoutpayment. With the assent of the attorney of the mortgagee, who waspresent at the sale, the purchaser paid a part of the purchaseprice in cash, and left the horses with the sheriff as security forpayment of the remainder in five days. On the expiration of thattime, he failed to pay the balance. The attorney refused to receivethe sum paid in cash and the horses as security for the remainder,but the principal received the amount paid in cash, and sued thesheriff and his bondsmen to recover the remainder. Heldthat he could not repudiate the transaction in part and ratify itin part, and that, having ratified it in part by the receipt of thesum paid in cash, he could not maintain this action.

This case comes from the Supreme Court of the Territory ofMontana, and presents the following facts: William Rader, one ofthe defendants in the case as commenced in the district court ofthat territory, was Sheriff of Meagher County, Montana, and theother defendants were his bondsmen. Maddox and Gaddis were theowners, respectively, of two notes, given by P. D. Kinyon, andsecured by a chattel mortgage on some four hundred horses. At thattime there was in force in Montana the following statutoryprovision:

"It shall be lawful for the mortgagor of goods, chattels, orpersonal property to insert in his mortgage a clause authorizingthe sheriff of the county in which such property or any partthereof may be, to execute the power of sale therein granted to themortgagee, his legal representatives and assigns, in which case thesheriff of such county at the time of such sale, may advertise andsell the mortgaged property in the manner prescribed in suchmortgage. Compiled Statutes of Montana 1550. "

This mortgage contained the clause referred to in the statute.On the maturity of these notes, and on the 9th day of August, 1887,one N. B. Smith, an attorney at law, as attorney for Maddox, placedin the hands of Sheriff Rader this mortgage, endorsed asfollows:

Rader collected the horses and advertised them for sale. At theday of the sale, a party by the name of A. B. Kier was a bidder,and after some horses had been knocked down to him, Rader -- nomoney having been paid -- refused to receive any further bids.Thereupon Kier represented that he had in the bank $1,752; agreedto turn that money over to the sheriff, and leave with him allhorses that should be knocked down to him; and, further, that if infive days he should not complete the payment, both money and horsesshould be forfeited. Neither Maddox nor Gaddis were present, butSmith, their attorney, was. The matter was referred to Smith, andhe directed the sheriff to continue the sale, and receive the bidsof Kier. Horses to the amount of $8,096.50 were struck off to Kier.The $1,752 was deposited with the sheriff, and the horses were leftwith him. Kier failed to complete his purchase by the payment ofthe balance of the money. After the five days had expired, thesheriff tendered the $1,752 and horses to Smith, for Maddox andGaddis, but Smith declined to receive either. Thereafter Maddox andGaddis took the money, but declined to receive the horses. Thesheriff received no other instructions, and, after holding thehorses for about a month, turned them over to his bondsmen, andMaddox and Gaddis, one as plaintiff and the other as intervener,brought this suit to recover the difference between $1,752 and$8,096.50. They obtained judgment in the district court, whichjudgment was affirmed by the supreme court. Maddox v.Rader, 9

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