Our native hunters had arrows with heads as large as a small tea-cup, for the purpose of shooting the birds of paradise.
— from In the Eastern Seas by William Henry Giles Kingston
It still remains doubtful whether she will persist in the claim for the incorporation of her Sclavic and Italian possessions into the German Confederation, in spite of the remonstrances of England and France, who maintain that as the German Confederation was established, and its limits defined by the Powers of Europe, for the express purpose of settling the balance of power, the extending of the limits of the Confederation is properly a European question.
— from Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol III, No 13, 1851 by Various
Heels overlap by about one-third length of shank when hind limbs adpressed; tibiotarsal articulation extends to anterior edge of eye; thin transverse dermal fold on heel; scalloped dermal fold along outer edge of tarsus; inner metatarsal tubercle large, flat, elliptical, visible from above; toes long, slender; length of toes from longest to shortest, 1-2-5-3-4; discs small, barely wider than digits; subarticular tubercles large, round, subconical; supernumerary tubercles few, scattered on proximal segments of digits; toes about two-thirds webbed; webbing extending from middle of penultimate phalanx of first toe to middle of penultimate phalanx of second, from distal end of penultimate phalanx of second to base of penultimate of third, from distal end of penultimate phalanx of third to middle of antepenultimate of fourth to middle of penultimate of fifth toe.
— from Descriptions of New Hylid Frogs From Mexico and Central America by William Edward Duellman
The force of this argument must be apparent by noting the practice of steam turbine builders of placing the turbine right up against the condenser, and remembering that a high vacuum is necessary to the economical working of a turbine.
— from Hawkins Electrical Guide v. 08 (of 10) Questions, Answers, & Illustrations, A progressive course of study for engineers, electricians, students and those desiring to acquire a working knowledge of electricity and its applications by N. (Nehemiah) Hawkins
In the further pursuit, of strengthening the bonds of peace and good will we have joined with other nations in an international conference held at Geneva and signed an agreement which will be laid before the Senate for ratification providing suitable measures for control and for publicity in international trade in arms, ammunition, and implements of war, and also executed a protocol providing for a prohibition of the use of poison gas in war, in accordance with the principles of Article 5 of the treaty relating thereto signed at the Washington Conference.
— from State of the Union Addresses by Calvin Coolidge
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