[Pg 64] CHAPTER XIV MAGNESIAN LIME Magnesium.
— from Right Use of Lime in Soil Improvement by Alva Agee
CHAPTER XVIII MISS LUDOLPH MAKES
— from Barriers Burned Away by Edward Payson Roe
[Pg 204] CHAPTER XI MORNING LIGHT Maria Angelina had no difficulty at all in recollecting where she was when she came to herself next morning, for her dreams had been growing sharper and sharper with reality.
— from The Innocent Adventuress by Mary Hastings Bradley
[xxiv] Mr. Lucien M. Turner was for two years stationed at the Hudson Bay Company’s post, Fort Chimo, near the northern end of the peninsula of Labrador, as a civilian observer in the employ of the Signal Service, U. S. Army.
— from Picture-Writing of the American Indians Tenth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1888-89, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1893, pages 3-822 by Garrick Mallery
But a few years after the death of Louis XV., Madame la Marechale being alone at the Val, a house belonging to M. de Beauvau, Mademoiselle de Dillon saw the Countess's calash take shelter in the forest of St. Germain during a violent storm.
— from Court Memoirs of France Series — Complete by Various
JUST IN TIME CHAPTER XVII RESCUED CHAPTER XVIII MISS LUDOLPH MAKES
— from Barriers Burned Away by Edward Payson Roe
[315] XIV MENTAL LIFE Mind and soul—Intelligence and reason—Pure reason—Kant's dualism—Anthropology—Anthropogeny—Embryology of the mind—Mind of the embryo—The canonical mind—Legal rights of the embryo—Phylogeny of the mind—Paleontology of the mind—Psyche and phronema—Mental energy—Diseases of the mind—Mental powers—Conscious and unconscious mental life—Monistic and dualistic theory—Mental life of the mammals, of savages, and of civilized and educated people.
— from The Wonders of Life: A Popular Study of Biological Philosophy by Ernst Haeckel
Also the same yere, durynge the forsaid sege, David kyng of Scotlond was taken at the bataille of Derham, the xvj kal’ of Novembre, whiche kyng was raunsoned at an hundred m l marcs, to be payed in x yere, that is to sey every yere x m l mark.
— from A Chronicle of London from 1089 to 1483 Written in the Fifteenth Century, and for the First Time Printed from MSS. in the British Museum by Anonymous
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