Stories, Listed By Author The TwoThousand Pounds Coupon, (ss) The White Magazine Mar/Apr SIMS, John (chron.)* The Man Who Took Geronimo, (nf) Walt Coburns Western Magazine http://users.ev1.net/~homeville/fictionmag/s916.htm
Extractions: Previous Table-of-Contents SHICKELL, JACK (chron.) SHIEK, HARRIET (chron.) SHIEL, M(atthew) P(hipps) (chron.) The Red Magazine Aug 1 1914 The Red Magazine ... Nov 1 1911 Dark Lot of One Saul, (nv) The Grand Magazine Feb 1912 The Empress of the Earth: The Tale of the Yellow War [chpt 1- 2], (sl) Short Stories (UK, 1) Feb 5 1898 The Empress of the Earth: The Tale of the Yellow War [chpt 3- 4], (sl) Short Stories (UK, 1) Feb 12 1898 The Empress of the Earth: The Tale of the Yellow War [chpt 5- 6], (sl) Short Stories (UK, 1)
Index Stories, Listed By Author, Part 86 CURT (19022000); SIPPRELL, DONALD S. SIR ROBERT G. SLATER, HD; SLATER, HOWARD; SLATER,John; SLATER, KEN SLATER, LEVIA; SLATER, MARY White (1870-?); SLATER, MILDRED http://users.ev1.net/~homeville/fictionmag/q86.htm
Extractions: Previous Table-of-Contents SHOLL, ANNA McCLURE SHOMEI, COL. MIYAMOTO ... SHORT, LUKE ; pseudonym of Frederick D. Glidden , (1908-1975); Journalist, popular writer of westerns. Born in Kewanee, Illinois; died in Aspen, Colorado. SHORT, MARION SHORT, PIDGE SHORT, TALBOT ; pseudonym of William Corcoran SHORTER, CLEMENT SHORTER, DORA SIGERSON SHORTT, STAFF-COMMANDER HENRY D. ... SHOTWELL, RAY P. ; house pseudonym; used by at least 15 different writers in as many different magazines. SHOUBRIDGE, DONALD SHOUGH, BERNARD SHOUP, GRACE SHOUP, PAUL ... SHRYER, WILLIAM A. (1877-1918); Writer, businessman, psychologist. Born in Terre Haute, Indiana; died in a car crash in Hawaii. SHUB, ELIZABETH SHUBERT, J. J. SHUBIN, SEYMOUR SHUCKER, JAMES ... SHURTLEFF, BERTRAND L(eslie) (1897-1967); Author of animal stories. Born in Adamsville, Rhode Island. SHUTE, GEORGE SHUTE, HENRY A. SHUTE, JOHN SHUTE, NEVIL ; pseudonym of Nevil Shute Norway SHUTE, WALTER (Ernest) (1870-1940); see pseudonym Walter Edwards SHUTES, F. A.
Disease-lists SIR John BETJEMAN, (19061984) poet laureate of England 1972 EB.White (1899-1985)essayist and storyteller died at died at 82, suffering of Alzheimer´s for 7 http://users.cybercity.dk/~dko12530/diseaselists.htm
Extractions: 12 disease-lists of 250 Celebrities LISTS OF PROMINENT PARKINSON PROFILES, FAMOUS ALZHEIMER PATIENTS, FAMOUS TUBERCULOSIS SUFFERERS, FAMOUS AIDS CASUALTIES, FAMOUS DIABETICS, COLON CANCER, EPILEPSY, MS- Multiple Sclerosis, ALS, Polio, Skizophrenia; List of Plagues PROMINENT PARKINSON PROFILES MOHAMMED ALI, 57, American boxer, The most wellknown person in the world slightly ahead of the second, pope John Paul 2. POPE JOHN PAUL 2, visible tremor in the left arm, no official confirmation, but Parkinson condition disclosed by Bob Woodward. JOHNNY CASH, 67, country singer, announced 28th October 1997 that he had Parkinson´s and now had started taking medication for it. JANET RENO (1938) former US Secretary of Justice, of Danish origin, announced November 1995 that she had Parkinson´s. BILLY GRAHAM, 81, televangelist, suffered Parkinson´s since 1992 and ended his crusades in 2000. VINCENT PRICE leading horror actor of Hollywood died 1993, 82 years old, suffering of Parkinson ´s.
This Is Project Gutenberg This List Has Been Downloaded From The John, 16081674 Mims, Edwin Mitchell, S. Weir Silar 1918 White, Gilbert, 1720-1793White, Stewart Edward Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892 Whittier, John Greenleaf, 1807 http://www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/authors9809a1.txt
Invention Of The Telephone As the callers vehicle passed from one cell to by Mistake by Charlotte Foltz Jones,John O Brien Switchboard is the leading provider of White pages, yellow http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inventions/story078.htm
Extractions: Telephone by Alexander Graham Bell in TELEPHONE Probably no means of communication has revolutionized the daily lives of ordinary people more than the telephone. Simply described, it is a system which converts sound, specifically the human voice, to electrical impulses of various frequencies and then back to a tone that sounds like the original voice. In 1831, Englishman Michael Faraday (1791-1867) proved that vibrations of metal could be converted to electrical impulses. This was the technological basis of the telephone, but no one actually used this system to transmit sound until 1861. In that year, Johann Philip Reis (1834-1874) in Germany is said to have built a simple apparatus that changed sound to electricity and back again to sound. A crude device, it was incapable of transmitting most frequencies, and it was never fully developed. According to the famous story, the first fully intelligible telephone call occurred on March 6, 1876, when Bell, in one room, called to his assistant in another room. "Come here, Watson, I want you."
People Behind The Names B First White man to the Great Salt Lake 1824. John BURKE (18751936) Roman Catholicclergyman. ALBERT S. BURLESON (1863-1937) Congressman from Texas. http://www.armed-guard.com/pbtnb.html
Extractions: Old Family Letters contributed by Vernon O Gayle, Jr COMMENTS HOME ALABAMA RECORDS John Gayle , PROBABLY the son of was born abt. 1770, in Va.. He and Nancy Whitehead born Abt.1773, Mecklenburg, VA, daughter of Benjamin From the book Historical Sketches of Sumter County- Sumterville was laid out between 1801 and 1804 on a low lying plot of land purchased from John Gayle. Even before the plan for the town was laid out, 1799, the General Assembly made provisions for a courthouse and gaol to be built for Sumter District on land "near the plantation of John Gayle, and until a court House shall be built, the Court of Said District shall be held at the House of the said John Gayle. His home which is described as a small one story building with a piazza on the south side. Except for the fact that he was the grandson of Josiah Gayle,* who obtained a grant of land in the High Hills in 1771 little else is known."
Bacon & Dear Their children Lionel, Ethel, and John were born in Founder of one of thecountrys early great Parade, Im Dreaming of a White Christmas, and http://www.baconanddear.com/imm-famous/b.php
Extractions: Considered the "father" of the plastics industry. Born in Ghent, Belgium. Graduated from the University of Ghent. Came to the United States in 1889. In 1893 he invented Velox, the first photographic paper that could be developed with artificial light. Baekeland also invented Bakelite, the first plastic to have wide applications. Buttons, pencils, fishing rods, adhesives, and radio cabinets are made of it. George Balanchine
Inventory Of The Garber Letter Collection S. St. Oversize MS w/Garber box in folio aisles.. Seeley, John Robert(1834-1895) Historian. ALS, 3 p., nd, Kensington, to Mr. White. http://www.cwru.edu/UL/SpecColl/Garber/letters.htm
Extractions: Case Western Reserve University. Legal Information Contact Library Webmaster University Library CWRU Home Page Search Welcome to CWRU! Admissions Academics University Departments Computing Resources University Libraries Research Student Life Alumni Relations News of CWRU Newsstand CWRU Directory Master Plan University Library Career Planning and Placement Undergraduate Admissions School of Graduate Studies Office of University Communication Scroll down or select a letter to move to the portion of the index you desire. Click on letter at head of category to return to alphabet bar A B C D ... St. John Webb, Marion ( - ) Poet. Sala, George Augustus (1828-1895) Author, Journalist. Salisbury, Robert Arthur (1830-1903) British Prime Minister. ALS, 2 p., June 3, 1888, n.p., to Balliene. ALS, 2 p., March 7, 1894, n.p., to Briley (?) ALS, 1 p., 3rd person, July 13, 1891, Foreign Office, to Laurence T. Bouvier. ALS, 2 p., November 4, n.y., Harts, to Lord Denman.
Chapter Eighteen It dealt with the harmful impact White culture has had What Miner did for wildlife,Edmund John Zavitz (18751968 The recovery of Ontarios forests is in good http://collections.ic.gc.ca/heirloom_series/volume3/chapter18/18-c.htm
Extractions: Discoverers and doctors have a special place in a roll of honour because they have contributed to the well-being or comfort of millions. The work of Sir Sandford Fleming (1827-1915), inventor, scientist, surveyor and engineer, for instance, still affects us. A Scot by birth, he came to Canada in 1845 and was chief engineer of the Intercolonial Railway that linked Ontario, Quebec and the Maritimes. From 1871 he worked for the Canadian Pacific Railway, surveying its arduous route through the Rockies. But his greatest achievement was the establishment of the system of international standard time in 1884. Another Scottish immigrant brought the province even greater fame. While living at Brantford during the years 1874 to 1876, Alexander Graham Bell (1847-1922) invented the telephone and inaugurated a new era of communications for the world. Bell was also a pioneer speech therapist for the deaf. He moved to the United States but returned in 1890 to live in Nova Scotia. There at Baddeck he devoted the rest of his life to research. His Aerial Experiment Association led to the first manned flight in Canada in 1909. Sir William Osler, Bt., (1849-1919) was a native of Bond Head, Ontario. His medical education at Trinity and McGill was completed in London, Berlin and Vienna. Chosen first Professor of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University in 1889, Osler became Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford in 1905. Medical education and the treatment of patients in hospitals were radically altered by his ideas which he expressed in his book The Principles and Practice of Medicine. A vigorous, humane doctor and a noted diagnostician, he was also an important philanthropist. King George V created him a Baronet in 1911.
The Spiritwalk Library: Project Gutenberg Marie Mulock, 18261887 Mitchell, S. Weir (Silar Weir 1918 White, Gilbert, 1720-1793White, Stewart Edward Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892 Whittier, John Greenleaf, 1807 http://www.spiritwalk.org/gutenberg.htm
Extractions: Spiritwalk Library Project Gutenberg http://www.gutenberg.net Project Gutenberg is the Internet's oldest producer of FREE electronic books (eBooks or eTexts). It intends to put as many books on-line as possible and to gather these on line works into one central location. It is a terrific service of the University of Illinois. Project Gutenberg is the brainchild of Michael Hart, who in 1971 decided that it would be a really good idea if lots of famous and important texts were freely available to everyone in the world. Since then, he has been joined by hundreds of volunteers who share his vision. Now, more than thirty years later, Project Gutenberg has the following figures (as of November 8th 2002): 203 New eBooks released during October 2002, 1975 New eBooks produced in 2002 (they were 1240 in 2001) for a total of 6267 Total Project Gutenberg eBooks. 119 eBooks have been posted so far by Project Gutenberg of Australia
Becker Medical Library Books Agent Orange dioxin A=Beljan, John R. American Medical Alan P., 1932 Weinberg, MartinS. Indiana University ulcers with a dissertation on White swellings of http://becker.wustl.edu/miniecat/BAB125.html
Becker Medical Library Books medicine Clinical pathology A=Latimer, Kenneth S. Mahaffey, Edward A A=Grant, EdwardG., ed. White, E. Maureen, ed A=Hueston, John Turner, ed. Tubiana, Raoul, ed http://becker.wustl.edu/miniecat/BTD161.html
Extractions: Becker Medical Library Books Titles beginning with:D (page 61) T=DSM-IV-TR casebook : a learning companion to the Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, Fourth edition, text revision / edited by Robert L. Spitzer ... [et al.]. DSM-IV-TR case book DSM-IV-TR casebook Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders.
List Of Inventors TutorGig.com Encyclopedia system, wireless communication, robotics, logic gates, the bladeless John PierpontMorgan. 68202 ProPolymer 4AA Flashlight with 7 Ultra Bright White LEDs , by http://www.tutorgig.com/encyclopedia/getdefn.jsp?keywords=List_of_inventors
1922 In History - BrainyHistory naval arms limitation February 7, 1922 John Willard s Cat siege proclaimed duringmine strike Johannesburg S Africa March 151.6 May 16, 1922 White Star Line http://www.brainyhistory.com/years/1922.html
February 26 Catalog Pg2 Eunice Kennedy Shriver, and others Provenance Maury White Estate. I am enclosingan autograph, and heres all my Wendell Willke; Thomas Dewey; John Kyl; Bert http://www.jacksonsauction.com/past_files/Feb262000catalogpg2.htm
Extractions: February 26, 2000 Catalog page 2 Back to lots 1 - 364 Here Information on Bidding Here RARE BABE RUTH PERSONALLY AUTOGRAPHED BAT BABE RUTH Lot is accompanied by additional personal belongings of Walter A. Axel including a 1920s period navy blue wool ball cap, a Wilson horsehide glove #K3140, a stitched horsehide baseball, a 1920s period 5x7 photograph of 9 ball players including Walter Axel (top row center) and a Championship pendant with embossed figure of a batter, attached to a key chain (Provenance: From the family of Walter A. Axel (1904-1964). Mr. Axel, a minor league player was scouted by the Chicago White Sox in the 1920s, participated In a try-out and received a contract offer which he turned down. While attending a game at the Pittsburgh Pirates, Mr. Axel met Babe Ruth and received the autographed bat.) Click here for a photo of lots 366-381 JOHNNY BENCH AUTOGRAPHED BATTING HELMET for the Cincinnati Reds. Signed on visor Johnny Bench labels include American Baseball Cap size 7 ¼. Helmet is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from San Mateo Sports Collectables, dtd 1996. Provenance: Maury White Estate BOBBING HEAD DOLL for Drake University in the form of a football player. Molded composition with hand painted features. H.7.
HistoryLink Database Search Results birth in 1918, Watson was raised by John and Elizabeth Title Seattles first newspaper,the Seattle Gazette, is Some White parents complain to the Board of http://www.historylink.org/results.cfm?keyword=Media&searchfield=topic&searchtyp