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40 HEREDITARY TRANSMISSION OF QUALITIES.
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IX.—ON THE HEREDITARY TRANSMISSION
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we While found travellin ourselve g in s...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Paris, February, 1863.
those afflicted with , cancer or epilepsy . Orders of admission to thedifferent hospitals are delivered morning by the doctors
and . surgeons on duty , and urgent every cases are admitted at any hour of the day or niht . The hospitals for adultswhere a
perm Louis anent and s La ervice Charite is established g . In the for form out er -door there patients were , , 27 are 116 St .
consultations held last year , and 27 , 054 bath , tickets distributed , . The medicines distributed during that period represented a sum
of Hue establishmen 6 , 227 Grange francs t aux for , and gratuitous Belles the such bathing baths as the will tickets one be , shortl latel 24 , 000 y y opened op francs ened . in at the the An
hosp consultations ital St . Louis held . at There La , wer Charite e also within and 25 the 528 last bath year 23 tickets , 324
distributed ; and the number of gratuitous , consultations , in all the hospitals where there is no regular service for out-door
patients , amounted to 139 , 506 .
40 Hereditary Transmission Of Qualities.
40 HEREDITARY TRANSMISSION OF QUALITIES .
Ix.—On The Hereditary Transmission
IX . —ON THE HEREDITARY TRANSMISSION OF QUALITIES .
We While Found Travellin Ourselve G In S...
we While found travellin ourselve g in s in the a north railway of carriage England and some engaged years in ago a , Presentl
warm discussion on the value of race and birth . y an the old door cunning opened look , and about there his entered juvenil hastil e features y a littl and e creature clad in with the
from tight time breeches imm , emorial cut-away we coat have , and learned spotted to neckerchief associate , with , which the
racing With stables the . hope of illustrating our point we presently
demanded of him aloud , " What horse is to win the Derby with this year his ? ri " ht Like thumb Panurg he e pointed , this imp over dealt his much left shoulder in signs and _^ so
we uttered made not a countersi g one word gn . , Regardful and shaking of the our teaching head three of Thaumas times laid t ,
our hand on our spotless tie with a reproachful air . Hereupon , our " little All on friend the spoke : ? " he said solemnly . " Perfectly so /'
we lied . The square creature leant back in his seathis head a little rep on one sideand eyed us from head to foot with , a sagacity
he beyond laced his his years riht , . finger Apparentl on the y satisfied side of his with nose his and examination responded ,
" p West Australian g —our stable have backed him for a pot of ,
money . "
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), March 1, 1864, page 40, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01031864/page/40/
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