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" The manufacturing population of this city is the healthiest portion of the population, and there is no reason why this should not be the case. They are but little exposed to many of the strongest and most prolific causes of disease, and very many of the... "
History of Lowell and Its People - Page 253
by Frederick William Coburn - 1920
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The North American Review, Volume 52

Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - American fiction - 1841 - 740 pages
...detect these exceptions, and to make in their favor, or on their account, all necessary allowances. "The general and comparative good health of the girls...their habits. They are early up in the morning, and are early in bed at night. Their fare is plain, substantial, and good, and their labor is sufficiently...
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The Christian Teacher, Volume 4

England - 1842 - 538 pages
...and experienced physicians. The manufacturing population of this city is the healthier portion of its population, and there is no reason why this should...circumstances which surround and act upon them are of the most favourable character. They are regular in all their habits. They are early up in the morning, and early...
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Lowell, as it Was, and as it is

Henry Adolphus Miles - Lowell (Mass.) - 1845 - 246 pages
...Mills," has the following words, the italicised sentences being thus marked by the Dr. himself: — " The general and comparative good health of the girls...are regular in all their habits. They are early up COMFORT AiTD HEALTH. in the morning, and early to bed at night. Their fare is plain, substantial, and...
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The Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal: Exhibiting a Concise ..., Volume 69

Medicine - 1848 - 544 pages
...doubt that they result from one and the same cause, namely, some vicious conformation of the ovum ; and there is no reason why this should not be the case with all other irregularities, whether slight or grave. I believe it to be an unrefutable argument...
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Hunt's Merchants' Magazine and Commercial Review, Volume 34

Freeman Hunt, Thomas Prentice Kettell, William Buck Dana - Commerce - 1856 - 844 pages
...Mediterranean. Now-a-days, travelers and mails of both hemispheres meet in the streets of Alexandria, and there is no reason why this should not be the case also with their respective products. By the last treaty with the Ottoman Porte, the transit through...
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Merchants' Magazine and Commercial Review, Volume 34

Commerce - 1856 - 794 pages
...Mediterranean. Now-a-days, travelers and mails of both hemispheres meet in the streets of Alexandria, and there is no reason why this should not be the case also with their respective products. By the last treaty with the Ottoman Porte, the transit through...
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A Practical treatise on the diseases of women

Theodore Gaillard Thomas - 1891 - 886 pages
...is very generally performed, even by men who make no pretence to being specialists in gynecology ; and there is no reason why this should not be the case, since, if the anatomy of the parts is carefully studied and correctly understood, it requires no very...
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Hansard's Parliamentary Debates

Great Britain. Parliament - Great Britain - 1891 - 1028 pages
...can tell the feeling of the bulk of the people is one of perfect contentment under their new ruler, and there is no reason why this should not be the case. And yet this ruler is the man whom the hon. Member for Stockport spoke of as a scoundrel in his Debating...
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Report of the Committee of Council on Education in Scotland...[without Appendix]

Education - 1899 - 824 pages
...reading. In the majority of schools an intelligent appreciation of the selected j>oetry is met with, and there is no reason why this should not be the case in, every school. Nothing more is asked for than _a rendering in the pupils' own language of ordinary...
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American Anthropologist, Volume 15

Anthropology - 1913 - 838 pages
...have a very intricate grammar, with, for example, four conjugations and an astonishing set of tenses, and there is no reason why this should not be the case also with the West Patagonian language. But in trying to penetrate the maze of an Indian language,...
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