Ward Sentence Examples

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  • He sensed the ward he triggered and waited.

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  • If he bought property belonging to a feudal holding, or to a ward in chancery, he had to return it and forfeit what he gave for it as well.

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  • He reached for her and she stumbled back, holding up her hand to ward him off.

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  • A little girl—a sort-of ward of ours—had an interest in the Lucky Pup Mine.

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  • Indeed, the bulk of the reign of Aurelius was spent in efforts to ward off the attacks of the barbarians.

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  • The name of the firm was Grant and Ward.

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  • Peekskill was the country home of Henry Ward Beecher.

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  • Ward Hill (742 ft.) is the sailors' landmark for Lerwick harbour.

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  • He was on Catherine's side during the revolution of 1762, but his jealousy of the influence which the Orlovs seemed likely to obtain ovlr the new empress predisposed him to favour the proclamation of his ward the grand duke Paul as emperor, with Catherine as regent only.

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  • For the speedy removal of burning houses each ward was to provide a strong iron hook, with a wooden handle, two chains and two strong cords, which were to be left in the charge of the bedel of the ward, who was also provided with a good horn, " loudly sounding."

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  • The Greyfriars, Minorites or Franciscans, first settled in Cornhill, and in 1224 John Ewin made over to them an estate situated in the ward of Farringdon Within and in the parish of St Nicholas in the Shambles, where their friary was built.

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  • The house of the Austin Friars or Friars Eremites was founded in Broad Street Ward in 1253.

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  • In 1377 it was ordered that aldermen could be elected annually, but in 1384 the rule was modified so as to allow an alderman to be reelected for his ward at the expiration of his year of office without any interval.

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  • The archers fixed the pointed stakes, which they carried to ward off cavalry charges, and opened the engagement with flights of arrows.

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  • It was formerly in the ancient parish of Eglwysilan, but from that and Bedwas (Mon.) an ecclesiastical parish was formed in 1850, while the whole of the parishes of Eglwysilan and Llanfabon, with a total acreage of 14,426, were in 1893 constituted into an urban district; its population in 1901 was 15,385, of which 4343 were in the "town" ward.

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  • Next followed the contest with Elam, in spite of the efforts of Assurbani-pal to ward it off.

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  • Layard in the palace of Assur-bani-pal at Kuyunjik (Nineveh), as long ago as 1851 and noticed then as in a " doubtful character," were compared by Hayes Ward and found to be of the Hamathite class.

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  • At first the consules, of whom there seem to have been twelve, two for each sestiere or ward, were chosen by the men of the towers, and assisted by a council of loo boni homines, in which the arti were predominant; the government thus came to be in the hands of a few powerful families.

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  • There is in the British Museum a copy with notes by John Ward (c. 1679-1758), biographer of the Gresham professors.

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  • He was also, as he tells us himself, alderman of a London ward and an active partisan in municipal politics.

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  • Amendments to the constitution must be passed by both houses of the General Assembly at two consecutive sessions, and must then be ratified by three-fifths of the electors of the state present and voting thereon in town and ward meetings.

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  • His forefathers were Gledstanes of Gledstanes, in the upper ward of Lanarkshire; or in Scottish phrase, Gledstanes of that Ilk.

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  • Upon his resignation from Lane Theological Seminary he lived in Boston for a short time, devoting himself to literature; but he broke down, and the last ten years of his life were spent at the home of his son, Henry Ward Beecher, in Brooklyn, New York, where he died on the 10th of January 1863.

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  • Channing, Henry Ward Beecher, Horace Bushnell, Phillips Brooks, to mention only a few.

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  • He married in 1904 Janet Penrose, elder daughter of Mrs. Humphry Ward.

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  • Other works include the Sheridan monument in Washington; " Mares of Diomedes " and " Ruskin " in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; statue of Lincoln, Newark, N.J.; statue of Henry Ward Beecher, Brooklyn; the Wyatt Memorial, Raleigh, N.C.; " The Flyer " at the university of Virginia; gargoyles for a Princeton dormitory; " Wonderment of Motherhood " and " Conception."

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  • It centralizes power in a council of five (mayor and four councilmen), nominated at a non-partisan primary and voted for on a non-partisan ticket by the electors of the entire city, ward divisions having been abolished.

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  • To ward off these attacks Charles took a warm interest in the building of a fleet, which he reviewed in 811; but by this time Gudrod had been killed, and his successor Hemming made peace with the emperor.

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  • The country towns now poured their militia into Cambridge, opposite Boston; troops came from neighbouring colonies, and Artemas Ward, a Massachusetts general, was placed in command of the irregular force, which with superior numbers at once shut the royal army up in Boston.

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  • The state is divided into sixty-one counties, each (unless wholly included in a city) having a county board of supervisors elected for two years, one from every town or city ward.

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  • In 1910 there were fourteen state hospitals (corresponding to fourteen state hospital districts) for the poor and indigent insane; these were at Utica, Willard, Poughkeepsie, Buffalo, Middletown (homoeopathic), Binghamton, Rochester, Ogdensburg, Gowanda (homoeopathic), Flatbush, Ward's Island, King's Park, Central Islip and Yorktown.

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  • The cabinets which administered the affairs of the colony during these years were those of Sir Frederick Whitaker, Sir Harry Atkinson (3), Sir Robert Stout (2), Mr Ballance, Mr Seddon, Mr Hall-Jones and Sir Joseph Ward.

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  • Mr Hall-Jones's short premiership was an interregnum made necessary by the absence of Sir Joseph Ward in England at the moment of Mr Seddon's death.

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  • The party headed by Ballance, Seddon and Ward held office without a break for more than seventeen years, a result mainly due to the general support given to its agrarian and labour policy by the smaller farmers and the working classes.

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  • Suffrage is conferred upon all adult citizens of the United States (including women, 1910) who have lived in the state one year, in the county ninety days, and in the city, town, ward or precinct thirty days immediately preceding the election, and are able to read and speak the English language; Indians who are not taxed, idiots, insane persons and convicts are debarred.

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  • In a city of the first class, a mayor, two aldermen from each ward, a police judge, and a treasurer who may be ex officio tax-collector are elected, and an attorney, a clerk, a chief of police, an assessor, a street commissioner, a jailer, a surveyor, and, where there is a paid fire department, a chief engineer with one or more assistants, may be appointed by the mayor with the consent of the council.

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  • In addition to the statues in Juneau Park there is a statue of Kosciusko in the park of that name; one of Washington and a soldiers' monument on Grand Avenue; a statue of Henry Bergh in front of the city hall; one of Robert Burns in the First Ward Park, and, in Washington Park, a replica of Ernst Rietschel's Schiller-Goethe monument in Jena, given to the city in 1908 by the Germans of Milwaukee.

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  • Walker's Point, the south side, was annexed as a third ward in 1845, and in 1846 the three wards were incorporated as the city of Milwaukee, of which Solomon Juneau was elected first mayor.

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  • Haverhill was settled in June 1640 by a small colony from Newbury and Ipswich, and its Indian name, Pentucket, was replaced by that of Haverhill in compliment to the first minister, Rev. John Ward, who was born at Haverhill, England.

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  • But neither his devotion to civic duty nor to the administration of the affairs of the Grand Army could ward off disaster.

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  • For more detailed information relating to Napier, Briggs and Vlacq, and the invention of logarithms, the reader is referred to the life of Briggs in Ward's Lives of the Professors of Gresham College (London, 1740); Thomas Smith's Vitae quorundam eruditissimorum et illustrium virorum (Vita Henrici Briggii) (London, 1707); Mark Napier's Memoirs of John Napier already referred to, and the same author's Naperi libri qui supersunt (1839); Hutton's History; de Morgan's article already referred to; Delambre's Histoire de l'Astronomie moderne; the report on mathematical tables in the Report of the British Association for 1873; and the Philosophical Magazine for October and December 1872 and May 1873.

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  • In the House of Representatives, which has the large membership of 390, representation is on the basis of population, but is so arranged as to favour the rural districts; thus every town or ward of a city having 600 inhabitants is allowed one representative, but, although for every additional representative 1200 additional inhabitants are required, any town having less than 600 inhabitants is allowed a representative for such proportionate part of the time the legislature is in session as the number of its inhabitants bears to 600.

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  • A representative must have been an inhabitant of the state for at least two years next preceding his election, and must be an inhabitant of the town, parish or ward he is chosen to represent; a senator must be at least thirty years of age, must have been an inhabitant of the state for at least seven years next preceding his election, and must be an inhabitant of the district by which he is chosen.

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  • In accordance with the general laws each city elects a mayor, a board of aldermen, and a common council in whom is vested the administration of its " fiscal, prudential and municipal affairs "; the mayor presides at the meetings of the board of aldermen, and has a veto on any measure of this body, and no measure can be passed over his veto except by an affirmative vote of at least two-thirds of all the aldermen; each ward elects three selectmen, a moderator and a clerk in whom is vested the charge of elections; the city marshal and assistant marshals are appointed by the mayor and aldermen, but the city clerk and city treasurer are elected by the aldermen and common council in joint session.

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  • Litchfield was the birthplace of Ethan Allen; of Henry Ward Beecher; of Harriet Beecher Stowe, whose novel, Poganuc People, presents a picture of social conditions in Litchfield during her girlhood; of Oliver Wolcott, Jr. (1760-1833); of John Pierpont (1785-1866), the poet, preacher and lecturer; and of Charles Loring Brace, the philanthropist.

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  • General McCarver's original plat included what is now the first ward of the city, and is called the Old Town.

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  • In the smallest areas, such as the township or city ward, the meeting is composed of all the recognized members of the party who are entitled to vote, and it is then called a primary.

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  • The precincts are entered by a gateway (P), at the extreme western extremity, giving admission to the lower ward.

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  • It is uncertain whether the conventional fleur-de-lis was originally meant to represent the lily or white iris - the flower-de-luce of Shakespeare - or an arrow-head, a spear-head, an amulet fastened on date-palms to ward off the evil eye, &c. In Roman and early Gothic architecture the fleur-de-lis is a frequent sculptured ornament.

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  • The only other islands containing heights of any importance are Pomona, with Ward Hill (880 ft.), and Wideford (740 ft.) and Rousay.

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  • Under the charter of 1903, as amended in 1907, the municipal government consists of a city council, composed of the mayor, four aldermen, elected at large, and eight ward aldermen, all elected for a term of two years, as are the other elective officers; a city attorney, an assessor, a collector, a treasurer, an auditor and judge of the Corporation Court.

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  • The petition may allege that the election was avoided as to the borough or ward on the ground of general bribery, &c., or that the election of the person petitioned against was avoided by corrupt practices, or by personal disqualification, or that he had not the majority of lawful votes.

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  • In Great Britain Mach's scepticism was welcomed by Karl Pearson to support an idealistic phenomenalism derived from Hume, and by Ward to support a noumenal idealism derived from Lotze.

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  • James Ward, in Naturalism and Agnosticism (1899), starts from the same phenomenalistic views of Mach and Kirchhoff about mechanics; he proceeds to the hypothesis of duality within experience, which we have traced in James Ward.

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  • Under the second head, according to Ward, as according to Wundt, knowledge is experience; we must start with the duality of subject and object, or perpetual reality, phenomenon, in the unity of experience, and not believe, as realists do, that either subject or object is distinct from this unity; moreover, experience requires " conation," because it is to interesting objects that the subject attends; conation is required for all synthesis, associative and intellective; thinking is doing; presentation, feeling, conation are one inseparable whole; and the unity of the subject is due to activity and not to a substratum.

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  • Not so Ward, who proceeds to a Natural Theology, on the ground that " from a world of spirits to a Supreme Spirit is a possible step."

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  • One cannot but feel regret at seeing the Reformed Churches blown about by every wind of doctrine, and catching at straws now from Kant, now from Hegel, and now from Lotze, or at home from Green, Caird, Martineau, Balfour and Ward in succession, without ever having considered the basis of their faith; while the Roman Catholics are making every effort to ground a Universal Church on a sane system of metaphysics.

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  • Ward was a philosophical critic of Mill.

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  • Sarong, the Malay ward for a garment wrapped round the lower part of the body and used by both men and women, is now applied to plain or printed cloths exported to the Indian or Eastern Archipelago for this purpose.

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  • Ward on the whole follows this triple scheme, but modifies it by new arguments founded on later German phenomenalism.

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  • In the interior, Ward Hill (1564 ft.) is the loftiest summit in either the Orkneys or Shetlands.

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  • In the valley between Ward Hill and the ridge of the Hamars to the south-east is situated the famous Dwarfie Stone, an enormous block of sandstone measuring 28 ft.

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  • When Carey died in 1834 he and his colleagues Marshman and Ward had translated the Bible into seven languages, and the New Testament into 23 more, besides rendering services of the highest kind to literature, science and general progress.

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  • Anthony Babington, in his boyhood a ward of Shrewsbury, resident in the household at Sheffield Castle, and thus subjected to the charm before which so many victims had already fallen, was now induced to undertake the deliverance of the queen of Scots by the murder of the queen of England.

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  • Upon quitting his professorship Barrow was only a fellow of Trinity College; but his uncle gave him a small sinecure in Wtles, and Dr Seth Ward, bishop of Salisbury, conferred upon him a prebend in that church.

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  • See Ward, Lives of the Gresham Professors, and Whewell's biography prefixed to the 9th volume of Napier's edition of Barrow's Sermons.

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  • Marshall Ward showed that the hyphae of Botrytis pierce the cell-walls of a lily by secreting a cytase and dissolving a hole through the membrane.

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  • A similar specialization has been observed by Marshall Ward in the Puccinia parasitic on species of Bromus, and by Neger, Marchal and especially Salmon in the Erysiphaceae.

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  • The pelt or skin is requisite to keep out the piercing wind and driving storm, while the fur and overhair ward off the cold; and "furs" are as much a necessity to-day among more northern peoples as they ever were in the days of barbarism.

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  • The borough lies in the valley of the Lehigh river, along which runs one of its few streets and in another deeply cut valley at right angles to the river; through this second valley east and west runs the main street, on which is an electric railway; parallel to it on the south is High Street, formerly an Irish settlement; half way up the steep hill, and on the north at the top of the opposite hill is the ward of Upper Mauch Chunk, reached by the electric railway.

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  • In 1609 an English lady, Mary Ward, founded at Munich the " Institute of Mary," the nuns of which were not bound to enclosure.

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  • In 1654 Seth Ward (1617-1689), the Savilian professor of astronomy, replying in his Vindiciae academiarum to some other assaults (especially against John Webster's Examen of Academies) on the academic system, retorted upon Hobbes that, so far from the universities being now what he had known them in his youth, he would find his geometrical pieces, when they appeared, better understood there than he should like.

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  • In the chapter (xx.) of that work where Hobbes dealt with the famous problem whose solution he thought he had found, there were left expressions against Vindex (Ward) at a time when the solutions still seemed to him good; but the solutions themselves, as printed, were allowed to be all in different ways halting, as he naively confessed he had discovered only when he had been driven by the insults of malevolent men to examine them more closely with the help of his friends.

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  • Ward's colleague, the more famous John Wallis, Savilian professor of geometry from 1649, had been privy to the challenge thrown out in 1654, and it was arranged that they should critically dispose of the De corpore between them.

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  • Obtaining also a copy of the work as it had been printed before Hobbes had any doubt of the validity of his solutions, Wallis was able to track his whole course front the time of Ward's provocation - his passage from exultation to doubt, from doubt to confessed impotence, yet still without abandoning the old assumption of confident strength; and all his turnings and windings were now laid bare in one of the most trenchant pieces of controversial writing ever penned.

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  • But the most remarkable of the persons with whom at this time Johnson consorted was Richard Savage, an earl's son, a shoemaker's apprentice, who had seen life in all its forms, who had feasted among blue ribands in St James's Square, and had lain with fifty pounds weight of irons on his legs in the condemned ward of Newgate.

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  • To punish him the pope put forward his own ward, Henry VI.s son Frederick, who was living in Sicily, as a rival king.

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  • The nephew also defended his uncle in An Appendix to the Life of Bishop Seth Ward, 1697, 8vo.

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  • The charter, as amended, provides for a mayor elected for two years and a common council of two members from each ward elected for two years.

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  • The members of the lower house are elected, one by each ward, in the spring of each even numbered year.

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  • In 1906 the question of uniting Allegheny with Pittsburg under one municipal government was submitted to a joint vote of the electorate of the two cities, in accordance with an act of the state legislature, which had been passed in February of that year, and a large majority voted for the union; but there was determined opposition in Allegheny, every ward of the city voting in the negative; the constitutionality of the act was challenged; the supreme court of the state on the 11th of March 1907 declared the act valid, and on the 18th of November 1907 this decision was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States.

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  • In July he mastered Edinburgh, and bade Angus and his brother, Sir George Douglas, place themselves in ward north of Tay.

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  • The story of the estrangement, which was largely a matter of temperament, is fully told in Ward's biography.

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  • See the biography by Wilfrid Ward, The Life and Times of Cardinal Wiseman (2 vols., 1897; fifth and cheaper edition, 1900).

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  • Among the numerous charitable institutions the most important hospital is the Casa de Beneficencia y Maternidad (Charity and Maternity Asylum), opened in 1794, and containing an orphan asylum, a maternity ward, a home for vagrants, a lunatic asylum and an infirmary.

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  • All these troops are intended to ward off a first attack, so as to allow time for the arrival of reinforcements from Italy.

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  • Facing the South Common were the homes of Rev. Nathaniel Ward (1578-1652), principal author of the Massachusetts "Body of Liberties" (1641); the first code of laws in New England, and author of The Simple Cobler of Aggawam in America, Willing to help mend his Native Country, lamentably tattered, both in the upper-Leather and the Sole (1647), published under the pseudonym, "Theodore de la Guard," one of the most curious and interesting books of the colonial period; of Richard Saltonstall (1610-1694), who wrote against the life tenure of magistrates, and although himself an Assistant espoused the more liberal principles of the Deputies; and of Ezekiel Cheever (1614-1708), a famous schoolmaster, who had charge of the grammar school in 1650-1660.

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  • In 46, his patience giving way, he divorced Terentia, and married his young and wealthy ward Publilia.

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  • The ward into which she penetrated was like a den of wild beasts; it was filled with women unsexed, fighting, swearing, dancing, gaming, yelling and justly deserved its name of "hell above ground."

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  • At an interview at Le Goulet on the 25th of March, Philip demanded the cession of Anjou, Poitou and Normandy to his ward, Arthur.

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  • There was also an executive council of six, one from each ward.

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  • On the 17th of January 1711, in spite of Marlborough's efforts to ward off the blow, the duchess was compelled to give up her key of office.

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  • Under the empire various special functions were assigned to certain praetors, such as the two treasury praetors (praetores aerarii),3 appointed by Augustus in 23; the spear praetor (praetor haslarius), who presided over the court of the Hundred Men, which dealt especially with cases of inheritance; the two trust praetors (praetores fideicommissarii), appointed by Claudius to look after cases of trust estates, but reduced by Titus to one; the ward praetor (praetor tutelaris), appointed by Marcus Aurelius to deal with the affairs of minors; and the liberation praetor (praetor de liberalibus causis), who tried cases turning on the liberation of slaves.'

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  • Her father, Samuel Ward, was a banker; her mother, Julia Rush [Cutler] (1796-1824), a poet of some ability.

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  • He became a ward and disciple of the famous Jacob - the same who attended the Council of Nicaea as bishop of Nisibis, and died in 338.

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  • Such deposition of sacredness is but an aspect of the wider method that causes a ring-fence to be erected round the sacred to ward off casual trespassers at once in their own interest and to prevent contamination.

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  • In the course of the following year Carey sailed for India, where he was joined a few years later by Marshman and Ward, and the mission was established at Serampore.

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  • The king went to Metz in 1744, and his presence there did something to ward off the danger.

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  • Yet as far back as the 13th century a statute, known as that of "Watch and Ward," was passed in the 13th year of Edward I.

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  • The latest recorded instance of its use is Trebilcock's case (1736), in which a ward sought to free himself from the custody of his guardian.

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  • The occurrence of a starch-like substance which stains deep blue with iodine has been clearly shown in some forms even where the bacterium is growing on a medium containing no starch, as shown by Ward and others.

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  • In its present form the constitution confers suffrage upon every male citizen of the United States who is twenty-one years of age or over and has resided in the state six months and in his township or ward twenty days immediately preceding an election; and any woman may vote in an election involving the direct expenditure of public money or the issue of bonds if she have the qualifications of male electors and if she have property assessed for taxes in any part of the district or territory affected by the election in question.

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  • While at supper about 6 o'clock an anonymous letter was brought by an unknown messenger which, having glanced at, he handed to Ward, a gentleman of his service and an intimate friend of Winter, the conspirator, to be read aloud.

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  • Meanwhile Ward, on the 27th of October, as had evidently been intended, informed Winter that the plot was known, and on the 28th Winter informed Catesby and begged him to give up the whole project.

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  • Borough councillors are elected for a term of three years, one-third of the whole number going out of office in each year, and if the borough is divided into wards, these are so arranged that the number of councillors for each ward shall be three or a multiple of three.

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  • At an election for the whole borough the returning officer is the mayor; at a ward election he is an alderman assigned for that purpose by the council.

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  • The tax rate for separate indebtedness varied from 6 mills in Allegheny to 16.2 mills in the 43rd ward.

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  • On the 17th of the following April, however, Ensign Edward Ward, commanding the soldiers, in the absence of Captain Trent, was forced to evacuate the unfinished fortification by a party of about r000 French and Indians, under Captain Contrecceur, who immediately occupied the works, which he enlarged and completed, and named Fort Duquesne, in honour of Duquesne de Menneville, governor of New France in 17521 755.

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  • Newlyn ward in the urban district of Paul (pop. 6332) had in 1901 a population of 3749.

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  • The western crescent, known as the Chiaja ward, though merely a long narrow strip between the sea and Vomero hill, is the fashionable quarter most frequented by foreign residents and visitors.

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  • The latter process, which was known to Basil Valentine, was commercially applied by the quack doctor, Joshua Ward (1685-1761), of Twickenham, England, to the manufacture of the acid, which was known as "oil of vitriol made by the bell" or per campanum.

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  • The first branch is composed of one member from each ward, elected for a term of four years; the second branch of two members from each of four districts, and a president elected by the city at large, all for a term of four years; a property qualification is prescribed for members of each branch.

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  • On the 21st of December 1671 he was proposed as a candidate for admission into the Royal Society by Dr Seth Ward, bishop of Salisbury, and on the 11th of January 1672 he was elected a fellow of the Society.

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  • Until 1908 the state had a prohibition law " by remonstrance," under which if a majority of the legal voters of a township or city ward remonstrated against the granting of licences for the sale of liquor, no licence could be granted by the county commissioners in that township or ward.

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  • In 1908, when the Republican party had declared in favour of county option and the Democratic party favoured township and ward option, a special session of the legislature, called by the Republican governor, passed the Cox Bill for county options.

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  • No child can be made a public ward except upon order of the juvenile court, and all such children may be placed in family homes by agents of the Board of State Charities.

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  • But though he might ward off blows from his own realm, he was helpless to aid Mercia or East Anglia, and still more the distant Northumbria.

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  • Much indignation was provoked by tha sight of the king kept continually in ward by his privy councilors and treated with systematic neglect; but the treatment of his son was even more resented.

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  • He had ruined a splendid constitution by the cornDeath of bination of sloth and evil living, and during his last ward years had been sinking slowly into his grave, unable to take the field or to discharge the more laborious duties of royalty.

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  • The Church's first creed had been " the Fatherhood of God and the Messiahship of Jesus " (A Ritschl); but the " Rule of Faith " (Irenaeus; Tertullian, who uses the exact expression; Origen)- that summary of religiously important facts which was meant to ward off error without reliance on speculations such as the Logos doctrine - built itself up along the lines of the baptismal formula of Matt.

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  • Ward in his Gifford lectures for 1896-1898 (Naturalism and Agnosticism, 1899), Huxley's challenge ("I know what I mean when I say I believe in the law of the inverse squares, and I will not rest my life and my hopes upon weaker convictions") is one which a spiritualistic philosophy need not shrink from accepting at the hands of naturalistic agnosticism.

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  • Of this necessity there is a growing consciousness in recent years, and no more notable exposition of it has been published than is contained in James Ward's Naturalism and Agnosticism.

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  • Certainly without some such assumption the hypothesis of an exact correspondence between the series described as parallel becomes, as Professor Ward has shown, unmeaning.

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  • Both aldermen and councilmen serve without pay, and are elected on a general ticket for a term of two years; not more than two councilmen may be residents of the same ward, but there is no such limitation in regard to aldermen.

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  • It was in this .connexion that General Gordon assumed the command of the Chinese force, which under his direction gave a reality to the boastful title of "ever-victorious army" it had assumed under the two American adventurers Ward and Burgevine.

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  • The city is governed by a mayor, a board of aldermen (one from each of eight wards) and a common council of eighteen members (two or three from each ward, according to population), elected in December every other year.

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  • But it does not appear that he got the money; and, after some more fruitless proceedings against Onetor, the brother-in-law of Aphobus, the matter was dropped, - not, however, before his relatives had managed to throw a public burden (the equipment of a ship of war) on their late ward, whereby his resources were yet further straitened.

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  • The earl left one daughter, Elizabeth, who was of course a royal ward.

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  • The chief authorities for his life are Ward's Life (1710); the prefatio generalissima prefixed to his Opera omnia (1679); and also a general account of the manner and scope of his writings in an Apology published in 1664.

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  • Ward Seminary, opened in 1865, Boscobel College, opened in 1889, and Buford, Belmont and Radnor colleges are all non-sectarian institutions of Nashville for the higher education of women.

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  • The school board is an independent body, consisting of one elected member from each ward holding office for four years, but the mayor has the veto power over its proceedings as well as those of the common council.

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  • This body consists of two members elected from each ward and five elected at large.

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  • Each of these poor-law parishes may represent the extent of an old ecclesiastical parish, or a township separately rated by custom before the practice was stayed in 1819 or separated from a large parish under the act of 1662, or it may represent a chapelry, tything, borough, ward, quarter or hamlet, or other subdivision of the ancient parish, or, under various acts, an area formed by the merger of an extra-parochial place with an adjoining district by the union of detached portions with adjoining parishes, or by the subdivision of a large parish for the better administration of the relief of the poor.

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  • Ward, who has shown how the Secondary flora gives place to one of Tertiary character.

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  • Lester Ward records no fewer than 737 distinct forms, consisting chiefly of Ferns, Cycads, Conifers and Dicotyledons, the Ferns and Cycads being con fined mainly to the Older Potomac, FIG.

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  • These highest plant-bearing strata rest, according to Lester Ward, somewhat unconformably on the Dakota No.

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  • This force, which was placed under the command of an American, Frederick Townsend Ward (1831-1862), took up a position in the country west of Shanghai to check the advance of the rebels.

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  • Fighting continued round Shanghai for about two years, but Ward's force was not altogether successful, and when General Staveley arrived from Tientsin affairs were in a somewhat critical condition.

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  • A French force, under the command of Admiral Protet, co-operated with Staveley and Ward, with his little army, also assisted.

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  • Ward was, unfortunately, killed in the assault of Tseki, and his successor, Burgevine, having had a quarrel with the Chinese authorities, Li Hung Chang, the governor of the Kiang-su province, requested General Staveley to appoint a British officer to command the contingent.

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  • The general law for the incorporation of cities and towns vests the government of each municipality accepting its provisions principally in a mayor and two aldermen from each ward.

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  • Was he beginning to view her as a ward?

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  • As of today, you're a ward of the Guardians.

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  • A little girl—a sort-of ward of ours—had an interest in the Lucky Pup Mine.

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  • They were firm in their conviction that the bones Fitzgerald retrieved were not the same as those discovered by their young ward.

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  • After saying the ward would not be closed health bosses then did an about-face.

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  • Effective leadership among ward managers leads to fewer drug errors, higher patient satisfaction and lower staff absenteeism and turnover.

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  • Guy's Hospital also admitted the mentally afflicted into its ' lunatic ward ' .

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  • HiBiSCRUB can be used as an antiseptic handwash on the ward and for pre-operative surgical hand disinfection and pre and post-operative skin antisepsis.

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  • The outer ward is nearly square, and its walls are nine feet in thickness and eighteen feet in height, surmounted by battlements.

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  • This shows part of the walkway around the castle battlements with the Inner Ward to the right of the walkway.

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  • They used charms to ward off evil spirits, often in the shape of a scarab beetle.

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  • On top of the plant is a head of the god Bes - who could ward away evil from women.

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  • Dr. Ward holds a BSc and a PhD in microbial biochemistry from the University of Bath.

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  • In the previous year Ward, then living at St Annes, was made a burgess by order of the mayor.

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  • The ward was extremely busy at the time; there were only enough staff to care for 22 patients.

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  • The BNP is contesting the by-election in Bridge ward, Redbridge, which takes place on 13 July.

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  • I would also like to welcome Sue Mayne, who was successful in winning the recent by-election in Kings Ward.

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  • They were within 100 votes of winning Village ward, also in Barking, in a subsequent council by-election.

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  • The BNP fared far worse in an Ashfield council by-election in Hucknall West ward on the same day.

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  • Today Lewisham Telegraph Hill ward by-election tomorrow err where exactly max?

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  • Ward had a goal chalked out for offside and to be honest we were relieved to see the flag, it looked very close.

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  • Bailey has kidney problems and after catching chickenpox had to be admitted to the ward so doctors could keep an eye on her.

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  • The ward clerk can give you a sick note for the time that you are in hospital.

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  • Every inmate is to be bathed and cleansed and suitably clothed before being admitted to the ward.

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  • Do not wear dog or cat flea collars on your ankles or cattle ear tags on your shoes to ward off harvest mite larvae.

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  • Now, changes recommended by the electoral commission mean his ward will lose at least 600 electors, most of them Protestants.

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  • The review team was able to arrange for five new commodes to be purchased for use in the palliative care ward.

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  • Keywords; Short stay ward, head injury, post concussion syndrome.

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  • Miss Ward immediately confronted the kitchen porter and grabbed hold of him in an attempt to restrain him.

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  • Ward Councilor Douglas Currie also attended to formally congratulate Neil.

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  • Meanwhile in Beverley, Liberal Democrat John Bird and two Independents stormed to victory in Beverley St. Mary's ward, ousting the conservatives.

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  • You can find ward your local ward constable by clicking here.

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  • Other team members may include the dietitian, social worker, psychologist and surgical ward staff.

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  • However, Ward Room patrons and restaurant diners do receive preferential reserved seating.

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  • Andy Ward has a large dollop of vocal versatility, whilst the tight inventiveness of the rhythm section is obvious.

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  • Richard was brought up as a royal ward, having become duke of York on the death of his uncle Edward in 1415.

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  • Located in central London, the Mary Ward Center is a bustling adult education college that attracts over 7,000 students each year.

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  • Community or Town Councils members, called community or town councilors, are directly elected by the electors of that particular community ward.

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  • Ward Jackson Park received a two million pound face-lift with significant funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund.

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  • In 1918 the Royal Polytechnic had pure wool flannel belts to ward off the threat of the pandemic Spanish ' flu.

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  • Vastly experienced goalkeeper Gavin Ward signed for Tranmere on the 28th June 2006, on a one-year contract.

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  • Giving gifts brought even more good cheer to ward off the evil spirits.

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  • Peter Ward had seen a hummingbird hawk moth on North Marine Road back in June.

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  • Getting brown's ear support quot ward notes worries ross henry an accident be.

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  • Building a boat from forest trees and using nails made from old horseshoes, they hung it with awnings to ward off Indian arrows.

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  • In addition, there are administration and clerical members of staff and ward hostesses.

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  • Areas covered include clean hospitals, hospital food, basic care services, privacy and dignity, ward housekeeping and the healing environment.

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  • Cllr Salinger has refused to allow the council to install any humps in his ward.

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  • There is one further hustings for Weavers Ward candidates this Thursday 27th at 6.30pm at the Sundial Center on Shipton Street.

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  • Now the mother has a paralytic ileus... Right after coming out of theater we found the ward in an uproar.

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  • He fills the air with incense and strange incantations to ward off evil, but with no effect.

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  • In a further question concerning cancer waiting time targets and proposed ward changes, at Aberdeen royal infirmary.

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  • Up till that point, medical oncology inpatients had been treated in a general medical ward.

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  • In center ' This Plan is most humbly inscribed to Thomas Chitty Esq Alderman of Tower Street Ward ' .

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  • A " stinger " suit would be recommended for divers to ward off box jellyfish.

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  • A gray tabby kitten with an injured foot from a road traffic accident was the first patient in the cat ward.

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  • Neil Baxter, last seen before Christmas, came into the center, while hooker Joe Ward also returned after a lengthy injury layoff.

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  • Dr. Helen Ward is senior lecturer in public health at Imperial College London.

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  • We r doing a full ward canvass but ignoring students as they'll vote lib dem!

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  • Changing electoral boundaries over the twenty year period have made a longitudinal analysis of ward data virtually meaningless.

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  • Vera was the married younger sister of Edward's former mistress, Freda Dudley Ward.

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  • Perhaps looking in Montgomery Ward's catalog, and drinking moonshine and hot water, since it is cold.

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  • On my second day I was told to take a trolley from a ward to the hospital morgue.

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  • I didnât have mush to feel down about I thought as when you look around the ward Iâve got it easy.

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  • In the male ward were eight or ten men walking about almost naked.

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  • General inpatient nephrology 25 inpatient beds provide the inpatient area for general nephrology on ward 206 at the Royal Infirmary.

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  • It leads to the cracked cosmic country noir of M Ward's âDead Man ' .

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  • Most of the other staff on the ward are children's trained nurses called staff nurses.

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  • While in the antenatal ward they would be seen by an obstetrician and a pediatrician to explain the possible prognosis.

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  • The number of consultant obstetrician sessions on the labor ward varied from 0 to 10 a week, with an average of 2.5.

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  • This can be used as a guide to the dose of intramuscular opioid that may be given in relative safety on the ward.

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  • The piece later turns into a meditative journey, with Ward becoming peaceful amidst Sanders clattering percussion.

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  • Reduce the use of potassium chloride concentrate in general ward areas and critical care areas further by purchasing ready to use potassium chloride infusions.

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  • The facility audit is intended to promote a review of policies and procedures for continence promotion in the ward, practice or residential/nursing home.

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  • Randal ward keep raising the companies then bring.

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  • The team worked closely with the project rapporteur, glass artist Sasha Ward.

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  • However, it does not ward off the threat to ethical rationalism.

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  • Sian Jenkins works full-time as a ward domestic at Morriston hospital, Swansea, but is growing resentful of the inequality in the system.

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  • The main focus of the stand will be Ward's innovative Topdek all-in-one composite single-ply roofing solution.

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  • The set times at which you have to take your medication may differ from the normal ward rounds.

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  • Proposed shift rotas appear to have very scanty provision in terms of senior cover for ward work on a day to day basis.

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  • Together, these will form a new constitutional settlement to empower frontline ward councilors in Westminster.

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  • Anyone who has worked on a labor ward gets a pretty shrewd idea about this.

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  • Cartoon Robin Costume S Where would Batman be without his ' Ward ' and faithful sidekick, Robin?

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  • However, if you do not wish to be seen by medical students please tell the ward sister or charge nurse.

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  • I looked at Ward again, and he had thrown off his dread solemnity and was laughing also.

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  • Four minutes later, Ward again found the target from a superb, defense splitting Simon Davies pass which beat the off side trap.

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  • A portable trolley with newspapers, sweets etc. visits the ward in the mornings.

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  • This 21st century version of Saxon are fronted by vocalist John Ward, who formerly worked with the band Shy.

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  • Higham Hill is the second most deprived ward in the boro.

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  • Some young people are " diverted " to an adult psychiatric ward, which is viewed by most to be inappropriate.

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  • The story takes place in the acute admission ward of a large psychiatric hospital.

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  • Thomas's family have pledged to raise £ 1m to dedicate a surgical ward in the new Children's Hospital, in his name.

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  • Each team of students was required to take a history from a patient recently admitted to a pediatric ward.

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  • Some ward sisters reported dealing with up to 18 consultants on one ward sisters reported dealing with up to 18 consultants on one ward, who all wanted to liaise with the sister.

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  • The standard plan of a medieval hospital was an open hall with beds either side, like a modern hospital ward.

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  • The assessors have also raised concerns about the management of the gynecology ward.

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  • The ward staff will give you a supply of syringes for the bladder washouts to take home.

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  • Infection followed operations almost as a matter of course and the dread scourge 'hospital gangrene ' spread from one ward to another like wildfire.

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  • Ward evidently hated batting at Sussex but the team work ethic is to be greatly admired.

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  • Ward, a fellow workman, held him up to the fresh air supply for three hours, thus saving his life.

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  • Out its new says ward wright automotive parts no need for.

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  • In 1749, when his headmaster Dr Nichols was already anticipating for him a successful career at the university, his uncle died, leaving him to the care of a distant kinsman,Mr Creswicke, who was afterwards in the direction of the East India Company; and he determined to send his ward to seek his fortune as a "writer" in Bengal.

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  • The theory of psychophysical parallelism has been subjected to a rigorous examination in James Ward's Naturalism and Agnosticism, part iii., in which the argument that mind cannot be derived from matter is convincingly presented.

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  • See FUNGI and BACTERIA; also Marshall Ward, Diseases of Plants (Romance of Science Series), S.P.C.K.; Massee, Text-Book of Plant Diseases (1899); Tubeuf, Diseases of Plants (London, 1897).

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  • On that occasion Bismarck helped Gorchakov to ward off the threatened intervention of France and England, and he thereby founded the cordial relations which subsisted between the cabinets of Berlin and St Petersburg down to 1878, and which contributed powerfully to the creation of the German empire by defending the Prussian cabinet against the jealousy and enmity of Austria and France.

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  • The university of Oxford was invited, on the 13th of February 1845, to condemn "Tract XC.," to censure the Ideal, and to degrade Ward from his degrees.

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  • L.') See William George Ward and the Oxford Movement (1889); and William George Ward and the Catholic Revival (1893), by his son, Wilfrid Philip Ward (b.

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  • But it is to be presumed that the punishment came from Israel - the use of Syrian mercenaries not excluded - and if, instead of using his treasure to ward off the invasion of Syria, Jehoash bribed Damascus to break off relations with Israel, an alternative explanation of the origin of the Aramaean wars may be found.2 12.

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  • The phrase is certainly as old as 1561, and was due to these beggars pretending that they were patients discharged from the Abraham ward at Bedlam.

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  • Under a charter of 1899, as amended afterwards, the city government, which has almost entirely superseded the town government, is in the hands of a mayor, who holds office for two years and appoints most of the administrative officers, except a board of aldermen (of whom each has a two-year term, six are chosen from the city at large and the others one each from each ward, the even-numbered wards electing their representatives one year and the odd-numbered the next), a city clerk, controller, sheriff, treasurer and tax collector, all chosen by popular vote, and an assistant clerk, appointed by the board of aldermen.

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  • Their official organs, indeed, continued to fulminate against the " unconstitutional " government, but the enthusiasm with which the programme had been received in the country showed the Coalition leaders the danger of their position, and henceforth, though they continued their denunciations of Austria, they entered into secret negotiations with the king-emperor, in order, by coming to terms with him, to ward off the fatal consequences of Kristoffy's proposals.

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  • The motif of the former is the poet's futile endeavour, in a dream, to ward off the arrows of Dame Beautee by Reason's "scheld of gold."

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  • An alderman of each ward (save that the wards of Cripplegate within and without, share one) is elected for life.

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  • It is thus contrasted with metaphysics, which considers the nature of reality, and with psychology, which deals with the objective part of cognition, and, as Prof. James Ward said, "is essentially genetic in its method" (Mind, April 1883, pp. 166-167).

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  • Epistemology is concerned rather with the possibility of knowledge in the abstract (sub specie aeternitatis, Ward, ibid.).

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  • Not so, according to Ward; but " God as the living unity of all," and " no longer things, but the connecting conserving acts of the one Supreme."

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  • In 1843 he married Julia Ward (see above), daughter of a New York banker, and they made a prolonged European trip, on which Dr Howe spent much time in visiting those public institutions which carried out the objects specially interesting to him.

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  • Another objection was that even if bacteria obtained access through the stomata, they could not penetrate the cell-walls bounding the intercellular spaces, but certain anaerobic forms are known to ferment cellulose, and others possess the power of penetrating the cell-walls of living cells, as the bacteria of Leguminosae first described by Marshall Ward in 1887, and confirmed by Miss Dawson in 1898.

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  • But, just because the assistant evidently did not want him to go in, Rostov entered the soldiers' ward.

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  • Rights to the to randal ward keep raising the companies then bring.

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  • To help them to randal ward in the range discount for anyone.

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  • The answer is no, you can only vote in the Ward for which you are registered as an elector.

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  • The main focus of the stand will be Ward 's innovative Topdek all-in-one composite single-ply roofing solution.

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  • It can also be used as a preventative; try gently rubbing ointment into the nipple to ward off soreness.

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  • She whirled to see Harley coming out of the sick ward with the scalpel in one hand and the tape in the other.

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  • As public open space is scarce in many parts of my ward this is an important issue.

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  • Bollinger shipyard source support quot ward notes my business time on his.

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  • He was placed in a side ward eventually, his treatment began of six skin grafts.

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  • The first sod of earth will be dug by Ward Member Cllr Neil Bell.

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  • His campaign in Village ward used leaflets full of lies in a bid to stoke up fear and resentment in the community.

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  • The tramp ward had a row of cells used for stone-breaking.

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  • Triage of appropriate patients to more specialized ward based care has increased.

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  • It is not uncommon for someone living over the road from you to belong to a completely different ward.

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  • I have spent my day caring for around 30 patients with infectious diarrhea and vomiting on an understaffed ward.

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  • He seems intent on undoing everything Jeff Burnige has done, with the possible exception of the sales of Ward and Ifill.

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  • Previously she worked as a staff nurse on a urology ward before becoming a health visitor.

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  • A ward of experienced urology nurses does its best to ease me into the job.

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  • Coffins are often opened by grave robbers who steal bones which are believed to be powerful in voodoo rituals to ward off an enemy.

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  • Thomas 's family have pledged to raise £ 1m to dedicate a surgical ward in the new Children 's Hospital, in his name.

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  • We 've asked our ward councilors to fight our battle for us.

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  • Some ward sisters reported dealing with up to 18 consultants on one ward, who all wanted to liaise with the sister.

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  • A branch placed in a house on Good Friday or placed in a bed was said to ward off such forces.

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  • This will be just another positive way to include your child in the addition of his new brother or sister, and it may help to ward off at least some of the sibling rivalry and jealousy he may feel.

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  • If possible, be proactive to ward off the chance of a tantrum occurring.

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  • Many maternity ward nurses will insist on putting the baby in the car seat and fastening it in so they know that they have done everything in their power to get the baby home safely.

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  • Montgomery Ward is one of the oldest buy now pay later catalogs.

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  • They were believed to bring good luck and ward off evil spirits.

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  • If you enjoy planting in your garden, you can also use your green thumb to ward off cats.

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  • Some cats will eat any and all of the food that is readily available in an attempt to ward off a future chance of starvation.

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  • Visits-A simple visit to the children's ward with a bouquet of balloons to hand out to the children can bring a smile to a child's face.

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  • Contributions-Contributions can be as simple as a monetary donation to the children's ward of your local hospital or a more specific donation, such as toys and books, which can be given to children on a needs basis.

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  • Become an Interior Refiner® and stage homes following the Use What You Have® system developed by Lauri Ward.

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  • This strategy can help ward off extreme anxiety and panic attacks.

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  • Using a stress ball throughout the day can help to ward off the stiffness that occurs when you don't use those joints frequently.

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  • Regular exercise helps ward off depression and eases anxiety.

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  • Moreover, including physical activity into your workday will improve your focus and concentration, ward of mid-day sleepiness, and increase your productivity.

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  • Try balancing your body with a shrug or shawl that will ward off the chill while flattering your upper half.

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  • Use citronella candles in lighting to help ward off mosquitoes and gnats.

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  • The color red is considered lucky and can ward away evil spirits from the wedding celebration.

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  • Not only does meth convince users that they do not need sleep or food, but it also inhibits the body's ability to absorb vitamins and to ward off illness and disease.

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  • The warrant is for failing to appear before the judge on allegations that Brown is late, by two months and $11,000, on his child support payments to ex-girlfriend Kim Ward.

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  • Ward is the mother of two of Brown's children, LaPrincia and Bobby, Jr., but this is nothing new.

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  • In March of 2004, Brown spent a night in jail for missing his child support payments to Ward.

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  • Brown paid $11,000 in child support in October 2006 to Kim Ward, his former girlfriend and mother of his children.

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  • Ward, and they call themselves She & Him.

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  • Ward has worked with many singers and musicians, among them Norah Jones, Cat Power, and the band Bright Eyes.

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  • The website Celebheights.com is dedicated to uncovering the precise heights of celebrities, even those who may be attempting to ward off critics through the use of shoe-lifts and other clever tricks.

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  • This can help to ward off ear infections and ear mite infestation.

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  • Your dog will always have fresh water available and will usually receive a healthy treat to ward off hunger.

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  • It can help an unsteady pet relax, and might just ward off bouts of car sickness.

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  • This covering will keep the cold off, the soil open, and ward off the effects of a treacherous winter sun.

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  • By carefully selecting the location for the vegetable garden, planning the vegetable garden layout, and improving the soil, you'll naturally ward off pests and increase your yield of delicious vegetables.

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  • Be sure to tuck a few marigold plants around the tomatoes to ward off the tomato hornworm, a pest that attacks tomato plants.

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  • Kitchen gardens are excellent places to try companion planting techniques such as marigolds among tomatoes to ward off insects, since the flowers look perfectly in place in the kitchen garden.

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  • Potatoes - plant the herb catnip to ward off various potato beetles.

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  • The late 1800's saw the burgeoning of direct mail catalogs starting with the 1872 Montgomery Ward and later the Sears dry goods catalogs.

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  • Companies such as Sears Roebuck and Montgomery Ward marketed glamorous heavy bicycles for youngsters and teens.

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  • Some even believed that by wearing the stone in jewelry pieces, they could ward off evil.

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  • Thought to be worn as a protective charm to ward off evil demons, the paisley design gained popularity in the European Baltic states between 1700-1800.

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  • Paisley vests also look great with a pair of loafers and a flannel shirt to ward off winter's chill.

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  • The likes of Montgomery Ward and Sears eventually became major players - in fact, two of the biggest players - in catalogue shopping history.

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  • When in doubt, having a simple cover-up to conceal your bare shoulders can ward off the chill in air-conditioned environments and also provide the necessary coverage should you find a reason to be more modest.

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  • If you think a petite plus size blazer's only use is to ward off the cold, you are missing out on one of the most economical ways to maximize your mix and match possibilities without busting your budget.

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  • Wearing women’s plus size flannel pajamas is a stylish way to ward off the cold.

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  • While many seniors find it difficult to exercise, it is important to realize that staying active can ward off a host of health complaints.

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  • Checking for problems like diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and even cancer can allow early treatment and ward off future problems.

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  • Many health experts believe that wine conveys certain health benefits thanks to resveratrol, a chemical grapes produce to ward off microorganisms that transfer health benefits to people when they drink wine.

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  • Relaxation techniques can help ward off tension and anxiety that can cause dizziness.

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  • Treatment of XLA consists of regular intravenous doses of commercially prepared gamma globulin (sold under the trade names Gamimune or Gammagard) to ward off infections.

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  • Carrying a dried acorn is believed to bring good luck, ward off illness and ensure a long life.

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  • Many people use this symbol to ward off illness.

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  • This line also includes gentle ultraviolet filters to ward against sun damage and fading, helping extend the vibrancy of the hair's color.

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  • However, keeping your hair clean regularly may help to ward off an infestation.

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  • Colostrum is the 'first milk' a nursing baby will get, and it is full of beneficial antibodies to help the baby ward off illness.

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  • This can help ward off nausea and indigestion, too.

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  • With six articulated legs and a fiery red body, this dragon has the same movable parts as the Adventures Deluxe model as well as a knight on its back with a protective helmet and a sturdy staff to ward off foes.

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  • While this is nowhere near the maximum amount of vitamin C that a person can absorb in a day, this is the minimum amount required to ward off diseases such as scurvy.

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  • The Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA) of vitamin D is 400 IU, but bear in mind that the RDA refers to the bare minimum scientists believe is needed to ward off deficiency diseases, not the optimal amount for health.

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  • Vitamin A also supports immune system, helping it to ward off infections.

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  • The book gained in popularity, and many people began taking megadoses of vitamin C to ward off the common cold.

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  • A lack of vitamin C can cause split ends and breakage, which black hair is already prone to, but luckily popping a vitamin C supplement daily will not only keep black hair in tip top shape, but may ward off a cold or two.

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  • Wicca magic (or magick) can be done for any need, whether it is a blessing for a new baby or to ward away suspected evil intentions.

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  • If the spell is to ward something away, place your hand in the center of the candle and push away the oil towards the top or wick end of the candle.

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  • Hanging mistletoe to ward off evil spirits and increase fertility.

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  • In December 1978, hospital workers found her corpse in abandoned Ward 20.

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  • Ward and a 5 member crew aboard, left Bermuda on July 3, 1947.

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  • If you're Greek, they're something old from your closet you burn to ward off evil and bad luck.

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  • The inclusion of a synthetic leather upper alongside patented HeatGear liners supposedly ward off moisture so your foot is kept as cool as possible.

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  • Thanks to the likes of Sears and Montgomery Ward, catalog shopping became a way of life for fashion-conscious consumers.

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  • In the mid-90s, he played Sela Ward's unstable brother on the show Once and Again.

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  • On the other hand fire can be used to ward off intruders or even to show a political opinion.

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  • Fire can be a beacon on a dark night or a way to ward off enemies and for many, fire tats represent a time of transformation or change, sometimes even a warning.

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  • Many sailors were superstitious and often tattooed specific symbols onto various places of the body to ward off evil, keep them from sinking or guide their way home.

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  • New York financier Henry Graves Jr. and Ohio automobile engineer James Ward Packard vied with one another to own a timepiece with the greatest possible number of complications.

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  • Many people have used yoga not only to ward off back pain but also to care for the back, as this DVD from famed yogi Rodney Yee instructs.

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  • Some assert that individuals who have mitochondrial dysfunction problems cannot produce the necessary energy required to ward off the elements introduced to the cells by the vaccines.

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  • Be sure to list the kinds of duties for each position, as well as situations where the nurse performed extra duties, such as acting as a supervisor or was the resource person for a particular ward or department.

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  • In 1960, William Ward founded his auto appraisal business with his wife, Betty.

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  • After forming a partnership with Black Book USA, the Wards were able to expand their organization and its reputation.CBB is now run by Kathy Ward.

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  • Another great resource is Ward's Auto, an auto industry analysis organization.

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  • Ward's Auto is another great source for news and features about the automobile industry.

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  • Of course, healthy eating won't prevent you from getting into a car accident, but it can ward off many serious health issues.

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  • This one page PDF file explains which foods ward off illnesses, help you loose weight and keep your body in optimum condition.

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  • Engaging your body in regular exercise is important because it can improve mental, physical and emotional health, helping you ward off chronic disease and depression while improving your memory and ability to reason.

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  • When you regularly engage in physical activity, you strengthen and tone your muscles, improve your cardiovascular health and ward off disease.

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  • It can even strengthen your immune system to help ward off bugs like the flu and the common cold.

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  • Conversely, you might be eating too few calories, so your body has decided to hold on to its mass in order to ward off starvation.

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  • Local insurance brokers like the Thomas Ward Insurance Group will search through insurance options for Chicago residents and will attempt to find the best coverage at the lowest price.

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  • Fresh out of the pool, you can slip into a robe to ward off a chill.

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  • Most robes made of this fabric are thick, just what you need when you want to ward off the chilly air.

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  • Petticoat Pond has scanned 1960s Montgomery Ward's catalogs you can view online.

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  • More erratic behavior resulted in her losing visitation rights, and she was admitted to a psych ward.

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  • Steve and JoAnn Ward are a mother-son team of matchmakers.

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  • Khloe Kardashian has been linked romantically to Rashad McCants of the Sacramento Kings and more recently to Derrick Ward of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

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  • As Decker, a blade runner, hunts down the infiltrating replicants, he discovers one hiding in plain sight, Dr. Tyrell's ward and secretary, Rachel (Sean Young).

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  • This story is just that-the beginning of an erotica romance between a Creek Elf woman and a French man, as they ward off the vampires from harvesting the magical power of the Creek Elf people.

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  • For many, they represent entities that ward against those evils.

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  • Some say they once existed but are no long visible, while other people still put out precautions to ward off evil fairies.

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  • Some people need to apply them daily or even twice a day to ward off itchy skin.

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  • The different ingredients are said to promote wrinkle reduction, collagen production, overall healthy skin, and ward off free radical damage.

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  • To help ward off these scars, treat pimples gently.

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  • Citronella candles tend to ward off mosquitoes in small outdoor spaces.

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  • Her eyes were large and imploring as she was wheeled down the hall to a room in the pediatric ward.

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  • Actually, Gerald's intent was probably to ward off an attack, rather than chastise Alex.

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  • He accordingly declined to take any action, meanwhile indicating the direction of his sympathies by making Mortara his ward.

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  • Ward, then began to work on commissions, and at the age of twenty-three received from the town of Concord, Massachusetts, an order for his well-known statue "The Minute Man," which was unveiled (April 19, 1875) on the centenary of the battle of Concord.

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  • The subscriber pays a fixed annual rent which covers a certain number of free out - ward calls, say boo; additional calls he purchases in advance in blocks of several hundred at so much per hundred, the price being reduced as the number increases.

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  • It was bold policy to confide Frederick to his greatest enemy and rival; but the pope honorably discharged his duty, until his ward outgrew the years of tutelage, and became a fair mark for ecclesiastical hostility.

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  • James Ward's masterly criticism of Herbert Spencer (Naturalism and Agnosticism) has been mentioned above.

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  • The guardian or his servant must not take from the ward's property more than a reasonable amount for his expenses and the like; on the contrary he must maintain the houses, estates and other belongings in a proper state of efficiency.

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  • The establishment of The Atlantic Monthly in 1857 gave her a constant vehicle for her writings, as did also The Independent of New York, and later The Christian Union, of each of which papers successively her brother, Henry Ward Beecher, was one of the editors.

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  • AuTH0RITIE5.Sachs, Lectures on the Physiology of Plants, translated by Marshall Ward; Vines, Lectures on the Physiology of Plants; Pfeffer, The Physiology of Plants, trans.

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  • Wounds, &c.Marshall Ward, Timber and some of its Diseases, p. 210; Hartig, Diseases of Trees (London, 1894).

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  • While the western mountains keep out the moisture, they do not ward off the winds which pour down the steep slopes in the winter and spring and raise clouds of dust.

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  • Ward is described by his son and biographer as somewhat unequally gifted by nature.

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  • In the previous year the Tractarian movement had commenced, and Ward's relations with that movement were as original as the rest of his life.

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  • In 1839 Ward became the editor of the British Critic, the organ of the Tractarian party, and he excited suspicion among the adherents of the Tractarians themselves by his violent denunciations of the Church to which he still belonged.

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  • From that period Ward and his associates worked undisguisedly for union with the Church of Rome, and in 1844 he published his Ideal of a Christian Church, in which he openly contended that the only hope for the Church of England lay in submission to the Church of Rome.

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  • After his reception into the Church of Rome, Ward gave himself up to ethics, metaphysics and moral philosophy.

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  • The area between the northern border of the Persian high lands and the Caspian and Aral Seas is a nearly desert low-lying plain, extending to the foot of the north - western extremity of the great Tibeto-Himalayan mountains, and prolonged east- Trans- ward up the valleys of the Oxus (Amu-Darya) and Caspian Jaxartes (Syr-Darya), and northward across the country re ior, and of the Kirghiz to the south-western border of Siberia.

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  • The city council is composed of a common council (five members from each ward, elected for two years) and of a board of aldermen (three members from each ward to be elected for four years).

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  • Three justices of the peace are elected from each ward for a term of two years.

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  • The city council appoints an attorney for the corporation, a city engineer, a city clerk, a police justice, a board of fire commissioners and a board of police commissioners, one from each ward, who have control of the fire and police departments, respectively, and a number of other officers.

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  • Wagner foresaw the use that would be made of this discovery by the adherents of the new philosophy, and, in the usual language of its opponents at the time, strove to ward off the " misinterpretations " that they would put upon it.

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  • No sustained effort was made to ward off the inroads of the Danes and others, who were constantly attacking the borders of the Empire.

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  • The charter of that year placed the balance of power in a council composed of three members chosen from each ward and as many aldermen as there were wards, elected on a general ticket.

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  • Benrath, Lokalfiihrer durch Hamburg and Umgebungen (1904); and the consular reports by Sir William Ward, H.B.M.'s consul-general at Hamburg, to whom the author is indebted for great assistance in compiling this article.

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  • It forms the Pater Ward of Pembroke, from which it is distant 2 m.

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  • Regulating works have been undertaken to ward off the dangers of periodical inundations, which occur in the valley of the Danube and of the other great rivers, as the Theiss, the Drave and the Save.

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  • Its name is kept in a wharf and a ward of the City.

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  • And Yahweh-Elohim planted a garden s in Eden, east ward; and there he put the man whom he had formed."

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  • On the heights, as at Bibracte, or on islands in the rivers, as at Lutetia, or protected by marshes, as at Avaricum, oppidaat once fortresses and places of refuge, like the Greek Acropoliskept watch and ward over the beaten tracks and the rivers of Gaul.

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  • Residents in Bedford's Goldington ward have a cleaner environment on Thursday following an early morning blitz by local agencies.

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  • The adjutant by his elaborate courtesy appeared to wish to ward off any attempt at familiarity on the part of the Russian messenger.

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  • The first person Rostov met in the officers' ward was a thin little man with one arm, who was walking about the first room in a nightcap and hospital dressing gown, with a pipe between his teeth.

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  • They advanced the few hundred paces that separated the bridge from the Kaluga road, taking more than an hour to do so, and came out upon the square where the streets of the Transmoskva ward and the Kaluga road converge, and the prisoners jammed close together had to stand for some hours at that crossway.

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  • With planning and diligence, his business would be on its feet in a few years and she would be working in the pediatric ward at the hospital.

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  • She breathed deeply, struggling to remain in control when all she wanted to do was run for the nearest psych ward and check herself in.

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  • Money must not be extorted from a ward when he receives his inheritance.

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  • A ward must be allowed a reasonable liberty in the matter of marriage.

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  • Stilicho and Serena were named guardians of the youthful Honorius when the latter was created joint emperor in 394 with special jurisdiction over Italy, Gaul, Britain, Spain and Africa, and Stilicho was even more closely allied to the imperial family in the following year by betrothing his daughter Maria to his ward and by receiving the dying injunctions of Theodosius to care for his children.

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  • New ward schools of modern construction were established.

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  • She sent to Bartlesville for information on the pediatrics ward and hinted at interest in a job there.

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  • Rainy nodded, a look of relief crossing his features, and Damian saw his mind was on his Natural ward, Traci.

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  • Ward, made vigorous contributions to natural theology.

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  • Ward left the Church of England in September 1845, and was followed by many others, including Newman himself.

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