2,297 research outputs found
Mayes, William F. - An inaugural dissertation on gonorrhoea
Handwritten inaugural dissertation on gonorrhoea by William F. Mayes, of Marietta, Georgia.Inaugural dissertation; no. 270
Earl Mayes, saddlemaker
Photograph L-2327-B shows Mayes removing water soaked leather from tub; L-2327-C shows Mayes tooling leather with steel die. After it is stamped the leather acquires a shine and becomes waterproof; L-2327-D shows leather sewn on a pine tree (a saddle tree) and formed into proper shape; L-2327-E shows a wool skin glued to the bottom of the tree. Wool will keep horse's back from getting sore; and L-2327-F shows Mayes tightening thongs and connections.Earl Mayes, saddle-maker at the San Antonio livestock market, shows the improved art of saddlery
Earl Mayes, saddlemaker
Photograph L-2327-B shows Mayes removing water soaked leather from tub; L-2327-C shows Mayes tooling leather with steel die. After it is stamped the leather acquires a shine and becomes waterproof; L-2327-D shows leather sewn on a pine tree (a saddle tree) and formed into proper shape; L-2327-E shows a wool skin glued to the bottom of the tree. Wool will keep horse's back from getting sore; and L-2327-F shows Mayes tightening thongs and connections.Earl Mayes, saddle-maker at the San Antonio livestock market, shows the improved art of saddlery
Earl Mayes, saddlemaker
Photograph L-2327-B shows Mayes removing water soaked leather from tub; L-2327-C shows Mayes tooling leather with steel die. After it is stamped the leather acquires a shine and becomes waterproof; L-2327-D shows leather sewn on a pine tree (a saddle tree) and formed into proper shape; L-2327-E shows a wool skin glued to the bottom of the tree. Wool will keep horse's back from getting sore; and L-2327-F shows Mayes tightening thongs and connections.Earl Mayes, saddle-maker at the San Antonio livestock market, shows the improved art of saddlery
Earl Mayes, saddlemaker
Photograph L-2327-B shows Mayes removing water soaked leather from tub; L-2327-C shows Mayes tooling leather with steel die. After it is stamped the leather acquires a shine and becomes waterproof; L-2327-D shows leather sewn on a pine tree (a saddle tree) and formed into proper shape; L-2327-E shows a wool skin glued to the bottom of the tree. Wool will keep horse's back from getting sore; and L-2327-F shows Mayes tightening thongs and connections.Earl Mayes, saddle-maker at the San Antonio livestock market, shows the improved art of saddlery
Earl Mayes, saddlemaker
Photograph L-2327-B shows Mayes removing water soaked leather from tub; L-2327-C shows Mayes tooling leather with steel die. After it is stamped the leather acquires a shine and becomes waterproof; L-2327-D shows leather sewn on a pine tree (a saddle tree) and formed into proper shape; L-2327-E shows a wool skin glued to the bottom of the tree. Wool will keep horse's back from getting sore; and L-2327-F shows Mayes tightening thongs and connections.Earl Mayes, saddle-maker at the San Antonio livestock market, shows the improved art of saddlery
Captive Companies
Voici la deuxième partie des travaux présentés au dernier Rendez-vous
de Septembre. Nous soumettons cette étude à nos lecteurs qui
y trouveront matière à réflexion. M. Mayes est, en effet, très bien
placé pour voir ce qui se passe dans le milieu des assurances aux
États-Unis. Il assiste à l’essor assez extraordinaire des compagnies
captives, ces belles esclaves, avons-nous dit, dans notre dernier numéro,
en empruntant le mot à Jean de la Varende, qui l’appliquait, il est
vrai, à bien d’autres choses. M. Mayes ne peut et ne veut pas s’opposer
à l’expansion des sociétés captives. Il en voit les inconvénients et,
parfois, les graves défauts. Ce n’est pas une mise en garde qu’il nous
présente, mais une étude assez approfondie du problème que pose la
dernière née d’une famille nombreuse. A
Baby announcement
Birth announcement card for baby, William Thomas, born to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mayes on July 14, 1942. From the Masako Adachi scrapbook. See also sac_jaac_1953.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications
Vicarious learning through capturing task‐directed discussions
The vicarious learner group has been developing a multimedia database system to promote and enhance the role of dialogue in learning. A specific interest, and the origin of the projects' collective name, is in the question of whether and how dialogue can be helpfully ‘reused’. What benefits can students gain from dialogue as observers, not just as participants? We describe our initial attempts to generate and capture educationally effective discourse exchanges amongst and between students and tutors. Problems encountered with available CMC discourse formats led to our development of a set of Task Directed Discussions (TDDs). A medium‐sized corpus of discourse exchanges was collected using the TDDs. A selection of nearly two hundred of these TDD exchanges formed the multimedia discourse database to the implemented prototype system, Dissemination. Initial results from a controlled experiment and evaluation of Dissemination are outline
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