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Zacharias Partenheimer was living in the village of Langenlonsheim, Germany in 1585. Traces his descendants in Germany and then follows several descendant lines in the United States. Descendants lived mainly in New York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Indiana and Wisconsin.
August Behling, parents unknown, was born 21/23 May 1823 in Petershagen, Hinterpommem, Germany. He married Caroline Lubenow about 1861 in Germany. They immigrated to America in 1866. They had 6-8 children. August died 14 Sep 1913 in Great Bend, North Dakota. Caroline died 22 Aug 1916, also in Great Bend. Their descendants have lived in North Dakota, Montana, California, Oregon, and other areas in the United States.
John Callaham was born in Virginia about 1770. On 2 April 1792, a marriage bond was issued in Lunenburg County, Virginia, for the marriage of John Callaham and Nancy Jarrett. He died 24 September 1855 and is buried in the cemetery at Little River Baptist Church, Abbeville County, South Carolina. Zachariah Carwile (1750-1841) was born in Goochland County, Virginia. He married Mary McMahon in 1755. He died at Level Land, South Carolina.
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A monthly magazine of practical nursing, devoted to the improvement and development of the graduate nurse.
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Biometrics in dermatology is an essential tool where data evaluation results in valid interpretations. This book will be the first in this area. One part of the book will describe principal aspects of dermatological research focussing on practical advice. A special part will cover applied biometrics to provide the clinician and researcher with state-of-the-art guidelines to assess the severity of common skin diseases. An additional aspect that will be of interest to pharmacologists addresses pharmacologic assays.
The baby girl was delivered, but not breathing. The doctors took the baby to the corner of the room and worked on her to try to get her to breathe. "Working on her" consisted of the doctor holding the baby's head in his hand with the body extending up his arm. This way he could move the baby up and down in a rocking motion which loosened the mucus in the baby's lungs. The doctors were then able to suction mucus from the baby's mouth with a bulb syringe. After twenty minutes of this attempt, the baby was still not breathing. The attending physician reluctantly suggested that they give up the process. Giles could not imagine this. He could not imagine telling his wife that their baby was dead. He kept working and praying. After ten minutes more, his efforts proved to be effective. The author was officially in the world.
If America had a heart, one might call it Brooklyn. This story is a small piece of that heart, told with verve by a young girl who dreams of becoming a writer. In these pages, she records her travel from fourteen through "sweet sixteen" (1929-1930), mixing the routines of her neighborhood life in Flatbush with poems, radio song lyrics, her love of books, regular trips to the theater to watch the latest "pictures," illustrations of her Jazz Age clothes, and her romantic notions about boys. Here, at the beginning of the Depression, she reluctantly shortens her education to learn marketable skills at a business schooltyping, shorthand, letter-writingand finds her first job in Manhattan at a fan manufacturing firm for $15/week. Though the novel she is co-writing with her girl friend is ultimately burned in the winter woods, this, the truer, fuller story, survives. It is, at heart, a coming-of-ages narrative. Posthumously published, this book finally fulfills her girlhood dream.