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Pages 161-192. Features: Hon. Benjamin Ames Kimball - article with nice one-page photo portrait; Daniel Webster; Hannah Dustin of Haverhill - her capture and famous exploit recounted; A Doubtful Claim - to whom belongs the honor of securing the abolition of flogging in the Navy?; In the Lecture Field - Flora Kendall Edmond; The Old Bow Meetinghouse - and the Baptist Church in the Town of Bow; Obituary of Maj. Henry McFarland; Poems; Fantastic back page ad for the David E. Murphy store of North Main St. in Concord, seller of reliable merchandise at reasonable prices; and more. Moderate wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. A quality copy of this vintage issue. Magazine
Multi-paginated Profusely illustrated with black and white photography, diagrams and advertisements. No. 2410 Vol. 67 contains: Maritime Britannia - first particulars of Canadair's CL-28; Re-Rising Sun - the Japanese aircraft industry 10 years after VJ-Day; Southern Air Traffic Control at London Airport; H.M. Carriers 1955 - survey's the role of the aircraft carrier in a thermo-nuclear age and previews the carrier strength of British and Commonwealth navies; Carrier Developments - recent inventions to increase efficiency on the flight deck; Scotland's Air Ambulances - two B.E.A. Herons go into operation. No. 2411 Vol. 67 8 April 1955 contains: The Speed of the Fox - a fairey occasion with historic associations; Jodel D.112 and Druine Turbi - Two French Ultra-light Two-seaters Compared; London Airport Central - photos of the new passenger handling block; Ferry 604 - The diary of a Viscount delivery flight to Montreal; Radically New Cockpit Design - U.S. Navy's television instrumentation; No. 47 Squadron - history of a famous transport command unit; Air Gunnery at Sylt; The Edo Amphibious Float; Two photos of the Handley Page Victor; The Deuce - English Electric's Digital Computer; T.C.A. and the Viscount - Background to the North American debut of a British turboprop airliner. No. 2413 Vol. 67 22 April 1955: Photo of the Hiller "Flying Platform"; Mixed Power - Engines of Different Species in Combination, Mr. M.J. Brennan's R.Ae.S. Lecture; Actuallites Francaises - the mighty Armagnac *page 519-520 missing from this article*; At the controls of the B-45 - Second-pilot time on a four-jet bomber; Britannia's Johannesburg Trials - Phase one of the tropical tests; Idlewild's New Terminal Area. No.2414 Vol.67 29 April 1955: Guide to First 1955 National Air Races; The Supercharged Turboprop - Dr. Hooker's S.A.E. Lecture on the Bristol B.E. 25, successor to the Proteus; Automatic Interception - all-weather single-seaters defending the U.K.; Meeting of the Airways; Actualites Francaises - the Morane-Saulnier M.S.760 Paris; Silencing Jet Helicopters - a notable paper by Professor E.J. Richards; Sopwith Camel - Historic Military Aircraft No. 10; Tower of London - radar, radio and lighting controls in the new central building. No. 2415 Vol. 67 6 May 1955: A Coming-of-age with Gannets; Actualites Francaises - part 3 - non-stop variety in light aircraft; Jet Provost - Hunting Percival's New Av Initio Trainer (includes 2-page detailed drawing); The First Round - Swansea sees the start of the 1955 national air races; Off the Ice - an R.C.A.F. helicopter rescues a Cessna which was partially submerged beneath ice; Igor Sikorsky in Great Britain - Pioneer Helicopter Designer's Lecture to the Institution of Mechanical Engineers; Fabrications to Float and Fly - rubber dinghies, balloons, and much else - the work of the R.F. D company; "Hot" Parts by the Hundred - Briggs Motor Bodies, Ltd. No. 2416 Vol. 67 13 May 1955: More Thoughts on Jet Lift; Routine Atlantic Crossing - Passenger's impressions of a typical Transatlantic flight by B.O.A.C. Stratocruiser; The World's Air Forces - Their compostion, duties and aircraft *2 pages of this article are loose but present*; 1955 Military Aircraft Data; National Aircraft Insignia; The World's Air Forces Cont'd. No. 2417 Vol. 67 May 20, 1955: A Truimphant British Motion Picture - The Dam Busters; Luftwaffe Redivivus - Germany's New Air Force for A.A.F.C.E. - Its strenghts and constitution; The Party Line on Airlines - Tories, Labour and Liberals express their view for "flight"; Supersonic Fighter - a critical examination of the F-100A Super Sabre (with detailed drawing); Introduction to Air Freight - Part 1 American Domestic Scene; The S.N.C.A.S.E. S.E. 210 Caravalle - France's First Jet Airliner (with detailed drawing); Regularity in the making - the technical organization behind B.O.A.C.; Flight Control - an historical review - Abstracts from Dr. Draper's Wilbur Wright Lecture; Deutsche Lufthansa in Book
PARIS, 1958 - Revue brochée - 20 x 14 cm - Du numéro 137, 2/07/1961 au N° 371 du 26/12/1965 - Couvertuire illustrée - illustrations en texte - Environ 60 pages par numéro - BON ENSEMBLE Sauf N° : 138, 145, 159, 161, 164 à 181, 183 à 216, 237, 239, 248, 255, 257, 262, 269 à 300, 302 à 304, , 306, 308 à 319, 324 à 326, 329 à 340, 342 , 343, 345, 350,370 - SOIT, 102 numéros Possibilité d'achat au Numéro 15 € pièce
20 pamphlets bound in one, nineteenth-century buckram. George Buchanan (1827-1906), surgeon, son of Moses Steven Buchanan (1796?1860) surgeon to the Glasgow Royal Infirmary and lecturer on anatomy in the Portland Street medical school from 1836 to 1841, when he was appointed professor of anatomy in the Andersonian University. George Buchanan was educated at the University of Glasgow and went on to study under his father and others at the Andersonian University, he became M.D. St. Andrews and L.R.C.S. Edinburgh, and in 1852 fellow of the Royal Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow. "In early life Buchanan volunteered to have chloroform anaesthesia demonstrated on himself, when his father performed a minor operation on him. He began to practise in Glasgow, but in 1856 he went to the Crimea as a civil surgeon. He returned to Glasgow at the end of the war, and was one of the first to practise there purely as a consulting surgeon. In 1860, when he succeeded his father as professor of anatomy in the Andersonian University, he was also appointed surgeon to the Glasgow Royal Infirmary. He soon became known as a bold and skilful operator, and as a good teacher. He was the first to point out (in 1865 and 1867) the possibility and safety of removing half the tongue in cases of cancer, and he was among the first surgeons to remove the upper jaw (in 1864 and 1869). He gave reasons for preferring lithotrity to lithotomy in operating for stone in the adult male, in 1868, and he was the first to perform ovariotomy successfully in the west of Scotland, in 1863."?(Oxford DNB). 1. Abstract of a Lecture on he Operation of Tracheotomy. 1871. 7pp. 2. Case of Acute Foetid Emphyema, Treated by Incision into Pleural Cavity. 1883. 4pp. 3. Case of a Hermaphrodite, Aged Nine Years, with the External Appearance of a Female; in whom both Testicles were Removed from the Labia Majora. [1885]. 4pp. 4. Case of Traumatic Femoral Aneurism. 1862. 7pp. 5. Cases of Tracheotomy in Croup and Diphtheria. 1864. 7pp. 6. Clinical Lecture on the Radical Cure of Hernia. 1878. 8pp. 7. Clinical Surgery. 1883. 19pp. 8. Clinical Surgical Report. 1871. 16pp. 9. Cyst of Fibula (Serous)?Excision of Upper Half of Fibula. 1882. 3pp. 10. On Excision of Isolated Bones of the Tarsus, Preserving a Useful Foot. 1877. 8pp. 11. Excision of One Lateral Half of the Tongue. 1865. 6pp. 12. Excision of the Superior Maxillary Bone. 1869. 6pp. 13. On Healing by Faith, with Reference to a Visit to the Gotto of Lourdes. 1885. 8pp. 14. Lithotrity, and Statistics of Lithotomy. 1880. 16pp. 15. Operation for the Radical Cure of Congenital Inguinal Hernia in the Child. 1879. 7pp. 16. On the Radical Cure of Artificial Anus, Dupuytren's Enterotome, and Subsequent Plastic Operation. 1879. 8pp. 17. Surgical Cases in Private and Hospital Practice. 1862. 8pp. 18. Talipes Varus: Its Pathology and Treatment. 1880. 15pp. 19. Tracheotomy in Croup and Diphtheria. 1863. 13pp. 20. On Tracheotomy in Diphtheria. 1865. 7pp. Formerly in the library of the Birmingham Medical Institute.