Benjamin Franklin: His Contribution to the American TraditionBobbs-Merrill, 1953 - 320 Seiten |
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Seite 107
... advantage gained by my being able to write . The utility of this cur- rency became by time and experience so evident ... advantages , as they were great encour- agements . He procured me also the printing of the laws and votes of that ...
... advantage gained by my being able to write . The utility of this cur- rency became by time and experience so evident ... advantages , as they were great encour- agements . He procured me also the printing of the laws and votes of that ...
Seite 211
... advantages above every other method of warming rooms demonstrated ; and all ob- jections that have been raised against the use of them answered and obviated . With directions for putting them up , and for using them to the best advantage ...
... advantages above every other method of warming rooms demonstrated ; and all ob- jections that have been raised against the use of them answered and obviated . With directions for putting them up , and for using them to the best advantage ...
Seite 217
... Advantages of this Fire - place Its advantages above the common fire - places are , 1. That your whole room is equally warmed ; so that people need not croud so close round the fire , but may sit near the window , and have the benefit ...
... Advantages of this Fire - place Its advantages above the common fire - places are , 1. That your whole room is equally warmed ; so that people need not croud so close round the fire , but may sit near the window , and have the benefit ...
Inhalt
PAGE | 27 |
INVENTIONS AND APPLICATIONS OF SCIENCE | 189 |
THE STYLE OF BEING AMERICAN | 225 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acquaintance advantage American tradition Autobiography Benjamin Franklin Boston called century character chimney colonies common conductors continued Cotton Mather distemper electricity empiricism England equal expence experience father fire fire-places Franklin stove Franklin wrote friends gave Gazette give hand hospital improvement industry inhabitants inoculation inventions Jefferson Keimer laws letters liberty lightning rod living London Mark Twain means ment mind nature never observed occasion opinion paper parliament Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Gazette Pennsylvania Hospital persons Philadelphia philosophy political Poor Richard says pounds sterling practice present principles printer printing house published reason religion Richard Bache Second Continental Congress sect slavery slaves society soon Stamp Act stoves taxes things thought thousand pounds thro tion took town trade VINDEX virtue warm wealth whole William Heberden writing