. They are not dead : Restoration by the "heat method," of those drowned, or otherwise suffocated. .Whether this is true of horses, and of other animals, I do not know. It isan interesting question, and I shall be obliged for any information thereupon. AJ, The Figs, below show highly magnified fibres of Yellow Sinewy Tiasue, notparallel like the white, but branched cuily and irregular. Fig. 4 shows it around the exceedingly magnified air spaces in the air is drawn into these spaces this elastic Tissue is stretched ; when thein-drawing power ceases to act, the large amount of this Tiss


. They are not dead : Restoration by the "heat method," of those drowned, or otherwise suffocated. .Whether this is true of horses, and of other animals, I do not know. It isan interesting question, and I shall be obliged for any information thereupon. AJ, The Figs, below show highly magnified fibres of Yellow Sinewy Tiasue, notparallel like the white, but branched cuily and irregular. Fig. 4 shows it around the exceedingly magnified air spaces in the air is drawn into these spaces this elastic Tissue is stretched ; when thein-drawing power ceases to act, the large amount of this Tissue in the lungswill, like India-rubber, press the air out of them, not completely while in theclosed chest, but if it is opened, so completely that the lungs become smalland considerably firm. Out of the chest the lungs can be fully distended byblowing or drawing air into them, and then the elastic force of this Tissue inexpelling the air can be realized, and also that the perfection of breathing de-pends upon the perfection of this Tissue. This topic will again come upFig. 3. Fig. 4. , Fig. 3. Fig. 5 represents distendedareolar Texture of Sinewy Tis-sue, often in this form namedConnectory Tissue, because itloosely or closely connects be-tween all parts of the Body,the spaces varying from thesize of a mustard seed to thatof an egg. The dense fibres ofthe true skin become less dense,at its lower portion, as canbe seen at the flesh side ofany piece of leather, until themeshes become areolar texture,and thus finer or coarser extendthrough all parts of the Body,in such a way that all its Sinewy Tissue, dense or areolar in texture, is con-nected. Butchers sometimes introduce a pipe into a piece of meat and blowair into its areolar Texture, giving it the appearance of being fatter than it spaces are always moist ; when the moisture increases it producesgeneral dropsy ; even when small in amount it sometimes settles to the feet,which swell ; if the person raises his feet, or


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectdrownin, bookyear1879