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...discussing the problem. Professor Raymond Pearl of Johns Hopkins University describes an experiment which he conducted with a pint milk-bottle, a supply of yeast and banana agar, and about a dozen flies (genus ). The food supply of yeast and banana agar was put it the bottom of the bottle and then the flies were enclosed, and the whole kept at a uniform temperature for about fifty days. During this time the flies multiplied so that the milk bottle--representing the United States--could not hold them all, nor the food supply give sufficient nourishment. The population, so to speak...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TOO MANY FLIES | 12/9/1922 | See Source »

...Americas time and again where a steady hand has been needed to keep the political cauldrom from upsetting. In Hali despite vague of "American actroties". It is generally admitted that the island has settled down to a prosperity unknown before American occupation. In others of the small "banana" republics, as O. Henry loved to describe, the more proscuce of a cool, giver American destroyer slipping into the harbor has completely discussed inciptent fire cracker revolutions...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PATROLLING THE BEAT | 5/24/1922 | See Source »

...would you feel rooting for the "Fighting Banana Slugs...

Author: By William P. Bohlen, | Title: More March Madness Musings | 3/23/1920 | See Source »

...hungry, but hasn't any money, should he plant a garden, steal a pie, work for a meal, or get a permanent job?" "Is Italy shaped like a banana, boot, broom, or sausage?" were other queries...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEW COLUMBIA TESTS POPULAR | 9/26/1919 | See Source »

...literary art. Even Mr. Calvert Smith's "Nueva Andalucia," a gracefully written and brilliantly colored--though uneven--story of South America, shows a similar tendency toward the odoriferous. and in "Nueva Andalucia" the good red blood is not content with remaining red; it blackens before our eyes, while the banana skins rot in the middle distance, and an "unclean native smell" fills...

Author: By F. L. Allen ., | Title: CURRENT MONTHLY REVIEW | 10/30/1913 | See Source »

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