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MARTIN'S HISTORY OF FRANCE THE DECLINE OF THE FRENCH MONARCHY. BY HENRI MARTIN. TRANSLATED FROM THE FOURTH PARIS EDITION. BY MARY L. BOOTH VOL. I. BOSTON: WALKER, FULLER, AND COMPANY. proprietors 1866. Nov. 28. 1865. Vol. 40. P. 965
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ANNUAL OF SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY: OR, YEAR-BOOK OF FACTS IN SCIENCE AND ART FOR 1855. EXHIBITING THE MOST IMPORTANT DISCOVERIES AND IMPROVEMENTS IN MECHANICS, USEFUL ARTS, NATURAL PHILOSOPHY, CHEMISTRY, ASTRONOMY, METEOROLOGY, ZOOLOGY, BOTANY, MINERALOGY, GEOLOGY, GEOGRAPHY, ANTIQUITIES, &c. TOGETHER WITH A LIST OF RECENT SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS ; A CLASSIFIED LIST OF PATENTS ; OBITUARIES OF EMINENT SCIENTIFIC MEN ; NOTES ON THE PROGRESS OF SCIENCE DURING THE YEAR 1854, ETC. EDITED BY DAVID A. WELL, A. M. BOSTON : GOULD AND LINCOLN, 59 WASHINGTON STREET. LONDON: TRÜBNER AND COMPANY, 12 PATERNOSTER ROW, 1855. [*Depos'. Feb. 28, 1855 See Vol. 30. Page 103 Gould & Lincoln, Propr.*]
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7 of his Country." But, after my advent here, I came to know that the day had even additional importance, because it was the natal day also of one who may, in a way, very properly be called the father of this large company of neighbors and friends gathered here to mark his eightieth anniversary. As Washington is the Father of his Country because of pre-eminent services rendered, so may Mr. Carter, for the time at least, be regarded as a father to us, because of kindly service rendered by him and received by us all how often! We are not here, therefore, simply to celebrate the eightieth birthday of a neighbor,--rather, it seems, to take advantage of the occasion to show Mr. Carter our appreciation of his generous and cheerful life among us. What one of us has not received from or through him some friendly token, some feast of
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506. Elements Vertical Oblique Horizontal 5 1 4 3 2 1 2 3 4 5 90° 50° 35° 0° Principles of Small Letters. 5 1 5 5 4 3 1 3 4 4 1 3 4 1 4 3 1 3 2 2 2 1 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 Scale of Lengths. Spaces 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 • This mark denotes equal spaces. Principles of the Capitals. Ovals 7 Prin. 8 Prin. 8p. 8p. 8p. 9 prin Spaces 1 2 3 4 1/8 4/5 1/2 1/2 1/3 2/3 1/2 9p. Give Special Heed to these Directions. This No. is the sequel to No. 1, the preparation for No. 3. The directions here given take for granted that those on the cover of No. 1 have been studied and followed. In this No. the letters formed from the first four principles are reviewed, and the stem-letters, t, d, p, q, are introduced. The Contractions used are as follows:—m.l., Main Line; c.l., Connecting LIne; m.s., Main Line Slope; c.s., Connecting Line Slope; m. Modified; pl., Parallel; P., Principle; E., Element. The Diagram on the cover shows the Elements, Principles, and Scale of Lengths. The Diagram above the copy, the part made at each Count, the Principles, and the way the copy is to be placed in the lines. SUGGESTIONS. 1. The only possible way of teaching Penmanship successfully in a school, is to have all the scholars of the class write the same line in the same book at the same time. 2. The order of instruction is KNOWLEDGE, EXECUTION, CRITICISM. First, KNOWLEDGE. Explain the copy carefully, and have it analyzed into its Principles and then into its Elements. Teach the nature, peculiarity, slope, beginning and ending of each element; notice the connections between the principles, and the combining lines between the letters; call attention to similitude and parallelism of parts and lines. Second, EXECUTION. Let them first trace the copy with dry pens. Then have one line in the column written, directing the pupils to be very careful as to position, penholding, rests, and movements, which are explained in the Manual and on cover of No. 1. Do not allow the pen to be raised from the paper until the line is written except in p. Be sure the wrist does not touch; it should be high enough from the desk to allow a holder to be passed under its right side. Third, CRITICISM. Criticize the line written, by asking questions on each particular given as knowledge, which the class answer by raising their hands. The errors lie, of course, on each side of the truth. Thus, if the line is a curve, it may be curved the wrong way, or too much or too little; if sloped, then too much or too little; the turn will be correct, or too broad, or too narrow. Select one or two of the most prevalent faults, discovered by the answers and by your own observation, for correction, direct especial attention to them, and have one more line written that may be corrected. Then criticize these same points, see how many have succeeded in correcting them, and write one more line. Thus, criticize the execution of each line, and direct attention to the correction of fault after fault until the whole is perfected. GENERAL RULES. 1. Begin and end in the corners. 2. Every principle touches both the head and base lines. 3. The Main Lines are straight lines and the sides of the oval written downwards; the ovals, the second upstroke of b and v, and the second and fourth of w. See Manual, Chap. III. The Connecting Lines are the rest of the curves written upwards. The Turns unite main to connecting lines. Sometimes the main and connecting lines unite in a point: this is termed a Connection. The line formed between two letters by their connecting lines running into one another at the middle of the space is termed a Connecting Line. 4. The odd numbers are used for the upstrokes; the even, for the down. 5. There are five Elements, numbered in the order in which they occur in the principles. There are six Principles in the small letters; from these, with the addition of a few exceptional parts, all the small letters are made. 6. The red lines mark the columns, each of which is divided into three oblongs or boxes. Write down the columns always. 7. The m.s. is 50° from base-line. N.B. Teachers will find our Manual of Penmanship a complete compendium of the art of teaching writing. The Blackboard Tablets are invaluable for presenting the Elements, Principles, and Capitals, of large size and perfect form. The Oblique Lines are a great help to the scholars in acquiring correct slope. SPECIAL DIRECTIONS FOR THE COPIES. COPY 1. KNOWLEDGE. The 1's and 2's are pl. respectively. The top of 1 is a little more than half across the box. Mind the slope of 2's, and the distance between them. Observe Rules 1, 2, 3, 7. Analyze P.1 from Diag. on cover. P.1 has been fully explained in No. 1, which see. Its analysis is P.1=3/4 E.1 + 1/4 E.2 + 3/4 E.3. Notice that the second 2 is perfectly straight through 3/4 of its height and pl. to the first 2, with which compare it. Call attention to the bend which forms the left side of the turn, and to the way in which the right side slants up directly the turn has touched the base line. Caution against making a broad turn by turning too soon on the left, or sagging down on the right side. EXECUTION. First, trace the copy a few times by count, giving special attention to Position, Penholding, Rests, and Movements. Next, have one column-line written by count. Thus, "Ready," (which means place the pen over, but not on the spot they are to start from,) "1, 2," "ready" or "up," "2, 1." CRITICISM. Ask questions on all the particulars known. Thus, "How many began in the corner?" How many did not?" "How many made the top of 1 far enough across?" "How many not?" "1 is the right curve of the oval—How many made this curve?" "How many the left curve?" (Show on the board what you mean.) How many made first 2 straight? Second 2 straight through 3/4? Turn too broad? Too narrow? &c., &c., &c.
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Filed Oct. 22. 1858. Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1858, BY ROBERT CARTER & BROTHERS, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York.
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NO. VI VOL. XXI. THE [checkmark] MONTHLY LAW REPORTER. EDITED BY JOHN LOWELL AND SAMUEL M. QUINCY. OCTOBER, 1858. ------------ "REPORT ME AND MY CAUSE ARIGHT." See Vol 33 Page 585 Dep Oct. 1858 BOSTON: CROSBY, NICHOLS, AND COMPANY. propr NEW YORK: JOHN S. VOORHIES. --------- BOSTON: PRINTED BY GEO. C. RAND & AVERY.
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2 Orleans Volunteers, did absent himself from his company, without permission from proper authority, on or about the 14th day of July, 1865, and remained absent until the 28th day of July, 1865. This at Camp Distribution, New Orleans, La. PLEA -—To the first charge - Not Guilty. To the first specification — Not Guilty; but guilty of absence without leave for ten days, from military authority. To the second charge -—Guilty To the Specification, second charge — Guilty. FINDING-—Of the specification, first charge —Guilty of so much only as sustains the charge of absence without leave. Of the first charge — Not Guilty; but guilty of absence without leave. Of the specification, second charge —Guilty. Of the second charge -—Guilty. SENTENCE. "To be confined at hard labor, at such place as the Commanding General may designate, for the period of three months." 3. Corporal JOHN KAPPEL, Company H, 1st United States Infantry. CHARGE 1st. "Disobedience of Orders." SPECIFICATION —In this: That Corporal John Kappel, of Company H, 1st United States Infantry, whilst on the corner of Canal and Carondelet streets, being ordered by the officer of the patrol, 1st Lieutenant John H. Purcell, 1st Infantry, to halt, did refuse to obey said order. This at New Orleans, La., on or about the 28th day of July, 1865. CHARGE 2d. "Absence without Leave." SPECIFICATION — In this: that Corporal John Kappel, of Company H, 1st United States Infantry, did absent himself from his company quarters, without proper authority, at or about 8 1/2 o'clock, P.M. and did remain absent therefrom until arrested by the patrol of the 1st United States Infantry, at or about 10 o'clock, P.M., on the 28th of July, 1865. This at New Orleans, La. PLEA -—To the specification, first charge — Not Guilty. To the first charge -—Not Guilty. To the specification second charge — Not Guilty. To the second charge -—Not Guilty. FINDING - Of the specification, first charge — Not Guilty. Of the first charge — Not Guilty. Of the specification, second charge — Guilty. Of the second charge — Guilty. SENTENCE. "To be reduced to the ranks, and forfeit to the United States ten dollars per month of his monthly pay for and during the period of two months."
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-9- the motives which to-day appear to control Legislatures and politicians, it would be this: "We admit the justice of the enfranchisement of women, but we don't want women in politics. That has been our sphere and we want to keep it to ourselves. There are not honors and plums enough to go around now; we don't want to have to divide them with women. Women, too, have a spying fashion of finding things out which we don't care for them to know. They might not approve of us, if they knew us better. Our machines are in good running order now. We know just how to conduct an election; we don't want the cogs stopped by a new class of unknown voters. We have ambitions which we can carry out if things are as they are, but if women came in Heaven only knows what might become of us. While we are in, women must stay out; when we get out, other men can enfranchise women if they want to." I think no one who has labored to secure justice from a Legislature to-day will deny that this is the correct description of the attitude of the modern politician. It isn't a new attitude. Men talked the same way before they admitted the right of woman's claim to the ballot.
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THE HEART AND HOME SONGSTER; CONTAINING A Choice Collection of Songs of the Affections, and embracing all the most Popular and Fashionable Comic, Convivial, Moral, Sentimental and Patriotic Songs. NEW YORK: DICK AND FITZGERALD, PUBLISHERS, 18 ANN STREET.
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31 Fort Bridger, by Special Order, No. 90, (Department of Utah,) of September 22, 1858, for the trial of privates Brevet Major R. C. G----, Captain 7th Infantry, president. 4. Requisitions for ordnance and ordnance stores, &c., not being entered in the book of "Letters Received," the memorandum preceding the endorsement will give the name of the officer making the requisition, the name of the company or post for which the stores are required, and the date of receipt of such requisition. Where the endorsement on the requisition is a simple reference or a mere approval, it is not necessary to record it in full in this book; a memorandum showing the action taken being all that is required. Fig. 1 shows the mode of noting requisitions and subsequent action thereon. 5. Endorsements on letters, reports, &c., merely referring or forwarding such communications, need not be recorded in this book; a note (in red ink) in the book of "Letters Received," showing the disposition made of such communications, being all that is necessary. On recording a subsequent endorsement, however, (should any be made,) reference must be made to the first one, although not recorded.-- See Fig. 2. In all other cases the endorsement will be recorded in full. It sometimes happens that the endorsement made on a communication, at department or general headquarters, simply approves of the views contained in the endorsements of the post or regimental commander, &c., without stating what those views are; in which case, both endorsements must be recorded in the book, in order to give a perfect understanding of the import of the last endorsement.--See Fig. 3. 6. Endorsements on certificates of disability simply ordering the discharge of enlisted men, will not be recorded in this book. The fact of the discharge being ordered will be noted in the "Book of Discharges," which will be noticed presently. In all other cases the endorsement must be copied; the memorandum preceding the endorsement giving the name of the soldier concerned, the date and place from which such certificates were sent, and a brief description of the cause or causes for discharge. A note (in red ink) will also be made referring to the entry made in the "Discharge Book."--See Fig. 4.
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good we could hardly believe it, and we asked each other over and over if it could really be true. It hardly seemed possible that the terrible struggle that had gone on for four years could end so suddenly. But the news was true. And when we began to realize what this news meant, how many glad hearts there were. What visions of home, and wives, and children, and sweethearts, and neighbors, and friends, arose and stood before our minds. Really it seemed like a dream, and like a dream we feared it would vanish away. But it was real. And I reckon there wasn't a man in that long marching line that day who had ever seen a happier hour than the one that brought to us there in that pine forest in North Carolina that day the words, "Lee has surrendered." CHAPTER XXXIII. JOHNSTON SURRENDERS AT RALEIGH. After receiving the news of Lee's surrender at Appomattox, we pushed on toward Raleigh, passing Smithville on the way, where Johnston had turned back to make his attack on Slocum's corps of Sherman's army at Bentonville. When we arrived at Raleigh we found Sherman's army there, encamped near the city, with Johnston's forces some miles beyond. We halted before reaching the city, and went into camp about a mile outside. In this position the forces remained for several days, while communications were passing between Sherman and Johnston, and Sherman was communicating with the authorities at Washington. We remained in camp near Raleigh until after General Johnston's surrender. While the proceedings incident to the surrender were in progress many of our officers and men visited Johnston's army. It was a great curiosity to see Confederate soldiers in their camps. For some reason I did not go to see the sight. I might have done so, but I did not. I cannot tell why. I have often wished since that I had gone along with the others. While so many were going daily to see and talk with the Johnnie Rebs, I was busy inspecting the regiments of my division. About as hard a day's work as I ever did was to carefully inspect three good-sized regiments of infantry. This I did while we lay near Raleigh. The proper inspection of an infantry regiment is not an easy task. The men have to be looked over carefully, to note the condition of their clothing, how they wear their uniforms, their condition as to neatness and cleanliness, their soldierly appearance, etc. Then their knapsacks must be carefully inspected, to learn what is in them, and the condition of their contents; after which the inspecting 84
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FREEDMEN'S BUREAU. 47 and supply of destitute and suffering refugees and freedmen, the Assistant Commissioners of this bureau will at once make careful estimates of the amounts of provisions, clothing, &c., as may be needed for the present quarter for the supply of such class of persons as may be within their respective departments, and they will hereafter, quarterly, make like estimates. All estimates must be approved by the Commissioner of the bureau prior to issue. Rations, fuel, transportation, and quarters, have been heretofore furnished to teachers of refugees and freedmen, and to other persons voluntarily laboring for the benefit of such per- sons, by certain commanders of departments, posts, &c., while others have refused to furnish the same. Therefore, in order that there may be uniformity of action and a clear under- standing in this matter, the following rules will be adopted, and will take effect and be in force on and after July 1, 1865m to wit: Rations will not be gratuitously issued to teachers of refugees or freedmen, or to other per- sons voluntarily laboring for the benefit of such persons, but such teachers as are authorized by the Assistant Commissioners of this bureau, while actually on duty in their fields of labor, may purchase rations of the government under precisely the same rules which apply to such purchases when made by commissioned officers of the army. Free transportation will be granted to such teachers on government transports and military railroads only. Public buildings, or buildings that may have been seized from disloyal owners, not required for military purposes, may be used for occupation for schools, teachers, soldiers' wives, and refugees. O. O. HOWARD, Major General, Commissioner Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, &c. Approved: E. M. STANTON, Secretary of War. –––––––––– [Circular No. 8.] WAR DEPARTMENT, BUREAU OF REFUGEES, FREEDMEN, AND ABANDONED LANDS, Washington, June 20, 1863 I. The following ration, being substantially that established in General Orders No. 30, War Department, 1864, for issue by the subsistence department to adult refugees and to adult freedmen, when they are not employed by the government, and who have no means of sub- sisting themselves, is republished for the information of officers of the subsistence department who are issuing rations to the persons above mentioned: Ration.–Pork or bacon, 10 ounces, in lieu of fresh beed; fresh beef; 16 ounces; flour and soft bread, 16 ounces twice a week: beans, peas, or hominy, 10 pounds to 100 rations; sugar, 8 pounds to 100 rations; vinegar, 2 quarts to 100 rations; candles, adamantine or star, 8 ounces to 100 rations; vinegar, 2 pounds to 100 rations; salt, 2 pounds to 100 rations; pepper, 2 ounces to 100 rations. Women and children, in addition to the foregoing ration, are allowed roasted rye coffee at the rate of ten (10) pounds, or tea at the rate of fifteen (15) ounces to each one hundred (100) rations. Children under fourteen (14) years of age are allowed half rations. II. Issues of provisions to the classes of persons above described will be made on ration returns for short periods of time, not exceeding seven days, signed by a commissioned officer, and approved by the commanding officer of the post or station, and, when practicable, by the Assistant Commissioner, or one of his agents for the State or district in which the issues are made. At the end of the month these original ration returns will be entered on a separate abstract, compared, certified to, &c., as is described for issues to troops in paragraph 23, subsistence regulations of June 8, 1863. No subsistence stores will be turned over in bulk to any Assist- ant Commissioner or agent whatever to be by him issued. III. In many cases the classes of persons above named are nearly able to subsist them- selves; in which event, only such parts and proportions of the ration as are actually needed will be issued. O. O. HOWARD, Major General, Commissioner Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, &c. Approved: A. B. EATON, Commissary General Subsistence.
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[*Deposited Oct. 23d, 1843 T.H Carter & Company propr. See Vol. 18, P. 326*] THE HOUSEKEEPER'S ANNUAL, AND LADIES' REGISTER: FOR 1844. BOSTON: REDDING AND CO., NO. 8 STATE STREET. BURGESS AND STRINGER: NEW YORK. ZIEBER AND CO., PHILADELPHIA.
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-59- We leave tonight and have "done" China. We have visited ten towns: Hong Kong, Macao, Canton, Shanghai, Nanking, Hankow, Peking, Nankow, Shanghaiquan and Mukden. We have had seven (7) kinds of money: Hong Kong, Canton, Shanghai, Nanking, Hankow, Peking and Mukden. The funniest thing was that the Peking silver dollar was worth in small silver 110 cents and those who changed it could get in addition 6 copper cents. The same dollar here is worth 100 3/4 Japanese cents, but the 100 cents of which it is composed in the silver with 116 Chinese cents and with 100 cents face value is only worth 84 Japanese cents: This is the worst dazzle-dazzle on money we have found.
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-2- CEASE as a result of a decade of investigation, research, study, discussions and conclusions. Questions 1. Shall organizations be asked to sign this? 2. Should it be submitted to the organizations? 3. Should the list of organizations be merely printed without reference to this forward?
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[*D254*] NEW YORK STATE AND The CIVIL WAR JANUARY 1963 OS IN LONGSTREET'S CHARGING COLUMN. METH'S DIVISION PENDER'S DIVISION ARCHER'S TENN. BRIDGADE. NORTH CAROLINA BRIGADE. PETTIGREW'S N.T. BRIGADE. SCALES' [?][] VA. BRIGADE. NORTH CAROLINA BRIGADE. Eisenhower and Catton at Gettysburg - Page 24
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RODEY MAGUIRE'S COMIC VARIETY SONGSTER. A COLLECTION OF Comic and Eccentric Songs, As Sung by the Celebrated Comic Vocalist and Delineator, RODEY MAGUIRE. NEW YORK: DICK & FITZGERALD, PUBLISHERS. [* Filed Augt 17th 1864 *]
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7 vate Jacob Hengell, of the aforesaid company and regiment, did visit the house of one Conrad Miller, citizen, on the Shell Road, near Carrollton ,La., and did then and there arrest the said Conrad Miller, citizen, without proper authority. This at or near Carrollton, La., on or about the 7th day of August, 1865. SPECIFICATION 2d-In this : that Sergeant Frederic Hilbert, of Company B, 4th Missouri Cavalry Volunteers, in company with Private Dominique Hilbert and Private Jacob Hengell, of the aforesaid company and regiment, did extort from the aforesaid Conrad Miller, citizen, the sum of five dollars, in consideration of which sum, the said Conrad Miller, citizen, was released from arrest by the said Sergeant Frederic Hilbert, Private Dominique Hilbert and Private Jacob Hengell, all of Company B, 4th Missouri Cavalry. This at or near Greenville, La., on or about the 7th day of August, 1865. PLEA— Not Guilty FINDING-—Not Guilty And the Court does therefore acquit the accused. 13. Private DOMINIQUE HILBERT, Company B, 4th Missouri Cavalry. CHARGE. "Conduct to the prejudice to Good Order and Military Discipline." SPECIFICATION—In this : that Dominique Hilbert, Private of Company B, 4th Missouri Cavalry Volunteers, did visit the house of Michael Long, citizen, residing near Nashville Station, on the New Orleans and Carrollton Railroad, and did abuse and threaten Mrs. Long, the wife of said Michael Long, citizen, in the following manner, to wit : pointing a revolver at her, saying at the same time, "I will murder you, as the woman was murdered at Greenville the other day." This at or near Nashville Station, in the Parish of Jefferson, Louisiana, on or about the 7th day of August, 1865. PLEA—Not Guilty. FINDING—Not Guilty. And the Court does therefore acquit the accused. 14. Private CHARLES HENDERSON, Company H, 1st New Orleans Volunteers. CHARGE 1st. "Absence without Leave." SPECIFICATION 1st—That Charles Henderson, Private of Company H, 1st New Orleans Volunteers, did absent himself from his company quarters on the 17th day of July, 1865, without permission, and did remain absent until the 19th day of July, 1865. All this at New Orleans, La. SPECIFICATION 2d--That Charles Henderson, Private of Company H, 1st New
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THE AMERICAN FAMILY COOK BOOK; CONTAINING RECEIPTS FOR COOKING EVERY KIND OF MEAT, FISH, AND FOWL, AND MAKING SOUPS, GRAVIES, AND PASTRY, PRESERVES AND ESSENCES; WITH A COMPLETE SYSTEM OF CONFECTIONERY, AND RULES FOR CARVING. AND ALSO SEVENTY-FIVE RECEIPTS FOR PASTRY, CAKES, AND SWEETMEATS, BY MRS. LESLIE.
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SCHOOL OF ARTS. VOLUME I. Treats of gold, silver, amalgamating, gilding, washing, separating, deadning, boiling, quickening, powdering, extracting, watering, adorning, embellishing, heightening, distinguishing, colouring, soldering, trimming, helling, silvering, converting, resembling, incorporating, melting, &c. BY WILLIAM CARTER. 1837.
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2 anti-slavery people in 1845-1849, and to which Garrison and Phillips lent the prestige of their names by writing a paper and a letter. It is needless to say that I purchased the historic volume, and ere I slept - that night - had read its contents and been deeply stirred by them. My wife and mother inmates of the home listened to my reading and we all felt then the end came, - that we had new conceptions of the awfulness of the institution of slavery. profounder reasons for rejoicing in the valor and courage of the men who brought slavery to an end [*Gro. P. Morris to F. Douglass Aug 26, 1893 - 2 of 2*]
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vi PREFACE. affair most deeply affecting the national welfare and common defence, and has subjected itself to the severest enforcement of those legislative and military powers, to which alone, under the constitution, the people must look to save themselves from ruin. In the last extremity of our contest, the question must be decided whether slavery shall be rooted up and extirpated, or our beloved country be torn asunder and given up to our conquerors, our Union destroyed and our people dishonored? Are any rights of property, or any claims, which one person can assume to have over another, by whatever local law they may be sanctioned, to be held, by any just construction of the constitution, as superior to the nation's right of self-defence? And can the local usage or law of any section of this country override and break down the obligation of the people to maintain and perpetuate their own government? Slavery is no longer local or domestic after it has become an engine of war. The country demands, at the hands of Congress and of the President, the exercise of every power they can lawfully put forth for its destruction, not as an object of the war, but as a means of terminating the rebellion, if by destroying slavery the republic may be saved. These considerations and others have led the author to the conclusion stated in the following pages, "that Congress has the right to abolish slavery, when in time of war its abolishment is necessary to aid the commander-in-chief in maintaining the 'common defence.'" W.W.
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toward the close of the war. The few days we lay in camp there witnessed the stirring and eventful scenes around Petersburg which culminated in Lee's surrender at Appomattox, and saw General Joseph E. Johnson's army retreating through North Carolina, followed by Sherman. About the time we went into camp at Faison the battle of Bentonville was fought, probably not more than twenty-five miles from us. While we lay in camp at Faision Station an incident occurred which in its result was quite important to me; and it was so unique in its character that I deem it worth relating briefly. Had the result been different I might not care to tell the story . Although no enemy was near we kept a good picket line, for we did not know when he might appear. The Confederates had a habit of coming at unexpected times, and experience had taught us the necessity of constant vigilance. We were short of lieutenants, and I found myself detailed one morning to take a lieutenant's place on the picket line. At the same time that the Adjutant detailed me thus, he notified Captain Riley of Company K that he had been detailed as brigade officer of the day. I don't question now but what all was right and straight in the transaction, but I felt at the time that I was being imposed upon. Officers in the army lay much stress on rank, and when I saw myself detailed to do a lieutenant's duty on the picket line, and the captain of another company going out as brigade officer of the day, I thought I was not receiving fair treatment, and so informed the adjutant, using pretty strong language. But my hot words didn't change matters any, and we went out just as we were detailed. I was in charge o the men from our regiment, and fortune so arranged matters that we were placed directly opposite the headquarters of General Terry, then commanding our corps, and not more than thirty or forty rods from his tent. Soon after we went on duty Captain Riley, brigade officer of the day, came along the line and in addition to giving me some general directions, instructed me specially that it was the order of General Paine, commanding our division, that no person be allowed to pass any portion of the picket line held by his men except on a pass given or countersigned by him. The order seemed unusual to me, and I asked him if he was sure he was not mistaken about it. He said he was not mistaken, and the order as he gave it to me was exactly as he had received it from the division office of the day, Major Brazee. I had full confidence in Captain Riley's word, and resolved to execute the order strictly, although I was sure somebody was making a mistake. Very soon a detail in charge of a sergeant came from the corps hospital, desiring to pass through the picket line out into the woods to 79
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2620 | Larabe, Charles...|Private...|E|8th Maine.........|..........|19| 139| 2621 | Littlefield, Charles M....|.do..|K|8th Maine.......|..........|19|121| 2622 | Littlefield, David M...|.do...|D|8th Maine........|..........|19|113| 2623 | Lord, Tobias ........|.do...|B|8th Maine.......|..........|19|143| 2624 | Legran, Daniel S....|..do..|B|8th Maine........|..........|36|44| 2625 | Lambert, Charles....|.......|C|6th Connecticut........|.......| | | 2626 | Lander, James......|..........|.....|Quartermaster's Department.|.......|.....|......| 2627 | Loucks, Wm.........|...........|E|115th New York.....|......|.......|......| 2628 | Lobdell, Richard.....|......|I|1st New York engineers....|.....|28|142| 2629 | Lewis, Francis.......|......|F|7th Connecticut......|......|36|37| 2630 | Lord, Wm......|.....|......|F|144th New York.....|.....|28|23| 2631 | Lewis, Geo. A......|......|G|40th Massachusetts...|...|15|88| 2632 | Lynch, Mathias......|......|I|127th New York.....|......|28|179| 2633 | Lewis, Rockwell....|.....|I|142d New York......|......|36|126| 2634 | Lewis, Jno. F......|Corporal....|D|20th Veteran Reserve Corps..|....24|44| 2635 | LeSage, Lewis....|Private...|F|54th New York......... |.......|26|84| 2636 | Lance, Jacob A ........|......do....|A|55th Pennsylvania.....|......|24|44| 2637 | Lewis, David.....|.....|H|20th Veteran Reserve Corps..|...|...|1|62| 2638 | Link, Jacob.....|........|K| 53d Indiana.....|.....|8|69| 2639 | Labdell, Asbury......|......|B|12th Indiana.......|......|8|63| 2640 | Lehrman, Wm....|.........|.......|107th Ohio..........|........|9|42| 2641 | Lucid, John.........|............|G|6th Missouri............|........|.....|...| 2642 | Lewis, Smart .......|........|G|33d U.S. colored troops...|.......|30|96| 2643 | Lete, Jonathan......|Corporal....|C|102d U.S. colored troops....|.....|31|100| 2644 | Luck, F.......|.......|....|..............................|....................|.......|.......| 2645 | Lewis, J.......|.....|.....|...............................|...................|.......|.......| 2646 | Leeper, S. D............|......................|...............|.............|.......|.......| 2647 | Lapp, B. J...................|.....................|................|..............|......|......| 2648 | Loney, D............|............|E|32d U. S. colored troops.....|...........|30|14| 2649 |Looney, John.........|.............|......|.......|.....................|.......|.....|.....| 2650 | Leverett, C.........|...............|...|................|..........|........|.........| 2651 | Lenkons, J. A..........|......|D|4th Virginia...........|..............|......|......| 2652 | Leigh, J. W..............|.............|A|26th Virginia.......|.........|..........|.......| 2653 | Lane, J. H........|............|.......|.......................|........|......|.......| 2654 | Lampman, Luman..........|Private....|I|29th Connecticut.........|..........|...|....| 2655 | Long, Jas. B.....|........|K|70th Ohio........|.......|9|53| 2656 | Lane, Samuel.......|...........|C|33d Ohio............|..........|9|53| 2657 | Leach, A.B...........|............|C|58th Indiana.........|...........|5|33| 2658 | Liles, G...........|..........|G| 2d Iowa...................|...........|....|.....| 2659 | Lloyd, Adam.............|........|K|141st New York.......|........|27|107 2660 | Laner, Wm.............|....................|E|1st Alabama cavalry.......|.........|23|51| [Side Text]: BEAUFORT NATIONAL CEMETERY, SOUTH CAROLINA. 77
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116 CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES. against the lawful government; holding public meetings to incite the people to the commission of treason; plotting treason; framing and passing ordinances of secession; organizing and forming new governments within any of the States, with the intent that they shall become independent of the United States, and hostile thereto; the making of treaties between the several States; refusal to take the oath of allegiance to the United States, when tendered by proper authority; resistance to civil process, or to civil officers of the United States, when such resistance is not so general as to constitute war. Each of these and many other public wrongs may be so committed as to avoid the penalty of treason, because they may not be overt acts of levying war, or of aiding and comforting the enemy, which the offender must have committed before he can have rendered himself liable to be punished for treason as defined in the constitution. These and other similar offences are perpetrated for the purpose of overthrowing government. Civil war must inevitably result from them. They might be deemed less heinous than open rebellion, if it were not certain that they are the fountain from which the streams of treason and civil war must flow, sweeping the innocent and the guilty with resistless tide onward to inevitable destruction. ALL ATTEMPTS TO OVERTURN GOVERNMENT SHOULD BE PUNISHED. Of the many atrocious misdeeds which are preliminary to or contemporaneous with treason, each and all may be and should be punishable by law. It is by no means desirable that the punishment of all of them should be by death, but rather by that penalty, which, depriving the criminal of the means of doing harm,
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11 sober, ascertaining the address of his family, go with him to the express office and with his consent forward it to them, leaving him enough to pay his fare home and follow on after. We had several such cases. Many ways of cheating the men were constantly practiced, and with the utmost vigilance we could hardly stop it backed up as the rascals were by some of the judges elected by the people. A case reported in the Evening Post, of May 31st, in which Mr. Kennedy, our energetic and faithful Superintendent of the Police, was arrested for contempt of court, for not immediately letting one of these rascals go, is as follows: "CHEATING SOLDIERS. THE ARREST OF MR. KENNEDY—CASE OF COLONEL COLYER AND THE JEWISH CLOTHIER ALKERS. The fact of the arrest of Mr. Kennedy on a writ of contempt, issued by Judge Cardozo, and his subsequent return, has already been published. The facts in relation to the arrest of Morris Alkers, in whose behalf the write of habeas corpus was issued, were not published. It appears that Alkers keeps a clothing store in Canal street. On several occasions he has visited the Soldiers' Depot corner of Howard and Mercer streets, where he distributed his business cards, which had a Masonic emblem at the top. By this means he secured a number of customers among the soldiers, and the Superintendent says he regularly cheated those dealing with him. One week ago last Sunday afternoon, Alkers visited the depot during divine service, and persuaded eight Western men from General Sherman's army to visit his store, where he sold each of them a snit of clothes, ranging from fifty to one hundred and twenty dollars each. Three or four of these men went west the same evening. The next morning one of the others showed his clothing to the officers in the depot, and was told that he had been grossly deceived. He was advised to go to Brooks Brothers and learn the value of the goods, which he did. He was was informed that a suit of clothing for which he had paid eighty dollars could be bought for thirty dollars. Colonel Colyer then made the facts know to Superintendent Kennedy, who detailed a detective to make the man refund the money. Alkers did pay the soldier fifty dollars, retaining thirty dollars for the clothing. The other soldiers who had remained in the city, learning of the success of their comrade, visited the merchant and received more than half of the money they had originally paid. To one of the men Alkers gave two suits of clothing rather than refund any money. At the request of the Colonel, Superintendent Kennedy detailed an officer at the depot, with instructions to prevent Alkers from visiting the building and distributing any of his cards, or enticing the men into his store. He persisted, however, and yesterday was arrested while hawking his cards in front of the depot in Howard street, and not in front of his own store, as was previously reported."
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68 UNION SOLDIERS INTERRED IN BEAUFORT NATIONAL CEMETERY, SOUTH CAROLINA -- Continued. No. Name. Rank. Co. Regiment. Date of death Sec. Grave. Remarks. 2281 Jones, Robert Private D 54th Massachusetts - 16 73 2282 Joiner, George do F 54th Massachusetts - - - 2283 Johnson, Stephen do B 54 Massachusetts - - - 2284 Joiner, Caesar do F Massachusetts - - - 2285 Jackson, Charles do A 104th U.S. colored troops - 31 2 2286 Jenkins, James do I 104th U.S. colored troops - 31 53 2287 Judges, Josiah do E 104th U.S. colored troops - - - 2288 Jenkins, Peter do G 104th U.S. colored troops - 31 58 2289 Jackson, Charles do E 26th U.S. colored troops - 29 27 2290 Jenkins, Virgil do K 104th U.S. colored troops - 31 64 2291 Jackson, Andrew do A 104th U.S colored troops - 31 26 2292 Jones, Samuel do E 104th U.S. colored troops - 31 98 2293 James, Prine do G 104th U.S. colored troops - 31 86 2294 Jackson, Anthony do H 104th U.S. colored troops - 31 49 2295 Jones, George W Sergeant E 85th New York - 27 151 2296 Johnson, David Private G 7th New Hampshire - 18 52 2297 Johnson, Stiles J do H 144th New York - 18 52 2298 Jourman, Richard H do E 35th U.S colored troops - 32 8 2299 Jarrett, James do I 11th Iowa - - - 2300 Johnson, Anderson - - - - - - 2301 Jones, David - E 9th Illinois - 7 118 2302 Johnson, Thomas - D 25th Indiana - 8 90 2303 Jenkins, Thomas - H 34th U.S. colored troops - 29 98 2304 Johnson M. A. E. - - - - - - 2305 Jones, D.J. - - - - - - 2306 Jow B. Goortrude - - - - - - 2307 Joe, M.P - - - - - - 2308 Johnson, J Sergeant F 14th West Virginia - 23 21 2309 Jordan, J.P - B 17th Connecticut - 36 28 2310 Joiner, R.S - F 18th Massachusetts - 16 84 2311 Johnson, J - I 54th, New York - 26 79 2312 Jewitt, J.E - E 6th Ohio - 10 101 2313 Jordan, L.S - E 6th Ohio - - - 2314 Jenkins, R - E 58th Indiana - 5 29 2315 Jones, Eaton - B 141st New York - 27 105
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[*Filed April 21st 1865*] Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1865, by ROBERT BONNER, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern District of New York. _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ THE WAGON TRAIN. ______ A TALE OF THE OVERLAND ROUTE. ~~~~~~~~~~ BY ILLION CONSTELLANO, AUTHOR OF "THE REEF SPIDER," "THE TURTLE HUNTER," ETC., ETC. ~~~~~~~~~~
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94 CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES. prevent Parliament from proclaiming any act of a subject to be treason, thereby subjected him to all its terrible penalties. The doctrine of constructive reasons, created by servile judges, who held their office during the pleasure of the king, was used by them in such a way as to enable the sovereign safely to wreak vengeance upon his victims under the guise of judicial condemnation. If the king sought to destroy a rival, the judges would pronounce him guilty of constructive treason; in other words, they would so construe the acts of the defendant as to make them treason. Thus the king could selfishly outrage every principle of law and justice, while avoiding responsibility. No man's life or property was safe. The wealthier the citizen, the greater was his apprehension that the king would seize and confiscate his estates. The danger lay in the fact that the nature and extend of the legal crime of treason was indeterminate, or was left to arbitrary determination. The power to define treason, to declare from time to time who should be deemed in law to be traitors, was in its nature an arbitrary power. No government having that power would fail to become oppressive in times of excitement, and especially in civil war. As early as the reign of Edward III., Parliament put an end to these judge-made-treasons by declaring and defining all the different acts which should be deemed treason; and, although subsequent statutes have added to or modified thelaw, yet treason has at all times since that reign been defined by statute. POWER OF CONGRESS TO DEFINE AND PUNISH TREASON LIMITED. It was with full knowledge of the history of judicial usurpation, of the tyranny of exasperated govern-
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PREFACE. v laws rendering the holding of any slaves therein illegal, so long as slavery is merely a household or family, or domestic institution and so long as its existence and operation are confined to the States where it is found, and concern exclusively the domestic affairs of the Slave States; and so long as it does not conflict with or affect the rights, interests, duties, or obligations which appertain to the affairs of the nation, nor impede the execution of the laws and constitution of the United States, nor conflict with the rights of citizens under them. Yet cases might arise in which, in time of peace, the abolishment of slavery might be necessary, and therefore would be lawful, in order to enable Congress to carry into effect some of the express provisions of the constitution, as for example, that contained in Art. IV. Sect. 4, Cl. 1, in which the United States guarantee to every State in this Union a republican form of government; or that contained in Art. IV. Sect. 2, Cl. 1, which provides that citizens of each State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States. It is asserted in this essay that, when the institution of slavery no longer concerns only the household or family, and no longer continues to be a matter exclusively appertaining to the domestic affairs of the State in which it exists; when it becomes a potent, operative, and efficient instrument for carrying on war against the Union, and an important aid to the public enemy; when it opposes the national military powers now involved in a gigantic rebellion; when slavery has been developed into a vast, an overwhelming war power, which is actually used by armed traitors for the overthrow of government and of the constitution; when it has become the origin of civil war, and the means by which hostilities are maintained in the deadly struggle of the Union for its own existence; when a local institution is perverted so as to compel three millions of loyal colored subjects to become belligerent traitors because they are held as slaves of disloyal masters, -- then indeed slavery has become an
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THE POCKET GUIDE TO CALIFORNIA; A SEA AND LAND ROUTE BOOK, CONTAINING A DESCRIPTION OF THE EL DORADO; ITS GEOGRAPHICAL POSITION; PEOPLE, CLIMATE, SOIL, PRODUCTIONS, AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES, COMMERCIAL ADVANTAGES, AND MINERAL WEALTH; WITH A CHAPTER ON GOLD FORMATIONS; ALSO THE CONGRESSIONAL MAP, AND THE VARIOUS ROUTES AND DISTANCES TO THE GOLD REGIONS. TO WHICH IS ADDED THE Gold-Hunter's memorandum and Pocket Directory. [*√*] BY SOLO. H. SANBORN, LATE OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY. "Westward the course of Empire takes its way."—BERKELEY. NEW YORK: J. E. SHERWOOD, PUBLISHER AND PROPRIETOR. FOR SALE BY H. LONG & BROTHER. 46 ANN STREET; BERFORD & CO., ASTOR HOUSE; AND THE PRINCIPAL BOOKSELLERS THROUGHOUT THE UNION. CALIFORNIA: BERFORD & CO., AND C. W. HOLDEN, SAN FRANCISCO. 1849.
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11 AS A SOLDIER year, President Lincoln was authorized to accept negroes for any service. About a month later, the Secretary of War, for the first time, authorized the raising of negro troops, by directing General Rufus Saxton to arm, uniform, equip and receive into the service of the United States such numbers of volunteers of African descent as he might deem expedient, not exceeding five thousand, and to detail officers to instruct and command them. In September, the Union victory at Antietam so strengthened the administration that the President at once issued his preliminary Emancipation, which was to go into effect January 1, 1863; and after that step all logical objection to using the negroes as a military factor ceased. On January 1, 1863 (now just fifty years ago), President Lincoln issued his final Emancipation Proclamation, and the project of making use of the negroes as soldiers was then considered more favorably; but not until the 22d of May following was the Bureau of Colored Troops established in the War Department. The tide then fully turned, for the government itself undertook the work of recruiting and organizing the new military force.
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For Index to Railways. see pages 1, 2, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Published Semi-Monthly, under the Supervision of the Railway Companies. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [checkmark] JANUARY, 1869. APPLETONS' RAILWAY AND STEAM NAVIGATION GUIDE [picture] NEW-YORK. D. APPLETON & CO 90 92 & 94 GRAND ST. LONDON: 16 LITTLE BRITAIN For Table of Contents, see page 26. Travellers can rely on the American (Waltham) Watch for correct time. ELGIN WATCHES. -- Superior Time-Keepers for Railway use. See page 41.
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No 1. filed Many 3d. 1850 Lea & Blanchard Props ENTERED according to Act of Congress, win the year 1850, by LEA AND BLANCHARD, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. PHILADELPHIA : T. K. AND P. G. COLLINS, PRINTERS.
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Filed Dec 18- 1850 REPORTS OF CASES ARGUED AND DETERMINED IN THE HIGH COURT OF CHANCERY, DURING THE TIME OF LORD CHANCELLOR COTTENHAM. BY T. J. PHILLIPS, Esq., BARRISTER AT LAW. WITH NOTES AND REFERENCES TO BOTH ENGLISH AND AMERICAN [EDITIONS] DECISIONS BY E. FITCH SMITH, COUNSELLOR AT LAW. VOL. II. 1847—1849. NEW YORK: BANKS, GOULD & CO., LAW BOOKSELLERS. ALBANY: GOULD, BANKS & GOULD, 475 BROADWAY. 1850.
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1828 May 13th Tariff Bill imposing heavy duties on British goods 1829 Feb 27th Battle of Tarqui in which the Peruvians are defeated by the Columbians, 1829 March 4th Andrew Jackson inaugurated President and John C. Calhoun Vice President 1829 Sept 11th A Spanish expedition for the recovery of Mexico sails from Havana - July 5th - it surrenders to the Mexican Gen l Santa Anna 1830 May 7th A treaty concluded between the United States and the Ottoman Porte - the ports of the United States are again opened to British commerce. Dec 17th Simon Bolivar, a South American and the liberator of Bolivia from the rule of Spain died aged 47 years 1831 April 6th Abdication of Pedro 1st emperor of Brazil in favor of his infant son Don Pedro. Nov. 17th Venezuela, New Granada, and Colombia So. America again become seperate states.
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Brown kept his growing number of hostages in the fire enginehouse at left, just inside the entrance to the U.S. Armory grounds. The machine shop where the muskets were assembled are at the right.
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California MRS. ELIZABETH ST. CHARLES EDWARDS Los Angeles MRS. ELIZA WARNER President Meritus California The California State of Federation of Colored Women's Clubs was organized in Oakland in 1906 by Mrs. Eliza Warner of Los Angeles, California. For many years Mrs. Warner has been an outstanding character in the church, fraternal and civic life of the State of California and has given the better part of her service for the protection of womanhood, home and child. Realizing the benefit derived from contacts with greater powers, the California State joined the great National Federation in 1908, and adopted a part of the National program for a part of the State's. During the 28 years of the State of Federation a great deal of study and consideration were given to organizing women over the State into club life and instead of the one State organizer, an organizer was elected for each section of the State and many clubs were brought into the State work. Aside from carrying out the State program many clubs in the various sections have built and maintained Institutional Homes for young women and children. Some of these are: Sojourner Truth Industrial Home, Los Angeles; Women's Day Nursery, Los Angeles; and Madam C.J. Walker's Home, San Francisco. These institutions became the monuments of the Federation and caused a Monumental Day to be held at each State Convention. The state gives an annual scholarship which began in 1916 Honorable mention is here made of the Presidents who have served the State through conditions peculiar to all Federated States' work by naming them: Eliza Warner, President Emeritus.....Los Angeles Katharine D. Tilman.....Oakland D.W. Boyer.....San Jose Etta Vena Moxley.....Santa Monica Mattie Tate Dodge.....San Diego Elizabeth Brown.....Oakland Minnie Bate.....Los Angeles Hettie B. Tilghman.....Oakland Lula Slaughter.....Los Angeles Pearl Lowery Winters.....Bakersfield Irene Bell Ruggles.....San Francisco Corine B. Hicks.....Pasadena Esther Jones Lee.....Oakland Z. Otey Smith.....Fresno Elizabeth St. Charles Edwards.....Los Angeles We also give honorable mention to a few of the mothers who pioneered: Mrs. Fanny Wall, Sarah Wright, Maggie Judge, Harriet Owens Bynum, Mothers Marshall, and the composer of the Inspirational State Song, Mrs. Eva Cater Buckner.
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Filed June 29, 1852. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1852, by HENRY WHITTAKER, AUTHOR AND PROPRIETOR, in the Clerk's Office, of the District Court of the Southern District of New York. EDWARD O. JENKINS, PRINTER. 114 Nassau Street. LC
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23 1865, and after secreting himself for several days, did proceed to Chocoula, parish of Terrebonne, Louisiana, and did there enter the cars clad in citizen's clothes, and proceed in the cars towards New Orleans, as far as Terrebonne Station, where he was arrested August 25th, 1865. PLEA—Guilty. FINDING—Guilty. SENTENCE. "To be reduced to the ranks, and confined at hard labor, at such place as the Commanding General may direct, for the period of eighteen months, and forfeit to the United States ten dollars per month of his monthly pay for and during said period of eighteen months." 40. Private GEORGE BRYANT, Company G, 11th Regiment United States Colored Artillery, (Heavy.) CHARGE. "Desertion." SPECIFICATION—In this: that he, Private George Bryant, Company G, 11th United States Colored Artillery, (Heavy,) an enlisted soldier in the service of the United States, did desert said service, from his company and regiment, at Donaldsonville, La., on the 29th day of August, 1865, and remained absent from said service, without proper authority, until the 5th day of September, 1865, when he was arrested in Plaquemine, La., by the provost guard, dressed in citizen's clothes, and returned to his company. PLEA—Guilty. FINDING—Guilty. SENTENCE. "To be confined at hard labor, at such place as the Commanding General may designate, for the period of two years, with ball and chain attached to his left leg, weighing twenty-four pounds, for and during said period of two years." 41. Private WILLIAM JOHNSON, Company B, 74th United States Colored Infantry. CHARGE. "Sleeping on Post." SPECIFICATION—In this: that Private William Johnson, Company B, 74th United States Colored Infantry, having been duly posted as a sentinel, was found asleep on his post, between the hours of 12 M., and 1 A. M., when visited by the Officer of the Day. This at Fort Pike, La., on or about September 4th, 1865. PLEA—Not Guilty. FINDING—Guilty. SENTENCE. "To be confined at hard labor, with ball and chain attached to his left leg,
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[*865*] Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1867, by FANNY P. SEAVERNS, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of Massachusetts. CONTENTS OF NUMBER NINE. Page. "DON'T TOUCH THIS BABY" Illustrated by Oscar Pletsch 65 DO NOT TAKE WHAT IS NOT YOUR OWN By J. R. Woods 67 THE GRATEFUL TIGER By Isabel Thorne 70 MARY'S RHYMES Illustrated by Oscar Pletsch 72 THE STORMY PETREL By Uncle Charles. Illustrated 73 HOW THE CAT FOUND HER WAY By Trottie's Aunt 74 THE DOVE'S NEST By E. Carter. Illustrated 77 SISTER AND BROTHER Illustrated by Mrs. Pulsifer 80 TIT FOR TAT By Emily Carter. Illustrated 81 ABOUT THE AIR WE BREATHE Illustrated by Hammatt Billings 84 OF WHAT USE CAN I BE? By W. C. Godwin 86 JAMES'S RIDE Illustrated 88 UNDER THE UMBRELLA Illustrated by Oscar Pletsch 90 THE ANXIOUS MOTHER By Emily Carter 92 THE END OF THE BOW By Emily Carter 93 RED, OR BLACK? By Uncle Charles 95 THE MOTHER'S LULLABY Illustrated 96 EDITOR'S PORTFOLIO. WE have received a number of letters from young correspondents who have been getting subscribers for us, and getting at the same time handsome prizes for themselves. (See page 3 of cover). One little girl sent three subscribers, and we sent her a nice silver fruit-knife. She then thought she would like another to present to her dear grandmother; so she sent us three more, and got another fruit-knife. Another little girl wanted a croquet set, and so sent us twenty full subscribers. Others have got wallets, books, note-paper, &c. Will our little readers help us to establish "THE NURSERY" prosperously by doing a similar work? For seven full subscribers we will send one of the excellent Craig microscopes with a prepared object-glass, all ready for use. OSCAR PLETSCH.---The well-known critic of "The Boston Transcript," who writes under the name of "Tom Folio," says,--- "What Landseer is to dogs, what Rosa Bonheur is to horses, what Morland is to pigs, what Teniers is to Dutch boors, Oscar Pletsch is to children, ---their painter, interpreter, immortalizer. It has been said that Pletsch has never had a superior, and probably not an equal, in his specialty of sketching children. For presenting the American public with the best drawings of this admirable artist, Miss Seaverns deserves the thanks of all lovers of art. If you would obtain an idea of Pletsch's genius,---his humor, truth, geniality, and beauty,---get a set of 'The Nursery,' and carefully examine his designs. If you are not charmed with his 'Keeping Shop' 'A Young Hair-dresser,' 'The Professor,' 'A Hard Day's Wash,' 'I've Been A-Maying,' 'You Can't Come In ,' 'The Children's Auction,' 'A morning Call,' 'Cooking Dinner,' 'Getting Ready for Breakfast,' &c., I advise you not to set up for a connoisseur." This admirable artist is now engaged upon some designs made expressly for "The Nursery," and which will appear in our numbers for 1868. Three of Pletsch's drawings appear in this number, as will be seen by our Table of Contents. LC
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168 PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY was still unknown. Things were soon to change, however. After Grant's regrettable assault at Cold Harbor on June 3, he decided to move around Lee's right flank, across the James River, and strike Petersburg from Bermuda Hundred. By June 15 Grant himself had arrived at Bermuda Hundred where almost 50,000 troops were preparing to cross the Appomattox River for the projected attack. Early on the morning of the 15th Major General William F. Smith's 18th Corps, previously detached from the Army of the James to assist at Cold Harbor, began the advance. Crossing the Appomattox at the Point of Rocks on the pontoon bridge the 6th Regiment had been protecting, Smith's troops passed by this unit's camp. The 6th followed immediately, joining some nine regiments of a colored division under General Hinks. The puzzling events of June 15 were by this time well under way. (27) Smith's corps, consisting of his own and Hinks' division, numbered at least 12,000 men. (28). Hinks' division of about 5,000 was composed of three brigades. Of these, Duncan's 2nd, consisting of the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 22nd regiments, totalled in the neighborhood of 2,200. Hinks took his men along the main road. Smith moved his division of over 6,000 to the right of the road, so as to face the Petersburg defenses near the Appomattox River. By 10:00 a.m. the corps was before the city's works, Smith having the advantage of a position in a wood and Hinks being protected by a slight rise in the ground between himself and the level line. Opposing the bluecoats was a thin band of troops numbering about 2,200. Until late in the day the corps' action consisted of several minor, though sharp skirmishes, those involving the 2nd Brigade occurring at Baylor's Farm. In one of them McMurray's company had several men killed and wounded. For the most part, however, Rebel fire was ineffective in the area of the 6th Regiment's movements. (29) Just before sundown Smith ordered the long-awaited attack. His own division of white troops, immediately to the right of the colored division, moved off first. Hinks' colored soldiers followed (27) Ibid., 33-34; Personal Memoirs of U.S. Grant, II, 276-277; Battles and Leaders, IV, 534-537; T. Harry Williams, P.G.T. Beauregard, Napoleon in Gray (Baton Rouge, 1954), 227. (28) Beauregard estimated the number at 22,000. See Battles and Leaders, IV, 541. (29) Ibid.; Recollections, 34-37; ORA, Ser. I, Vol. XXXIII, 957, 1053-1055, and Vol. XL, Pt. 2, 552-555; Duncan's report of his brigade's activities of June 15-19 may be found ibid., Ser. I, Vol. L. Pt. 1, 265-269.
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1862-‘63.] DOCUMENT NO. 1. 25 The disbursements for the year are as follows: Clothing, $1,233,042 69 Camp and Garrison Equipage, 269,404 61 Mules, Wagons and Harness, 20,600 91 Forage, 15,630 57 Horses for two Regiments of Cavalry, 142,459 22 Wood, 3,114 19 Miscellaneous, consisting of Transportation, Building, Hospital Expenses, &c., &c., 213,304 98 Pay of Troops, 1,032,427 07 Bounty, 1,572,745 00 -------------------- Total, $4,502,729 24 By the Militia Law the Governor is required to furnish the troops with suitable clothing, and make arrangements with the Government of the Confederate States to receive the commutation money for the clothing furnished. This law was ratified 20th September, 1861. Immediate steps were taken to comply with the law, and although there was no clothing on hand at its passage, before cold weather most of the troops were supplied with clothing and blankets, at least so far as to prevent any suffering. An establishment for the manufacture of clothing was put in operation in this city, immediately after the passage of the law, under Captain Garrett, Assistant Quarter Master. I enclose herewith a statement, marked "A," of the clothing and camp and garrison equipage manufactured at that establishment and turned over in the fiscal year ending September 30th. Independent of the articles manufactured here, many purchases had to be made elsewhere to supply the troops. I enclose herewith a statement, marked "B," of the clothing and camp and garrison equipage issued by Major W. W. Pierce, Quarter Master, for the year ending September 30th. The cost of every article of clothing has increased at such rapid rates within the last few months, that they are now more than double the price they were twelve months ago.
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THE LITTLE WANDERERS' ADVOCATE. BOSTON. EIGHT NUMBERS WILL BE PUBLISHED DURING THE YEAR. Price 75 Cts. Vol. I. No. 3. April, 1865. PUBLISHED AT THE HOME FOR BALDWIN PLACE LITTLE WANDERERS. [*R. G. Toles - Proprietor, April 6, 1865, Vol. 40. Page 225*] YOU CAN OBTAIN THIS THROUGH N. P. KEMP, TRACT DEPOSITORY, NO. 40 CORNHILL, BOSTON. BALDWIN PLACE EDITED BY ROOMS, BOBBETT HOOPER SQ BOSTON, MASS. Rev. R. G. TOLES. Dakin and Metcalf, Printers, 37 Cornhill, Boston.
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joined General Taylor's command at Aqua Nueva. The combined forces defeated Santa Anna at Buena Vista on 23 February 1847, ending the war in the north. Marching from Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, Brig. Gen. Stephen W. Kearny occupied Santa Fe, New Mexico, and continued overland to California where he joined a naval task force. A column under Col. Alexander W. Doniphan marched south from Santa Fe, captured Chihuahua, and joined General Wool's command at Saltillo on 21 May 1847. In the decisive operation of the war, Maj. Gen. Winfield Scott, supported by the Navy, captured Vera Cruz on 26 March 1847 and after defeating the Mexican Army at Cerro Gordo, Contreras, Churubusco, and Molino Del Rey stormed Chapultepec and captured Mexico City on 14 September 1847. The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, 2 February 1848, restored peace and ceded New Mexico and California to the United States. Demobilization was a continual process during the Mexican War as it had been in previous wars. At the conclusion of hostilities whole units were demobilized without prior planning. Army casualties in the Mexican war were approximately 1,700 men killed incident to battle, 4,000 wounded, and 12,000 who died from other causes. During the war Dennis H. Mahan, a professor at the United States Military Academy, published a little book that became the prototype of all United States field service regulations. Both his instruction and his book, Advanced Guard, Outpost and Detachment Service of Troops, had considerable subsequent influence upon operational thinking in the United States Army. In first amphibious landing, Army forces debarked at Vera Cruz.
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Letters rec'd from Dec 26 Henry Casson Chief clk Ag. Dpt. Miss Jenkins Rev. J. H. Carson Montreal 20451 James st., lecture 28 Mrs. Morris - photo.. Miss Eliza N. Sherwood 1123 California st., San Francisco. Miss Jane E. Thompson 934 T st., N.W. Wash Jan 13 Miss Hathaway. stopping 116 North 11th st Phil. Pa. " Mr. J.D. Thomas 334 S. Caroline st. Baltimore 16 Boston Globe - of Mr. Bowditch " Fiske, Dr. Wolfe & Co. 361-365 Washington st. , Boston concerning addition to Life and Times 21 Mr Johnson, Hagerstown " Dr. Wolfe Fisk & Co. 361-365 Wash. St. Boston, Mass. " Mrs. James G. Adams - for Life & Times ' Mr Cummings 213 North Calvert st., Baltimore 26 Sup. Gregory, Going to Wilberforce Letters addressed to Dec 28 Henry Casson " Rev. J. H. Carson. declining " E.P. McCabe. Langston City. Oklahoma Ter. " J.D. Van Ouzee. 27 School st. room 41. Boston " Mr. Jaros 6 Mr. Vernon st. Boston " Mrs. Greene and Mrs. Morris. Mr. Sweeney Indianapolis Freeman. Jan 13 Miss Hathaway 1810 K.st., N.W. Wash 18 Boston Globe " Fiske Dr. Wolfe and Co. 21 Dr. Wolfe Fiske & Co. Feb 9 Mrs. James G Adams Oakwood Oakland Co Mich. " Toilet Mask Co " Mrs Walker " Mrs. Blackall & sent umbrella. " Mr. Cummings Baltimore House estimates " Miss Hathaway PJ.F. Hawley M.D. 13 Center St. Canandaigua N.Y. 25 Prof. Gregory, accepting. " Mrs. Parsons, Miss Thompson
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[*626*] iv CONTENTS OF VOL. XII. IX. NOTICES OF NEW PUBLICATIONS, 205 I. Herodoti Orientalia Antiquiora, 205 II. Greek Version of the Pilgrim's Progress, 208 X. SELECT THEOLOGICAL AND LITERARY INTELLIGENCE, 209 Germany, 209 Great Britain, 212 NO. XLVI. I. THE TRUE DOCTRINE OF DIVINE INSPIRATION, 217 By Eleazar T. Fitch, D. D., New Haven, Ct. II. THE SITE OF CAPERNAUM, 263 By E. Robinson, Professor at New York. III. GENIUS, 283 By William S. Tyler, Professor in Amherst College. IV. GERMAN EDUCATION, 312 By Anthony Lamb, Jr., Providence, R. I. V. THE NARRATIVE OF THE CREATION IN GENESIS, 323 By Rev. John O. Means, East Medway, Mass. [Concluded from p. 130.] VI. THE SEVEN ANGELS O THE SEVEN APOCALYPTIC 339 CHURCHES, By Isaac Jennings, Pastor of the Congregational Church, Ongar, Essex, England. CONTENTS OF [?] VII. RICHARD BAXTER'S "[E?] § 1. Reasonableness of the [D?] 2. The Divine [Governmen?] 3. Free Moral Agency, 4. Human Sinfulness, 5. State of Infants, 6. State of the Heathen, 7. The Covenants, 8. The Work of Christ, 9. Effectual Grace, 10. Holiness, 11. The Real, Imputed [a?] Believers, 12. Saints' Perseverance, VIII. THE CONSERVATIVE [U?] ESPECIALLY IN REFERENCE TO [?] SENSIBILITY OF [?] By George A. Bethune, m. D., one [?] Charitable Eye [a?] IX. CORRESPONDENCE, Letter from Henry Lobdell, [?] [?can] Board in Assyria, Remarks on the above, by [?] X. NOTICES OF NEW [PUBLICATIONS?] I. Tischendorf's Labors in [?] II. Wayland's Intellectual [?] III. The Scholastic [Philosoph?] Christian Theology, IV. The New German [Cyclo?] V. Kurtz's Manual of Sacred [?] VI. Wilson on Punctuation, VII. Bartlett's Jerusalem [Re?] XI. SELECT THEOLOGICAL [?] [?LIGENCE], Germany, England, Scotland, LC
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ENGLISH REPORTS IN LAW AND EQUITY: CONTAINING REPORTS OF CASES IN THE House of Lords, Privy Council, COURTS OF EQUITY AND COMMON LAW; AND IN THE Admiralty and Ecclesiastical Courts; INCLUDING ALSO CASES IN BANKRUPTCY AND CROWN CASES RESERVED. EDITED BY EDMUND H. BENNETT AND CHAUNCEY SMITH, COUNSELLORS AT LAW. VOLUME XXVI. Containing Cases in the House of Lords, the Privy Council, the Courts of Common Law, and the Admiralty and Ecclesiastical Courts, during the years 1853 – 54. BOSTON: LITTLE, BROWN AND COMPANY. [*proprs.*] 1855. [*Deposd. May 8. 1855. See Vol. 30. Page 237.*]
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"The First Six Member Organizations" NATIONAL BOARD OF THE YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS NATIONAL COUNCIL OF JEWISH WOMEN WOMEN'S DIVISION OF THE AMERICAN JEWISH CONGRESS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY WOMEN NATIONAL WOMEN'S TRADE UNION LEAGUE NATIONAL FEDERATION OF BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL WOMEN'S CLUBS "The First One Hundred" Of Two Thousand Sponsors Sponsors MRS. SADIE T. M. ALEXANDER MRS. EDNA LISTER Pennsylvania Washington MISS MARY ANDERSON MRS. ANDREW MacLEISH District of Columbia Illinois MRS. JAMES RAE ARNEILL MRS. T. A. McCann Colorado Ohio MRS. ALEXANDER C. BARKER MRS. A. J. McGuire New York Minnesota MRS. H. J. BESSESSES MRS. CHARLOTTE B. MAHON Minnesota New York MRS. WARNER J. BLANCHARD MISS ELSA MAXWELL Ohio New York MRS. W. RUSSELL BOWIE MRS. PAUL D. MERICA New York New York MRS. HENRY S. BRECKINRIDGE MRS. E. S. MILLS New York New York MRS. WILLIAM C. BREED MRS. DWIGHT MORROW New York New Jersey MRS. WRIGHT BROOKS MRS. LILIAN T. MOWRER Minnesota District of Columbia MRS. ELBERT CARPENTER MRS. CLARE DANA MUMFORD Minnesota New York MRS. EDWARD C. CARTER MRS. C. REINHOLD NOYES New York New York MISS MARGARET CUENOD MRS. GIBSON D. PACKER Connecticut North Carolina MRS. JAMES STEWART CUSHMAN MISS FRANCE PAPERTE New York New York MRS. JOHN S. DALRYMPLE MRS. EDGERTON PARSONS Minnesota New York MRS. H. P. DAVIDSON MRS. ELLIS L. PHILLIPS New York New York MRS. CLAIRE C. DEANE MRS. JAMES PICKER New York New York MRS. ALFRED V. deFOREST MISS MARY A. PORTER Massachusetts Connecticut MRS. H. EDWARD DREIER MRS. JOHN T. PRATT New York New York MRS. LAURA DREYFUS-BARNEY DR. AURELIA H. REINHARDT New York California MRS. MAXWELL EHRLICH MRS. MAXMILIAN RICHTER New York New York MRS. M. ELSER, JR. MRS. FLETCHER ROCKWELL New York Connecticut MRS. FRANK J. FEELY MRS. LANNY ROSS New Jersey New York MRS. MARSHALL FIELD MRS. JULIET BARRETT RUBLEE Illinois New York MRS. E. H. FIGG MRS. CHARLS H. RUSSELL, JR. Connecticut New York MRS. JOHN H. FINLEY MRS. HARRY G. SAMSON New York Pennsylvania MRS. HARRY E. FOSDICK MRS. RAYMOND SAYRE New York Iowa MRS. CHARLES W. GILKEY MRS. SAMUEL SCHINDLER Illinois New York DR. META GLASS MRS. LYDIA SCHMIDT Virginia Illinois MRS. M. L. GOLDMAN MISS ROSE SCHNEIDERMAN California New York MRS. WILLIAM H. GOODE MRS. WORTHINGTON SCRANTON New York Pennsylvania MRS. G. M. GREEN MISS ELIZABETH SEEGER New York New York MRS. EDITH STARR HAINES MRS. V. G. SIMKHVITCH Illinois New York MRS. LEARNED HAND MRS. F. LOUIS SLADE New York New York MRS. MAY BELL HARPER MISS MARJORIE SLOAN New York New York MRS. PERCY G. HART MRS. JESSIE MERRICK SMITH New York New York MRS. FORBES HAWKES MRS. THOMAS STAMP New York New York MRS. MICHAEL HEIDELBERGER MRS. JOHN STILLWELL New York New York MRS. ALFRED HESS MISS LEILA V. STOTT New York New York MRS. GEORGE H. HUNTINGTON MISS ANNA LORD STRAUSS New York New York MISS RUE BELL INGLIS MRS. E.T. SWARD Minnesota Minnesota MRS. ALFRED WINSLOW JONES MISS MARION TALBOT New York Illinois MRS. ADAM LEROY JONES MRS. HAROLD E. TALBOTT New Jersey New York MRS. HENRY JAMES MRS. MAYNARD F. THAYER New York California MISS ETHEL B. KETCHAM MISS LILA TYNG New York New Jersey MRS. FREDERIC R. KING MRS. ARNULF UELAND New York Minnesota MRS. JAMES LEES LAIDLAW MRS. FRANK A. VANDERLIP New York New York MRS. THOMAS W. LAMONT MRS. DeFOREST VAN SLYCK New York New York MRS. J. HARLAN LANDES MRS. THOMAS J. WATSON Ohio New York MRS. GEORGE J. LERCH MRS. MRS. VANDERBILT WEBB Pennsylvania New York MISS IRENE LEWISOHN MRS. HALSEY W. WILSON New York New York 181
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VOL. II. NO. II. AUGUST, 1853. AMERICAN POLYTECHNIC JOURNAL. DEVOTED TO SCIENCE, MECHANIC ARTS AND AGRICULTURE. CONDUCTED BY PROFESSOR CHAS. G. PAGE. J. J. GREENOUGH. M. E. CHAS. FLEISCHMANN. C. E. OPPOSITE THE PATENT OFFICE WASHINGTON D. C. AND NO. 6 WALL ST NEW YORK. C. L. FLEISCHMANN DEL. W. ROBERTS
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Requisition for 60 days commencing the 21st day of June 1866 and ending the 20th day of August 1866 for troops stationed at Fort Macomb La. by 1st Lt. G.L. Faxon 10th USCA. (Hy) A.C.S. Articles No of rations required Total [?] of Balance [teh?] Remarks to keep on hand Rations on hand Supplied Rations Pork Bacon 3600 3377 12 sheep I am required to Fresh Mutton [N?tive] [?] to 60 [?] Flour There are 4 officers Hard Bread 3600 1500 2100 [?th] Fort Macomb Beans 146 I am required to have the [Peas] 3600 11,827 - right Provisions Rice Provisions have been [Rg Coffee] 900 2700 [?] to [?] [R?ture] Coffee 3600 2200 2000 the 20th of June 1866 Tea Brown Sugar 3600 1600 2000 [White Sugar] Vinegar 3600 10,400 - Candles 3600 21,920 - Soap 3600 1225 2375 Salt 3600 [3] 3600 Pepper 3600 9,200 - [Has?] Potatoes - [Ca?] [Tomatoes] Jams & Jellies]
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GUIDE TO THE ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER: A COMPLETE MONITOR FOR ROYAL ARCH MASONRY. WITH FULL INSTRUCTIONS IN THE DEGREES OF MARK MASTER, PAST MASTER, MOST EXCELLENT MASTER AND ROYAL ARCH, ACCORDING TO THE TEXT OF THE MANUAL OF THE CHAPTER,. BY JOHN SHEVILLE, P. G. H. P. OF NEW JERSEY, AND JAMES L. GOULD, D. G. H. P. OF CONNECTICUT. TOGETHER WITH A HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION, EXPLANATORY NOTES AND CRITICAL EMENDATIONS. TO WHICH ARE ADDED MONITORIAL INSTRUCTIONS IN THE HOLY ORDER OF HIGH PRIESTHOOD IN ROYAL ARCH MASONRY, WITH THE CEREMONIES OF THE ORDER. BY JAMES L. GOULD, M.A. 33°, D. G. H. P. OF THE GRAND CHAPTER OF CONNECTICUT, G. G. R. A. CAPTAIN OF THE GEN. GRAND CHAPTER OF THE U.S.A. NEW YORK: MASONIC PUBLISHING AND MANUFACTURING CO., 432 BROOME STREET. 1867.
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(FORM NO. 13.) MUSTER ROLL of Captain ___ ___, Company (___.) of the ___ Regiment of United States Army, (Colonel ___ ___, ) from the ____ day of ____, 186_, when last mustered, to the ___ day of ____, 186_. No. NAMES. Present and absent. (Privates in alphabetical order) RANK. JOINED FOR SERVICE AND ENROLLED AT GENERAL RENDEZVOUS. Commencement of first payment by time. When. Where. By whom. Period. MUSTERED INTO SERVICE. When. Where. By whom. LAST PAID (See note 6.) By Paymaster. To what time. NAMES. Present. NOTES. 1. . All officers and soldiers are to be taken up on the rolls, so soon as assigned to the company by competent authority, whether they have yet joined, or not; and to be dropped, when similarly transferred from it. 2. . Under the head of REMARKS, the date when any assignment takes effect, the No., date, &c., of order therefor; the date of any officer or soldier's joining, whether originally or from any absence; the date of an officer's assuming, or being relieved, from any command, or special duty; the description of any special, extra, or daily duty, on which officers or soldiers may be; all changes of rank, by promotion, appointment, or reduction, with date of same, and No., date, &c., of order; all authorized stoppages, fines, sentences, with No., date, and &c., of order, &c., ; in case of absence, the nature and commencement of, No., date, &c., of order, and period assigned or same, (to be repeated on every rolls, while it lasts;) if wounded in battle, or injured on duty -- if sick, or confined, a remark to that effect, &c., &c., must be carefully stated opposite to the name of the person concerned, with everything else necessary, either to account fully for every individual of the company, to guide the paymaster, or insure justice to the soldier and to the United States. REMARKS. PAY ROLL of the Company from the __ day of ___, 186--, when last paid, to the _____ day of ____, 186-----. Period paid for. Mos. Days. Pay per mo. Dolls. Amount of pay. Dolls. Cts. Retain'd pay. Dolls. Cts. Clothing. Dolls. Cts. Subsistence. Dolls. Cts. Forage. Dolls. Cts. 40 cents per day, use of horse and horse equipments. Dolls. Cts. Total amount due. Dolls. Cts. Amount of stoppages. Dolls. Cts. Balance paid. Dolls. Cts. RECEIVED PAYMENT OF ___ WITNESS.
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6175 - B LC Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by E.J. HALE & SON, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
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Rosenburg, Homer T. "Migrations of Pennsylvania Germans to Western Pennsylvania, "Western Pennsylvania History Magazine, LIII (1970) , 319-35. ����. The Pennsylvania Germans, 1891-1965. Lancaster: Pennsylvania German Society, 1966 ���� (ed) . Intimate Glimpses of the Pennsylvania Germans. Gettysburg, 1965. Rosenberger, Jesse L. In Pennsylvania-German Land, 1928-1929. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1929. ����. The Pennsylvania Germans: A Sketch of Their History and Life. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, c.1923. Rosenberger, J.G. "The Palatines in New York and Pennsylvania," German American Annals, VI (1908) , 251-56. Rothermund, Dietmar. "The German Problem of Colonial Pennsylvania," Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, LXXXIV (1906) , 3-21. ����. "Mennonites, Moravians and Salvation in Colonial America," Mennonite Quarterly Review, XXXII (1958) , 70, 73, 77. Rubingam, Milton. "Researching European Origins of Pennsylvania German Families," Pennsylvania Genealogical Magazine, XXV (1968) , 227-45. Rush, Benjamin. Account of the Manners of the German Inhabitants of Pennsylvania. Revised and annotated by Theodore E. Schumauk and Isaac D. Rupp. Lancaster: Singing Trees Press, 1910. Sachse, Julius F. (trans. & ed.) . "Daniel Talckner's Curieuse Nachright from Pennsylvania," Pennsylvania-German Society, Proceedings, XIV (1905) , 2-256. ���� (trans.) . "Diary of a Voyage from Rotterdam to Philadelphia in 1728," Pennsylvania-German Society, Proceedings XVIII (1909) 1-25. Sachse, Paul. "Facts and Fallacies about Berks County Dutch," Historical Review of Berks County, X (1944-45) , 80-82. Schantz, Franklin F. F. The Domestic Life and Characteristics of the Pennsylvania German Pioneer. Lancaster: Pennsylvania German Society, 1900. Schmucker, Samuel. "The Racial Composition of the Pennsylvania Germans," Pennsylvania-German Society, Proceedings XXXIII (1923) , 15-19. Schreiber, William I. Our Amish Neighbors. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962. Shelley, Donald A. The Franktur Writings on Illuminated Manuscripts of the Pennsylvania Germans. Allentown: Pennsylvania German Folklore Society, 1961. Shriver, George H. "Phillip Schaff: Heresy at Mercersburg" [German Reformed]. In America Religious Heretics, edited by George H. Shriver, pp. 18-55. Nashville: Abington Press, 1966. Shryock, Richard H. "The Pennsylvania Germans in American History," Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, LXIII (1939) 261-81. Smith, Abbot E. "Some New Facts about Eighteen Century German Immigration," Pennsylvania History, X (1943) , 105-17. Smith, C. Henry. "The Mennonite Immigration to Pennsylvania in the Eighteenth Century," Pennsylvania-German Society, Proceedings, XXXV (1924) , 1-412. Smith, Elmer Lewis. The Amish People: Seventeenth-Century Tradition in Modern America. New York: Exposition Press, 1958. ����. "The Amish System of Nomenclature," Historical Review of Berks County, XXVII (1961-62) , 21-25. ����. The Amish Today: An Analysis of Their Beliefs, Behavior and Contemporary Problems. Allentown: Pennsylvania German Folklore Society, 1961. ����. "Christmas Among the Amish," Historical Review of Berks County, XXVI (1960-61), 6-12.
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26 suffered with their unhappy and proscribed chattels. The white men of the North, who, from their own hard-earned and hoarded wages, will support their unemployed craftsman rather than let him work for under wages, would hardly have permitted men to work beside them for nothing, and throw their babies as property into the scale with their unrequited toil. Sir, I believe this war was inevitable. The insane ambition and mad, craving lust of the South could be checked alone by the results of war. It had closed its ears hermetically against the voice of persuasion and reason. And wherever slavery existed that ambition and that lust had root. Slavery did cause this war. It was destined to cause war, and if not put in process of eradication, will involve our posterity in war. Is it not fitting, therefore, that the result of the war shall be the end of slavery? The President’s proclamation does not propose to touch the institution in the Border States. But, as I have said, with the market for the annual crop gone, it will be found to be of no more value in Kentucky than it is now found to be in Missouri, with her free surroundings. And then we will come to what I am prepared to say very few words upon, the compensated emancipation proposition of the President. The countless millions, the millions of millions that we have heard from the other side are to be expended in compensated emancipation, will be somewhat reduced when we come to remember that it is only the loyal men of the Border States that we will have to deal with. Missouri is here, asking $10,000,000 on condition that she emancipates her slaves within a little more than a year. In God’s name, let us give it to her; and if Kentucky and Maryland make the same claim, let us give it to them, and pay our full share out of the results of our own hard labor at the North. Let us even, by an addition to our already grievous burden of taxes imposed by this war—slavery’s own offspring —share the losses of those whose slaves shall be exalted into freemen. But, say the gentlemen, the proclamation is unconstitutional and illegal, and therefore void. I fear self-interest blinds some of them. It is a professional maxim that he has a fool for a client who takes charge of his own case. Certainly, no disinterested lawyer will dispute the validity of the proclamation of the commander-in-chief inviting to our flag people of the rebel States, and promising them protection and the enjoyment of constitutional rights. But will the proclamation be enforced?
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Woman Citizen April, 1931 "Party Clean-ups Are the Crying Need" Says Carrie Chapman Catt Distinguished Suffrage Leader Wanted, feminism in politics. Emily Newell Blair says so. Mrs. Blair, sunny-tempered, broad-visioned and one time hopeful, confesses herself (in her recent Journal articles) to be pessimistic and discouraged about women in politics. Her conclusions are drawn from seven years' experience and hard work as vice-chairman of the National Democratic Committee. She admits that women vote, sit in conventions and serve on committees, but instead of supporting independently their own ideas and policies, she charges that they have been widely guilty of merely doing what men want them to do and of voting as men direct them. Mrs. Blair finds that women have created no progressive action for their parties and that women form no bloc of political power. Perhaps. But there is a twin comment and one should not be made without the other. The masses of men, also, fail to support independently their own ideas and policies and they walk up the chalk line to vote exactly as their higher-ups tell them to; in fact, men and women behave so much alike in politics that the comment should be confined to the admission that the great masses of men and women have not really grown up yet and are more or less in leading strings. A Republican woman in high political leadership has been known to express views so similar to Mrs. Blair's as to reveal the fact that the same sad thing that has happened in one party has also occurred in the other. Mrs. Blair suggests that the remedy is the application of more feminism. I believe this is the comment of the other party also. Mrs. Blair says there are two ways only in which women may become a power in politics and such power she regards as essential. One is by holding office and the other is by becoming effective in political organization. Either or both calls for more feminism. But is the feminism a revival of something we once had or is it a brand-new attitude for which modern politics is yearning? Personally, while I agree with Mrs. Blair in many of her comments, I do not think her diagnosis is correct. The fact is that when the new women voters walked through the opened door into American politics there was one great crying need throughout the national and that was for a thorough party cleaning. The parties have not been cleaned yet and, apparently, are as much in need of it as on the day women were enfranchised. Said Professor McMaster, of the University of Pennsylvania, under the title, The Political Depravity of the Fathers: "A very little study of long forgotten politics will suffice to show that in filibustering and gerrymandering, in stealing governorships and legislatures, in using force at the polls, in colonizing and in distributing patronage to whom patronage is due, in all the frauds and tricks that go to make up the worst form of practical politics, the men who founded our state and national governments were always our equals and often our masters." So the years passed. Votes were bought, nominations were engineered, legislation was passed or lost by political strategy, statesmen degenerated into politicians, poor men made fortunes in politics, and the price of election has flown so high that it must withstand continual investigation. There is a Tammany Hall in New York, a Republican machine in Chicago, Boston, and Philadelphia, which is even worse. Neither men nor women have seriously attempted to remove the dishonorable use of money, corruption, fraud and indecent attemps to cover up the wicked things that have been done. No feminism in politics and no masculinity in or out of politics can contribute much to American self-government until the voters within the nation drop every other question and devote themselves to the institution of honesty and decency in the administration of party politics. We shall never be a great nation, our parties and politics will never be worthy of the respect of our own citizens and neighbors, until this housecleaning is thoroughly done. Every dishonst trick, every over-expenditure, every purchased office, must be recognized by all voters as a political crime and political honesty must be made the common standard of all parties before any simple remedy can be applied effectively. A wide cry from women of all parties that they will no longer support a party that is dishonest, covers graft, or guarantees profit to certain of its men, would startle the nation and the world; it would awaken respect where it does not now exist. It would put the right kind of feminism into politics and take out the wrong kind of masculinity. Instead of more women in office and more women effectively working in the parties, the great need is a crusade conducted by men and women against the positive wickedness of their parties. Suppose Mrs. Blair and her friends, a Republican and her friends, conduct a Round Table upon these questions: Are women getting out of politics all they should? Are women giving to politics all they might? Does politics call for more feminism, less masculinity, or more decency? When the conclusion has been reached, there will be need of another Round Table to answer the next question: How shall the result wanted be attained?
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18 Document, No. 1. [Session subject at length. I have not yet had the pleasure of seeing that opinion, and now lay the matter before you, and recommend you take such steps as will preserve the rights and honor of the State. It may well be doubted if the officering of the whole of our troops does not belong exclusively to State authority, as by strict reference to the Constitution they may be found to be in point of law, militia. It is mortifying to find entire brigades of North Carolina soldiers in the field commanded by strangers; and, in many cases, our own brave and war-worn Colonels are made to give place to Colonels from distant States, who are promoted to the command of North Carolina troops over their heads to vacant Brigadierships. Some of these promotions are charged to North Carolina, which enables the authorities to say that we have had so many appointments, when in fact we have not—the appointees not being citizens of our State. This is fast breaking down the pride and patience of our officers, many of whom are reporting to me their intention to resign, alleging that the road to honorable promotion is almost closed to our citizens. This is not right, and forms a just cause of complaint both in our army and with our people at home. We are willing that our soldiers should follow any General capable of leading them, but we contend that as a matter of sheer justice, our soldiers are entitled to receive their fair proportion of honors won by their gallantry and endurance. I would also recommend that the existing prohibition against the distillation of spirits from all kinds of grain be continued during the war. There is no grain to be spare for such purposes, and all the medical needs of the country and army can be abundantly supplied by the liquors made from the fruit crop. Should even the supply for the army fail, it cannot be doubted that it is much better for the soldier to go without spirits than that his wife and child should be without bread. I also recommend that a law be passed providing for a rigid punishment of all persons who may be convicted of speculating in any of the necessaries of life, under the false pretence of being government agents.
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In 1861 the people in the mountainous western counties of Virginia strongly opposed secession. When the rest of the State voted overwhelmingly in a statewide referendum on May 23, 1861, to withdraw from the Federal Union, the loyal western residents, in a series of conventions at Wheeling, voted to "secede" from Virginia and set up their own State. The bill for admission passed Congress on December 11, 1862, and on June 30, 1863, by Presidential proclamation, West Virginia became the 35th State. For years, however, many Jefferson County residents refused to use "West" as part of the designation. Harpers Ferry never recovered from the devastation of the Civil War. Staring at the stark chimneys and charred remains of once impressive buildings, one of the townspeople concluded: "This place will never be anything again unless the government rebuilds the armory - and it is doubtful if that is ever done." The Government never did, and the ground on which it stood was auctioned off in 1869. Mills and factories remained closed. The railroad did a small percentage of its previous business. Hopes for a renewal of the town's former prosperity were dashed in 1870 when a flood destroyed or badly damaged nearly every building on Virginius Island and along the south side of Shenandoah Street. Subsequent floods destroyed still more of the town and ruined the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. The canal was finally abandoned after the flood of 1924. Inundated to often by high water, the residents of Harpers Ferry eventually left the old buildings in the lower town and moved up the heights to the high ground of Camp Hill and towards Bolivar. For years the old shops and stores, those that remained, stood empty, neglected, and deteriorating. When Harpers Ferry became a national historical area, the National Park Service began an intensive campaign to preserve the fragile remains of the 18th- and 19th-century industries, homes, churches, stores, and shops, and to restore much of the old town to its pre-Civil War appearance, a time when it was at its peak as a thriving, bustling industrial community and transportation center. Today, while much of the old historical town remains, few of the structures that figured prominently in John Brown's raid survive. (See maps on pp. 29 and 30.) The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad bridge across the Potomac, by which Brown and his raiders entered Harpers Ferry in October 1859, was destroyed by Confederate soldiers early in the Civil War. More modern structures span the river now, but the stone supports of the old bridge can still be seen. Nothing at all remains of the bridge across the Shenandoah. The stone piers now standing in the river near the Point section of the town are from a later structure. The ruins of the armory buildings stood for many years after the war and eventually disappeared. In 1893 the site itself disappeared under 30 feet of fill when the B & O Railroad changed the line of its tracks. The outlines of two of the armory buildings have been marked by flat stones and the spot where the enginehouse was located is marked by a small monument. The enginehouse itself (now called "John Brown's Fort") stands nearby on the old arsenal grounds, and is little changed from its
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THE NEGRO AS A SOLDIER BY GEORGE R. SHERMAN, * [Captain Seventh United States Colored Infantry and Brevet-Lieut.- Colonel United States Volunteers.] WHEN we remember that in all the wars of our country, negroes have always shown that they were able and willing to fight, and that patriotism burned brightly in their hearts, though they were usually looked upon and treated as chattels, that at Bunker Hill, standing shoulder to shoulder with the white yeomanry of the colonies, negroes stood firmly, and bore their part bravely; that a Rhode Island regiment of manumitted slaves did valiant service for their state and country in the Revolutionary War; that as early as June 28, 1778, negroes were to be found serving in as many as eighteen brigades under Washington; that at New Orleans, in the war of * For many of the facts here related I am indebted to a paper by William Elliot Furness, Major of the Eight Regiment United States Colored Troops, which has been read by him before the Illinois Commandery of the Loyal Legion; and by his permission I have copied copiously therefrom.
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No. 2. No. 2. Potter & Hammond's SYSTEM OF BOOK-KEEPING, BY SINGLE AND DOUBLE ENTRY. FOR COMMON AND HIGH SCHOOLS. IN THREE NUMBERS. DESIGNED AS A CONTINUATION OF POTTER & HAMMOND'S ANALYTICAL AND PROGRESSIVE SYSTEM OF PENMANSHIP. PUBLISHED BY H. COWPERTHWAIT & COMPANY, 609 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA.
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we make sure of a more blissful meeting where farewells are never said. I remember how much you dear Frederick dislike sermons but- but- let me say, for myself that I never found my dear Savior so near nor so precious as now. Amidst the many trials & heart rendings- & disappointments I have gone through I can realize that "all things" must win & are working together for good- & when we reach yonder glorious city, we shall dear dear friend, be enabled to "look back on all the way the Lord our God has led us to humble us- & prove us". May our loving Heavenly Father bless you for ever prays your ever faithful and affectionate friend J. G. Crofts [*Dec. 12, 1873*]
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[*N 89 - Deposited 22 June 1835 by Carey Lea & Blanchard As Pro.*] ENTERED according to the act of congress, in the year 1835, by CAREY, LEA, & BLANCHARD, in the clerk's office of the district court of the eastern district of Pennsylvania.
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[* Filed June 5, 1866 *] Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1866, by R. C. SHIMEALL, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. JOHN F. TROW & CO., PRINTERS, STEREOTYPERS, & ELECTROTYPERS, 50 GREENE STREET, N. Y.
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THE PRACTICAL METAL-WORKER'S ASSISTANT: CONTAINING THE ARTS OF WORKING ALL METALS AND ALLOYS, FORGING OF IRON AND STEEL, HARDENING AND TEMPERING, MELTING AND MIXING, CASTING AND FOUNDING, WORKS IN SHEET METAL, THE PROCESSES DEPENDENT ON THE DUCTILITY OF THE METALS, SOLDERING, AND THE MOST IMPROVED PROCESSES, AND TOOLS EMPLOYED BY METAL-WORKERS. WITH THE APPLICATION OF THE ART OF ELECTRO-METALLURGY TO MANUFACTURUNG PROCESSES: COLLECTED FROM ORIGINAL SOURCES, AND FROM THE WORKS OF HOLTZAPFFEL, BERGERON, LEUPOLD, PLUMIER, NAPIER, AND OTHERS. THE ORIGINAL MATTER IS PURELY AMERICAN. THE WHOLE ARRANGED With Numerous Engravings on Wood, TO SUIT THE AMERICAN METAL WORKER. BY OLIVER BYRNE, CIVIL, MILITARY, AND MECHANICAL ENGINEER; AUTHOR OF "THE PRACTICAL MODEL CALCULATOR;" COMPILER AND EDITOR OF THE "DICTIONARY OF MACHINES, MECHANICS, ENGINE-WORK AND ENGINEERING;""THE PRACTICAL COTTON-SPINNER;" AUTHOR AND INVENTOR OF THE "CALCULUS OF FORM," A NEW SCIENCE, A SUBSTITUTE FOR THE DIFFERENTIAL AND INTEGRAL CALCULUS; ETC. ETC. PHILADELPHIA: HENRY CAREY BAIRD, SUCCESSOR TO E. L. CAREY. 1851.
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Deposd. March 11, 1845 See Vol. 20. Page 64 J. Weiss, propr. THE ÆSTHETIC LETTERS, ESSAYS, AND THE PHILOSOPHICAL LETTERS OF SCHILLER; TRANSLATED, WITH AN INTRODUCTION, BY J. WEISS. Schön zu leben, ist wahre Kunst, Kunst im Leben das schöne Wahre, Leben der Kunst das wahre Schöne, Wahres Leben die schöne Kunst. SCHILLER'S ALBUM. BOSTON: CHARLES C. LITTLE AND JAMES BROWN Proprietor MDCCCXLV. Proprietor
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JOHNSON'S UNIV. CYC. VOL. III Libe'ria, a republic on the western coast of Africa, founded in 1820 by the American Colonization Society (see COLONIZATION SOC.), and established as an independent state in 1847, is between 4° 20' and 7° 20' N. lat., and stretches along the Atlantic from the Sherboro River on the N. W. to the Pedro River on the S. E., a distance of about 600 miles, extending inland from the coast from 10 to 40 miles. Its area, which is steadily increased by purchases from the native tribes, was estimated in 1890 at 14,300 square miles. The shore is elevated and rocky in the S. E., but otherwise low, generally sandy or gravelly, seldom marshy. In the interior the country rises, swelling into forest-covered hills and lofty mountain-ranges traversed by fine valleys. Many streams flow to the ocean, but none of them is navigable for more than 20 miles from the mouth; the most important are the St. Paul, navigable for 18 miles, and having 7 feet of water at low tide on the bar at its mouth; the St. John, the Junk, and the Cape Mount River. The climate is thoroughly tropical. Of the two seasons, the dry lasts from October to June, and the wet from June to October. In the dry season the average heat is 84° F., the thermometer seldom rising above 90° in the shade; in the wet season the average heat is 76°, the thermometer never falling below 60°. To the white man the climate is deadly---not from its excessive heat, but probably from miasmata; and even the negro, when born and reared in another climate, suffers on his arrival here from the so-called African fever. The natives, on the contrary, are robust, healthy, and long-lived. The soil is generally very fertile. The principal farming districts lie along the banks of the St. Paul. Here the sugar-cane grows luxuriantly; one year's produce was estimated at 300,000 pounds. Cotton is indigenous, and yields two crops annually. Coffee of excellent quality is cultivated with success in the interior. The cereals, maize, rice, wheat, barley, and oats; the vegetables, cabbages, peas, beans, tomatoes, cucumbers, etc.; and the fruits, lemons, oranges, guavas, tamarinds, pomegranates, pineapples, African peaches, etc., are easily raised. The forests contain teak, mahogany, rosewood, hickory, poplar, several kinds of gum trees, dyewoods, medicinal shrubs, and different varieties of useful palms, among which is the nut-bearing palm, from which palm oil is made. Wild animals, the elephant, hippopotamus, crocodile, leopard, etc., are now nearly exterminated. Of minerals, iron abounds, and copper is said to occur in the interior. The inhabitants of the republic numbered, according to the largest estimates, about 1,068,000, of whom about 18,000 are Americo-Liberians, and the rest natives. The natives belong to different tribes: the Veys, mostly Mohammedans, among whom the Protestant Episcopal Church of the U. S. has established a mission school at Totocoreh; the Pessehs, entirely pagans; the Bassas, among whom the American Baptist missionaries established a mission in 1835; the Kroos, mostly idolaters; the Mandingos, the most gifted of the tribes under the jurisdiction of the republic; and others. The Americo-Liberians have a regular system of schools, and are progressing in all branches of civilization. Industrial processes and manufactures have been started among them, and a lively trade has sprung up between the republic and the U. S., Great Britain, Belgium, and Hamburg. Palm oil, sugar, cotton, coffee, ivory, camwood, arrowroot, etc. are exported; cotton goods, cutlery, powder, and tobacco are imported. The country is divided into four counties---Mesurado, Grand Bassa, Sinou, and Maryland. The capital, Monrovia, is situated on Cape Mesurado, and has about 3,400 inhabitants. Other settlements are New Georgia, Caldwell, Virginia, Edina, Greenville, Lexington, Buchanan, Millsburg, etc. The annual revenue is about $100,000, almost exclusively derived from customhouse duties. A public debt of $500,000 was contracted in 1871. The constitution of the republic is modelled after that of the U. S. All men are born free and equal. Elections take place by ballot, and every male citizen who possesses real estate has the right of suffrage. But no white man can be admitted to citizenship, and none but citizens can hold real estate in the republic (a temporary provision). The president is elected for two years; the senators for four; the representatives for two. Each county sends two senators to the legislative assembly, and one representative for every 10,000 inhabitants. The first president was Joseph Jenkins Roberts, who served four terms, from 1848 to 1856, and was once more elected in 1871. Hilary R. W Johnson was elected president May, 1883. The officia[l] language is the English. (See Stockwell, The Republic of Liberia, its Geography, Climate, Soil, and Productions, wit[h] a History of its Early Settlement, New York, 1868, and Liberia; the Americo-African Republic, New York, 1886.)
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SELECTED READING LIST Joseph Barry, The Strange Story of Harper's Ferry With Legends of The Surrounding Country, Martinsburg, W. Va., 1903. Richard O. Boyer, The Legend of John Brown: A Biography and A History, New York, 1973. Louis Filler, The Crusade Against Slavery, 1830-1860, New York, 1960. Stephen B. Oates, To Purge This Land With Blood: A Biography of John Brown, New York, 1970. Louis Ruchames, ed., John Brown: The Making of a Revolutionary, New York, 1969. (Originally published under the title A John Brown Reader.) Franklin B. Sanborn, Life and Letters of John Brown, Boston, 1885. Kenneth M. Stampp, The Peculiar Institution: Slavery in the Ante-Bellum South, New York, 1956. Edward Stone, ed., Incident at Harper's Ferry, Englewood Cliffs, 1956. Oswald Garrison Villard, John Brown, 1800-1859: A Biography Fifty Years After, Boston and New York, 1911 (2d edition, 1943). PICTURE CREDITS Harpers Ferry National Historical Park: title page, 8-9, 16-17, 24 (right), 26 (drawing), 28 (inset), 31, 32-33, 37 (drawing), 40-41, 45, 47 (drawing), 48, 53, 54-55, 56, 58-59; Library of Conress: 2, 3, 6, 19, 20, 21, 22 (left & center), 24 (left), 26 (portraits), 28, 36, 37 (inset), 39, 42, 44, 46, 50, 51, 52, 57; Kansas State Historical Society, Topeka: 4, 5, 22 (right); U.S. Marine Corps Museum: 47 (portrait); Boyd B. Stutler Collection, through the courtesy of Stephen B. Oates; 11 (Howe, Stearns); John Brown Collection, Columbia University Libraries: 11 (Sanborn, Parker); Public Library, City of Boston: 11 (Smith); Boston Atheneum: 11 (Higginson). U.S. Government Printing Office: 1973 0-521-267
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Deposited June 6th, 1840 See Vol. 15, Page 158 Harrison Gray propr. HISTORY OF ENGLAND. BY THOMAS KEIGHTLEY. REVISED AND EDITED, WITH NOTES AND ADDITIONS, BY JOSHUA TOULMIN SMITH, AUTHOR OF "COMPARATIVE VIEW OF ANCIENT HISTORY," "NORTHMEN IN NEW ENGLAND," &c. IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. II. BOSTON: HILLIARD, GRAY, AND COMPANY. 1840.
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succeeded in filling the ditch, and constructed a causeway, under a close fire of the enemy, Repeated dashes were then made and furious struggles took place to carry the works by storm, but often on the verge of success, the federal were as often repulsed and driven back by the indomitable bravery of the enemy, the federals were eventually ignorminiously repulsed with heavy losses, Federal loss 668 in killed, wounded and missing - Number of federals engaged 14.000. - Numer of rebels engaged 5.000. - Genl Benhaw was subsequently summoned to Washington to explain and justify his conduct, 1862 June 17 Evacuation of Cumberland Gap, Tenn, The federals under Genl Morgan, advanced toward this place for the purpose of expelling the rebel Genls Sherman & Smith who occupied the gap with 13,000 men and well fortified the same, This gap is a cleft in the Cumberland mountains, and is so deep and narrow that there is through the gap for only a single roadway, It was expected that the rebels would defend its possession with the utmost tenacity. No such result followed. When the rebels were informed of the approach of the federals, the precipitataly evacuated the place, 1862 June 17th The federals 1000, and four gunboats under the command of Col Fitch were ordered to convoy supplies from Memphis to Genl Curtis, they convoy proceeded up the White River, when nearly opposite St Charles, suddenly encountered the batteries, which the army had erected, These were so concealed
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CCC [Carrie Chapman Catt] speech at hearing before Senate Suff. Committee April 20, 1917 Suffrage Victory Number National Suffrage News May 1917 Published Monthly by the NATIONAL AMERICAN WOMAN SUFFRAGE ASSOCIATION 171 Madison Ave. New York City Volume III Number 4 VOTES FOR WOMEN NEW SUFFRAGE MAP FOR 1917 (Gained since April 1: Rhode Island, Michigan, and Nebraska)
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of Color, To Arms!" He published it as a broadside as well as in pamphlet form. Four days later he wrote to Gerrit Smith: "I have thought much of your letter to Mr. May, expressing the wish that we should send at least one colored company of soldiers from the State of New York to make part of the regiment now forming at Readville, Massachusetts. At first I saw some ground for hesitation. Subsequent reflection and consultation with our friend Mr. George L. Stearns from Boston have convinced me that your suggestion should be carried out. I have therefore already set myself to the work of raising at least one company in this state to be a part of the first colored regiment of Massachusetts. I have visited Buffalo and obtained seven good men. I spoke here (Rochester) last night and got thirteen. I shall visit Auburn, Syracuse, Ithaca, Troy and Albany and other places in the State till I get one hundred men. Charley my youngest son was the first to put his name down as one of the company. It is a little cruel to say to the black soldier that he shall not rise to be an officer of the United States whatever may be his merits; but I see that, though coupled with this disadvantage, colored men shall hail the opportunity of getting on the United States uniform as a very great advantage. I sent you a few days ago my call upon colored men to enlist. It was published in all the papers here, and is having a good effect...I shall be in Syracuse on Wednesday for the purpose of getting men for this company, and in Troy on Thursday, Friday in Albany. I shall go to New York and at the request of Mr. Stearns go to Philadelphia I shall revisit the places named and make calls at others in the State, for the purpose of accommodating those who wanted time to decide." In the April, 1863, issue of DOUGLASS' MONTHLY, the editor gave considerable space to appeals for enlistment in the 54th Massachusetts. He urged his readers to send him the names of volunteers and told them not to wait until New York State authorized a colored regiment. $20,000 ORATORY FROM AN EX-SLAVE In March, 1855, Frederick Douglass delivered an address to the New York State Legislature. An eyewitness (William H. Topp, of Albany) describes the crowded audience, and their rapt attention to the speaker, as the grandest scene he ever witnessed in the Capitol. Among those whose eyes were riveted on the speaker full two hours and a half were Thurlow Weed and Lieutenant Governor Raymond; the latter, at the conclusion of the address, exclaimed to a friend, "I would give twenty thousand dollars, if I could deliver that address in that manner." —James McCune Smith, in Introduction he wrote for MY BONDAGE AND MY FREEDOM, by Frederick Douglass, published 1856 by Miller, Orton and Mulligan. 15
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BEAUFORT NATIONAL CEMETERY, SOUTH CAROLINA. 133 4746 Webster, George C 75th New York 27 47 4747 Walten, Robert Gov't clerk C 14th New Hampshire 17 67 4748 Withers, William C 75th New York 27 45 4749 Ware, Isaac C Maine 4750 Webster, Samuel J. G 4751 Whittier, James C 28th Iowa 4752 Williams, Charles B. F 162d New York 26 77 4753 White, J. C. B 153d New York 12 25 4754 West, Lyman C 175th New York 27 96 4755 Wyre, Edward D 12th Maine 20 131 4756 Walker, William J. E 131st New York 27 180 4757 Williams, C. L. Captain B 18th Kentucky 3 14 4758 Waters, John M. Lieutenant C 16th Connecticut 3 6 4759 White, W. J. Seaman Steamer Rettel 6 11 4760 Wise, C. M. Sergeant E 141st New York 27 109 4761 Williams, Sylvester F 33d U. S. colored troops 31 183 4762 Walker, George C 103d U. S. colored troops 4763 Wade, James G ___ U. S. colored troops 4764 Walse, Benjamin B 33d U. S. colored troops 31 184 4765 Williams, Daniel Sergeant H 33d U. S. colored troops 31 186 4766 Welser, Adam A 103d U. S. colored troops 4767 Waters, Thomas 103d U. S. colored troops 4768 Wiggins, John L. I 102d U. S. colored troops 31 169 4769 Wilkerson, J. K 103d U. S. colored troops 4770 Wilford, Robert F 48th New York 12 8 4771 Wail, John 7th United States infantry 4772 Webber, John R. 7th United States infantry 2 31 4773 Warren, Alonzo H 21st Michigan 4774 Williams, John C. D 1st Michigan 41 115 4775 White, C. L. Captain 3d Kentucky cavalry 3 17 4776 Warrener, Frederick 7th United States infantry 2 16 4777 Walker, J. R. 70th Ohio 10 33 4778 Whitfield, Tyler A 27th _____ battery 4779 W_____, W. 4780 Whorton, J. F 21stMichigan 41 107 4781 Wisner, E. B 13th Michigan 41 24 4782 Webner, Frederick A 113th Ohio 5 40 4783 Woodley, _____ 4784 Williams, Aaron 4785 Williams, Stephen B 152d Pennsylvania 4786 Whitney, A. R. H 1st New York dragoons 25 88
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64 EMANCIPATION AND COLONIZATION. The city of carmen has about 5,000 inhabitants; its aspect from the port is very picturesque and beautiful. Mariners, on their entering, may be guided by a fine fixed light in the Indian village opposite the place, which light can be seen fourteen miles at sea. The principal commerce of this town consists in the extraction of logwood, the annual exportation of which is from four to six hundred thousand quintals. The price generally ranges from 75 cents to $1.25,according to the demand, or the great or small supply in the market. The logwood is carried to Carmen in canoes of from four hundred to a thousand quintals burden, from Tabancuy, Chiboja, Candelaria, Chumpan, the Ranchos of the East, Palisada, and principally from all the ranchos on the river Usumacinta, passing through Palisada. The interior of the country is generally swampy, and its greatest production to this day is logwood. There is also in the interior of the country a large quantity of cedar, mahogany, and divers other kinds of fine and valuable timber, especially for ship-building; but, until now, they have not been an object of great extraction or exportation. There are at present ten or twelve establishments for the elaboration of sugar and aguadiente (sugar-cane rum,) and with time these articles may be produced in abundance for exploration. What is now considered as the territory of Carmen has about 20,000 inhabitants. If the country was more thickly peopled, so as to facilitate labor for agricultural pursuits, it would probably be one of the richest tracts of country in the world. Steam communications could be established from Carmen to the rivers of Palisada, Chumpan, Candelaria, Mamantel, and Cano de Tabancuy, by deepening a little the bars of these rivers, which could be done without any great outlay, and with lucrative results to any one who would undertake the enterprise. The distance by sea from Vera Crus to Laguna is two hundred and seventy mile; from Lugano to Frontera de Tabasco, by sea, fourth-eight miles; or to San Juan Bautista on hundred and fourteen miles by sea and river. Statement of logwood exported from the port of Laguna. Quintals. 1849……………….. 598.832 1850……………….. 442,949 1851……………….. 384,251 1852……………….. 472,636 1853……………….. 455,920 1854……………….. 466,561 1855……………….. 678,988 1856……………….. 584,810 Of the 584,810 quintals of Logwood exported from Laguna in 1856, but 36,859 quintals went to the United States. The sate of Yucatán contains 47,253 square miles, just the area of Pennsylvania. Siliceo, in his Memoria, published in 1857, gives Rigil's computation of the inhabitants in 1853 as 668,623: cities, 5; incorporated towns, 7; haciendas 1,388; rancherias, 2,040. M. Gilbert, an intelligent traveller who visited Yucatan in 1801, estimated the population at 500,000. Yucatan was, under Spain, a captain generalcy, distinct from the vice-royalty of Mexico; it was called the Intendancy of Merida. Humboldt, in his New Spain, vol. 2, p. 244, writes of the intendancy of Merida, in 1808, as follows:
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Filed Aprl 28. 1833 FAMILIAR ANECDOTES OF SIR WALTER SCOTT. BY JAMES HOGG, THE ETTRICK SHEPHERD. WITH A SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF SHEPHERD, BY S. DEWITT BLOODGOOD. “A man’s a man, for a’ that.” NEW-YORK: PUBLISHED BY HARPER & BROTHERS, NO. 82, CLIFF-STREET. AND SOLD BY THE PRINCIPAL BOOKSELLERS THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES. M DCCC XXX1V.
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three wounded. About the middle of may we had orders to go to St. Augustine which we had but just accomplished when I was ordered to report to the Head as clerk at A.A. Gens Office and so here I am this accounting to you for my absence from the regt. which still lies in the healthy and pleasant shades of the oldest town in the United States I spent but a day and a half there after the move before I came here. I was charmed with the place and is historical associations and could have spent much longer time there very agreeably but I had to obey (end of page two) orders and not inclinations. It is a paradise of orange groves, flowers and shrubs. In the yard I noticed the date palm and bananna as among the tropical fruits grown there while peach and pomegranate indicated a plentiful crop of fruit in the season of it which I judge to be at least from six weeks two months earlier that with us as the north Since I have been here our weather has come down on us as a little one accordingly as the thermometer in Dextus but stood 102 (degrees) day. Dexter is clerking here in the same office that moore left to become adjt of our supt. as you may have heard. He took a fine leap up from a private to 1st lieut. and Adjt but I consider it a very worthy bestowment of favor or influence. Sammy has come to be as tough as an alligator and at meal time has almost as open countenance. His company with one other garrison the Fort (Marion). It is a curious looking piece of old pottery but from the material of which it is constructed. I should judge it stand a considerable of a battering before it would come down. here of late two little sands on the main have sharpened up our appetites for something glorious from Vicksburgh. We have four negroe sergts in this Dept or parts of them besides the 54th Mass (colored) just here Col. James Montgomery of Kansas notority is in command of the 2nd S.C.Vs. the other nigh he took four of his companies (end of page three) struck the main Pocotalys way and guided by some "intelligent contraband" late we approached a battery of eight guns from the rear took it. burned the RR bridge across the covsewatcher also a mile of trestle work, tore up track for the three miles and the telegraph, destroyed property to the amount of two millions of dollars. Secured some five hundred negros mostly males and able bodied and came safely back without the loss of a man. This band of negros was undoubtedly the most prized by him as he had only six companies in his organization and now he can fill his regiment. Every able bodies negro is now being put into the Army and as far as proved in this Department they make
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20 (c) PREAMBLE. "WHEREAS, unconditional slavery exists to a fearful extent amongst us as a nation, in violation of those principles that moved our fathers to the dreadful struggle of the Revolution--- "that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." WHEREAS, the aristocracy of the South are determined to perpetuate it by means scarcely less dreadful than the tortures of the Inquisition, and the [bastard] aristocracy of the north are aiding their "chivalrous" compeers of the South in their inhuman endeavors by misrepresenting, slandering, threatening, and imprisoning those who boldly espouse the cause of universal freedom, and further by circulating publications and making speeches so highly incendiary as to excite mobs, an I impel them to their ruthless work of terror and destruction WHEREAS, the crisis has arrived at which the descendants of the pilgrims must determine whether they will establish the shameful and cowardly precedent of surrendering their most sacred rights at the nod of an arrogant domineering and self constituted aristocracy, or in the spirit of their fathers manfully maintain them. AND WHEREAS, if we remain silent and inactive we effectually surrender those rights, and with them the hopes of the slave, till the prediction of Jefferson shall be realized, and the slave fearless and free shall till the land of his thraldom enriched with the blood of his master. THEREFORE, RESOLVED, under a deep sense of duty to ourselves to the slave, to our country, and to God, that "sink or swim, live or die, survive or perish," we will exercise the right of discussing the subject of slavery, that we will use all constitutional and peaceful means for its speedy termination---and to act the more efficiently, form ourselves into a society and adopt the following, &c. (d.) ABOLITION. From the Cincinnati Gazette. Some forty miles from Cincinnati, to the East, are two settlements of free negroes---probably near a thousand---men, women and children, of the true ebony color; with a very little mixture of the mahogany or lighter shades. The negroes own the land occupied by them, but without the power to sell. Each family has a small farm. They a re emancipated slaves, and these lands were purchased expressly for them, and parceled out among them about fifteen years ago. Their lands are not of the best quality of Ohio lands; but, by good management could be made very good---they are particularly well adapted to grass, either meadow or pasture. Having been formerly slaves and compelled to work, one would suppose they ought to have industrious habits. They have had every inducement to industry and good conduct held out to them.---The experiment was to test the merits of the negro race under the most favorable circumstances for success. Has this experiment succeeded? No, it has not. In all Ohio, can any white settlement be found equally wretched, equally unproductive? Farms given to them fifteen years ago, instead of being well improved, and the timber preserved for farming, have been sadly managed-- small awkward clearings, and those not in grass, but exhausted and worn out in corn crops--the timber greatly destroyed--wretched log houses, with mud floors; with chimneys of mud and wood--with little timber for further farming. They are so excessively lazy and stupid, that the people of Georgetown (near by their camps) and the neighboring farmers will not employ them as work hands to any extent. They do not raise produce enough on their own lands to feed their families, much less do they have a surplus for sale abroad. They pass most of their time in their little sorry cabins; too listless even to fiddle and dance. One may ride through the "negro camp" as they are called, passing a dozen straggling cabins with smoke issuing our of the ends, in the middle of clearings, without seeing a soul either at work or play. The fear of starvation makes them work the least possible quantity, while they are much too lazy to play. Why do not the zealous Abolitionists go there and see the experiment in all its beauty---the slave changed into a free, but wretched savage! Why not make something of these thousand negroes? There are not more than two or three families out of the whole who are improved by the change from slavery to freedom. The negro settlements are a dead weight upon Brown county, as to any productive benefit from the negro lands, or from negro labor; and that space of country might as well, to this day, have remained in possession of the Indians. If Southern wealth can be applied to buy and colonize among us such a worthless population, what farmer in Ohio is safe? Has he any guarantee that a black colony will not be established in his neighborhood? Let any one who wished to learn the operation of emancipated negroes, visit the Brown county camps. As they sink in laziness, poverty and filth, they increase in numbers--- their only produce is children. They want nothing but cowries to make them equal to the negroes of the Niger.
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7 hands of loyal men in the rebel States, and by immediately yielding a united and enthusiastic support to the Government, thus speedily and thoroughly crushing the hopes, and effectually baffling the efforts of the rebels. REMARKS OF HON. WM. D. KELLEY, OF PENNSYLVANIA, IN REPLY TO THE OPPONENTS OF THE CONSCRIPTION BILL. Delivered in the House of Representatives, February 24, 1863. Mr. Speaker, the discussion upon this most important bill draws to a close. The discussion has, it seems to me, been made the occasion for proving, not the dangerous powers of the bill, but the necessity for some such provisions as it embodies, whereby every species of "reasonable practice" may be quickly suppressed. The gentleman from Kentucky (Mr. Mallory) inquired this morning or when in which of our wars such powers had been asked for. When I ask, in return, was the exercise of such powers necessary before? Sir, there was little occasion for their enactment during our earlier wars. When a few influential men of Pennsylvania during the revolutionary war talked as gentlemen have talked on this floor, the executive councils sent them far inland into the then remote State of Virginia. They were seized, by night or by day, wherever they could be found, and forthwith hastened upon their journey thither, and the right to the writ of habeas corpus expressly denied them. That transaction was approved by George Washington, and the Continential Congress passed a bill of indemnity, covering all parties concerned in it. There were it is true cow-boys in those days in the South, and as this instance shows, a few false and craven creatures in the North who sympathized with the enemy and prayed "for peace on any terms," but they were so few that they dared not hope to be able to debauch the sentiment of the army, so few as not to hope, as is now hoped by the disloyal managers of the opposition, to be able to paralyze the arm of the Government. During the late war, the men who attempted to embarrass the Administration charged with its conduct, where overwhelmed
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Deposd. Sept. 25.1856 David Bigelow, Author History of Prominent MERCANTILE & MANUFACTURING FIRMS IN THE UNITED STATES, WITH A COLLECTION OF Truthful Illustrations, REPRESENTING MERCANTILE BUILDINGS, MANUFACTURING ESTABLISHMENTS, AND ARTICLES MANUFACTURED. BY DAVID BIGELOW. Author VOLUME VI. BOSTON: PUBLISHED BY DAVID BIGELOW. Dep. Sep. 25. 1856. 1857. See Vol. 31. Page 633
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CHAPTER XI. THE YORKTOWN CENTENNIAL. Before leaving Yorktown and the "Peninsula" for good I want to speak of my visit to the "Yorktown Centennial" in October 1881, when the one hundredth anniversary of the surrender of Lord Cornwallis to General Washington was celebrated there. That surrender ended the war of the Revolution, when we achieved our independence as a nation. The celebration being at the place where I spent over seven months during the active progress of the civil war, I was anxious to witness it. To reach Yorktown I went from Brookville to Pittsburgh over the Allegheny Valley railroad. From Pittsburgh I went to Washington, over the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. I remained in Washington one night, and it happened to be the night when electric lights first shed their brilliancy on Pennsylvania Avenue--the first night that a street in Washington City was lighted with electricity. I was standing in Pennsylvania Avenue, near the monument, below the Capitol building, when the electric current was turned on, and saw the lamps as they flashed their light, one after another, along the avenue from the Capitol building to the Treasury, and witnessed the beautiful illumination it caused. It was known all over the city at what hour the illumination would take place, and the avenue was crowded with people the entire distance I have indicated, nearly a mile. The scene was a brilliant one, increased and intensified by the large number of people who were assembled to witness it. From Washington I went to Richmond, passing through Fredericksburg, close by the place where my only brother was buried, who was killed there in December of 1862. From Richmond I went by the Danville and West Point railroad to White House Landing, near where the Pamunky and Mattapony rivers unite to form the York river. The "White House" was a place of considerable importance during the Peninsula campaign, and subsequently during the civil war; but long before that it was a place of interest to Americans. Here it was that George Washington first met Mrs. Martha Custis, the "beautiful young widow," who afterwards became his wife; and as I passed the railroad station here, where twenty-five or thirty very pretty girls and young women were engaged in animated conversation, forming a handsome picture, my mind ran back to the time and the account of the first meeting here between Washington and his future bride. It was in May of 1756. Washington had been serving on the frontier, and was on his way to Williamsburg, then the capital of the 26
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WILKINS WYLDER; OR, THE SUCCESSFUL MAN. BY STEPHEN F. MILLER, AUTHOR OF "THE BENCH AND BAR OF GEORGIA." PHILADELPHIA: J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. 1860. $1 Paid
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New England Women's Club HOTEL KENMORE 490 COMMONWEALTH AVENUE BOSTON, MASS. 1941-1942 Telephone Number Kenmore 2770 ORGANIZED FEBRUARY 16TH, 1868 INCORPORATED 1877 ADMITTED TO GENERAL FEDERATION 1893 ADMITTED TO STATE FEDERATION 1893 Club Color-- Violet
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[*Filed July 2, 1844.*] Entered, according to act of Congress, in the year 1844, BY M. W. DODD, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District of New York. STEREOTYPED BY T. B. SMITH, 216 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK.
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142 UNION SOLDIERS INTERRED IN NATCHEZ NATIONAL CEMETERY, MISSISSIPPI. No. Name. Rank. Co. Regiment. Date of death. Sec. Grave. Original place of burial. 1 Atkinson, John H. K. 95th Illinois infantry Aug, 24, 1863. 1. 1. Natchez, Mississippi. 2 Astings, --- 4th Illinois cavalry. Oct. 31, ---. 1. 71. Do. 3 Ashwood, Troy. Private. G. 58th U.S. colored infantry. 15. 49. Washington, Mississippi. 4 Anderson, Henry. I. 5th U.S. colored cavalry. 15. 149. Vidalia, Louisiana. 5 Allen, Henry. Private. F. 6th United States artillery. May 23, 1864. 15. 244. Natchez, Mississippi. 6 Allen, Daniel. Sergeant. D. 58th U.S. colored infantry. Apr. 29, 1864. 15. 244. Do. 7 Beebe, Charles A. A. 12th Wisconsin infantry. Oct. 1st, 1863. 1. 20. Do. 8 Brown, D. H. 12th Wisconsin. Oct. 24th, 1863. 1. 26. Do. 9 Blanchard, W. W. K. 12th Wisconsin infantry. Sept. 26, 1863. 1. 27. Do. 10 B---, S. 12th Wisconsin infantry. 1. 28. Do. 11 Baltzell, J. L...G. 76th Illinois infantry. Oct. 27, 1863. 1. 48. Do. 12 Bush, William F. B 76th Illinois volunteers Oct. 27, 1863 1 54 Do. 13 Broken, Henry A C 4th Illinois cavalry Aug. 18, 1864 1 67 Do. 14 Burwell, W. J C 15th Illinois infantry 1 Oct. 14, 1863 1 80 Do. 15 Biggs, Paul D 11th Illinois infantry 1 82 Do. 16 Bates, John I 46th Illinois infantry Dec. 7, 1863 1 86 Do. 17 Boyd, William K 2d Illinois artillery Dec. 13, 1863 1 87 Do. 18 Brahm, August G 15th Illinois infantry Dec. 19, 1863 Do. 19 Balzell, W Private G 76th Illinois infantry Oct. 27, 1863 1 98 Do. 20 Bennington, T 21 Boyd, William 22 Brahm, Auigust 23 Broker, H 24 Brokett, W. P. 25 Brown, Edward 26 Boughton, Edgar 27 Bettis, A 28 Bringat, John 29 Benton, Lucius 30 Brewer, Henry 31 Blake, J 32 Brady, George 33 Burke, George 34 Black, Benjamin 35 Bartlett, James
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FREEDMEN'S BUREAU 11 "VI. Brigadier General R. Saxton is hereby appointed inspector of settlements and plantations, and will at once enter on the performance of his duties. No change is intended or desired in the settlement now on Beaufort island, nor will any rights to property heretofore acquired be affected thereby. "By order of Major General W. T. Sherman: "L. M. DAYTON, Assistant Adjutant General." In Virginia quite an amount of land was libelled and about to be sold by the marshal just previous to the establishment of the bureau, when the sales were suspended by the Secretary of War, in order that these lands might be turned over to the bureau for the benefit of the freedmen. I claimed that these lands, which had been condemned to sale, though not actually sold, were already the property of the government, and objected to his excellency the President against the insertion of the word "sold" in the definition of confiscated property. The President referred the matter to the Attorney General, whereupon, finally, the word "sold" was inserted. This decision necessitated the restoration of all the property where the sale had been suspended. I have been very desirous of conforming to the letter of the law in setting apart lands, but was unwilling to do so before it became probable that they could be retained. In this way much disappointment and suffering would be avoided. The freedmen were so eager for the possession of land, and so likely, without that possession in fact or in prospect, to be obliged to leave their present homes, that I made the following proposition through yourself: WAR DEPARTMENT, BUREAU OF REFUGEES, FREEDMEN, AND ABANDONED LANDS, Washington, September 4, 1865. SIR: The matter of imposing some conditions in the cases of pardoning those who have lands already under cultivation by freedmen, for the benefit of this class of persons, having been presented to me by the Attorney General, and a plan having been suggested by a distinguished officer of the army, which I heartily indorsed, I deem it best to combine these suggestions in the following proposals, to wit: 1st. That hereafter pardons of the President of the United States, extended to those who have been excepted in his proclamation of May 29, 1865, having more than 20,000 dollars' worth of property, be conditioned by specific stipulation in each individual case: that the land-owner agree to set apart and grant title, in fee-simple, to each head of family of his former slaves, a homestead varying in extent from five to ten acres, to be secured against alienation during the lifetime of the grantee. The location, precise extent, and other details to be determined by three referees, two to be chosen by the interested parties, each selecting one, and the two a third. 2d. That other persons, not land-holders, be conditioned according to their several circumstances by equivalent or proper stipulation, to be determined by a committee of three appointed by the President. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, O. O. HOWARD, Major General, Commissioner. Hon. E. M. STANTON, Secretary of War. I felt quite sanguine that this course would produce contentment among the freedmen, and afford an example to other land-owners beside those affected by it. My proposition may have come too late for adoption, for already quite a number of land-owners had been pardoned. RECORDS—OF LABOR. By Circular No. 5 I empowered the Assistant Commissioners to do everything possible to "quicken and direct the industry of the refugees and freedmen, that they and their communities may do all that can be done for the season, already so far advanced, to prevent starvation and suffering, and promote good order and prosperity." * * * "Negroes must be free to choose their
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337. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1869, by GOULD AND LINCOLN, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the District of Massachusetts. ROCKWELL & ROLLINS, PRINTERS AND STEROTYPERS, BOSTON. LC
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and Dr Kane bring many evidences such as spoons, clothes, and a boat, and a log book of Capt Crozier, and a paper of the last farewell between Crozier & Franklin. 1853 July 8th American expedition under Com. Perry arrives at Japan. 1853 July 14th Exhibition of the Industry of all Nations, opened at New York City, 1853 Sept 8th Remaining portion of "Table Rock", at the falls of Niagara breaks off. 1853 Nov 9th Inauguration of the Washington Aqueduct. 1853 Dec 16th Genl. Santa Anna, elected dictator of Mexico for life. He had formerly been President from 1833 to 1845, 1854 March 8th A Treaty of Commerce concluded between the United States and Japan. 1854 April 20th Miss Dix's bill ameliorating the condition of the in= dijent insane - vetoed. 1854 April 28th The President issued a proclamation, announcing the neutrality of the United States in the Eastern question, 1854 June 7th A reciprocity treaty between the United States and Great Britain concluded at Washington respecting Newfoundland fishing, international trade &c,
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[*Filed March 6, 1849*] ENTERED, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1849, by WASHINGTON IRVING, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern District of New York. Leavitt, Trow, & Co., Printers and Stereotypers, 49 Ann-street, N.Y. LC
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26 THE WOMAN CITIZEN A Cordial Invitation Won't you come in and inspect the women's department of our new Park Avenue office ? We have tried to make it as convenient and home-like as your own home. Miss Furman, Manager of the Women's Department, is always available for consultation. Park Avenue Office IRVING BANK- COLUMBIA TRUST COMPANY 280 Park Avenue at 48th Street Member Federal Reserve System LECTURES BY MRS. IDA PORTER-BOYER on Current Events Citizenship Government The Far East Clubs, church organizations, schools and study groups will find the lectures of especial interest. CURRENT EVENTS These lectures are very clear and concise discussions of the important happenings [?] and local. Women's organizations find these talks informing and entertaining. Special terms for courses during the Club year. THE FAR EAST The Philippines What they mean to us and what we [mean?] to them. China, Its Yesterdays and To-day Ceremonial, ecclesiastical, political and industrial status. Japan. The Old and the New. Hawaii and Guam Our Picturesque Pacific Islands Mrs. Boyer's trip through the FAR EAST enables her to give accurate information about this interesting part of the worl[d]. CITIZENSHIP AND GOVERNMENT Citizenship Who are and who may be citizens. Naturalization, registration and voting qualifications of different States. Election Machinery Political Parties Fundamentals and influences. Our National Government Congress, the President, the Cabinet and the Supreme Court. Our State, its Departments and Officials Business of City Government How it relates to housekeeping. What We Mean By U. S. A Day in Congress Legislative Measures Approved by Women's Clubs. For terms and dates address MRS. IDA PORTER-BOYER 3 Monadnock Street Boston 25, Mass. Telephone : Columbia 9449-M ture was started in the Northwest an attempt has been made to start a similar co-operative delivery system in Cleveland, Ohio. Numerous other attempts are being made to solve the problem of distributors' spread. In Cincinnati, for example, the farmers have formed a co-operative association and are building a large plant of their own to deliver milk to the housewife's door. In other communities farmers are also working out short cuts to the consumer. "Licensing" (Continued from page 17) Third Assembly be promptly taken, the date for the regular meeting of the Advisory Committee on Traffic in Women and Children was advanced by several weeks. And it was to this meeting that our American representative, Miss Grace Abbott of the Children's Bureau, went as "unofficial observer." The full report of the action of that Committee has just now been given out. This informs us that the fullest possible consideration was given to the draft convention which, after much discussion, was finally adopted. In this discussion two other important points were raised and were finally crystalized into resolutions. One was a recommendation for a questionnaire to be set to all members of the League asking those states that have a system of regulation for a report on its working and results, and those that have abolished it for a full statement of the reasons that led them to do so. The other urges the use of women police in dealing with prostitution. But, says the report, particular importance attaches to that resolution which embodies the proposal made by the "unofficial observer" from the United States. This was that the Council might, without delay, appoint experts to make, in collaboration with the governments of the countries concerned, a comprehensive study of the conditions under which this traffic goes on, the methods practiced and the main centers between which it prevails. Again, it is seen, the mighty weapon of publicity is to be used. Light is to be turned upon this darkest spot in our social organism. It is hardly credible that, when the full facts are laid out for the world's inspection, governments and people will not be stirred to some immediate positive action against this hideous business. When these resolutions of the Advisory Committee have passed through the necessary technical steps, they will be referred to the various national legislatures for ratification. Adequate legislation for their enforcement must then be passed. And when that is done, as Mrs. Dale, alternate from Australia, said at the time of the discussion in the Third Assembly, the greatest blow ever dealt at the traffic will have been struck. Your Investments By ELEANOR KERR TWO policies issued by insurance companies which are very popular and which are more or less on the endowment order mentioned in our last article, are income bonds and retirement annuities. Many women--and men, too, of course--who have no one dependent on them and wish to provide themselves with savings from which to receive an income in the future, find the purchase of income bonds one of the safest methods of assuring this. The purchaser makes annual payments until a certain age, after which date the insurance company pays her a fixed amount monthly for the rest of her life. Should she die before reaching this age, the insurance company usually agrees to return to the heirs the total amount of deposits which have been made. And even if the purchaser dies after having reached the stipulated age and received some of the income payments, but not the aggregate equal to the entire amount deposited as premiums, the difference is usually returned to the heirs. The cost of income bonds varies greatly, according to the age at which payment on them begins, and the age at which the income is desired. A person thirty years of age, who wishes to receive ten dollars monthly beginning at the age of sixty, would pay an annual premium of about $34.14, and the same amount for each additional ten dollars of income desired. Should she wish the income to begin at the age of fifty the annual premium would be about $82.36. Disregarding the fact that no interest is paid until the end of twenty or thirty years, the interest received after that period amounts to a little over 7 per cent. on the accumulated deposits in the latter case, and approximately 11 1/2 per cent. in the former case. The profit to the insurance company, of course, lies in the fact that interest on the money as it is accumulating during the twenty or thirty year periods is not paid out, but goes into the company's treasury. From a business man's point of view, this makes the interest received on the money in the form of income after the age of fifty or sixty represent only about one-half the interest rate indicated above, as during this time the capital has had a chance to increase 50 per cent. to 100 per cent. The compensation for that lower return lies in protection against making a bad investment and in the guarantee of systematic saving. The retirement annuity bond operates on the same principle and is practically the same thing, though differently names. The premium unit for women is $105 a year. This would provide for a woman of thirty a retirement annuity of $13.50 a month for life beginning at the age of fifty, and of $30.71 a
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OLIVER OPTIC'S MAGAZINE. 415. 1869. THIRD YEAR! FIFTH VOLUME! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ THE immense popularity which the only Juvenile Magazine published ONCE A WEEK has attained, assures the publishers that OUR BOYS AND GIRLS, commenced as an experiment, was needed by the young people, and is indorsed by their parents and guardians, who demand A FIRST-CLASS PERIODICAL, and are willing to pay a fair price for such, while they insist that it shall not only contain the productions of the BEST AMERICAN WRITERS who have distinguished themselves in the department of juvenile literature, but also that it shall be of the HIGHEST MORAL TONE. The publishers of OLIVER OPTIC'S MAGAZINE, encouraged by the success of the past, will endeavor, in the coming volume, to meet the requirements of their patrons for such a work more perfectly than ever before. Having on their Trade List more than TWO HUNDRED JUVENILE BOOKS, written by the most popular authors, they are confident that their unrivalled facilities in this department will enable them to realize their ambition to furnish THE CHEAPEST AND THE BEST MAGAZINE for the young people in the United States. Their aim will still be to IMPROVE THE MIND AND HEART, and while the work shall amuse and entertain. It shall also impart valuable information in ART, SCIENCE, AND LITERATURE, and develop and encourage the purest morality. The publication will continue to be under the editorial superin- tendence of OLIVER OPTIC, whose books for young people have now reached the unparalleled annual sale of ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY THOUSAND VOLUMES. His works are in every family all over the land, and are largely relied upon by parents and guardians as moral and educational agencies in the training of the children. This popular author, while he writes AN EXCITING STORY. which shall afford young readers no excuse for resorting to the dangerous trash so abundant at the present time, endows his heroes and heroines with pure and noble characters, worthy the imitation of youth, and depicts vice in its true colors, so that the young heart may loathe and shun it. The publishers confidently challenge friend or enemy to point to an impure thought or an immoral sentiment on the pages of any of his numerous works. OLIVER OPTIC writes for no juvenile publication except OUR BOYS AND GIRLS, and all his books are issued by the publishers. During the coming year he will continue the LAKE SHORE SERIES, four stories of which will appear in this volume, and which, when published in book form, will cost five dollars, as follows:-- LIGHTNING EXPRESS; or, The Rival Academies. ON TIME; or, The Young Captain of the Ucayga Steamer. SWITCH OFF; or, The War of the Students. BRAKE UP; or, The Young Peacemakers. The issue of three stories in this Magazine affords an opportunity to the young people of the United States which can be presented by no other juvenile publication. (Continued on third page of cover.) LC
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in the rear for the purposes to capture the Wagon trains. The federals were commanded by Genls Curtis & Sizel, the battle was fought for three days without any decisive result, but on the 8th Genl Curtis made additional changes, and at early morning he attacked the rebels along his whole line, the rebels were instantly thrown with confusion and fled precipitately on all the attack. The division of Van Dorn retreated in one direction that of Price escaped by another. The pursuit was continued by Genl Sizel toward Keithsville, and by the Cavalry to the mountains, the rout of the enemy was complete. Rebel loss 2000 killed and Wounded also 1000 prisoners, among the rebel dead was found Genl. Mc Culloch, a peculiar feature in this battle was the presence of several thousand Indians, under the command of Albert Pike, their savage instincts were demonstrated [?] after battle the federal slain and wounded were found to be scalped, thus renewing the primevil scenes of sanguinary slaughter. Union loss 500 killed, and 900 wounded. 1862 March 11 Genl Mc Culloch assumes command of the Army of the Potomac in the field, - Genl Fremont assumes command of the Mountain Department - Genl Halleck assumes command of the Department of the Mississippi - Manassas occupied by the Federals. 1862 March 12th Commodore Dupont captures and take possession of Jacksonville, Fla, - The federals attacked and drove the rebels compelling them to abandon their entrenchment at Paris, Tenn.
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REPORTS OF CASES ARGUED AND DETERMINED IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, WITH Copious Notes and References. BY GEORGE CAINES, COUNSELLOR AT LAW. THIRD EDITION, CAREFULLY REVISED AND CORRECTED, WITH ADDITIONAL NOTES EMBRACING THE MORE RECENT DECISIONS. BY WILLIAM G. BANKS, COUNSELLOR AT LAW. IN THREE VOLUMES. VOL. III. NEW YORK: BANKS, GOULD & Co. 144 NASSAU STREET. ALBANY: GOULD, BANKS & CO. 475 BROADWAY. 1854.
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242 THIRTIETH REGIMENT INFANTRY, U.S.C.T., MD. VOL. - COMPANY C. NAME. RANK. DATE OF ENLISTMENT OR MUSTER IN. DATE OF MUSTER OUT OR DISCHARGE. REMARKS. Smith, Samuel (2) Private. Mar. 31, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Stephens, Perry Private. Mar. 31, 1864 Absent sick since Dec. 6, 1864, Co. M. O. rolls. Stansbary, Benjamin Private. Feb. 7, 1864 Absent sick since April 1, 1865. Co. M. O. rolls. Snowden, Isaiah Private. Feb. 24, 1864 Missing in action, July 30, 1864; supposed to have been killed, Co. M. O. rolls. Simmons, Henry Private. Feb. 25, 1864 - Died March 21, 1864. Snowden, Henry Private. June 16, 1864 - Died Aug. 4, 1864, of wounds received in action. Thompson, Thomas Corporal. Feb. 27, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Thomas, George W. Private. Feb. 9, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Turner, Dennis Private. Feb. 24, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Tailing, Randolph Private. May 27, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Thomas, Aaron Private. May 27, 1864 Absent sick, Co. M. O. rolls. Talbot, Henry Private. Feb. 24, 1864 April 11, 1864 Transferred to Navy Tilghman, Samuel Private. Feb. 9, 1864 April 11, 1864 Transferred to Navy Vance, Stephen Private. May 17, 1864 Jan. 11, 1866 Wilmer, Levin Sergeant. Feb. 11, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Woods, John H. Sergeant. Sept. 15, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Waters, Robert Corporal. Mar. 31, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Wing, Charles E. Private. Feb 24, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Waters, Stephen Private. Mar. 31, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Webster, John Private. Feb. 27, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Weaver, Benjamin Private. Mar. 19, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Wisly, Cyrus T. Private. Feb. 27, 1864 June 17, 1865 Wallace, Greenberry Private. Feb. 27, 1864 April 11, 1864 Transferred to Navy Williams, Edward Private. Feb. 25, 1864 April 11, 1864 Transferred to Navy Wilkinson, Philip W. Private. Feb. 9, 1864 - Died March 2, 1864 Ward, Anthony Private. Mar. 31, 1864 - Died Aug. 4, 1864 of wounds received in action. Wilkinson, Wash'g'n Private. May 26, 1864 - Died Aug. 26, 1864 COMPANY D. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS NAME. RANK. DATE OF ENLISTMENT OR MUSTER IN. DATE OF MSTER OUT OR DISCHARGED. REMARKS. Eben Whitney. Captain. Feb. 26, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Charles B. Sanders. 1st. Lieut. Mar. 3, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 See Roster, Field and Staff. Jacob Foster. 1st Lieut. April 5, 1865 Dec. 10, 1865 Entered the service as 2nd Lieut.: promoted 1st Lieut., Oct. 26, 1865. Ira B. Quimby. 2d Lieut. Feb. 13, 1864 Jan. 11, 1865 Disability. ENLISTED MEN. Allan, James 1st Sergeant. Feb. 23, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Addison, Joseph Private. Feb. 25, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Bowzer, James H. Sergeant. Mar. 19, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Brown, John Corporal. Feb. 27, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Bankers, Tigle W. Private. Mar. 31, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Barrett, John Private. May 18, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Blackstone, Charles Private. Feb. 23, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Brice, Aaron Private. Feb. 23, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Brice, Daniel Private. Feb. 24, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Brown, Charles Private. Feb. 25, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Brown, William Private. May 17, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Bryan, Thomas H. Private. Feb, 24, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Buckner, Andrew Private. May 17, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Burgess, Joseph Private Feb. 23, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Burr, Daniel Private. Feb. 23, 1864 Dec. 10, 1865 Bostick, John Private. Feb. 27, 1864 Missing in action, July 30, 1864. Bordley, Perry Private. Feb. 25, 1864 - Died March 22, 1864, of disease. Boyd, William Private. Feb. 22, 1864 - Died of wounds received in action, Dec. 1. 1864 Brice, William F. Private. Feb. 26, 1864 - Died March 12, 1864, of disease.
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Dr.Wm. Gear Spencer Page 17. made of clay or just mud if it bars one from changing his opinion or speech when he has convincing evidence of his error. In closing I join you in a salute to the flag. Until the Federal Council of Churches and other patriotic and religious groups, the Y.M.C.A., the Y.W.C.A., and a host of other patriotic groups and individuals, be proved to be in error, I salute them as defenders of what the flag symbolizes, and I shall heartily support them by deed, word and finances. Cordially yours, /s/ JOS. W. MAUCK
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AN EASY INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF GEOGRAPHY, AN AN IMPROVED PLAN: COMPILED FOR THE USE OF SCHOOLS, With a View to render the Acquisition of Geographical Science easy and pleasant to the Student. ACCOMPANIED BY AN IMPROVED ATLAS, Exhibiting the Elevation of Mountains, Length of Rivers, and Population of Cities. FROM THE BEST AUTHORITIES. BY THOMAS T. SMILEY, TEACHER. PHILADELPHIA: Printed by Clark & Raser, 33 Carter's Alley, 1823.
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SAINT CHRYSOSTOM ON THE PRIESTHOOD. TRANSLATED FROM THE ORIGINAL GREEK WITH NOTES AND A LIFE OF THE FATHER, BY THE REV. HENRY M. MASON, A.M. RECTOR OF ST. JOHN'S CHURCH, FAYETVILLE, N. CAROLINA [Philadelphia :] E. LITTELL--CHESNUT STREET 1826. Plain - [Accept?] Type Copyright on the back of the title
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