Samuel Milton Jones Collection Inventory
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Proceedings Op the Twenty-Third Annual Meeting Op the Geological Society Op America, Held at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, December 21, 28, and 29, 1910
BULLETIN OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA VOL. 22, PP. 1-84, PLS. 1-6 M/SRCH 31, 1911 PROCEEDINGS OP THE TWENTY-THIRD ANNUAL MEETING OP THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OP AMERICA, HELD AT PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA, DECEMBER 21, 28, AND 29, 1910. Edmund Otis Hovey, Secretary CONTENTS Page Session of Tuesday, December 27............................................................................. 2 Election of Auditing Committee....................................................................... 2 Election of officers................................................................................................ 2 Election of Fellows................................................................................................ 3 Election of Correspondents................................................................................. 3 Memoir of J. C. Ii. Laflamme (with bibliography) ; by John M. Clarke. 4 Memoir of William Harmon Niles; by George H. Barton....................... 8 Memoir of David Pearce Penhallow (with bibliography) ; by Alfred E. Barlow..................................................................................................................... 15 Memoir of William George Tight (with bibliography) ; by J. A. Bownocker.............................................................................................................. 19 Memoir of Robert Parr Whitfield (with bibliography by L. Hussa- kof) ; by John M. Clarke............................................................................... 22 Memoir of Thomas -
Ohio Historical Newspapers by Region
OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY NEWSPAPER INDEX UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, WRIGHT STATE UNIVERSITY Alphabetical by Region Arcanum Arcanum Time (weekly) May 11, 1899 - Jan 2, 1902 Aug. 27, 1903 - Dec. 20, 1905 April 26, 1906 – Dec. 22, 1910 May 2, 1912 – Jan 19, 1950 April 20, 1950 – Feb 9, 1961 Oct. 18 – 25, 1962 Darke Times Feb 16, 1961 – Dec 27, 1962 June 6, 1968 – Jan 23, 1969 July 3, 1969 –June 26, 1970 Early Bird (weekly) Nov 1, 1971- May 3,1977 Nov 16, 1981- Dec 27,1993 Early Bird Shopper June 2, 1969 – Oct 25,1971 Bath Township BZA Minutes 1961-1973 Trustees Minutes v.1 – 13 1849 – 1869 1951 – 1958 Beavercreek Beavercreek Daily News 1960-1962 1963 -1964 Jan 1975 – June 1978 March 1979 – Nov 30, 1979 Beavercreek News Jan 1965 – Dec 1974 Bellbrook Bellbrook Moon Sept 14, 1892 – June 23, 1897 Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Post May 19, 1965 – April 7, 1971 Bellefontaine Bellefontaine Gazette Feb 25, 1831 – Feb 29, 1840 Bellefontaine Gazette and Logan Co. Advertiser Jan 30, 1836 – Sept 16, 1837 Bellefontaine Republican Oct. 27,1854 – Jan 2 1894 Feb 26, 1897 – June 3, 1898 Sept. 28, 1900 – May 29, 1904 Bellefontaine Republican and Logan Register July 30, 1830 – Jan 15, 1831 Logan County Gazette June 9, 1854 – June 6, 1857 June 9, 1860 – Sept 18, 1863 Logan County Index Nov 19, 1885 – Jan 26, 1888 Logan Democrat Jan 4, 1843 – May 10, 1843 Logan Gazette Apr 4, 1840 – Mar 6, 1841 Jun 7, 1850 – Jun 4, 1852 Washington Republican and Guernsey Recorder July 4, 1829 – Dec 26, 1829 Weekly Examiner Jan 5, 1912 – Dec 31, 1915 March -
A Slow Reading of Olive Senior's Hurricane Story Anne A
University of Wollongong Research Online Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts 2019 A slow reading of Olive Senior's hurricane story Anne A. Collett University of Wollongong, [email protected] Publication Details Collett, A. "A slow reading of Olive Senior's hurricane story." 100 Atmospheres: Studies in Scale and Wonder. London: Open Humanities Press, 2019, 259-277. http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/one-hundred-atmospheres/ Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: [email protected] A slow reading of Olive Senior's hurricane story Abstract Over the course of the 20th century, recourse to satellite and radar technology, and the use of reconnaissance aircraft, has greatly assisted the tracking of tropical cyclones. In addition, data buoys are now employed throughout the Gulf of Mexico and along the Atlantic and Pacific es aboards to relay air and water temperature, wind speed, air pressure and wave conditions that enable more accurate prediction and monitoring of storm systems. But before the people of the Caribbean had recourse to modern instrumentation and communication, surviving a regular hurricane season was founded on sensitivity to environment, accumulated knowledge passed from one generation to the next by word of mouth; and what amounted to a rehearsed, even ritualised, set of practices. As Jamaican Canadian poet Olive Senior writes in 'Hurricane Story, 1903': In those days storm warning came by telegraph to Postmistress. Living in the bush, Grandfather couldn't see her rush to broadcast the news by posting a black flag. -
Fish Commission Biennial Report
California. of Fish ana Gair.e " Dept. §iennial Report 1903-1904. ^jifTi'nxP ''C^<\•i-^r^^.i^Y^ Wmm "'»«'' Hi Ul. i. iGOMMISSIONE California. Dept. of Fish and Game, Biennial Report 1903-1904. (bound volume) DATE DUE _^ California- Dept. of Fish and Game. Biennial Report 1903-1904. ^ (bound volume) — APR X5'93 y^l ^o '93 California Resources Agency Library 1416 9th Street, Room 117 Sacramento, California 95814 .P.A!; *f^y liiUk^u. / EIGHTEENTH BIENNIAL REPORT OF THE State Board of Fish Commissioners STATE OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE YE^LRS 1903-1904. COMMISSIONERS: W. W. VAN ARSDALE, President, San Francisco. W. E. GERBER, - - - - Sacramento. CHAS. A. VOGELSANG, Chief Deputy, Mills Building, San Francisco, Cal. SACRAMENTO: : : state W. W. SHANNON, : superintendent printing. 1904. EIGHTEENTH BIENNIAL REPORT OF THE STATE BOARD OF FISH COMMISSIONERS. To Hon. George C. Pardee, Governor of the State of California : Sir: In accordance with law, the vState Board of Fish Commissioners has the honor to siihmit for your consideration its Eighteenth Biennial Report, being a record of its work and expenditures from September 1, 1902, to September 1, 1904. We submit, also, the recommendations which our experience in carry- ing on this important work has suggested, as tending, in our jvidgment, to the betterment of both the fish and the game interests. Since the Seventeenth Biennial Report was suVmiitted, the personnel of this Board has undergone one change. H. W. Keller tendered his resignation on April 24, 1903. On May 6, 1903, W. W. Van Arsdale Avas elected President of the Board, vice H. W. -
The Stetson Collegiate, Vol. 13, No. 04, January, 1903
University of Central Florida STARS Stetson Collegiate Newspapers and Weeklies of Central Florida 1-1-1903 The Stetson Collegiate, Vol. 13, No. 04, January, 1903 Stetson University Find similar works at: https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-stetsoncollegiate University of Central Florida Libraries http://library.ucf.edu This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Newspapers and Weeklies of Central Florida at STARS. It has been accepted for inclusion in Stetson Collegiate by an authorized administrator of STARS. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STARS Citation Stetson University, "The Stetson Collegiate, Vol. 13, No. 04, January, 1903" (1903). Stetson Collegiate. 493. https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-stetsoncollegiate/493 The Stetson Collegiate VOLUME XIV. , 1 nf\-i NUMBER 4. January, 1903 THE STETSON COLLEGIATE THE OLD FASHIONED WAY When I zvas a lad I used to play "hookey" from school, go foraging for eggs and then "hike" off to the creek zvhere zve caught a mess of Ush; boiled our eggs in a tin can; split our fish in halves and baked them on a plank; picked berries in the spring of the year and in the fall gathered nuts for our desert—and zvhen zve got home at night usually got our "just desserts. 44 A Spread'' Is appreciated by anyone zvho enjoys the "good things" of life. The nearer we get to na ture the more enjoyment zve get out of life. A girl is neither less mischievious nor less ad venturesome than a boy—as one lad tersely expressed'it "They're just like kids, only they're different." The UP-TO-DATE GIRL zvaits until the "lights" are out and then steals softly dozvn the corridor to "Number pp" zvhere phantom-like figures are gathered around "a bunch" of WHITE FRONT dainties. -
January, 1903
18 MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW. JANUARY,1903 terior curves computed from Helmholtz's equations harmonize cleared the men waited in the station, when the wind struck it with such force that the men thought the station would blow down and left it. All so happily with the exterior lines derived from this discussion the men say they never encountered such a terrific wind in their lives. on the output of the sun, that the probability is strengthened that this scheme is the proper one with which to enter upon Reports from all such valley towns would fill a Scrapbook. the analysis of the internal circulation of the sun. As This phenomenon should not be compared with that of the easterly winds (see MONTHLYWEATHER REVIEW, 1897, Vol. XXV, already noted in that bulletin, if the vortexlaw (urnz= constant, pp. 212, 307; 1898, Vol. XSVI, p. 66), inasmuch as the east where rd= the radius and w = the angular velocity) holds good in this case, then we have an explanation of the cause of and southeast gales seem to attain their destructive force in retardation of the diurnal angular velocity of the motions of the valleys at the leeward bases of mountain ranges. the photosphere in middle latitudes as referred to the equato- CLIMATOLOGICAL DATA FOR JAMAIUA. rial or polar belts. For if m2> w, then uz< wl, and since UJ~ is the initial rotational velocity at the equator, the angular ve- Through the kindness of H. H. Cousins, chemist to the gov- locity in middle latitude8 must be less than at the equator or ernment of Jamaica and now in charge of the meteorological at the poles. -
A Historical and Legal Study of Sovereignty in the Canadian North : Terrestrial Sovereignty, 1870–1939
University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository University of Calgary Press University of Calgary Press Open Access Books 2014 A historical and legal study of sovereignty in the Canadian north : terrestrial sovereignty, 1870–1939 Smith, Gordon W. University of Calgary Press "A historical and legal study of sovereignty in the Canadian north : terrestrial sovereignty, 1870–1939", Gordon W. Smith; edited by P. Whitney Lackenbauer. University of Calgary Press, Calgary, Alberta, 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/1880/50251 book http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 4.0 International Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca A HISTORICAL AND LEGAL STUDY OF SOVEREIGNTY IN THE CANADIAN NORTH: TERRESTRIAL SOVEREIGNTY, 1870–1939 By Gordon W. Smith, Edited by P. Whitney Lackenbauer ISBN 978-1-55238-774-0 THIS BOOK IS AN OPEN ACCESS E-BOOK. It is an electronic version of a book that can be purchased in physical form through any bookseller or on-line retailer, or from our distributors. Please support this open access publication by requesting that your university purchase a print copy of this book, or by purchasing a copy yourself. If you have any questions, please contact us at ucpress@ ucalgary.ca Cover Art: The artwork on the cover of this book is not open access and falls under traditional copyright provisions; it cannot be reproduced in any way without written permission of the artists and their agents. The cover can be displayed as a complete cover image for the purposes of publicizing this work, but the artwork cannot be extracted from the context of the cover of this specificwork without breaching the artist’s copyright. -
Poverty, Disease, Responsibility: Arthur Newsholme and the Public Health Dilemmas of British Liberalism
Poverty, Disease, Responsibility: Arthur Newsholme and the Public Health Dilemmas of British Liberalism JOHN M. EYLER University o f Minnesota N DELIVERING AN ADDRESS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF Glasgow in November 1900, Lord Rosebery, the heir apparent to the leadership of the Liberal party, linked anxieties about disease,I poverty, race, and national prowess in ways that would have startled his mid-Victorian predecessors: An Empire such as ours requires as its first condition an Imperial Race— a race vigorous and industrious and intrepid. Are we rearing such a race? In the rural districts I trust that we are. But in the great cities, in the rookeries and slums which still survive, an imperial race cannot be reared. You can scarcely produce anything in those foul nests of crime and disease but a progeny doomed from its birth to misery and ignominy. Remember, then, that where you promote health and arrest disease, where you convert an un healthy citizen into a healthy one, where you exercise your authority to promote sanitary conditions and suppress those which are the reverse, you in doing your duty are also working for the Empire. Health of mind and body exalt a nation in the competition of the universe. The survival of the fittest is an absolute truth in the conditions of the modern world (Rosebery 1922, 250-51). The nation was, in fact, facing a crisis of confidence. Foreign competition in industry, trade, and agriculture, the growth of German military might, and then the disastrous showing of the British forces The Milbank Quarterly, Vol. -
The London Gazette, February 22, 1901. 1353
THE LONDON GAZETTE, FEBRUARY 22, 1901. 1353 . -Henry Arthur Bransbury. The following appointment to the Staff of the Mervyn Winfred Falkner. Lines of Communication, made in South Africa, Richard Nason Woodley. is confirmed :— Eugene Ryan. Captain (temporary Captain in the Army) J. Edward Ernest Parkes, M.B. Barrett-Leonard, 24th Middlesex Volunteer . James Valentine Roche. Rifle Corps, to be graded as a Staff Captain Alfred John Hull. whilst employed with the Army Transport .. Reginald Vionnee Cowey. from 3rd July, 1900, to 12th November, 1900. \ James Conway. John Humphrey Barbour, M.B. Army Schools, The undermentioned Inspectors of Frederick England Robinson, M.B. Army Schools are granted the honorary rank of Samuel Mason. Captain:— John Southey Bostock, M.B. Honorary Lieutenant Robert Raymer. Dated Arthur Henry McNeil Mitchell. 18th February,'1901. Honorary Lieutenant Henry Jerram. Dated 20th February, 1901. .STAFF. t Army Pay Department, Colonel H. W. Bateman, Major G. E. Pereira, Grenadier Guards, to be a Chief Paymaster, is placed on retired pay. Special Service Officer, graded as a Deputy- Dated 22nd January, 1901. Assistant Adjutant-General on the Staff of the Lieutenant-Colonel G. H. Moore-Lane, Staff China Field Force. Dated 20th November, Paymaster, to be Chief Paymaster, with the .1900. substantive rank of Colonel in the Army, vice Captain E. M. Jackson, Indian Staff Corps, is Colonel H. W. Bateman. Dated 22nd January, - graded as a Deputy-Assistant Adjutant-General 1901. whilst * acting as a Staff Officer, China Field The undermentioned Paymasters to be Staff Pay- ... Force. Dated 27th November, 1900. masters :— Lieutenant.C. P. Berthon, the East Yorkshire Major B. -
NJDARM: Collection Guide
NJDARM: Collection Guide - NEW JERSEY STATE ARCHIVES COLLECTION GUIDE Record Group: Governor Franklin Murphy (1846-1920; served 1902-1905) Series: Correspondence, 1902-1905 Accession #: 1989.009, Unknown Series #: S3400001 Guide Date: 1987 (JK) Volume: 6 c.f. [12 boxes] Box 1 | Box 2 | Box 3 | Box 4 | Box 5 | Box 6 | Box 7 | Box 8 | Box 9 | Box 10 | Box 11 | Box 12 Contents Explanatory Note: All correspondence is either to or from the Governor's office unless otherwise stated. Box 1 1. Elections, 1901-1903. 2. Primary election reform, 1902-1903. 3. Requests for interviews, 1902-1904 (2 files). 4. Taxation, 1902-1904. 5. Miscellaneous bills before State Legislature and U.S. Congress, 1902 (2 files). 6. Letters of congratulation, 1902. 7. Acknowledgements to letters recommending government appointees, 1902. 8. Fish and game, 1902-1904 (3 files). 9. Tuberculosis Sanatorium Commission, 1902-1904. 10. Invitations to various functions, April - July 1904. 11. Requests for Governor's autograph and photograph, 1902-1904. 12. Princeton Battle Monument, 1902-1904. 13. Forestry, 1901-1905. 14. Estate of Imlay Clark(e), 1902. 15. Correspondence re: railroad passes & telegraph stamps, 1902-1903. 16. Delinquent Corporations, 1901-1905 (2 files). 17. Robert H. McCarter, Attorney General, 1903-1904. 18. New Jersey Reformatories, 1902-1904 (6 files). Box 2 19. Reappointment of Minister Powell to Haiti, 1901-1902. 20. Corporations and charters, 1902-1904. 21. Miscellaneous complaint letters, December 1901-1902. file:///M|/highpoint/webdocs/state/darm/darm2011/guides/guides%20for%20pdf/s3400001.html[5/16/2011 9:33:48 AM] NJDARM: Collection Guide - 22. Joshua E. -
Otterbein Aegis February 1900
Otterbein University Digital Commons @ Otterbein Otterbein Aegis Otterbein Journals & Magazines 2-1900 Otterbein Aegis February 1900 Otterbein Aegis Otterbein University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.otterbein.edu/aegis Part of the Arts and Humanities Commons Recommended Citation Otterbein Aegis, "Otterbein Aegis February 1900" (1900). Otterbein Aegis. 97. https://digitalcommons.otterbein.edu/aegis/97 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Otterbein Journals & Magazines at Digital Commons @ Otterbein. It has been accepted for inclusion in Otterbein Aegis by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Otterbein. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Editorials 6 Our Common Schools 8 A Sketch of Paul Kruger- 11 Who is Able to Judge? 13 America as a Power in the World 15 Old Ocean - A Poem 16 Y. M. C. A. Notes 16 Personals 17 Locals 18 Exchang~s 20 An Institution of High Grade, Standard Faculty and Courses of Study. ~~ University Located at Westerville, Ohio, SUBURBAN TO COLUMBUS THE CAPITAL OF THE STATE. ~~~~ There are Four High Class Literary Societies, With Elegantly Furnished Halls, Well Selected Libraries and Reading Rooms. ~~~~ The Christian Associations, the oldest in the state, are doing a grand work. Westerville is a beautiful and healthful village of about 2,000 popu lation, with a fine classical and religious atmosphere. There are no saloons or other low places of resort. Both sexes are admitted to equal advantages. Instruction thorough. All professors are specialists in their departments Expenses moderate. The University offers eight Courses of Study ; the Classical, Philosophical, Preparatory, Pedagogy, Music, F ine Art, and E lo cution and Oratory. -
Stanford University Clippings Collection
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt138nf41w No online items Guide to the Stanford University Clippings Collection Daniel Hartwig Stanford University. Libraries.Department of Special Collections and University Archives Stanford, California October 2010 Copyright © 2015 The Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University. All rights reserved. Note This encoded finding aid is compliant with Stanford EAD Best Practice Guidelines, Version 1.0. Guide to the Stanford University SC0015 1 Clippings Collection Overview Call Number: SC0015 Creator: Stanford University. Office of the President Title: Stanford University clippings collection Dates: 1891-1945 Physical Description: 14 Linear feet (112 volumes) Summary: Scrapbooks of newspaper clippings collected by the staff of the President's Office pertaining to University events and interests. Language(s): The materials are in English. Repository: Department of Special Collections and University Archives Green Library 557 Escondido Mall Stanford, CA 94305-6064 Email: [email protected] Phone: (650) 725-1022 URL: http://library.stanford.edu/spc Information about Access This collection is open for research. Ownership & Copyright All requests to reproduce, publish, quote from, or otherwise use collection materials must be submitted in writing to the Head of Special Collections and University Archives, Stanford University Libraries, Stanford, California 94304-6064. Consent is given on behalf of Special Collections as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission from the copyright owner. Such permission must be obtained from the copyright owner, heir(s) or assigns. See: http://library.stanford.edu/depts/spc/pubserv/permissions.html. Restrictions also apply to digital representations of the original materials.