Spts"A Was - 24

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Spts i : 1 CLUBBED TO DEATH. EXONERATE PAUL VANUtKVUuni. NEWS OP OTSBKASEA. MOORE IS ARRESTED. Reform Press Association Docs Not Sus- IZZ: Him. FATE OF KICAKUU HUii WORDS Against HORRIBLE TOLD.IN AFEW tain Charges Confirmed. SpTS"a was - 24. Tuesday's Manger PRISON. A swindler named uilcr l EM- Memphis, Tenn., Feb. , IN A SPANISH tradingarniibo- - IS CHARGED Wl n Washington-- Feb. 19. William H. nfc TTnnsas Citv. chnrtrcd with session of the Reform. Press association IRaL BARE, EDrroRAiro Proprietor IN i a horse uenms BEZZLING STATE FUNDS. has been confirmed as judge for EVENTS OCCURRING ALLotu iura Missouri land for of interesting talk. The dis- Munger Pay fifirrlo.Tr. an aired Uhicacoan, was full of Nebraska. Authorities of tho State Dopartment SUMMARIZED. ieuuuu precipitated and the angei the district a stairs at his home and fractured his skull, cussion was No Attention to Ills Defends For SUBSOEIPTIOK BATES. - Brought the Trobate Court of by the state- Postmaster. death following an horn- afterward Action In of the delegates aroused Three Candidate For "IVarship to Protect Amerlcaa Citizens. IL25. Xe-duc-ed County-Informat- ion Alleges had 23. One Year, cash in advance Happenings From Homo and Abroad James Sykes, a line repairer for the "Wes- tancastor ment of Secretary Parker that he Republican City, Neb., Feb. Is Critical. .75 Cents $27,208.05-Pr- e- from the Situation at Havana Sir Months, cash in advance Prom Columns to ilsss Every- tern Union, slimjcd and fell before a train a .Deliberate Steal of received an official communication There are several candidates for at Hickorv Grove. Ky., and was cut to Hniinar7HearingtoBeiieUionMarch34 tilfi Teijraska Rsform Press association nostoffice here. Tho most prominent thing Bat Facte Eliminated For Oar kid- - World n'oepe Grissom. suspected of - Whitney Havana, Feb. 25. (New York EnteredattheNorthPlatte(Kebraska)pogtofficeas John W1UUU U1CIC111.U 0 u arc Mrs. J. Reynolds, C W. Headers' Convenience. naninff at Stroudc. O. T., was shot and askea Cahleirrani.l The state department Ex-Audit- or Yandervoorfc aud e econd-cIas- E matter. Feb. 25. Eu President Paul and A. T. Smitl killed bv Sheriff Bentley and a posse, Lixcols. aud ex- refuses to answer General Lee's cabled a charged with that Mr. Yandcrvoort be tried udgesoip. Friday, Feb. 19. white resisting arrest Edward Ferry, gene Moore is under arrest Mr. Sullivan Gets the J question as to whether or not it win new railroad public pelled from the association. Hol-com- b laborer employed in building embezzlement and theft of Prr Feb. 19. Governor man-ot-w- ar ms aemauu i A statuo of St. Patrick, a present from communication charged Mr. Lincoln, sustain with a shorts at Shawnee. O. T., was sctuck on came into his hands dur- said the today appointen H. M. Sullivan of upon Americans Karspaper his holiness, the pope, was delivered at St. and died moneys which with being a paid spy of that Spanish outrages The first the head by a falling timber his term of Vandervoort Broken Bow to succeed William L. lives, liberty and Patrick's church, Montreal While Thomas Malone ot Uttawa, xiis., ing the last two years of cease and that the crop of Florida pineapples reached Chi- Chicago men had been notihed. ana Greene as judge of the Twelfth judicial rrftntv richts of the citizens ot tne containing tens Krekincr work at three office. Mr. Moore cago Friday, and half crates, manner and robbed county at-- district of Nebraska. States he respected by the Span- Three-year-ol- brutal walked into the office of the United two dozen, sold at $8 d money. Mich., while him of all his tornev and accepted service of the war Burns to tho Ground. ish authorities. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1897. George Hurst of Lincoln, rianlng Mill an American citizen oi playing with a carving knife, cut himself "Wednesday, Feb. 24. rant. Consequently no formal arrest Hastings, Feb. 19. The large plan Kicardo Ruiz, Weyrick, Yalley education, has just been muracreain with fatal results Frederick It is rumored that the Hocking was macte. no was uiuuitjamuvx j ing mill of F. L. Pade & Son burned to for capitalist of Milford, Ind., was thrown go into a receiver's hands The prison and Charles W. Scott, another , The national oppropriation a road will attorney. ground, xne entire iosa is esuuuiwi from the back of a fractious horse and United States Leather company has de his the Amflrimn citizen, has been kept 14 days Trans-Mississip- pi exposition sev- - $8,000. There was not one aouax s the injuries Andrew Nolan. of 1 per cent on the pre After a conference extending over at with nothing to died from his clared a dividend - i. in soiitary confinement $275,000. - n - of insurance on it. has been increased to HOvears old. a sailor, committed suiciuo ferred stock At La Crosse, wis., Aora- cral hours. Judge Cochrane nnauy sei- worth door, nn bnt a wet stone noor. xvuw. shooting, the home of a friend, Syrian, stabbed his wife and . released by at nam Tobit, a hearing for March 24, and "Women to Chose lady Managers. kept incommunicado 13 days before are now sell Hugh McArdle, in New York city A He will die The Missouri was Texas strawberries himself. nf with killfid- - prevent Scott from 4.i, wJ t-- n cm at-- xi a bill Mr. Moore on a bond iu,uw, Fkemont, Neb., Feb. 20. Congress i,o vns To ing- - 20 cents a quart. If the ,f.Mi,nc a General Lee demanded at tornev named S. iuM. Galloway, charging roouirinir that all executions of criminals L. F. Bilhngsley and Dr. Hoover oi man Mciklejohn has designated that being murdered - J.-- m Texans would accept pay in the him with takine public records from Jus-- RhaU ti-- e in the penitentiary at Jef- coi t t Sutherland of Tekamah, mass convention be held in this city of General Ahnmaoa on xnimy Dr. E. W. Sawyer of Steel Canal Boat con - of 25, select two brought out of close connne- - voted for the price ticc Wood's court ferson City The lvpr- O. A. McCloud next Wednesday, Feb. to Scott be monev they a 1 Si. I . 1 A . .1 I nf Milford and Has commenceu iuriuuiwjr was u.mur. congressional to see friends. cheap enough. Uhicago suit pany, whleh organizes iur lady directors from this ment and allowed would be exposi- by baturday ana - Tim-firs- t district for the Transmississippi This was not done j utr. t,a i.1hi-h-1 his -n, . i fninoronm it! fleet nonnt of the luiormanon Secretary Olney road announces svm v,.i;,ii McCloy, 3, tion. General Lee cabled to The Burlington eve A student named Monroe at tho frnm six to 19 boats Charles B. ntrn;nst Moore alleges that on Jan. many warships - - 8,000, facts, asking how catering- to the short- school at Valparaiso, Ind., took Michigan for embezzling Q feloniously by a Train. the that it is not normal wanted in Moore unlawfully and Judge Thomas Killed Florida coast and if one morphine to cure headache and was found surrendered to United States Marshal , , own use City. Neb., Feb. 20. Judge E. were on tho and will not make - rnnvertto his Falls haired fraternity ,.,.1 yA r.-r- f. ,w Winn- taken an 1,1, n? a,n Vmnriwn vestcrdav. Ho did fraudulently would be sent here in case it became - A. Thomas, a prominent lawyer of this to the Corbett-- h ltzsim- Wk a nnn Rfin'sh of Chicaeo in the Second Is a-- aud embezzle of tho pubuc money $11, to enforce a demand. Not a cheap rate wicn ka ncSccnf. mib.r cirv. was rnn over and killed nere at necessary We believe in this is suing the Knights of Honor to recover tional bank of Bay City, Mich. ine 703.80. The second count is praccicauy PAUL VAXDEUVOORT. one word in reply to these questions mons fteht. life of Eu- tno . - party and a traitor to midnight while alighting from a south Wed- officials take 2,000 insurance money on the Wisconsin supremo court continued fiiinrr. with a few tech- the Republican had came from Washington up to matter the Burlington she claims um-iu- u " hound freight train, on which he was a gene Beresh, her husband, who decision oi tne iocu couuy Dr.i;cm Tim convention howled at nesday morning. Bell Telophone company hiding promulgated by the meal change s in moment passenger. crossing a parallel track the proper stand is dead The that the rule date and barges and showed in a In emergency still exists. The of Canada has appealed to tho gov- state board of health in 1894, requiring all third count sets up the same Mr. he was struck by a northbound freight. Tho h utmost least said, released from the school to be vaccinated amount, charges Moore-wit- having Spanish authorities do not in the Chauncey M. Depew, it is ernment to be children attending but Yandervoort, both as a man and as a no the 1 (Ren.. Tenn.) Intro ,tto Sopher Acquitted. treaty stipulations that which restricts invalid Gibson count al Mrs. Anna Is respect the new ambassa-- 1 act of parliament stolen the money. The fourth party. is certain to be the company making its own rates the house a joint resolution auth- member of the Populist City, Feb. 19. The trial prisoner must be kept in soli- duced in leges that on Jan. 7, 1897, Moore unlaw demanded an inves- Nebraska American dor of the United States to the Miss Anna Groverstock, sweetheart of F.
Recommended publications
  • Tiffany Memorial Windows
    Tiffany Memorial Windows: How They Unified a Region and a Nation through Women’s Associations from the North and the South at the Turn of the Twentieth Century Michelle Rene Powell Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master’s of Arts in the History of Decorative Arts The Smithsonian Associates and Corcoran College of Art and Design 2012 ii ©2012 Michelle Rene Powell All Rights Reserved i Table of Contents List of Illustrations i Introduction 1 Chapter 1: Old Blandford Church, American Red Cross Building, and Windows 8 The Buildings 9 The Windows in Old Blandford Church 18 The Windows in the National American Red Cross Building 18 Comparing the Window Imagery 22 Chapter 2: History of Women’s Memorial Associations 30 Ladies’ Memorial Associations 30 United Daughters of the Confederacy 34 Woman’s Relief Corps 39 Fundraising 41 Chapter 3: Civil War Monuments and Memorials 45 Monuments and Memorials 45 Chapter 4: From the Late Twentieth Century to the Present 51 What the Windows Mean Today 51 Personal Reflections 53 Endnotes 55 Bibliography 62 Illustrations 67 ii List of Illustrations I.1: Tiffany Glass & Decorating Company, Reconstruction of 1893 Tiffany Chapel 67 Displayed at the Columbian Exposition I.2: Tiffany Glass & Decorating Company advertisement, 1898 68 I.3: Tiffany Glass & Decorating Company advertisement, 1895 69 I.4: Tiffany Glass & Decorating Company advertisement, 1899 70 I.5: Tiffany Studios, Materials in Glass and Stone, 1913 71 I.6: Tiffany Studios, Tributes to Honor, 1918 71 1.1: Old Blandford Church exterior 72 1.2: Old Blandford Church interior 72 1.3: Depictions of the marble buildings along 17th St.
    [Show full text]
  • MILLER HOUSE HOFFMANN LIBRARY CATALOG Updated 2-24
    Madeira Historical Society Miller House - Hoffman Library Catalog VOLUME/ CALL #(BIBLIO) COMMENTS AUTHOR TITLE Free & public : one hundred and fifty years at the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County, 1853- 2003 / 1 027.477178 fP976Zf 2003 Fleischman, John, 1948- by John Fleischman. 2 031 N867 1925 The North American almanac. 3 071.77178 C49 1966 Cincinnati Enquirer Headlines of the Future, Cincinnati Enquirer, 1966 4 071.77178 qC574Zd, 1991 DeCamp, Graydon. The grand old lady of Vine Street / Graydon DeCamp. Cincinnati-- for Pete's sake : a collection of Cincinnati Enquirer 5 081 B869, 2003 Bronson, Peter. columnist Peter Bronson's greatest hits / by Peter Bronson. 6 081 C644 1995 Clooney, Nick, 1934- Nick : collected columns of Nick Clooney. Gertrude, the Great, The life and revelations of Saint Gertrude : virgin and abbess, 7 282 G384Zg, 1975 Saint, 1256-1302. of the Order of St. Benedict. St. Gertrude Parish 8 282.77177 qS139 v.01 1970 (Madeira, Ohio) Saint Gertrude Parish newsletter. St. Gertrude Parish 9 282.77177 qS139 v.02 1971 (Madeira, Ohio) Saint Gertrude Parish newsletter. St. Gertrude Parish 10 282.77177 qS139 v.03 1972 (Madeira, Ohio) Saint Gertrude Parish newsletter. St. Gertrude Parish 11 282.77177 qS139 v.04 1973 (Madeira, Ohio) Saint Gertrude Parish newsletter. St. Gertrude Parish 12 282.77177 qS139 v.05 1974 (Madeira, Ohio) Saint Gertrude Parish newsletter. St. Gertrude Parish 13 282.77177 qS139 v.06 1975 (Madeira, Ohio) Saint Gertrude Parish newsletter. St. Gertrude Parish 14 282.77177 qS139 v.07 1976 (Madeira, Ohio) Saint Gertrude Parish newsletter. St. Gertrude Parish 15 282.77177 qS139 v.08 1977 (Madeira, Ohio) Saint Gertrude Parish newsletter.
    [Show full text]
  • Complete Roster of Commandery-In-Chief Officers Grand Army of the Republic 1866 - 1949
    COMPLETE ROSTER OF COMMANDERY-IN-CHIEF OFFICERS GRAND ARMY OF THE REPUBLIC 1866 - 1949 FOUNDED BY DR. BENJAMIN F. STEPHENSON, AT DECATUR, ILL. APRIL 6, 1866 BENJAMIN F. STEPHENSON, ILLINOIS FIRST COMMANDER IN CHIEF ROBERT MANN WOOD, ILLINOIS FIRST ADJUTANT GENERAL JOHN M. SNYDER, ILLINOIS FIRST QUARTERMASTER GENERAL No official records of membership prior to 1878 FIRST NATIONAL ENCAMPMENT, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. NOVEMBER 20, 1866 Headquarters established in Springfield, Ill. The following officers were elected for the ensuing year Commander in chief Stephen A. Hurlbut, Illinois Senior vice commander in chief James B. McKean, New York Junior vice commander in chief Robert S. Foster, Indiana Surgeon general D.C. McNeil, Iowa Chaplain in chief Rev. William Pile, Missouri Adjutant general Benjamin F. Stephenson, Illinois Quartermaster general August Willich, Ohio SECOND NATIONAL ENCAMPMENT, PHILADELPHIA, PA. JANUARY 15, 1868 Headquarters established Washington, D.C. The following officers were elected and appointed for the ensuing year: Commander in chief John A. Logan, Illinois Senior vice commander in chief Joshua T. Owen, Pennsylvania Junior vice commander in chief Joseph R. Hawley, Connecticut Surgeon general John Bell, Iowa Chaplain in chief Rev. Alonzo H. Qunit, Massachusetts 1 Adjutant general Norton P. Chipman, Washington, D.C. Quartermaster general T.C. Campbell, Ohio Inspector general Edward Jardine, New Jersey THIRD NATIONAL ENCAMPMENT, CINCINNATI, OHIO MAY 12-13, 1869 Headquarters established in Washington D.C. The following officers were elected and appointed for the ensuing year: Commander in chief John A. Logan, Illinois Senior vice commander in chief Lucius Fairchild, Wisconsin Junior vice commander in chief Joseph R. Hawley, Connecticut Surgeon general S.B.
    [Show full text]
  • A History of Woman Suffrage in Nebraska, 1856-1320
    This dissertation has been microfilmed exactly as received g g.gg^g COULTER, Thomas Chalmer, 1926- A HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE IN NEBRASKA, 1856-1320. The Ohio State University, 1PI.B ., 1967 History, modem University Microfilms, Inc., Ann Arbor, Michigan A HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE IN NEBRASKA, 1856-1920 DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Thomas Chalmer Coulter, B.S. in Ed., B.S., M.A. The Ohio State University 1967 Approved by Adviser Department of History VITA December 27, 1926 Born - Newark, Ohio 1951............. B.S. in Ed., B.S., Kent State University, Kent, Ohio 1951-1957 .... Teacher, Berlin High School, Berlin, Ohio 1954-1956 .... Graduate Study, Kent State University Summer School 1956 ......... M. A., Kent State University, Kent, Ohio 1957-1960 . Graduate Study, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 1960-1961 . Instructor, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio 1961-1967 . Assistant Professor of History, Doane College, Crete, Nebraska FIELDS OF STUDY Major Field: The Social History of Nineteenth Century America 11 TABLE OF COwTEOTS VITA ................................... ii INTRODUCTION Chapter I. THE GENESIS OF THE WOMAN SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT IN NEBRASKA . 4 The Western Milieu The First Shot, 1856 II. THE POSTWAR DECADES, 1865-1882 ............. ............. 15 Continued Interest E. M. Correll Organization Progresses The First State Convention III, HOUSE ROLL NO. 162 AND ITS CONSEQUENCES, 1881-1882 .... 33 Passage of the Joint Resolution The Campaign for the Amendment Clara Bewick Colby Opposition to the Measure Mrs. Sewall’s Reply The Suffrage Associations Conventions of 1882 The Anthony-Rosewater Debate The Election of 1882 Aftermath IV.
    [Show full text]
  • L the Statue
    Sv^l'war i^oiiumeHt: Histciy'- Memory -C^ntroversy ' "*- '' *•* A. Bowdoin Van Riper Research Librarian, Martha's Vineyard Museum The Vineyard has many (barkers^rSctedribrcottmemdrate historical events, hut only two of them are statues. One, at the edge of the State Forest, memorializes the heath hen that the forest - first set aside as a reserve for the endangered bird - failed to save. The other, standing guard over the Oak Bluffs ferry wharf, commemorates a Civil War soldier. This is a story about that statue. It's also - necessarily and inseparably - a story about a man, a town, and a war. It's also, again necessarily, a story about people's memories of that war. This is a complicated story about an (apparently) simple object, but it's interesting - and important, today more than ever — precisely because it's complicated. L The Statue First things first: It is not a Confederate soldier. Despite what Gale Huntington - who should have known better - wrote in An Introduction to Martha's Vineyard back in 1969 . despite what passing tour bus operators may proclaim . despite what your houseguests explained at tedious length last weekend . .. it's a Union soldier. The belt buckle, the cartridge box, the cap badge, and the uniform buttons are all Federal issue. The statue is not, therefore, a direct analog of those at the center of recent controversies in Charlottesville, Baltimore, and Richmond. It was not erected, as so many of them were, as a marker of white power and an implicit warning to blacks to "know their place" in a society that refused to acknowledge their humanity.
    [Show full text]
  • Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War Incorporated by Act of Congress
    Grand Army of the Republic Posts - Historical Summary National GAR Records Program - Historical Summary of Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) Posts by State NEBRASKA Prepared by the National Organization SONS OF UNION VETERANS OF THE CIVIL WAR INCORPORATED BY ACT OF CONGRESS No. Alt. Post Name Location County Dept. Post Namesake Meeting Place(s) Organized Last Mentioned Notes Source(s) No. PLEASE NOTE: The GAR Post History section is a work in progress (begun 2013). More data will be added at a future date. 000 (Department) N/A N/A NE Org. 11 June Ended 1949 Provisional Department organized 10 July 1867, but soon dropped Beath, 1889; Carnahan, 1893; 1877 from the rolls for lack of reports. Provisional Department restored National Encampment in 1874. and Permanent Department organized 11 June 1877. Proceedings, 1949 The Department came to an end with the death of its last member in 1948. 001 Sedgwick Kearney Buffalo NE MG John Sedgwick (1813-1864), Chart'd 1 Dec. Originally organized in 1870 under the Department of Illinois, re- Dept. Proceedings, 1910 famous Civil War leader, KIA 1875 organized in 1874 under the Department of Iowa, and re-organized Spotsylvania Co., VA, 9 May again under the Department of Nebraska in 1875. 1864. 002 Post No. 2 Brownville Nemaha NE In existence as early as 3 October 1867. Nebraska Advertiser (Brownville), 3 Oct. 1867 002 Phil Kearney Ft. Omaha / South Douglas NE MG Philip Kearny, Jr. (1815- Chart'd 1 Jan. Seventy-six charter members. History of the City of Omaha, Omaha 1862), KIA at Chantilly, VA, on 1 1876 1894; Dept.
    [Show full text]
  • 1884 History
    Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War (a) The History of the Sons of Veterans by A.P. Davis, Originator and Frank P. Merrill Commander-In-Chief The Sons of Veterans of the United States of America The material for the following outline of the origin, organization, purposes, progress and aims of the National Association, now so widely spread and so well known under the above – named simple and highly appropriate official title, has been furnished by Comrade A.P. Davis, the originator of the Order, with the assistance of Brother Frank P. Merrill, the Commander-in-Chief of the Organization, and is approved by the officers of the National Association. The term “Veteran” would indicate one who was experienced in any art or calling, but more particularly that of war. Therefore, before our late civil struggle of 1861-5 had closed, we had what was termed veteran soldiers and veteran regiments. When the end had come, and the Union no longer required the services of her well-trained and faithful volunteer hosts, those who had passed through the ordeal and were still alive returned to their several homes and vocations as “citizens,” with the feeling that each and all had done something to save and perpetuate a great and good nation; and so it came that in due time, and as it were by common consent, the mantle and title of “Veteran” slowly and surely fell upon all who had drawn a sword or shouldered a musket for our national existence. ________________________ (a) Excerpted from: Mottelay P. F.
    [Show full text]
  • New Jersey Women and Their Strategies for Exerting Power in Marriage, 1770-1800 Jacqueline Deyo
    University of Richmond UR Scholarship Repository Honors Theses Student Research 5-2001 New Jersey women and their strategies for exerting power in marriage, 1770-1800 Jacqueline Deyo Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.richmond.edu/honors-theses Recommended Citation Deyo, Jacqueline, "New Jersey women and their strategies for exerting power in marriage, 1770-1800" (2001). Honors Theses. Paper 427. This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Research at UR Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Honors Theses by an authorized administrator of UR Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND LIBRARIES 1\11\ Ill\\\\\\\\\ \\I\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ I\ 3 3082 00802 6014 UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND NEW JERSEY WOMEN AND THEIR STRATEGIES FOR EXERTING POWER IN MARRIAGE, 1770-1800 A HONORS THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE SCHOOL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY BY JACQUELINE DEYO RICHMOND, VIRGINIA MAY2001 In recent years, women's history has attempted to document and explore the lives of early American women beyond the traditional role of obedient, passive, and dutiful wife and mother. Historians investigated women's roles in supporting the Revolution, in the political system of the new republic, and in their own "female subculture" where they had power in the home or church. This paper describes individual cases of late eighteenth-century New Jersey women who also do not fit into the established woman's role. I discovered and investigated strategies women used to exert power within their marriages and relationships. The result is a fresh image of early American women that highlights their clever resourcefulness, surprising abilities, and strong personalities.
    [Show full text]
  • Xerox University Microfilms 300 North Zeeb Road Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106 73- 26,842
    INFORMATION TO USERS This material was produced from a microfilm copy of the original document. While the most advanced technological means to photograph and reproduce this document have been used, the quality is heavily dependent upon the quality of the original submitted. The following explanation of techniques is provided to help you understand markings or patterns which may appear on this reproduction. 1. The sign or "target" for pages apparently lacking from the document photographed is "Missing Page(s)". If it was possible to obtain the missing page(s) or section, they are spliced into the film along with adjacent pages. This may have necessitated cutting thru an image and duplicating adjacent pages to insure you complete continuity. 2. When an image on the film is obliterated with a large round black mark, it is an indication that the photographer suspected that the copy may have moved during exposure and thus cause a blurred image. You will find a good image of the page in the adjacent frame. 3. When a map, drawing or chart, etc., was part of the material being photographed the photographer followed a definite method in "sectioning" the material. It is customary to begin photoing at the upper left hand corner of a large sheet and to continue photoing from left to right in equal sections with a small overlap. If necessary, sectioning is continued again — beginning below the first row and continuing on until complete. 4. The majority of users indicate that the textual content is of greatest value, however, a somewhat higher quality reproduction could be made from "photographs" if essential to the understanding of the dissertation.
    [Show full text]
  • Camp-Fire Chats of the Civil War
    THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES ENTIHG OH THE OLD (sAMP GROUND.* We're tenting to-night on the old camp ground, Give us a song to cheer Our weary hearts, a song of home And the friends we love so dear. Many are the hearts that are weary to-night, for the to cease Wishing war ; Many are the hearts looking for the right To see the dawn of peace. Tenting to-night, tenting to-night, Tenting on the old camp ground. We've been tenting to-night on the old camp ground, of Thinking days gone by ; Of the loved ones at home who gave us the hand. " " And the tear that said Good-bye! We are tired of war on the old camp ground, Many are dead and gone, Of the loved and true who've left their homes ; Others been wounded long. We've been fighting to-day on the old camp ground,- Many are lying near; Some are dead, and some dying : Many are in tears. CHORUS AND REFRAIN: Dying to-night, dying to-night, Dying on the old camp ground. Copyright. Used by permission of O. Ditson & Co. CAMP-FIRE CHATS OF THE GIVIL WAR; BEING THE INCIDENT, ADVENTURE AND WAYSIDE EXPLOIT OF THE BIVOUAC AND BATTLE FIELD, AS RELATED BY MEMBERS OF THE GRAND ARMY OF THE REPUBLIC, EMBRACING THE TRAGEDY, ROMANCE. COMEDY, HUMOR AND PATHOS IN THE VARIED EXPERIENCE OF ARMY LIFE. BY WASHINGTON DAVIS. CONTAINING A HISTORY AND OTHER VALUABLE INFORMATION FOR MEMBERS OF THE G. A. R.
    [Show full text]
  • The Strange and Wonderful Masks of Doane Powell
    Volume 69 / Number 4 / October/November/December 2016 The Strange and Wonderful Masks of Doane Powell n itself a mask is an ornament,” said store window displays, and at social functions. Nebraska artist Doane Powell. “The Starting October 10, they will be displayed “I photograph of a mask makes an in a new Nebraska History Museum exhibit, interesting picture; but a mask worn, with The Strange and Wonderful Masks of Doane movement, by the proper person, becomes Powell, one of four new exhibits opening at the a living art.” museum this fall. Made primarily in the 1940s and 1950s, A University of Nebraska alumnus, Powell Powell’s strange and wonderful masks spent twelve years as a cartoonist for the were used in theater productions, circus Omaha Bee. He eventually changed his artistic performances, movies and television, focus from political cartoons to masks. His advertising campaigns, magazine illustrations, skills for caricature were still evident in his new Continued on p. 4 Doane Powell and a “surprised man” mask which is part of a new exhibit opening October 10 at the Nebraska History Museum. NSHS RG5857-123, 2014.115.50 IN MEMORIAM The NSHS lost an esteemed colleague and dear friend with the unexpected death of Senior JIM POTTER Research Historian Jim Potter on August 6. Jim began work at the NSHS in 1967, and over the 1945-2016 years served variously as state archivist, editor of Nebraska History, and finally as senior research historian. Along the way he wrote and edited several books and dozens of scholarly articles. His depth of knowledge was legendary, and it was always shared with generosity and good humor.
    [Show full text]
  • MILLER HOUSE HOFFMANN LIBRARY CATALOG Updated 2-24
    Madeira Historical Society Miller House - Hoffman Library Catalog VOLUME/ CALL #(BIBLIO) COMMENTS AUTHOR TITLE 100 who made a difference : Greater Cincinnatians who made a mark on 1 977.178020922 qH819, 1999 Horstman, Barry M. the 20th century / by Barry M. Horstman. 2 Gore, Michael 1003 Household Hints & Work Savers, Editor: Gore, Michael, 1948 3 287.677177 N567 1988 175th anniversary of the Newtown United Methodist Church, 1813-1988. 1897 Sears Roebuck catalogue / introductions [by] S.J. Perelman, 4 670 qS43r 1968 Sears, Roebuck and Company. Richard Rovere ; editor: Fred L. Israel. 5 670 S43 1973a Sears, Roebuck and Company. 1923 Sears, Roebuck catalogue / edited by Joseph J. Schroeder, Jr. 6 1975 World Series, MLB corp. 1975 Program 25th Anniversary Greater Loveland Historical Society 7 Museum Cook Book, Loveland Ohio, 2000 Cookbook A bicentennial history of Pleasant Ridge, 1795-1995 : a project of the Pleasant Ridge Bicentennial Committee / text and research by David Dukart and Larry Trame ; 8 977.178 qD877, 1995 Dukart, David. photos from the collection of Arthur F. Glos. Dwyer, Doris D. A century of city-building : the Kilgour family in Cincinnati, 9 977.178 D993 1983 (Doris Dawn) 1798-1914 / by Doris D. Dwyer. Dickens, Charles, 10 Fiction 1812-1870. A Christmas carol / by Charles Dickens. A cook's tour of Madeira : an historical cookbook / 11 MR 641.597717 qC773 2000 Madeira Reference Item the Madeira Historical Society. 12 598.0974 P485 Peterson, Roger Tory A Field Guide to Birds, Peterson, Roger Tory, 1947 A Finnish immigrant son in the Great War, 1918-1919 / 13 940.373 B879 2004 Brown, Marion A.
    [Show full text]