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CONGRESSIONAL Recoltd-HOUSE. DECEMBER 3
. 2 CONGRESSIONAL RECOltD-HOUSE. DECEMBER 3, .Ma.ssa;chusetts-Henry L. Dawes and George F. Hoar. ARKANSAS. Clifton R. Breckinridge. John H. Rogers. JJ!ichigan-Omar D. Conger and Thomas W. Palmer. Poindexter Dunn. Samuel W. Peel. Minnesota-Samuel J. R. McMillan and Dwight 1\I. Sabin. James K. Jones. Mi.ssissippi=-James z. George and Lucius Q. C. Lamar. CALIFORNIA. Missouri-Francis M. Cockrell and George G. Vest. Charles A. Sumner. James H. Budd. John R. Glascock. Barclay Henley. Nebraska-Charles F. l\Ianderson and Charles H. VanWyck. WilliamS. Rosecrans. Pleasant B. Tully. Nevada-James G. Fair. New Hampshire-Henry W. Blair and Austin F. Pike. COLORADO. New Jersey-John R. McPherson and William J. Sewell. James B. Belford. New York-Elbridge G. Lapham and Warner Miller. CONNECTICUT. North Carolina-Matt. W. Ransom and Zebulon B. Vance. William W. Eaton. John T. Wait. Ohio-George H. Pendleton and John Sherman. Charles L. 1\fit.<Jhell. Edward W. Seymour. Oregon-Joseph N. Dolph and James H. Slater. DEL.AW .ARE. Pennsylvmtia-J ohn I. Mitchell. Charles B. Lore. Rhode Jslan~Nelson W. Aldrich. FLORIDA.. Sottth Camlina-M. C. Butler ~d Wade Hampton. Robert H. M. Davidson. Horatio Bisbee, jr. Tennessee-Isham G. Harris and Howell E. Jaekson. GEORGIA. Texas-Richard Coke and Sam. Bell Maxey. Thomas Hardeman. James H. Blount. Vermont-George F. Edmunds and Justin S. Morrill. John C. Nicholls. Judson C. Clements. Virginia-William .Mahone and Harrison H. Riddleberger. · Henry G. Turner. Seaborn Reese. N. Charles F. Crisp. Allen D. Candler. West Virginia-Johnson Camden and John E. -
Mtmmmmtm of Buffalo, NY
BUFFALO & ERIE COUJVTT PUBLIC LIBRARY cr. I BUFFALO & ERIE COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY Epf/lfl ELI AS HOWE SEWING MACHINES 1867. 1867. FAMIZT AJV2) MJUYZTFACTUZIIJVG. POINTS OZ" SUPERIORITY i ADJUSTABLE PRESSER FOOT. ADJUSTABLE HEAD. SIMPLICITY: OF MECHANISM. Self-Adjustable Take Up. EASE OF OPERATION. RANGE OF WORK. DURABILITY. PERFECTION OF TENSIONS. THE HOWE, or LOCK-STITCH, IS UNEQUALED. "With every Machine we furnish free a Hemrner, Fellor, Braider, Quilter, Guage, 1 doz. Needles, 6 Bobbins, 2 Wrenches, 1 Oiler, 2 Screw Drivers, Bottle of Oil and Instruction Book. IFXXTTXraTGh 3DEI>-AJRT3^E2SrT. Constantly on hand and for sale, wholesale and retail, the best quality of Machine Twist, Sewing Silk, Cotton and Linen Thread of all sizes and colors, Tuckers, Corders, Kufflers, Machine Findings, Needles, Oil, &c., &c Also, at Wholesale and Retail, the Celebrated WILLISTON'S COMBED SEA ISLAND THREAD for Family and Manufacturing uses. J". 3ST. DORE,IS <Sc CO., OFFICE AND SALESROOM; 18 West Swan Street, Buffalo. Agents Wanted. GROVER & [BAKER'S IMPBOVBD Shuttles Lock Stitch SEWING MACHINES. SMiniMiMiMlXiMOtlXlCi^lMMlU'KUOirHl1 THE ATTENTION OP Tailors, Manufacturers of Clothing, Boots and Shoes, Harnesses, Carriage Trimmings, and all others who require The Best and Most Effective Look Stitch MachinJ Is invited to the above. The Lock Stitch Machines which have been employed in these^ branches of manufacture, have been defective in several essential par ticulars. They have been much too noisy and too much encumbered with cog-wheels or gearing, and wire springs.) to be simple, durable and comfortable in use. In Grover & Baker's Improved Machines these defects have been entirely removed. -
The Corporation*
THE CORPORATION* See Alumni Record, Vol. I, pp. 8I-89; and Vol. II, pp. 5I-54 I87G-I9IO. ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED 1870 Hon. CHARLES ANDREWS, t LL.D., L.H.D., at large, Ex-Chief Judge Court-of Appeals, State of N. Y., Syracuse, N.Y. I886 jOHN D: ARCHBOLD, at large, Vice-President Standard Oil Co., New York, N. Y. 1879 •o. H. P. ARcHER, at large, I894 Agent for private estates, New York, N. Y. 1$70 •Rev. EBENEZER ARNOLD, tat large, I872 Northern New York Coilference, -Port Jackson, N. Y. 1870 Hon. ALLEN C. BEACH, e,x-officio, I872 Lieut. Governor. 1872 *Hon. jAMES j . BELDEN, at large, I904 Banker, Member of Congress, Syracuse, N. Y. Died 1 Jan. I904 at Syracuse, N. Y. 1880 *Rev. jAMEs E. BILLS, D.D., I897 Genesee Conference, Rochester, N.Y. Died I6 July I897· 1870 *Rev. ISAACS. BINGH:kM, 1872 Black River Confercence, .Herkimer, N.Y. 1875 R. M.-BINGBAM, M.D., 1885 Northern N.Y. Conference, manufacturer, Rome, N.Y. 1898 M. E. BLANCHARD, 1907 Newark Conference. 1896 *CHARLES M. BOLEN, 190I New York Conference, New York, N. Y. 1893 *SAMUEL W. BoWNE, at large, since I899, Died 29 Oct. I9IO 19I 1 New York Conference, merchant, New York, N.Y. 1895 IRA D. BRAINARD; 1907 Northern N. Y. Conference, banker, Waterville, N.Y. 1870 *Rev. DANIEL W. BRISTOL, D.D., 1878 1870 Wyoming Conference 1872; I873 Central N.Y. Conference, 1878. Died I883 at Syraeuse, N.Y. 1885 Dean jAMES B. BROOKs, D.C.L., Central N. Y. Conference, Dean College of Law sinoe I895· Syracuse, N.Y. -
12/05/2005 Case Announcements #2, 2005-Ohio-6408.]
CASE ANNOUNCEMENTS AND ADMINISTRATIVE ACTIONS December 5, 2005 [Cite as 12/05/2005 Case Announcements #2, 2005-Ohio-6408.] MISCELLANEOUS ORDERS On December 2, 2005, the Supreme Court issued orders suspending 13,800 attorneys for noncompliance with Gov.Bar R. VI, which requires attorneys to file a Certificate of Registration and pay applicable fees on or before September 1, 2005. The text of the entry imposing the suspension is reproduced below. This is followed by a list of the attorneys who were suspended. The list includes, by county, each attorney’s Attorney Registration Number. Because an attorney suspended pursuant to Gov.Bar R. VI can be reinstated upon application, an attorney whose name appears below may have been reinstated prior to publication of this notice. Please contact the Attorney Registration Section at 614/387-9320 to determine the current status of an attorney whose name appears below. In re Attorney Registration Suspension : ORDER OF [Attorney Name] : SUSPENSION Respondent. : : [Registration Number] : Gov.Bar R. VI(1)(A) requires all attorneys admitted to the practice of law in Ohio to file a Certificate of Registration for the 2005/2007 attorney registration biennium on or before September 1, 2005. Section 6(A) establishes that an attorney who fails to file the Certificate of Registration on or before September 1, 2005, but pays within ninety days of the deadline, shall be assessed a late fee. Section 6(B) provides that an attorney who fails to file a Certificate of Registration and pay the fees either timely or within the late registration period shall be notified of noncompliance and that if the attorney fails to file evidence of compliance with Gov.Bar R. -
History of the U.S. Attorneys
Bicentennial Celebration of the United States Attorneys 1789 - 1989 "The United States Attorney is the representative not of an ordinary party to a controversy, but of a sovereignty whose obligation to govern impartially is as compelling as its obligation to govern at all; and whose interest, therefore, in a criminal prosecution is not that it shall win a case, but that justice shall be done. As such, he is in a peculiar and very definite sense the servant of the law, the twofold aim of which is that guilt shall not escape or innocence suffer. He may prosecute with earnestness and vigor– indeed, he should do so. But, while he may strike hard blows, he is not at liberty to strike foul ones. It is as much his duty to refrain from improper methods calculated to produce a wrongful conviction as it is to use every legitimate means to bring about a just one." QUOTED FROM STATEMENT OF MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND, BERGER V. UNITED STATES, 295 U. S. 88 (1935) Note: The information in this document was compiled from historical records maintained by the Offices of the United States Attorneys and by the Department of Justice. Every effort has been made to prepare accurate information. In some instances, this document mentions officials without the “United States Attorney” title, who nevertheless served under federal appointment to enforce the laws of the United States in federal territories prior to statehood and the creation of a federal judicial district. INTRODUCTION In this, the Bicentennial Year of the United States Constitution, the people of America find cause to celebrate the principles formulated at the inception of the nation Alexis de Tocqueville called, “The Great Experiment.” The experiment has worked, and the survival of the Constitution is proof of that. -
T R S V, Seere Tary Stanton, but Tion That the Unconscious Progress of Polit- of the Cascade
' ' _:\u25a0' \u25a0TELE ST. PAUL DAILYGLOBE. S__.TUKJ3 ___yXbiu_\Nl_n"G, NOVEMBER 14, 1885.— TEN PAGES. nowhere, the congress be a perfect menagerie. west willnever be protected by national terlzed Itas "runningfrom hell to large amount of wheat to the acre. ItIs EX-SENATOR SHARON DEAD. next will SPECULATIVE LINE, one or two of our most The judge has probably made a correct diag- legislation until the Northwest sends good through a swamp." A understood that wealthy are interested with J. Brief Outline of the Noted man's nosis. Already the band begins to \ play. Democratic statesmen to congress. citizens J. sound ''• Without intending to say anything dis- enterprise. Wonderful Career. And by the time tho winter is half gone ._-."f\u25a0'. • _»_. the Hillin the '\ •;,,«., respectful of the dead we merely suggest General Belief that Northern Pacific San Francisco, Cal., Nov. 13.—Ex- there willbeliveller. music. GROWTH OF DEMOCRACY. Will Report Favorably. PUBLISHED EVEKY DAT IN THE YEAR. that ifex-Senator Sharon had possessed less Will* Secure the James River %&-* Senator William Sharon died at 3:30 'this Ex-Congressman' Job Stevenson ofCin- money „ Anderson, chiet engineer of Madame Modjeska is a connoisseur ofart. a five and more virtuehis life would have ValleyLine. Gen. Adna afternoon. BAKER. cinnati has just returned home after been happier and his death more peaceful. road, returned yester- .LEWIS She pronounces the Globe's picture of her Europe. Mr. the Northern Pacific years' residence and travelin day coast, where he was, Utt ,was born Smlthfleld, 0., in yesterday's issue the best she has ever observing man, di- from the Pacific 1_S 2, at Jan. -
New York State History Book
GLENCOE New York State History•Geography•Government \ Thomas E. Gray Susan P. Owens Social Studies Teacher Social Studies Teacher DeRuyter, New York East Greenbush, New York About the Authors Thomas E. Gray is a middle school social studies teacher in the Susan P. Owens teaches seventh and eighth grade social studies DeRuyter schools located in central New York state. He has served at the Howard L. Goff Middle School in East Greenbush, New York, as consultant for the National Archives in the development of edu- just east of Albany. She has presented numerous workshops on the cational materials and document kits using primary sources. He use of historical records in the classroom for the New York State has written many grants and conducted numerous workshops Archives, New York State Historical Association, other historical funded by the Local Government Records Management and agencies, as well as for school districts. In 1992 she was the recip- Improvement Fund on the benefits and methods of teaching with ient of the Capital District Council for the Social Studies local government records. In 1990 he was presented with the Neiderberger Award for outstanding service to social studies edu- Educator of the Year Award from the central New York Council for cation. Sue was also awarded the 1995 “Archives Advocacy Award” the Social Studies. He went on to receive the New York State by the New York State Archives and Records Administration. She Council’s Distinguished Social Studies Educator Award in 1994. presently serves as the K–12 Social Studies Department Chair in Tom served for three years as the Chair of the New York State East Greenbush. -
THE HUYLER BUILDING (A.K.A the Petri Building) 374 Delaware Avenue Buffalo, Erie County, New York 14202
State and National Registers of Historic Places Individual Building Nomination August, 2011 THE HUYLER BUILDING (a.k.a The Petri Building) 374 Delaware Avenue Buffalo, Erie County, New York 14202 Prepared by: Clinton Brown Company Architecture ReBuild The Pierce Building in the Theatre Historic District 653 Main Street, Suite 104 Buffalo, New York 14203 PH (716) 852-2020 FX (716) 852-3132 All contents Copyright 2012 CBCA NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 10024-0018 (Oct. 1990) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places DRAFT Registration Form This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A). Complete each item by marking “x” in the appropriate box or by entering the information requested. If an item does not apply to the property being documented, enter “N/A” for “not applicable.” For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. Place additional entries and narrative items on continuation sheets (NPS Form 10-900a). Use a typewriter, word processor, or computer to complete all items. 1. Name of Property historic name THE HUYLER BUILDING other names/site number The Petri Building, The Pitt Petri Building 2. Location street & number 374 Delaware Avenue [ ] not for publication city or town Buffalo [ ] vicinity state New York code NY county Erie code 029 zip code 14202 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, I hereby certify that this [X] nomination [ ] request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements as set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. -
CENTURY ASSOCIATION BUILDING 109-111 East 15Th Street, Manhattan
Landmarks Preservation Commission January 5, 1993, Designation List 248 LP-1763 (FORMER) CENTURY ASSOCIATION BUILDING 109-111 East 15th Street, Manhattan. Built 1869; architects Gambrill & Richardson. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 871, Lot 10. On December 12, 1989, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the (Former) Century Club Building and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 27). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Thirteen witnesses spoke in favor of designation. A representative of the owner did not take a position regarding the designation and no witnesses spoke in opposition to designation. The hearing was continued on April 3, 1990 (Item No. 22). At that time eight letters were read into the official record, including one letter from the owner, expressing opposition to designation, and seven letters in favor of designation. The Commission has received other letters in favor of designation. Summary The Century Association Building was designed by the firm of Gambrill & Richardson, whose partners were both members of the association and one of whom, Henry Hobson Richardson, went on to become one of this country's most prominent architects. Built in 1869, the building appears to be Manhattan's oldest surviving structure erected as a clubhouse. Its exterior, which remains remarkably intact, heralded a wave of neo-Grec buildings in the early 1870s. The Century Association, founded in 1847 to promote interest in literature and the arts, attracted authors, artists, and amateurs of letters and the fine arts, many of whom were national leaders in their fields. -
Official New York from Cleveland to Hughes, Vol 3
x^-6^^ s OFFICIAL N E W YORK FROM CLEVELAND TO HUGHES IN FOUR VOLUMES Editor CHARLES ELLIOTT FITCH, L. H. D. VOLUME III HURD PUBLISHING COMPANY NEW YORK AND BUFFALO 1911 o.i. Copyright, 1911, by HPRD PUBLISHDfO COMPANY yes ADVISORY COiNIMITTEE Hon. John LL.D. Joseph H. Choate, LL.D.,D.C.L. Woodward, James S. Sherman, LL. D. De Alva S. Alexander, LL.D. Hon. Cornelius N. Bliss Henry W. Hill, LL. D. Horace Porter, LL.D. WiliiamC. Morey, LL.D. Andrew D. White, LL.D.,D.C.L. Pliny T. Sexton, LL. D. David J. Hill, LL. D. M. Woolsey Stryker, D.D.,LL.D. Chauncey M. Depew, LL.D. Charles S. Symonds Hon. Horace White Hon. J. Sloat Fassett Charles Andrews, LL. D. Hon. John B. Stanclifield A. Judd Northrup, LL.D. Morgan J. O'Brien, LL.D. T. Guilford Smith, LL. D. Hon. William F. Sheehan Daniel Beach, LL.D. Hon. S. N. D. Xorth CONTENTS CHAPTER I PAGE The Legislature 13 CHAPTER n Statutory Revision 41 CHAPTER ni Albany County 45 CHAPTER IV 37th Congressional District 65 CHAPTER V Broome County 83 CHAPTER VI Cayuga County 107 CHAPTER Vn Chemung County 123 CHAPTER Vni Chenango County 131 CHAPTER IX Clinton County 139 CHAPTER X Columbia County 141 CHAPTER XI Cortland County 151 CHAPTER XII 24th Congressional District 167 CHAPTER XIII Dutchess County 171 CHAPTER XIV Erie County 179 CHAPTER XV Essex County 221 CHAPTER XVI PAGE Franklin County 225 CHAPTER XVII Fulton County 231 CHAPTER XVm Genesee County 235 CHAPTER XIX Greene Coxtnty 253 CHAl'TER XX 27th Congressional District 263 CHAPTER XXI Hamilton County 275 CHAPTER XXII Jefferson County 277 CHAPTER XXIII Kings County 291 CHAPTER XXIV Lewis County 293 CHAPTER XXV Livingston County 301 CHAPTER XXVI Madison County 315 CH.\PTER XXVII Monroe County 323 CHAPTER XXVIII Montgomery County 349 CHAPTER XXIX Nassau County 353 CHAPTER XXX Niagara County 355 CHAPTER I The Legislature By Frank B. -
1797 to 1897. a Century in the Comptroller's Office, State of New York
A Century in the Comptroller's Office wBSffl THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES . Comptroller 1797 H Century in tbe TO Comptroller's 1897 ©ffice. State of flew !£ork «c§w <£* A CENTURY IN THE COMPTROLLER'S OFFICE. [N the 17th of February, 1897, occurred the one hundredth anniversary of the establish- ment of the office of Comp- troller of the State of New York. The present incumbent of the office trusts it will not be considered unwar- ranted pride which has led him to collect and transcribe, in honor of its one hun- dredth birthday, such general facts relat- ing more or less directly to the office, or to the former incumbents thereof, as he has gathered from unsystematic reading and in the performance of his duties. An office which has without scandal managed the financial affairs of this great State, and has otherwise borne a con- 3 ^SJ O £Z 1398900 Cu A Century in the spicuous part in its government for a century ; an office from the thirty incum- bents of which have been chosen a Vice- President and a President of the United States, two United States Senators, four Governors of the State, one Chief Jus- tice and one Chief Judge of its Court of Appeals — to say nothing of others who have achieved distinction in less conspicu- ous civil positions — would seem entitled to something more than a passing notice on its centennial anniversary. The office, as created, and from time to time enlarged, is a unique feature in our State government. -
Bicentennial Celebration of the U.S. Attorneys
Bicentennial Celebration of the United States Attorneys 1789 - 1989 "The United States Attorney is the representative not of an ordinary party to a controversy, but of a sovereignty whose obligation to govern impartially is as compelling as its obligation to govern at all; and whose interest, therefore, in a criminal prosecution is not that it shall win a case, but that justice shall be done. As such, he is in a peculiar and very definite sense the servant of the law, the twofold aim of which is that guilt shall not escape or innocence suffer. He may prosecute with earnestness and vigor– indeed, he should do so. But, while he may strike hard blows, he is not at liberty to strike foul ones. It is as much his duty to refrain from improper methods calculated to produce a wrongful conviction as it is to use every legitimate means to bring about a just one." QUOTED FROM STATEMENT OF MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND, BERGER V. UNITED STATES, 295 U. S. 88 (1935) INTRODUCTION In this, the Bicentennial Year of the United States Constitution, the people of America find cause to celebrate the principles formulated at the inception of the nation Alexis de Tocqueville called, “The Great Experiment.” The experiment has worked, and the survival of the Constitution is proof of that. But with the celebration of the Constitution must also come the commemoration of those sharing responsibility for the realization of those noble principles in the lives of the American people, those commissioned throughout our nation’s history as United States Attorneys.