{"1": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3847", "width": "2519", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0001.jp2"}, "2": {"fulltext": "LIBRARY OF CONGRESS.\\nChap.H.\\\\.\\\\ Copyright No,.\\nShell, :_.\\nUNITED STATES OF AMERICA.", "height": "3795", "width": "2436", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0002.jp2"}, "3": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3795", "width": "2504", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0003.jp2"}, "4": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0004.jp2"}, "5": {"fulltext": "\u00e2\u0096\u00a0p^\\n351\\nf .v\\nCentury.\\nThis hour s the very crisis of your fate;\\nYour good or ill, your infamy or fame,\\nAnd all the color of your life, depends\\nOn this important now. IDryden.\\n-BY-\\nA P CONNOLLY,\\nPast Commander U. S. Grant Post No.\\nDept. Illinois. G. A. R.,\\nChicago, III.\\ni", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0005.jp2"}, "6": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3800", "width": "2394", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0006.jp2"}, "7": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0007.jp2"}, "8": {"fulltext": "ADMIRAL GEORGE DEWEY,\\nTHE HERO OF MANILA.", "height": "3852", "width": "2362", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0008.jp2"}, "9": {"fulltext": "THE\\nNINETEENTH\\nCENTURY\\nCONTAINING\\nioi Calendars from 1800 to 1900\\nINCLUSIVE\\nWITH HISTORICAL AND IMPORTANT EVENTS\\nOF EACH YEAR.\\nFIFTH EDITION\\nBy A. P. CONNOLLY,\\nCHICAGO, ILL.\\nCopyright by A. P. Connolly, Chicago, 1898.\\nCopyright by A. P. Connolly, Chicago, 1900.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0009.jp2"}, "10": {"fulltext": "TWO\\n56516\\nLIFE S SECRETS\\nREVEALED\\nThe Book of Destiny,\\nBy Cagliostro, the Great Fortune-Teller.\\nIllustrated. Cloth, burnished top, 75 cts.\\nDreams and Omens,\\nAs revealed to Nostradamus and other\\nconjurers. Illustrated. Cloth, burnished\\ntop, 75 cents.\\nPractical Palmistry,\\nBy Comte C. de Saint-Germain. Illustrated.\\nCloth, burnished top. $1.00.\\nHerrmann the Magician, His Life,\\nHis Secrets.\\nBy H. J. Burlingame. Illustrated. Cloth,\\nburnished top. Illustrated. $1.00.\\nHours with the Ghosts; or, 19th\\nCentury Witchcraft.\\nBy H. R. Evans. Illustrated. Cloth, bur-\\nnished top. $1.00.\\nThe Practice of Palmistry for\\nProfessional Purposes.\\nBy Comte C. de Saint-Germain. The great-\\nest book of the kind ever published. Two\\nimperial 8vo volumes. 1,253 illustrations.\\nLimited signed edition. Half-Russia, full\\ngilt, in a box, $7.50.\\nFor sale everywhere or sent\\ndirect on receipt of price.\\nLaird Lee, ^c^ A s v\\nSECOND COPY,", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0010.jp2"}, "11": {"fulltext": "OUR PRESIDENTS.\\nTrue nobility is derived from virtue, not from birth. Title may be purchased, but\\nvirtue is the only coin that makes the bargain valid.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Burton.\\nThe long line of illustrious men who have held the exalted position of Presi-\\ndent of the United States has not its counterpart in the world s history. Not\\nrulers by Divine right but by the will of the people, occasionally not by\\nthe majority of the popular vote, but, by the majority of the Electoral College,\\nwhich is a conception of the early Congress, and, while we perhaps think that\\nthe majority ought to rule, yet this is not the law, and we are a wonderfully\\ngood people to obey the law. The men who have filled these exalted positions\\ncame from the people, some had wealth, tis true, others came from the farm\\nand other humble walks of life, but with a desire to serve the people and advance\\nthe interests of the Republic. No czars, no emperors,, no kings with an entailed\\nsuccession, with or without brains no blue blood, made bluer by running back\\ninto barbarism, but good, rich, American blood that thrills the very soul, inde-\\npendent, honest, God-fearing men, whose counsels have carried the Republic\\nthrough the perils of birth at Bunker Hill and Yorktown and Valley Forge until\\nto-day we can dictate terms of peace to the proudest nations on the globe.\\nThe 19th Century to Americans is most important, for it is our initial cent-\\nury. We had just seen the light of day in our new condition when 1800 was\\nushered in. The declaration had gone forth to be free but the experiment was\\nyet to be tried. When the bold, determined men signed the Declaration and the\\ngauntlet was thrown down to the arrogant, proud Briton, it was faith in God and\\npowder, the free men of America and George Washington of Virginia that in-\\nspired our forefathers to wondrous deeds of valor amid great sacrifices and a holy\\ndetermination to be free. Washington was called by his countrymen to lead the\\narmies of the young republic to victory; and, as they marched and counter-\\nmarched and suffered for country, and country alone, the tide of battle rolled\\nback; the sacrifices and the life blood of the fathers and sons hallowed the\\nground and cleared the skies and peace was declared. The armies disbanded\\nand the modest hero bade farewell to his comrades in arms, retiring to his estate\\nin Virginia to live in quietude for the balance of his life, but the people wilied it\\notherwise, and\\nGEORGE WASHINGTON, the First President, was hosored by a two-\\nterm service from 1789 to 1797. He was born on February 22, 1732, near Bridges\\nCreek, Va., and inherited large landed estates from his father. The first", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0011.jp2"}, "12": {"fulltext": "election occurred in January, 1789. The two houses of congress had been organ-\\nized in New York about April 4, 1789, although March 4th had been the\\nappointed time. The organization of the gorernment was completed on April\\n30th. The President and Vice-President John Adams, were sworn in by Hon.\\nRobert R. Livingston, chancellor of New York, in the gallery of the old city\\nhall in Wall street. In the first cabinet were Thomas Jefferson, secretary of\\nstate; Alexander Hamilton, secretary of the treasury; Henry Knox, secretary of\\nwar; Edmund Randolph, attorney general, and Samuel Osgood, postmaster\\ngeneral. John Jay was the first chief justice. At this time the country had a\\ndebt of $80,000,000, a fabulous sum considering the country s small population\\nand resources. After a re-election of Washington and John Adams for a second\\nterm, the cabinet was Timothy Pickering, secretary of state; Oliver Wolcott,\\nsecretary of the treasury; James McHenry, secretary of war; and Charles Lee,\\nattorney general. There was no navy at this time. General Washington died at\\nMount Vernon, Va., December 14, 1799.\\nJOHN ADAMS, Second President, was born at Braintree, Mass., on\\nOctober 30, 1735. In early life he was a school teacher and had ambition to enter\\nthe army, but laoked the requisite influence to accomplish what he desired, and\\nthen he thought of theology, but finally turned his attention to law and was\\nadmitted to the bar. He married Abigail Smith and removed to Boston in 1768.\\nOn the organization of the first Continental Congress, which met in Philadelphia\\nin 1774, he was one of the five members to represent Massachusetts. In 1777 he\\nwas sent as minister to France, where he remained until the mid-summer of 1779,\\nwhen he returned home to be again called into service, and in October of the\\nsame year, went as commissioner to Great Britain. He remained abroad until\\n1788, when he returned home and received the thanks of congress. He was\\nelected President and inaugurated at Philadelphia on March 4, 1797, in the\\nsixty second year of his age. As Vice-President he opened the electoral vote\\nand declared himself President and Thomas Jefferson Vice-President. During his\\nadministration the seat of the general government was removed to the District\\nof Columbia, its present location. Virginia and Maryland had ceded ten miles\\nsquare of land for this purpose. His cabinet remained about as General Wash-\\nington had left it, with the addition of the navy portfolio, to which Benjamin\\nStoddard, of Pennsylvania was appointed. General Washington died during this\\nadministration. Mr. Pickering failing to be in accord with the President was\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2discharged from further service as secretary of state. Mr. Adams died on\\nJuly 4, 1826\\nTHOMAS JEFFERSON, the Third President, was born in Shad well,\\nVa., on April 2, 1743. His family was of Welsh ancestry and his education of a\\nclassical order. He was graduated from the William and Mary College with\\nhonors, and then turned his attention to law and soon built up a large praetice.\\nIn 1769 he was elected member of the house of burgesses. He entered the arena\\nof politics deliberately, for the benefit of his fellow men and not to enrich him-\\nself, except in contentment, deeming the respect and consideration of his fellows\\nof far greater worth than riches. He married on January 1, 1772, Mrs. Martha\\nSkelton, a childless widow, who, upon the death of her father added to her\\nhusband s estate 50,000 acres and 135 slaves. On June 20, 1775, he took his seat", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0012.jp2"}, "13": {"fulltext": "in the Continental Congress in Philadelphia, and on the same day learned and\\napprised congress of the battle of Bunker Hill. The die was cast and he was\\nappointed on a committee to draft a declaration, which has become an immortal\\ndocument. He was elected President and Aaron Burr Vice-President by the house\\nof representatives, and for the second term his running mate was Mr. George\\nClinton, of New York; James Madison was his secretary of state. During his\\nsecond administration, Georgia ceded 100,000 square miles of land which now\\nform the states of Alabama and Mississippi; Louisiana was purchased from\\nFrance; Aaron Burr was tried for treason; the slave trade was abolished and\\nJudge Pickering was impeached. Mr. Jefferson died on July 4, 1826.\\nJAMES MADISON, the Fourth President, was born in Virginia, March\\n16, 1757. His father was a large landed proprietor and a leading man of affairs.\\nJames was educated at Princeton College where he graduated with high honors.\\nAt the outbreak of the revolutionary war he would have joined the army but\\nhis health would not permit. He turned his attention to politics and the affairs\\nof the country became of great interest to him. He and Mr. Jefferson met for\\nthe first time on October 7, 1776, at the first session of the independent legislative\\nassembly of Virginia, where he was one of the delegates to represent the state in\\nthe congress of the confederation. His abilities were recognized, and he was\\nplaced on most important committees. He was secretary of state under Jefferson\\nin 1801, and took an active part in the negotiations then pending with foreign\\nnations. He was twice elected President, serving from March 4, 1809, to 1813,\\nwith George Clinton of New York, as Vice-President the first term, and Elbri.dge\\nGerry of Massachusetts, for the second. In his cabinet were found Robert Smith,\\nof Maryland; William H. Eustis, of Massachusetts; Paul Hamilton, of South\\nCarolina; Albert Gallatin, of Pennsylvania and Caesar A. Rodney, of Delaware.\\nThe most important event of the administration was the declaration of war\\nagainst England which cost the United States $100,000,000. Mr. Madison died\\non June 28, 1836, and his wife died on July 12, 1849.\\nJAMES MONROE, the Fifth President, was born in West Walden\\ncounty, Virginia, on April 28, 1758. He was educated at William and Mary\\nCollege, but left in 1776 to enter the army, was commissioned a lieutenant and\\npromoted to captain, and again as major on the staff of Lord Sterling. He\\nfought at Brandy wine and Germantown, and also took part in the War of the\\nRevolution. He left the army because, having accepted the staff appointment,\\nhe lost his lineal rank as captain. After leaving the army he read law and was\\nadmitted to the bar went to congress in 1783, and in 1790 was chosen as senator.\\nIn 1794 was sent as minister plenipotentiary to France, but was recalled, as he\\nwas not in accord with the administration. He was elected by the Democrat-\\nRepublican party as governor of Virginia in 1799 and served three years. He\\nwas elected President, and with Daniel S. Tompkins, of New York, as Vice-\\nPresident, was inaugurated on March 4, 1817. He and the Vice-President were\\nreelected, inaugurated, and both served for eight years, to 1825. John C.\\nCalhoun and John Quincy Adams were his secretaries of state. The latter was\\nrecalled from the Court of St. James to accept the position, and Calhoun became\\nsecretary of war. He was the author of the famous Monroe doctrine. In his\\nmessage he declared As a principle, the American continents, by the free", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0013.jp2"}, "14": {"fulltext": "and independent positions which they have assumed and maintained, are hence\\nforth not to be considered as subjects for future colonization by any European\\npower. At the expiration of his second term as President, in 1825, he retired to\\nhis estate at Oak Hill, Va. and was soon chosen as justice of the peace. His ill-\\nhealth compelled him to relinquish all political cares and to decline further honors.\\nHe was not a thrifty man, for in his old age he was much harrassed by debt. Mr.\\nMonroe died at the residence of his son-in-law in New York City on July 4, 1831,\\nbut in 1858 his remains were removed to Richmond, Va., amid universal rever-\\nence and great pomp.\\nJOHN QUINCY ADAMS, the Sixth President, was born at Quincy,\\nMass., on July 11, 1767. He was a soldier and a diplomat, and was present at the\\nbattle of Bunker Hill. At the age of eleven years he accompanied his father to\\nFrance, and was educated at Paris, Amsterdam and Leipsic. At fourteen he\\nwent to Russia as private secretary to the envoy, Francis Dana, but returned to\\nAmerica and entered upon a course at Harvard, and graduated in 1787. He was\\nsent as minister to The Hague on his twenty-seventh birthday. He was\\nappointed by his father, who had succeeded Washington as President, and upon\\nthe advice of Washington, as minister to Russia. He returned to America, how-\\never, and was chosen to the Massachusetts senate April 5, 1802, and to the United\\nStates senate in 1803. He was very unpopular in the senate, and resigned before\\nhis time expired, saying He was not the man to remain where he was not\\nwanted. Under President Madison he was sent for the second time as minister\\nto Russia. He was also a commissioner to Ghent to effect a treaty with Eng-\\nland, and, after the treaty had been concluded, he went to Paris and witnessed\\nthe return of Napoleon from Elba and the events of the famous hundred\\ndays. He went from Paris to England as minister, where he remained for two\\nyears, when he returned to America to assume the duties of secretary of state\\nunder James Monroe. He was elected to the Presidency, with John C. Calhoun\\nas Vice-President, and was inaugurated on March 4, 1825. The election was\\nthrown into the house of representatives, when Henry Clay, who was subsequently\\nMr. Adam3 secretary of state, was speaker. John McLean, of Ohio, was a\\nmember of his cabinet. Mr. Adams died in Washington on February 23, 1848.\\nANDREW JACKSON, the Seventh President, was born in the district\\non the borders of North and South Carolina, known as the Waxhaw Settlement,\\non March 15, 1767. In early life he was a teacher, and was given to all sorts of\\nsports. He was an expert duellist, and fought one in 1795, and again in 1805,\\nwhen he killed his antagonist, Charles Dickenson. He commenced practicing\\nlaw in Nashville, Tenn., in 1788, was elected to congress in 1796, heard Wash-\\nington deliver his last message, and in 1797 went to the senate. He was irritable\\nas a senator, for the body was too slow and deliberate for one of his fiery temper.\\nThe historian says: He was desperately in debt, and sold his estate of 25,000\\nacres to liquidate. He then removed with his negroes to The Hermitage, and\\nsettled, as he supposed, for the balance of his life but events changed his\\npurpose.\\nThe War of 1812 broke out, and he tendered his services and that of 2,000\\nmen, which were accepted, and he was ordered to New Orleans, January 7, 1813.\\nHe did not arrive there, however, owing to some misunderstanding, and so", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0014.jp2"}, "15": {"fulltext": "marched the troops back, when they were mustered out. It was on this march that\\nhe was dubbed Old Hickory, and the name clung to him for the balance of his\\nlife. He participated in some of the Indian wars, and again was ordered to New\\nOrleans to face the red coats. Upon his arrival he commenced to fortify,\\nwith cotton bales- and earth, on December 28, 1814. The British fleet of fifty ships,\\nwith 1,000 guns and 20,000 veterans, were anchored below the city. GeneralJack-\\nson, with only 2,000 men on the ground and 4,000 somewhere en route, nothing\\ndaunted, threw down the gauntlet for John Bull to pick up. On New Year s\\nday of 1815, the British began to bombard his works of earth and cotton, and,\\nafter the commanding general thought Old Hickory and his recruits were about\\nready to cry quits, an assault was ordered, which resulted in a loss of 700\\nkilled, 1,400 wounded and 500 prisoners to the British, while Jackson s loss was\\neight killed and thirteen wounded. The assault occurred just before dawn, but\\nthe defeat was most overwhelming. This was the last battle of the war. The\\ntreaty of peace had already been signed at Ghent on December 24, 1814, but tbe\\nnews did not reach Washington until February 14, 1815.\\nGeneral Jackson was twice elected President, commencing on March 4, 1829,\\nand ending March 4, 1837. John C. Calhoun was Vice-President the first term,\\nand Martin Van Buren the second. He died at The Hermitage on June 8, 1845.\\nMARTIN VAN BUREN, the Eighth President, was born in Kinderhook,\\nN. Y., on December 5, 1782. His father was a farmer in moderate circum-\\nstances but Martin gained an education and prepared himself for the profession\\nof law, and was admitted to the bar in 1803. He was married in 1807, and elected\\nto the state senate in 1812 and remained for eight years, also was attorney\\ngeneral from 1815 to 1819. In 1816 he removed to Albany and formed a law\\npartnership with Benjamin F. Butler, of New York, and became, also, regent\\nof the State University. In 1821 he was elected to the United States senate and\\nbecame governor of New York, in 1827, resigning from the senate for that pur-\\npose. President Jackson made him his secretary of state, and in June, 1831, ap-\\npointed him as Minister to England, but he was not confirmed. He was elec-\\nted to the presidency with Richard M. Johnson, of Kentucky, as Vice-President\\nand inaugurated on March 4, 1837. His cabinet was composed of John Forsyth,\\nof Georgia; Levi Woodbury, of New Hampshire; Joel R. Poinsett, of South\\nCarolina; Mahlon Dickinson of New Jersey, Amos Kendall of Massachusetts and\\nBenj. F. Butler, of New York.\\nMr. Van Buren died at his home Lindenwald, on July 24, 1862, greatly\\nhonored and respected. His wife died in New York City, on December 29, 1878.\\nWILLIAM HENRY HARRISON, the Ninth President, was born in\\nBerkeley, Va., February 9, 1773. When Washington became President he was but\\nsixteen years of age. Education was not so easily obtained then as now, and\\nIndian border troubles attracted the attention of young Harrison, so he entered\\nthe army. He was commissioned as an ensign in April, 1791, and assigned to the\\nartillery. His youthful appearance attracted the attention of his superiors, but\\nhis determination brought him to the front, and he was advanced and placed up-\\non the staff of General Anthony Wayne, who complimented him in orders, for\\nhis bravery. In 1795 he was a captain of artillery and in 1800 President Adams\\nappointed him governor of the new territory of Indiana, an immense domain,", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0015.jp2"}, "16": {"fulltext": "from which the States of Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin and Michigan were formed\\nHis powers were autocratic. He was not only commander of the entire militia\\nbut, was Indian and land commissioner, legislator and law giver, and held the\\npardoning power. It was wonderful authority, but he was a wonderful man\\nand dealt fearlessly and equitably with all. Tecumseh, the noted Indian Chief\\nw s a disturber of the peace and assembled with one thousand warriors at Tippe-\\ncanoe, Indiana, to dispute the authority of Governor Harrison. The gauntlet\\nthrown down by this imperious, proud warrior was accepted by the general and\\nhe advanced upon them, and, when near the town was severely set upon by the\\nsavages, who were defeated. The War of 1812 provoked the Indians to a general\\nuprising, and General Harrison was appealed to by Kentucky, whose Governor\\ncommissioned him as major general of State troops. The President in the mean-\\ntime had made him a brigadier gen.ral in the regular army where he did such\\nsignal service that his countrymen wishing to still further honor him hispartv\\nnominated him for the Presidency. He was elected and with him John Tyler as\\nVice-President on March 4, 1841. His secretary of state was Daniel Webster-\\nsecretary of treasury, Thomas Ewing; secretary of war, John Bell and secre-\\ntary of navy, Geo. Edmund Badger.\\nGeneral Harrison died on April 4th of the same year as the result of a cold\\nincurred on the day of his inaugural.\\nJOHN TYLER, the Tenth President, was born in Greenway Va on\\nMarch 29, 1790. He was quite a poet, as well as something of a musician but\\nlaw was his profession. Among his classmates were James Madison president\\nof the college, and Thomas Jefferson. He entered the arena of politics and was\\nelected to the Virginia legislature in 1811 and married Letitia Christian on March\\n20, 1813. In the War of 1812 he commanded a company in the defense of Rich-\\nmond against the English. Politically he was opposed to slavery, and on the\\ncompromise bill admitting Missouri without restriction, he voted in the nega\\ntive, much to the surprise of his friends. He was a forceful and ready debater in\\nCongress. He declined a re-election to congress in 1821 on account of ill health\\nbut in 1823 was again elected, and in 1826 was elected governor of his state\\nHe was elected Vice-President on the ticket with General Harrison, and upon\\nthe notice of the President s death at once repaired to Washington taking the\\noath of office on April 6, 1841. Upon assuming the duties of President there\\nwere some changes in the cabinet. Upon a re-adjustment the official family was\\ncomposed of such men as Walter Forward, of Pennsylvania; John McLean of\\nOhio; Charles A. Wickliff, of Kentucky; John C. Spencer, of Virginia-\\nThomas W. Gilmore, of Virginia, and William Wilkins, of Pennsylvania\\nTwo members of the cabinet were killed by the explosion of a gun on the vessel\\nPrinceton, and the places were filled by John C. Calhoun and John Y Mason\\nof Virginia. After leaving the White House Mr. Tyler returned to Sherwood\\nForest, where he dwelt for the remainder of his life. He retired from politics\\nentirely but was often called upon to take part in public gatherings It was he\\nwho suggested the peace conference of the states which met in Washington in\\nFebruary, 1861. He was the president of the conference. He finally went with\\nVirginia and was member-elect to the Confederate house of representatives, but\\ndied before he took his seat. His death occurred on January 18, 1862.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0016.jp2"}, "17": {"fulltext": "JAMES K. POLK, the Eleventh President, was born in Mecklenburg,\\nNorth Carolina, on November 2, 1795. He was of Scotch-Irish parentage and\\nhis father was a captain in the War of the Revolution. He at one time worked\\nin a country store, but his taste was not in that direction, so he turned his atten-\\ntion to law, and in order to educate his son the father made a great sacrifice; but\\nhe was repaid in future years by seeing the son honored by the Nation. Mr. Polk\\nturned to politics and in 1823 was elected to the house of representatives, returned\\nin 1824, and was elected to congress in 1825, and re-elected until 1839, when he\\nbecame governor of Tennessee. He was a free trader, an advocate for the exten-\\nsion of slavery, and advised the annexation of Texas. He was elected speaker\\nof the house of representatives in 1835, and so remained for four years. In 1839\\nhe decided not to become candidate for another congressional term, but was a\\ncandidate for governor had a vigorous canvass and was elected. In 1841 he\\nwas again a candidate for governor, but was defeated by the whigs. He was\\ninaugurated as President and George M. Dallas as Vice-President on March 4,\\n1845. He received 175 votes of the electoral college, as against 105 for Henry\\nM. Clay. His cabinet was composed of James Buchanan, of Pennsylvania;\\nRobert J. Walker, of Mississippi; William M. Marcy, of New York; Cave John-\\nson, of Tennessee, and John Y. Mason, of Virginia. These were all able men.\\nMr. Calhoun, as secretary of state in the preceding administration, had signed a\\ntreaty of annexation with Texas on April 12, 1844, which was approved by con-\\ngress on March 1, 1845, and the following day signed by Mr. Tyler.\\nThe Mexican government issued a proclamation denouncing the annexation act\\nand called upon the people to rally in defense of their country, but did not declare\\nwar. General Taylor was sent with an army to assert the old French claim,\\nthe rights given to Texas by Santa Anna and the new title of the United States.\\nOn May 7, 1846, the Mexican troops first opened fire on General Taylor at Palo\\nAlto, and the Mexican war opened, when 50,000 men were called for.\\nThe campaigns were vigorously prosecuted by Generals Scott and Taylor,\\nthe City of Mexico was captured and our troops continued in possession of the\\ncountry. Finally terms were agreed upon Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and\\nCalifornia were made the property of the United States upon the payment of\\n$15,000,000. The treaty signed in Mexico on February 2, 1848, was sanctioned\\nby congress on March 10, and the Mexican war ended.\\nMr. Polk s political career was a most remarkable one. His administration\\nwas filled with momentous questions that called forth his best qualities, and he\\ncould have been re-nominated but declined, and upon the close of his term\\nretired to private life, to nurse back his impaired vitality, which had been over\\ntaxed by the cares of office. He died at Nashville, Tenn., June 15, 1849.\\nZACHARY TAYLOR, the Twelfth President, was born in Orange county,\\nVa on September 24, 1784. His father was Lieutenant Colonel Taylor of the\\n9th Virginia, which he commanded in the revolutionary war. He was always\\na soldier, having been born and bred amid the glitter and glamour of the army,\\nand the stern realities of war. In 1808 he was a lieutenant of infantry, and cap-\\ntain in 1810. In 1812 was in command of Fort Harrison on the Wabash, but in\\n1815 he resigned and went to his farm, where he remained but a short time,\\nwhen he returned to the army, and was made lieutenant colonel and placed in\\ncommand of Fort Snelling, which at that time was far out on the frontier. In", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0017.jp2"}, "18": {"fulltext": "1832 he was full colonel and participated in the second Black Hawk war, when\\nhe secured the surrender of that renowned chief. He took a prominent part in\\nthe Seminole war in 1836, and was breveted a brigadier general in 1837; was\\nordered to Texas July, 1845, to defend her against Mexico, and was made brevet\\nmajor general Miy, 1846. He took a prominent part, also, in the Mexican war,\\nat the end of which he was elected President, with Millard Fillmore as Vice-\\nPresident, and inaugurated on March 4, 1849. He started for Washington on\\nJanuary 24th to enter a political life which was antagonistic to his taste, for he\\nloved the army and the frontier, where the greater part of his life had been spent.\\nThe manner of travel was slow, and Old Rough and Ready reached Wash-\\nington on February 23d. As March 4th was on Sunday, he was inducted into\\noffice on Monday, March 5th. In his cabinet were John M. Clayton, of Dela-\\nware; Wm. M. Meredith, of Pennsylvania; George W. Crawford, of Georgia;\\nWm. B. Preston, of Virginia; Thos. Ewing, of Ohio; Jacob Callaman, of Ver-\\nmont and Reverdy Johnson, of Maryland. On July 4, 1850, President Taylor\\nattended a ceremony at the Washington monument and became overheated,\\nwhich resulted in his death on the night of July 9, 1850. His oldest daughter,\\nSarah, became the wife of Jefferson Davis.\\nMILLARD FILLMORE, the Thirteenth President, as Vice-President,\\nupon the death of General Taylor, was sworn into office. He was born on a farm\\nat Locke, N. Y., on January 7, 1800,\u00e2\u0080\u0094 came from an ancestry of pioneers, and\\nwas early placed to learn the business of wool carding, but this did not suit his\\ntaste, and, having a fair education, he became a teacher, a surveyor, and finally\\na lawyer, and was admitted to the bar in the spring of 1823, He married Abigail\\nPowers, a clergyman s daughter, in 1826. He was elected as an Anti-Mason to\\nthe general assembly in the fall of 1828, and in 1832 to congress, re-elected in\\n1836, and served in the XXVth, XXVIth and XXVIIth congress. He was nom-\\ninated by the Whigs for governor, but was defeated by Silas Wright, a Demo-\\ncrat. In 1847 was elected state comptroller, but resigned to run for Vice-Presi-\\ndent with General Taylor. He took the oath of office on July 10, 1850, and his\\ncabinet remained as originally constituted, with the exception of secretary of\\nstate; Mr. Clayton resigned and Daniel Webster was appointed in his stead.\\nDuring this administration cheap postage was secured and Japan opened to\\nAmerica and the rest of the world by the Perry expedition. The Republican\\nparty was formed, the fugitive slave law passed, and the country was honored by\\nthe visit of General Kossuth and family, who were everywhere received with very\\nmarked distinction. Mr. Fillmore s wife died in 1853, and in 1855 he visited\\nEurope, where he was received as became one who had so honored the high office\\nof President of this great republic. In 1856 Mr. Fillmore accepted the Presiden-\\ntial nomination the second time from the hands of the American party, but\\nreceived only the vote of Maryland. He was a model citizen and a wise and\\nChristian statesman. He died at Buffalo, N. Y., on March 7, 1874.\\nFRANKLIN PIERCE, the Fourteenth President, was born in Hills-\\nborough, N. H., on November 23, 1804. At the early age of 16 he entered Bow-\\ndoin College and graduated in 1824. Law was his chosen profession. He was\\nadmitted to the bar in 1827, and was soon elected to the legislature, where he\\nremained for four years, a part of which time he was speaker. He was elected\\nto Congress in 1833, and being considered a rising man, was placed on important", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0018.jp2"}, "19": {"fulltext": "committees. Here he was associated with such eminent men as Clay, Calhoun,\\nWebster and Buchanan. He retired from the senate in 1842, settled in Concord\\nand resumed the practice of law. In 1844 he declined the senatorship and also\\nthe Democratic nomination for governor (an object lesson for the present\\nday.) At the outbreak of the Mexican war he enlisted as a private and was soon\\nmade colonel of the 9th regiment, and was made brigadier general in March,\\n1847. His service was a conspicuous one, he was once wounded, and remained\\nin Mexico until the elose of the war. He received the nomination of his party\\nand was elected President, and with William R. King, of Alabama, as Vice-Pres-\\nident, was inaugurated on March 4, 1853. In his cabinet were William L. Marcy,\\nof New York; James Guthrie, of Kentucky; Robert McClelland, of Michigan;\\nJ. C. Dobbin, of North Carolina Jefferson Davis, of Mississippi James Camp-\\nbell, of Pennsylvania, and Caleb Cushing. Mr. Pierce died at Concord, N. H.,\\non October 8, 1869.\\nJAMES BUCHANAN, the Fifteenth President, was born in Mercers-\\nburg, Pa., on April 23, 1791. His parents were Scotch-Irish,\u00e2\u0080\u0094 his father having\\nbeen born in Donegal in 1761. There was a large family of eleven children, and\\nJames was the second. The father was well-to-do, and the children were edu-\\ncated. The future President graduated from college, read law and was admitted\\nto the bar. He became a member of the legislature in 1814, was elected to the\\nXVIIfch Congress at the age of 29 years, and was sent by President Jackson as\\nminister to Russia in 1831 was senator from Pennsylvania in 1834, secretary of\\nstate under Mr. Polk in 1845, and was a candidate for the Presidency in 1852.\\nMr. Pierce was elected, however, and sent his competitor, Mr. Buchanan, as\\nminister to St. James, where he remained until early in 1856.\\nMr. Buchanan was elected President, with John C. Breckenridge, of Ken-\\ntucky, as Vice-President, and inaugurated on March 4, 1857. He being a bach-\\nelor, the White House was presided over by Miss Harriet Lane, his niece, who,\\nupon the election of her uncle to the presidency, became the first lady of the\\nrepublic. This administration was marked with the most important event in the\\nNation s history, a plot by prominent statesmen, senators and cabinet secretaries,\\nto disrupt the Union, the suppressing of which cost four years of civil war, the\\nloss of hundreds of thousands of lives and the expenditure of billions of money.\\nThe members of the cabinet were Lewis Cass, of Michigan, secretary of state;\\nHowell Cobb, of Georgia, secretary of the treasury; John B. Floyd, of Virginia,\\nsecretary of war; Isaac Toucey, of Connecticut, secretary of navy; Jacob Thomp-\\nson, of Mississippi, secretary of interior; Aaron Vail Brown, of Tennessee, post-\\nmaster-general; Jere S. Black, of Pennsylvania, attorney general. Mr. Buchanan\\nretired from Washington the eve of this cruel war, for which he was held respon-\\nsible, and died at Lancaster, Pa., June 1, 1868.\\nABRAHAM LINCOLN, the Sixteenth President, was born in Hardin\\ncounty, Ky., on Feb. 12, 1809. He was veritably a boy of the frontier and it be-\\ning a long way to the deestrick school, his education was limited, so far as col-\\nleges were concerned. The Lincoln family moved to Indiana in 1816, and his\\nmother, who was Nancy Hanks, died in 1818. His step-mother was a woman of\\nquite considerable learning, and Abraham, stimulated by her kind endeavors,\\nlaid the foundation for an education that placed him among the foremost law-", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0019.jp2"}, "20": {"fulltext": "yers and debaters in the world. He was a flat-boat man and made trips to New\\nOrleans, some to profit and some to loss. Another move was made, and the fu-\\nture President became a son of Illinois. He took an active part in politics, and\\nwas a soldier as well and served in the Black Hawk war, was postmaster at one\\ntime and a member of the state legislature. He married Mary Todd, of Ken-\\ntucky, in 1840, and was elected to congress in 1846, where he met such notable\\nmen as John Quincy Adams, Robert C. Winthrop, Alexander H. Stephens, Robt.\\nToombs, Andrew Johnson, Daniel Webster, Lewis Cass, John C. Calhoun, Jeffer-\\nson Davis and Stephen A. Douglas. He opposed the war with Mexico, but, when\\nthe die was cast, he voted to sustain the men who fought in it. In 1854, he met\\nin debate, the Little Giant in Springfield and opposed the repeal of the Mis-\\nsouri Compromise which Douglas advocated. This debate made him equally\\nfamous with the champion of the measure and paved the way to the presidency.\\nHe was nominated to this high office amid the rumblings of civil war, and was\\nelected and inaugurated with the clouds of secession hanging thick about him.\\nHe lived to carry on the greatest civil war in all the annals of history. Abraham\\nLincoln the farmer, the rail splitter, the soldier, the statesman, the patriot, th e\\npresident and the martyr, dead and made glorious and immortal by the assassin s\\nsteel, lives in the hearts of his countrymen. He, with Hannibal Hamlin of Maine,\\nas Vice-President, was inaugurated on March 4,1861. His cabinet was composed\\nof William H. Seward, Salmon P. Chase, Simeon Cameron, Edwin M. Stanton,\\nwho became the great war secretary, Gideon Wells, Caleb B. Smith, Edward\\nBates and Montgomery Blair. For the second term Mr. Lincoln was accom-\\npanied in the race by Andrew Johnson of Tennessee, Ex-Gov. Denison ot\\nOhio, Wm. Pitt Fessenden of Maine and Hugh McCulloch were members of the\\nsecond cabinet. The Nation and the world were shocked by the announcement\\nof Mr. Lincoln s assassination which occurred in Washington on the evening of\\nApril 14, 1865. He died in the City of Washington, at 22 minutes past 7 o clock,\\non the morning of April 15, 1865.\\nANDREW JOHNSON, the Seventeenth President, was born in Raleigh,\\nN. C, on December 29, 1808. He had no school advantages whatever, and was\\nearly apprenticed to learn the tailor trade, which he did. But he desired an edu-\\ncation\\nAnd while he was handling the goose,\\nWas storing away knowledge for future use.\\nHis wife, Eliza McCardle, helped him intellectually, and he read many\\nauthors, mastered difficult problems, and became a linguist. His political\\nstar was in the ascendency, and he became an alderman, mayor, and a member of\\nthe legislature. He was elected to congress in 1843, governor in 1853 for two\\nterms, and to the United States senate in 1857, where he remained until 1862,\\nwhen he was appointed by President Lincoln as military- governor of Tennessee,\\nWith the rank of brigadier-general. He was not an advocate of slave extension,\\nand denounced the John Brown raid in 1859; was glad of Lincoln s election, was\\nopposed to secession, and claimed that the war had been thrust on the North.\\nHe was denounced, burned in effigy, and threatened with lynching, all of which\\ndid not disturb him in the least. He was the owner of slaves, but they were con-\\nfiscated. He was elected Vice-President, and upon being notified of Mr. Lin-\\ncoln s death, took the oath of office as President. He was inducted into office by", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0020.jp2"}, "21": {"fulltext": "Chief Justice Chase without any public demonstration, and his first cabinet meet-\\ning was held in the treasury building on the day of Lincoln s death. He invited\\nthe members of the cabinet to remain. His administration was an eventful one.\\nThe war closed, the civil rights bill passed, reconstruction was put on foot, the\\nFrench withdrew from Mexico, Alaska was purchased, and the President himself\\nwas arraigned for impeachment, and in the trial, which laited from March 23d to\\nMay 26th, he was acquitted.\\nMr. Johnson died on July 3, 1875.\\nULYSSES S. GRANT, the Eighteenth President, was born at Mount\\nPleasant, Ohio, on April 27, 1822. He was the eldest of six children; lived on a\\nfarm, and got a common school education, and in 1839 went to West Point, where\\nhe did not particularly distinguish himself for brilliancy of intellect. He was\\ncalled Uncle Sam Grant, and United States Grant, but later in life\\nUnconditional Surrender Grant. He graduated from West Point in 1843,\\nwas commissioned as second-lieutenant in 1845, on the eve of the Mexican war,\\nthrough which he served, and for gallantry was promoted to captain. He\\nresigned in 1854 and retired to a small farm near St. Louis, where he sought to\\ngain a livelihood, but it was not to his taste. He went to Galena, and was there\\nwhen the war broke out that, before its close, made him the most, famous general\\nin history. General Grant was inaugurated as President and Schuyler Colfax as\\nVice-President on March 4, 1869, and again with Henry Wilson as Vice-President on\\nMarch 4, 1873. There were many changes in President Grant s cabinet during hifc\\ntwo terms, and we find the following Secretaries of state, Elihu B. Washburne,\\nHamilton Fish; of the treasury, Alexander T. Stewart (not confirmed), George S.\\nBoutwell, William S. Richardson, Benjamin H. Bristow and Lot M. Morrill;\\nsecretaries of war, General John M. Schofield, U. S. Army; General John A.\\nRawlins, W. W. Belknap, Alonzo Taft, J. Donald Cameron; for the navy, Adoli\\nE. Borie and George M. Robeson; postmaster-generals, John A. J. Cress well,\\nMarshall Jewell and James A. Tyner; attorney-generals, Ebenezer R. Hoar,\\nAmos T. Ackerman, George H. Williams, Edwards Pierrepont and Alonzo Taft;\\nsecretaries of interior, Jacob D. Oox, Columbus Delano and Zachariah Chandler.\\nAt the end of his second term President Grant made a tour of the world, and\\nsecured more honors from the rulers and nobility of Europe and Asia than any\\nother man in history. His sickness, suffering and heroism in his last days were\\nmost pathetic, and so long as history is written and the oenturies roll round, and\\npeople moulder into dust, so long will the name of Grant be enshrined in the\\nhearts of his countrymen.\\nHe died at Mount McGregor, New York, on July 23, 1885.\\nRUTHERFORD B. HAYES, the Nineteenth President, was born in\\nDelaware, Ohio, on October 4, 1822. He received a good education, and by pro-\\nfession was a lawyer. At the outbreak of the war he enlisted and was commis-\\nsioned as major of the 23d Ohio, of which W. S. Rosecrans was colonel. He was\\nbrave, and at Cedar Creek had a horse shot under him. General Sheridan said\\nto him You will be a brigadier general from this time. And so he was, and\\nwas breveted major general on March 13, 1865. His war record ended with the\\nmemorable Shenandoah Valley campaign. He was inaugurated as President,\\nwith William A. Wheeler as Vice-President, on March 4, 1877. In his cabinet", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0021.jp2"}, "22": {"fulltext": "were William M. Evarts, John Sherman. Carl Schurz, David M. Key, George W\\nMcCreary, R. W. Thompson and General Charles Devens.\\nMr. Hayes died on January 17, 1S93.\\nJAMES A. GARFIELD, the Twentieth President, was born at Bedford,\\nOhio, on November 19, 1831. He, too, was a poor farm boy and canal-boat man,\\nwho worked his way from the tow path to the White House. He got an\\neducation by great exertion, and became a school teacher and president of Will,\\niams College. He was a lawyer by profession and dabbled in politics. His first\\npolitical speech was in support of the nomination of John C. Freemont for the\\npresidency. He was elected to the state senate in 1859. In the war he\\nwas colonel of the 42d Ohio, became brigadier general and joined General Grant\\nat Shiloh. He was also chief of staff to General Rosecrans, and gave gallant\\nservice at Chickamauga under Thomas, but resigned December 5, 1863, and took\\nhis seat in the United States senate, to which he had been elected.\\nHe was elected President and Chester A. Arthur, of New York, Vice-Presi-\\ndent, and inaugurated on March 4, 1881. His cabinet was composed of James G.\\nBlaine, William Windom, Robert T. Lincoln, William H. Hunt, Samuel J. Kirk-\\nwood, Thomas L. James and Wayne McVeigh. Mr. Garfield fell, mortally\\nwounded, by the hand of the assassin, on the morning of July 2, 1881, and\\nlingered for months, when death came to his release at Elberon, near Long\\nBranch. He died on September 19, 1881.\\nCHESTER A. ARTHUR, the Twenty First President, was born at\\nFrankfort, Vt. on October 5, 1832. He was in early life a teacher and finally\\nselected law as his profession, and was a man of fine attainments. His first\\nschooling was obtained at Union College, N. Y., and, in 1851, he was principal\\nof the academy at North Pownal, Vt. Subsequently he was made engineer in\\nchief of the staff of Governor Morgan in 1860, and quartermaster-general of New\\nYork, in which capacity fell to him the task of subsisting, quartering, uniform-\\ning, equipping and arming New York s quota of soldiers for the Union Army.\\nIn February, 1862, he was appointed inspector general for New York, and in\\nMay went to the front and thoroughly inspected all the State troops; but the\\nState became Democratic in 1863, and General Arthur was superceded or rather\\nresigned, and returning home resumed the practice of law. In 1871, President\\nGrant appointed him collector of the port of New York, and reappointed him in\\n1875. He took the oath of office at once upon the death of President Garfield and\\nfilled out the unexpired term. General Arthur died in New York, November\\n18, 1886.\\nGROVER CLEVELAND, the Twenty-Second President, was born at\\nCaldwell, N. J., on March 18. 1837. His ancestry was English and most excel-\\nlent stock. In early life he was a clerk and a teacher, as well as assistant in the\\nNew York Institute for the Blind. He studied law and was admitted to the\\nbar in 1859. He entered the political arena and was appointed assistant district\\nattorney for New York, January, 1863. He was the only support of his mother\\nand sisters, or he would have been in the army; but the family was represented\\nby his two brothers who enlisted. He was a singularly successful man in\\npolitics, for the political wave tossed him to the mayoralty chair of Buffalo, and", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0022.jp2"}, "23": {"fulltext": "again it rolled and he found the gubernatorial seat, and yet again the great\\npolitical sea carried him on the crest of the wave to the White House, where he\\nremained for four years, and then retired for a season to make way for a new\\ntenant from Indianapolis. In 1893 he returned to Washington as President for a\\nsecond term, and retired hale and hearty, and the century is not closed yet.\\nGrover Cleveland and Thomas A. Hendricks, of Indiana, were inaugurated\\nMarch 4, 1885, and Grover Cleveland and Adlai Stevenson, of Illinois, were\\ninaugurated in 1893. President Cleveland was married in the White House on\\nJune 2. 1886, to Frances Folsom. and has a family of three girls and one boy as\\na result of the union.\\nHis first cabinet was Thos. F. Bayard of Delaware, secretary of state;\\nDaniel Manning, New York, secretary of treasury; Wm, C. Endicott, of Massa-\\nchusetts, secretary of war; Wm. C. Whitney, of New York, secretary of navy;\\nT. Q. C. Lamar, of Mississippi, secretary of interior; William F. Vilas, of Wis-\\nconsin, attorney-general; A. H. Garland, of Arkansas, postmaster-general.\\nThe second cabinet was Walter Q. Gresham, secretary of state; John G.\\nCarlisle, secretary of treasury; W. S. Bissell, postmaster-general; Daniel 8.\\nLamont secretary of war; Hilary A. Herbert, secretary of navy; Richard Olney,\\nattorney-general; Hoke Smith, of Georgia, and J. Sterling Morton.\\nBENJAMIN HARRISON, the Twenty-Third President, was bom in\\nNorth Bend Ohio, on August 20 1833. His father, John Scott Harrison, was\\nthe third son of General William Henry Harrison, who was the ninth President\\nof the United States, and the youngest son of Benjamin Harrison, one of the\\nsigners of the Declaration of Independence, from Virginia.\\nThe subject of this sketch gained a university education, studied law, and\\nwas admitted to the bar in 1854. Indianapolis has been his home since that\\ntime, and he has steadily advanced from crier in the federal court at $2.50 per\\nday. to become one of the most distinguished jurists and expounders of law in\\nAmerica. In the civil war he was among the first to enroll himself, and after\\nassisting in raising the 70th Indiana regiment, was commissioned by Governor\\nMorton as a second lieutenant, and took the field where he displayed such energy\\nin drilling his men, such gallantry and skill in handling them that he soon\\nbecame its colonel, and was placed in command of a brigade. He took a promi-\\nnent part in the campaigns of Fighting Joe Hooker, and under General\\nSherman was among the very first in the storming column at Resaca, Ga., and\\nat Atlanta bore a conspicuous part. After Sherman s march to the sea and the\\nsurrender of General Johnson at the close of the war, General Harrison went to\\nWashington and took a part in the grandest reviews of veterans that this world\\nhas ever seen.\\nHe was elected President and with Governor Levi P. Morton, of New York,\\nas Vice-President, was inaugurated at Washington, on March 4, 1889. His\\ncabinet was as follows: James G. Blaine, William Windom, Redfield Proctor,\\nBenjamin F. Tracey, John Wanamaker. John W. Noble, W. H. H. Miller and\\nJeremiah Rusk.\\nDeath is no respecter of persons or places, and Mrs. Harrison, the first lady\\nof the land, the President s wife, died at the White House on October 25, 1892.\\nUpon the expiration of his term as President, General Harrison retired to his\\nhome in Indianapolis, Ind., and resumed his law practice. He is married for the", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0023.jp2"}, "24": {"fulltext": "second time, is hale and hearty, and we hope will live long to advise and give the\\nbenefit of his experience for the betterment of our common country.\\nWILLIAM M KINLEY, the Twenty-fourth President, was born in Niles,\\nOhio, on February 26, 1844. He attended the public schools until the breaking\\nout of the war in 1861, when he enlisted as a private in the 23d Ohio Volunteers,\\nand served with distinction until the close of the war, when he was mustered out\\nas major. After returning home he studied law, and was in receipt of a large\\nand lucrative practice at the time of his election Politics claimed his attention,\\nand he was elected to Congress, and served in the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth,\\nForty seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth and Fiftieth congresses, and was the\\nauthor of the celebrated McKinley bill that has made his name a household word\\nin all the civilized world.\\nMajor McKinley was elected President, and was inaugurated, with Garrett\\nA. Hobart, of New Jersey, as Vice-President, on March 4, 1897. The members\\nof his cabinet are as follows John Sherman, secretary of state Russell A.\\nAlger, secretary of war Cornelius N. Bliss, secretary of the interior Joseph\\nMcKenna, attorney general John D. Long, secretary of the navy Lyman J.\\nGage, secretary of the treasury James Wilson, secretary of agriculture James\\nA. Gary, postmaster-general. Attorney-general McKenna was promoted to a\\njustice of the Supreme Court. President McKinley, the first man in the whole\\nworld, will not disappoint the Nation, and it is to be hoped that jingoes and hot-\\nheaded political demagogues will enlist for the war they want him to declare and\\nget out of the way.\\nNo President since Abraham Lincoln s time has had so grave a question to\\nsettle as has President McKinley. The irresponsibles propose measures which\\nare seconded by a lot of cheap office-seeking politicians, who think they elected\\nthe President, and who know more (?)than he dares to claim. This Cuban ques-\\ntion was the president s inheritance; and, having fallen heir to it, he will, with\\nthe assistance of his coadjutors in office Alger of the Army, Long of the Navy,\\nand Gage of the Treasury, to furnish the sinews, hold the dogs of war in check\\nuntil the propitious moment arrives, and then the haughty Dons will release their\\nhold and Cuba will be free.\\nIt is a serious thing to involve a nation in war, and none know it better than\\ndo those who have followed our ship of state through four years of strife. The\\nPresident himself served more than his full term, and he and General Alger, his\\nwar secretary, with an experience of four years and sixty odd battles, will\\nadvocate peace if it can be honorably done. No fault-finding from soreheads,\\npartisans and jingoes at home, nor howls and threats from nations abroad, will\\nchange the minds of the President and his cabinet, who hold the key to the situa-\\ntion. But if war it must be, let it be a war so swift and so terrible, that future\\ngenerations will pause and pray, and plan and legislate for a general disarma-\\nment of nations, and an international congress to arbitrate and settle great and\\ngrave questions peacefully, as Christian nations should.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0024.jp2"}, "25": {"fulltext": "My son, if sinners entice thee,\\nconsent thou not.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 1-10.\\n1800\\nWisdom is better than rubies.\\n\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 8-11.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust....\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS M T\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nW\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nT F S\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nHISTORICAL EYENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nClosing year of the Eighteenth Century.\\nGeorge Washington died at Mount Vernon on Sunday, December 14, 1799.\\nThe Territories of Mississippi and Indiana organized.\\nWashington, D. C, selected as the permanent seat of Government.\\nWilliam Cowper, the poet, died April 25\\nNapoleon crosses the Alps. Battle of Marengo fought.\\nSecond United States Census taken showing 5,308 483 population.\\nUnited States Bank established, with a capital of $10,000,000.\\nTotal revenue of the Government for present year, $12,945,000.\\nVon Moltke born on Sunday, October 26.\\nAttempts to burn anthracite coal declared a failure, called black rocks.\\nTreaty of peace between the United States and France signed September 30.\\nDr. Benjamin Waterhouse, of Massachusetts, first introduces vaccination into\\nthe United States\\nGeorge Washington died at Mount Vernon, Va., on Sunday, 14th of Decem-\\nber, 1799, at tri e age of sixty-eight years. The whole people were recommended\\nto wear crape on the left arm for thirty days. First in war, first in peace and\\nfirst in the hearts of his country men.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0025.jp2"}, "26": {"fulltext": "Honesty is prompt in its de-\\ncision.\\n1801\\nTJie mightier the man\\nmightier the deed.\\nthe\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nM\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nW\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\nq 7\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nOpening year of the nineteenth century.\\nThomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr were elected President and Vice-President by\\nthe House of Representatives.\\nOn January i, the union of Great Britain and Ireland was consummated.\\nOn March 23. Paul I, of Russia, was murdered.\\nAlexander I was made Czar of Russia.\\nTerritory of the United States at this time was 820,680 square miles.\\nThe Habeas Corpus Act was suspended in England.\\nSteam navigation was made a success in Scotland.\\nAlien and sedition laws of the United States repealed, and excise tax on whisky\\nabolished.\\nAt this time there were about 200 newspapers published in the United States.\\nWilliam H. Seward born May 16.\\nThe system of internal duties was abolished.\\nA star for every state and a state for every star. Robert C. Winthrop\\nWar between the United States and Tripoli, one of the piratical Barbary powers.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0026.jp2"}, "27": {"fulltext": "Honor the defenders of the ^j v Gold in all ages has been the\\nRepublic, who now stand in the 1 pL g W curse of mankind it fetters the\\ndeepening twilight. M.VJ\\\\J sum soul.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nOhio, the seventeenth State, admitted into the Union.\\nSpain ceded the territory of Louisiana to France, and New Orleans was closed\\nagainst American commerce, causing great excitement in the west.\\nGas-lights were first displayed in the streets of Birmingham, England.\\nMerino sheep first imported into the United States.\\nHerschel makes important astronomical discoveries.\\nOn May 24, a bill to abolish bull fighting in England was rejected by the House\\nof Commons.\\nThe great West India Docks in London were opened August 27.\\nDuring this year life boats were first invented in England.\\nDr. Jenner, who discovered vaccination, was voted \u00c2\u00a310,000 by the British Par-\\nliament.\\nIs life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and\\nslavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take, but\\nas for me, give me liberty, or give me death. Patrick Henry, March, 1775.\\nJ", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0027.jp2"}, "28": {"fulltext": "Of all bad things by which man-\\nhind are cursed,\\n1803\\nTliere own bad tempers surely\\nare the worst. Cumberland.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\nCl|\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\n2 October.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nM\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nW T F\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n*1\\n8\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nS\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nOn March 3, Congress authorized the President to call out 80,000 volunteers if\\nnecessary, to open New Orleans to American commerce.\\nOn May 2, France sold the territory of Louisiana to the United States for $15,-\\n000 000, thus adding 930,928 square miles to the public domain.\\nMay 18, war declared between France and England.\\nJuly 23, Robert Emmett instigates an insurrection in Dublin.\\nAugust 2, Napoleon Bonaparte made First Counsel for life.\\nNumber of Postoffices in the United States at this time, 1,258.\\nDr. Gall, of Germany, first announces the science of Phrenology.\\nAlexander Dumas born.\\nRalph Waldo Emerson born.\\nYesterday the greatest question was decided which ever was debated in\\nAmerica; and a greater perhaps never was. nor will be, decided among men. A\\nresolution was passed without one dissenting Colony, that those United Colonies\\nare, and of right ought to be, free and independent States. John Adams in a\\nletter to Mrs. Adams, July 3, 1776.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0028.jp2"}, "29": {"fulltext": "There is but one good throw 4 C* f\\\\ A Gaming finds a man a ctdly.\\nupon the dice, which ts, to throw 1 *L mm A and leaves him a knave. Thoml\\nthem away.\u00e2\u0080\u0094ChatQeld. J| %J \\\\J *-J Hughes.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nJuly\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nApril\\n1\\nft\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n1\\n5\\n6\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\nDecember\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nOn July 12, Aaron Burr killed Alexander Hamilton in a duel at Weehawken.\\nopposite New York.\\nThe British and Foreign Bible Society instituted.\\nAustria was made an empire and Francis II relinquished the title of Emperor of\\nGermany, and assumed that of Emperor of Austria.\\nThe State of New Jersey provided for the gradual Emancipation of Slaves.\\nOn November 19 Napoleon was crowned Emperor of France.\\nDuring this year stereotypes were first used in England.\\nTerrible massacre of the white inhabitants of St. Domingo. March 29.\\nDecatur burned a captured frigate in the harbor of Tripoli to prevent it falling\\ninto the hands of rebels.\\nThe surplus revenue of the United States for the year was $7,300 000.\\nTripoli was bombarded by an American Squadron under Commodore Preble.\\nEllen Marion Kinzie, the first white child born in Chicago, December 20.\\nNathaniel Hawthorn born.\\nJohn Hancock said after signing the Declaration: There, John Bull may read\\nmy name without spectacles.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0029.jp2"}, "30": {"fulltext": "TJiere shall no evil happen to\\nthe just\\n1805\\nThe wicked shall be filled with\\nmischief.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 12-21.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2(\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\n2 August\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nM\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nW\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nT\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nF S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nA general alliance was made at St. Petersburg against France, April 8.\\nSchiller died on Wednesday, May 8.\\nJanuary 30, Mungo Park sailed on his second expedition to Africa.\\nThe Gregorian Calendar restored in France, September 9\\nTreaty of Peace signed June 3, between the United States and Tripoli.\\nNapoleon crowned King of Italy, May 26.\\nBattle of Trafalgar and death of Nelson, October 21.\\nDecember 2, Battle of Austerlitz.\\nThomas Jefferson and George Clinton, President and Vice-President of the\\nUnited States; seventeen States voted; total electoral vote, 176.\\nAn earthquake in Naples destroyed 20,000 lives.\\nThe Territory of Michigan organized.\\nBenjamin Disraeli born.\\nThe increase in American shipping was very large during this year, owing to the\\ncomplications of foreign nations.\\nIn 1805 Michigan became a distinct territorial government of the United States;\\nfrom 1802 until 1805 it was apart of the territory of Indiana. Previous to this\\nit was a part of the Northwest territory.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0030.jp2"}, "31": {"fulltext": "TJie memory of the just is 43 i\\\\ JC The wicked shall be cut off from\\nblessed. J, ^J Vf \\\\J the earth.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 2-22.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n21\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMarch\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nSeptemb r\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nOctober....\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nNovember\\n1\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nDecember\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n13\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n7\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\nSO\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nJanuary 23 William Pitt died.\\nJune 4 Parliament passed resolutions for abolishing the slave trade March 25.\\nRobert Morris, the celebrated financier of the Revolution, died.\\nBattle of Jena Tuesday, October 14.\\nJohn Stewart Mill born.\\nAmerican commerce greatly paralyzed by the issuance of the British Orders\\nin Council and Napoleon s Berlin Decree, which practically closed all\\nEuropean ports against neutral vessels.\\nAaron Burr originated his famous conspiracy to form a Western government.\\nWebster s Dictionary was first published during this year.\\nOn Monday, June 16, a great solar eclipse occurred, afterward referred to as\\nthe dark day.\\nCol. Aaron Burr was detected in a conspiracy to form west of the Alleghanies\\nan independent empire of which he was to be the ruler and New Orleans\\nthe capital. He was arrested, brought to trial in 1807 and acquited.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0031.jp2"}, "32": {"fulltext": "Jjet not mercy and truth for- 4 ^x Ccm mem fafce /ire in his\\nsake thee; write them upon the 5 5Sk 1 1 V bosom and his clothes not be\\ntable of thine heart\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 3-3. 1 C^ V-F burned?\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 6-27.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nAugust\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nNovember\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n31\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nLongfellow and Whittier both born during this year.\\nOn June 22 the United States frigate Chesapeake was fired on by the British\\nfrigate Leopard causing great excitement and indignation throughout the\\ncountry.\\nAaron Burr tried for treason and acquitted.\\nThe United States Government lays an embargo on French and English vessels.\\nThe Fourdinier paper-making machine patented in England.\\nDuring this year the Missouri River was explored to its head.\\nRobert Fulton makes the initial trip of his steam vessel Claremont on the\\nHudson River, the same proving a signal success.\\nLouis Agassiz born.\\nOn the nth of November the British government issued the celebrated orders\\nin council prohibiting all trade with France and her allies, except such\\ntrade as should be carried on directly from the ports of England or her con-\\nfederates.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0032.jp2"}, "33": {"fulltext": "May future generations emulate\\nthe unselfish devotion of even the\\nlowliest of our Nation s heroes.\\n1808\\nThe friendship of the world is a\\nmere outward show tis like the\\nharlot s tears.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Savage.\\nJanuary\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMay.\\nJune\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\n1\\nS\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptenib r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n*8\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nM\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nW T F\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n**8\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EYENTS OF THE TEAR.\\nOn March 30th, in view of possibility of war with England or France, congress\\nvotes to increase the regular army to 6,000 men; and on April 12th empowers\\nthe President to call for 100,000 six months volunteers.\\nSalmon P. Chase born.\\nCable railways first patented in England by William Chapman.\\nNapoleon Bonaparte prohibits all commerce with Great Britain.\\nSlave trade abolished by the United States.\\nA society organized in London for Christianizing Jews.\\nGeneral La Fayette refuses to become an adherent of Napoleon.\\nDecember 29th Andrew Johnson was born.\\nJoseph Bonapart made king of Spain.\\nThe right of search refused by the United States.\\nDuring this year many indignities were perpetrated upon American seamen.\\nA man used to vicissitudes is not easily dejected Samuel Johnson.\\nThe aggregate bonded indebtedness of the civilized nations in 1894 was\\n$34 446 574.000.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0033.jp2"}, "34": {"fulltext": "Napoleon said: X propose and\\nI dispose. Mis ambitious sun\\nset at Waterloo.\\n1809\\nGeneral Grant said:\\nhave peace, and his\\nloved him.\\nLet tis\\nS\\n1\\nM\\n2\\nT\\n3\\nW\\n4\\nT\\n5\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober....\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nM\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nT\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nW T F\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n*5\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n12\\n19\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nJames Madison and George Clinton inaugurated President and Vice-President of\\nthe United States. Number of states voting, 17; total number of electoral\\nvotes, 176, of which Madison secured 123.\\nBattle of Corunna fought Monday, January 16th, resulting in the defeat of the\\nFrench and death of Sir John Moore.\\nMonday, February 20th, the French capture Saragossa.\\nNapoleon entered Vienna May 13.\\nDrury Lane theater, London, burned Monday, July 24th.\\nThe British government send secret emissaries and endeavor to divide the Ameri-\\ncan union.\\nThomas Payne, and Haydn, the musical composer, both died during this year.\\nHonorable William E. Gladstone born.\\nTremendous eruption of Mount Etna.\\nCaesar had his Brutus; Charles the First his Cromwell; and George the Third\\nTreason cried the speaker] may profit by {their example. If this be trea-\\nson make the most of it. Patrick Henry in Virginia Convention, i?6j.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0034.jp2"}, "35": {"fulltext": "The hours are too precious to be\\nspent in reading idle tales.\\n1810\\nIf you cannot speaTc well of a\\nperson it were better to keep silent\\nJanuary...\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril.\\nMay\\nJune\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\nSeptenuVr\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nM\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nW T F S\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nPresident Madison takes formal possession of West Florida under the Louisiana\\nPurchase, notwithstanding the protests of England.\\nThird census of the United States taken, showing 7,239.881 population.\\nFifteen million dollars worth of cotton exported from the United States during\\nthis year.\\nEmpress Josephine divorced from Napoleon January 16. April 1 Napoleon\\nmarries Archduchess Maria Louisa.\\nAmerican Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions organized.\\nNovember 2 George III, of England, again becomes insane.\\nHolland becomes united to France.\\nOn December 2 the Isle of France was captured by England.\\nAt this time there were 364 newspapers published in the United States, twenty\\nfive of them being dailies.\\nNapoleon issued a decree October 19 to destroy all British merchandise.\\nMarch 10 Napoleon issued a decree by which all American vessels and cargoes\\narriving in any ports of France were ordered to be seized and condemned.\\nIn November it was revoked", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0035.jp2"}, "36": {"fulltext": "lie that hath a Vountiful eye\\nshall be blessed\\n1811\\nFor he giveth his bread to the\\npoor.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 22-9.\\nJanuary-\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril.\\nMay\\nJune\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS M\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n*?|2\\n9\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nW\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nF S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nOn January 3 Congress of the United States authorized the occupation of East\\nFlorida.\\nThe charter of the first bank of the United States having expired, a renewal was\\nrefused by the casting vote of Vice-President Clinton.\\nMay 16, the American frigate President disabled the British sloop of war,\\nLittle Belt, off Cape Charles.\\nOn Tuesday, November 5, Gen. Harrison defeated the Indians under Tecumseh\\nat Tippecanoe.\\nDuring this year the first steamboat ran on the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers.\\nAt this time British vessels used the American flag to avoid French privateers.\\nThe Prince of Wales was appointed Regent on January 10.\\nAstoria founded by John Jacob Astor.\\nPreparations made for war with England $11,000,000 borrowed and duties on\\nimports doubled.\\nThe nations of the world spend annually to keep in preparation to destroy one\\nanother $1,687,718,473.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0036.jp2"}, "37": {"fulltext": "Evil is limited. One cannot\\nform a scheme for universal\\nevil.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Bailey.\\n1812\\nThe body sins not, tis the will\\nTliat makes the action, good or ill.\\n\u00e2\u0080\u0094Herrick.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nM T W\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nT\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\nli\\nL 6\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR\\nOn Thursday, June 18, the United States declared war against Great Britain.\\nAugust 16, Gen. Hull surrendered his army and the city of Detroit to the British\\nHe was tried for treason and cowardice and his name was stricken from the\\narmy.\\nJohn C. Fremont born at Savannah, Ga., January 21.\\nLouisiana was admitted into the Union.\\nTerrible earthquake in Caraccas with 12,000 lives lost, March 26.\\nRussia and Sweden declare war against France.\\nBonaparte marched against Russia May 9 He entered Moscow September 14,\\nevacuated it October 22, left his army and reached Paris at midnight, Friday,\\nDecember 18.\\nDuring this year the American Navy was very successful and was estimated to\\nhave captured more than 250 British vessels and 3,000 prisoners.\\nGov. DeWitt Clinton of New York first projects the Erie Canal.\\nHe that does good to another does good also to himself, not only in the conse-\\nquence, but in the very act; for the consciousness of well-doing is in itself\\nample reward. Seneca.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0037.jp2"}, "38": {"fulltext": "There s many an empty cradle, J^ *5 Tliere s many a lonesome bosom.\\nThere s many an empty bed, fi (3 JL %J Whose joy and light have fled.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n3\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n5\\n6\\nSeptemb r\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2(\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nOn January 23, terrible massacre of American troops at Frenchtown by Indian\\nallies of the British.\\nJames Madison (second term) and Elbridge Gerry, President and Vice-President\\nNumber of States voting, eighteen; total electoral vote, 218; electoral votes\\ncast for successful candidate, 128.\\nMarch 8, Russia offers to mediate between the United States and Great Britain.\\nCommodore Perry achieved a notable victory over the British fleet on Lake Erie,\\nSeptember 10.\\nA loan of $16,000,000 was authorized by the United States Government to prose\\ncute the war, and $5,000,000 in treasury notes to be issued. Tohn Jacob\\nAstor and Stephen Girrard negotiated the principal part of this loan.\\nThe American Tract Society was founded during this year.\\nOctober 13, Battle of Leipsic between the allied forces of Napoleon Bonaparte,\\nin which Bonaparte lost 80.000 men. and 180 pieces of cannon.\\n$7,5( 0,000 of the United States loan taken at 88 cents on the dollar.\\nMillions for defense, but not one cent for tribute. C. C Pinckney.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0038.jp2"}, "39": {"fulltext": "If any man tears down the 4 C\\\\ -4 A J t man sin can he not re\\nstars and stripes, shout him on 1 J^C I pent? If he repents can he be\\nthe spot.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Dix. M. \\\\Jr M. T forgiven?\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n30\\n31\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n26\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nA.pril\\n1\\n2\\nOctober...\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMay\\n1\\nS\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\nNovember\\n6\\n*7\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\nO\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nOn January 14 the union of Norway and Sweden was consummated.\\nWellington took possession of Bordeaux, March 8th. and on the 31st of March\\nthe allied sovereigns enter Paris. April nth, abdication of Napoleon.\\nOn the 24th of August the British forces, under General Ross, entered Washing-\\nton and burned the capitol, its library, all the public offices and numerous\\nprivate dwellings.\\nThe London Times was first printed by steam Monday, November 28th.\\nTreaty of Ghent signed December 24th, establishing peace between the United\\nStates and Great Britain.\\nDuring this year threats of disunion were made by discontented inhabitants of\\nMassachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island.\\nGas first used for lighting the streets of London.\\nThe American Baptist board of foreign missions organized\\nOn the morning of July 3d Generals Scott and Ripley, at the head of 3,000 men,\\ncrossed the Niagara river, surprised and took possession of Fort Erie with-\\nout opposition.\\n1", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0039.jp2"}, "40": {"fulltext": "Liquor selling is the way to\\nruin they who open the gates\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\n1815\\nAs well as those who enter\\ntherein, alike go to destruction.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2(\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a27\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nM\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nT\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n*?I2\\n:9\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nW T F\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nThe power loom first introduced into the United States, and used at Waltham,\\nMass.\\nOn January 8th, General Jackson fought the battle of New Orleans, gaining a\\nbrilliant victory over the British. The news of peace had not been received\\nwhen the battle was fought.\\nApril 6th, a brutal massacre of American prisoners in Dartmoor prison, England.\\nOn June i8th, battle of Waterloo, resulting in the complete overthrow of Na-\\npoleon Bonaparte, Wellington commanding the allied forces.\\nAugust 7th, Napoleon gave himself up to the British and is banished to St.\\nHelena.\\nMarshal Ney shot for treason December 5th.\\nWar declared against Algiers by the United States, which was soon brought to a\\nclose by the brilliant victories of Commodore Decatur.\\nPrince Bismarck of Germany born April 1st\\nWhat pity is it that we can die but once to serve our country.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Addison.\\nConfidence imparts a wonderful inspiration to its possessor. Milton.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0040.jp2"}, "41": {"fulltext": "Party honesty is party expedi-\\nency.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Qrover Cleveland, Sept. 19, 1889.\\n1816\\nOur Federal Union it must b*\\npreserved.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Andrew Jackson, in 1845.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n1\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\nAugust\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n1()\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n31\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n30\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nIndiana admitted into the Union.\\nApril io, the second Ban?k of the United States established with an authorized\\ncapital of \u00c2\u00a335. 000,000, John Jacob Astor and Stephen Girard being the\\nGovernment directors\\nSir Humphrey Davy invented the safety lamp.\\nRichard Brinsley Sheridan the brilliant dramatist, orator and poet. died.\\nSerious financial troubles throughout the United States, especially among manu-\\nfacturers whose business was damaged by English importations. To remedy\\nthis a slightly protective tariff bill was passed, affecting chiefly coarse c t-\\ntons, but it met too much opposition to be of value.\\nDecember 9, the Bank of England resumed specie payments.\\nWe must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately. Benj.\\nFratiklin at the Signing of the Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776.\\nTis our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the\\nforeign world. Washington in his Farewell Address.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0041.jp2"}, "42": {"fulltext": "The memory of the just is\\nblessed\u00e2\u0080\u0094 the name of the wiched\\nshall rot.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 10-7.\\n1817\\nThe wicked flee when no man\\npursuetli; but the righteous a/re\\nbold as a lion.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 28-1.\\nJanuary..\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMay\\nJune.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n*2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust....\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS M T\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nW T F S\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nUnder a resolution introduced in Congress by Daniel Webster, February 20, ihe\\nUnited States Government began specie payments.\\nMississippi admitted into the Union.\\nJames Monroe and Daniel D. Tompkins, President and Vice-President of the\\nUnited States. Number of States voting, 19. Total electoral vote, 221.\\nElectoral vote for successful candidate, 183.\\nFor the first time in the history of the United States a Congressional committee\\nrecommend internal improvements at public expense.\\nThe Seminole War results in the subjugation of the Indians and the conquest of\\nFlorida from the Spaniards.\\nDe Witt Clinton begins operations on his systems of canals.\\nOn February 21 the Habeas Corpus Act was suspended in England.\\nLithographic engraving first used in England.\\nMississippi Territory was divided in 1817 and the western portion admitted into\\nthe Union as the State of Mississippi; it contains 48,000 square miles.\\nI only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country Nathan Hall.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0042.jp2"}, "43": {"fulltext": "He that covereth his sins shall\\nnot prosper; but whoso f orsaketh\\nthem shall have mercy\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 28-13\\n1818\\nWisdom is more precious than\\nrubies} her ways are ways of\\n2)leasantness.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 3.\\nJanuary\\nFebruary.\\nIVIarch\\nApril\\nMay\\nJune\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\n1\\nF\\n4\\nS\\n~3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nO\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nIO\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nO\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nIO\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nO\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n20\\n9\\nIO\\n23\\n30\\nO\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nO\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nM T W\\nO\\n13\\n20\\n*7\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n1\\n19\\n20\\n2\\n9\\n1(\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nO\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n20\\n2\\n9\\nIO\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n10\\n23\\n30\\nT F\\n2\\n9\\ni a\\nL 3\\n30\\nO\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n20\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\nIO\\n23\\n30\\nO\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n20\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n20\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nIllinois is admitted into the Union.\\nThe Seminole and Creek Indians again make war on the United States, but are\\nsignally defeated by General Jackson\\nJune 12, imprisonment for debt abolished in New York.\\nSir John Franklin sets out on his Polar expedition.\\nOn October g the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle was made, under which France was\\nadjudged to pay 265.000,000 francs to the allies.\\nEncke s comet discovered November 26.\\nSir John Ross starts on his first expedition in search of a Northwest passage.\\nIn May an important commercial treaty was made between the United States\\nand Sweden.\\nSignal victory of Gen. Bolivar over Morillo in the battle of Sombrero.\\nBenjamin F. Butler of Massachusetts, born November 5. He served in the\\nU. S. Senate, was Governor of his State, an eminent member of the Bar, and a\\nMajor-General during the war for the preservation of the Union.\\nI was born an American; I will live an American; I shall die an American.\\nWebster, July 17, 1850.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0043.jp2"}, "44": {"fulltext": "If we have nothing else to do\\nThan talk of those who sin,\\n1819\\nf Tis better to commence at home,\\nA.nd from that point begin.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n*8\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n*6\\nM\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nT W T\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nS\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nAlabama admitted into the Union.\\nThe United States purchased Florida from Spain for $5,000,000, and Gen. Jack-\\nson was made the first Governor of the Territory of Florida.\\nThe law of appeal by wager of battle was stricken from the English Statute\\nbooks.\\nCapt. Parry sets out from England May 4, on his second attempt to find the\\nNorthwest passage.\\nSteel engraving was introduced into England by an American inventor.\\nThe territory of Arkansas was formed from that of Missouri.\\nThe steamer Savannah reached England from America July 26, being twenty-\\nsix days making the voyage\\nThe boundary line of Mexico was settled this year between Spain and the United\\nStates.\\nA treaty was made between the United States and Great Britain.\\nJohn Ruskin, the brilliant artist and writer, born February 22.\\nPrince Albert, prince consort to Queen Victoria, born August 26.\\nCast thy bread upon the waters; for thou shalt find it after many days.\\nEccles., ii:l; or Luke, ii:l", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0044.jp2"}, "45": {"fulltext": "He that keepeth company with\\nharlots spendeth his substance.\\n-Prov. XXIX. 3.\\n1820\\nBless them that curse you, and\\npray for them which despite-\\nfully use you.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 St. Luke VI. 28.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust....\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n31\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nW\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nT F S\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19|\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nMaine admitted into the Union\\nGeorge III of England died on January 29, in the eighty-second year of his age\\nand the sixtieth of his reign. He spent, in a melancholy state of blindness,\\ndeafness and insanity, the last ten years of a reign which, up to the present\\ntime, was the longest and most important in the history of England.\\nDecember 22, celebration of the second centennial of the landing of the Pilgrims\\nat Plymouth Rock.\\nFourth census of the United States taken, showing 9,633 822 population\\nThe Missouri Compromise Bill was passed, excluding slavery north of the\\nparallel of 36 30 north latitude.\\nCalifornia was ceded to Russia by Spain.\\nDuring this year the Bible was first printed in Chinese.\\nThe term of doughface originates with John Randolph who applied it to\\nNorthern members of Congress who voted in favor of the Missouri Com-\\npromise.\\nThe Astronom cal Society of London founded.\\nBenjamin West the celebrated American pa nter, died.\\nDaniel Boone, a brave American pioneer, died September 26.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0045.jp2"}, "46": {"fulltext": "Riches take to themselves wings\\nand fly away. A. good name\\nnever.\\n1821\\nOpen thy mouth\u00e2\u0080\u0094 judge right-\\neously plead the cause of the\\npoor.\\nJanuary..\\nFebruary.\\nMarch..\\nApril.\\nMay\\nJune\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\n7 October.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nM\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nW\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nT F\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nS\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nMissouri admitted into the Union.\\nJames Monroe and Daniel D. Tompkins re-elected President and Vice-President\\nof the United States. Number of States voting, 23; total electoral vote, 235,\\nof which the above candidates received 232.\\nOn July 19 George IV was crowned King of England.\\nPeru and Mexico both declare independence\\nOn Saturday, May 5, Napoleon Bonaparte died at St. Helena.\\nAugust 10, Major Andre s remains were removed from New York to be placed in\\nWestminster Abbey.\\nEmanuel, King of Sardinia, abdicates March 13.\\nDecember 20, St. Domingo declares for independence\\nAugust 7, Queen Caroline of England died; at time of funeral procession seri-\\nous riots occurred in London.\\nA people that does not hold in honor its historical great men is like one who\\ndenies his parents. Auerbach.\\nFew men in public affairs act from a mere view of the good of their country,\\nwhatever they may pretend. Franklin.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0046.jp2"}, "47": {"fulltext": "The hand of the diligent mah-\\neth rich.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 10-4.\\n1822\\nThe fear of the Lord is the be-\\ngi tming of wisdom.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 9-10.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\ns l\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\ni\\noj\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n18\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n8\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n8\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n1()\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\no\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n5 July\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS M\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nT\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nW\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nF S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n*6\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nUlysses S. Grant born April 27.\\nSir William Herschell, the eminent astronomer, died in August. He was born\\nNovember 15, 1738.\\nOn the 27th of January Greece declared her independence.\\nTerrible massacre of the Greeks at Scio, April 22. Twenty-five thousand men,\\nwomen and children killed by the Turks, and 30 000 carried into captivity.\\nDestruction of the Turkish Army at Thermopylae by the Greeks, July 8.\\nIndependence of Brazil acknowledged September 7.\\nDuring this year a joint conference was held in London between English and\\nAmerican commissioners relative to suppressing the slave trade, each gov-\\nernment giving the other the right to capture their vessels engaged in it\\nA part of the northern boundary line of the United States settled this year.\\nRosa Bonheur, the famous artist, born at Bordeaux, France, March 22.\\nDuring the year 1822 an alarming system of piracy having grown up in the\\nWest Indies, a small naval force was sent there which captured and\\ndestroyed more than twenty piratical vessels on the coast of Cuba.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0047.jp2"}, "48": {"fulltext": "Seest thoti a man tvise in his ^vif pursueth sinners; but to\\nown conceit? there is more hope 1 3|\u00c2\u00a3 t/te righteous good shall be re-\\nofafool than ofhim.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 26-12. M. \\\\D ^%J paid.-Prov. 13-21.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMarch\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nNovember\\n1\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nJune\\n1\\nV\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nD^H fiithcr\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nNumber of postoffices of the United States, 5,242.\\nThe United States census apportionment fixed at one representative for every\\n40,000 people.\\nDuring this year the announcement of the so-called Monroe Doctrine was\\nmade for the purpose of preventing foreign entanglements and foreign\\ninterference in American affairs.\\nA full territorial government established by Congress over Florida.\\nThe French Army entered Spain and invested Cadiz.\\nBrazil declared to be an independent empire.\\nSouth American republics acknowledged by the United States and by England.\\nThe Thames Tunnel projected by Isambard Brunei.\\nIt is more blessed to give than to receive John xx, jj.\\nOf the whole sum of human life no small part is that which consists of man s\\nrelations to his country, and his feelings concerning it. Gladstone.\\nLet no guilty man escape if it can be avoided. U. S. Grant, relating to the\\nWhisky Ring, July 2Q, i8yj.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0048.jp2"}, "49": {"fulltext": "An unjust man is an abomina-\\ntion to tJiejust;\\n1824\\nthe upright an abomination to\\nthe wicked.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. XXIX. 27.\\nJanuary\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMay\\nJune\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2(\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nM\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nT\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n*7\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nW\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nS\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nLord Byron died April 9th, at the age of thirty-six; was born January 22 1788.\\nOn August 15th Gen. La Fayette visited the United States by invitation of Con-\\ngress, and met with a hearty reception. He was presented by the Govern-\\nment with $200,000 and a township in Florida, as a reward for his eminent\\nservice in the Revolutionary War.\\nThere was great manufacturing prosperity at this time in the United States.\\nA new Tariff Bill was passed chiefly protecting cotton goods.\\nLouis XVIII of France died September 16th, and was succeeded by Charles X.\\nThe first nominating political convention ever held was the State Convention of\\nNew York, when De Witt Clinton was nominated for governor.\\nMacadamized streets first made in London.\\nThe American Sunday School Union was organized.\\nThe Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to animals instituted in England\\nIf I were an American, as I am an Englishman, while a foreign troop was landed\\nin my country I never would lay down my arms never! never! never! Will-\\niam Pitt.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0049.jp2"}, "50": {"fulltext": "Cast your bread on the waters\\nand it shall return to you after\\nmany days,\\n1825\\nThat is, help those who need\\nhelp and receive your reward in\\nwell doing.\\nJanuary\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMay.\\nJune\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n1\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb\\nOctober\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n7\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nM\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n*9\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nW T F\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n8\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nS\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24-\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nJohn Quincy Adams and John C. Calhoun, President and Vice-President of the\\nUnited States by vote of the House of Representatives.\\nOn the 17th of June occurred the fiftieth anniversary of the battle of Bunker Hill\\nOn April 1st work was commenced on the Thames Tunnel\\nThe Erie Canal was completed total length 363 miles.\\nAugust 16th. first voyage was made in a steam vessel from England to India for\\na prize of \u00c2\u00a3\\\\o 000.\\nA council was he d by the Creek Indians, by which their lands in Georgia were\\nceded to the United States, the Indians removing to reservations beyond the\\nMississippi\\nDuring this year there was great speculative excitement in England, and\\nnumerous Bubble Companies were formed.\\nIn the United S ates there was a speculative advance in cotton from twelve to\\nthirty-two cents in a few weeks. It was followed by a decline and disastrous\\nbankruptcies.\\nSmypathy is the golden key that unlocks the hearts of others Samuel Smiles.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0050.jp2"}, "51": {"fulltext": "Take the advise of those who\\nhave gone over the road they\\nknow the hidden rocks.\\n1826\\nAnswer not a fool according to\\nhis folly, lest thou also be like\\nunto him,\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 26-4.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober....\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nM\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n9\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nT W T\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n*8\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n*6\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n\u00c2\u00ab*7\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nJohn Adams and Thomas Jefferson both died on July 4, which was the fiftieth\\nanniversary of American Independence.\\nThe self-acting mule spinner was invented in England by Roberts\\nOn the 24th of February, by a treaty with Burmah, England obtained ,\u00c2\u00a31,000 000\\nand a large tract of country.\\nThe first railroad in the United States built, connecting Quincy, Mass with\\nNeponset.\\nBiela s comet d scovered February 28.\\nGreat anti-Masonic excitement in western New York, some of the New England\\nstates and Pennsylvania. Churches were broken up, political parties dis-\\nrupted, and many went practically mad on the subject of anti-Masonry.\\nOne William Morgan, of Batavia, N. Y., mysteriously disappeared, and\\nMasons were falsely accused of having drowned him in Niagara river.\\nOn Saturday. April 8th, Henry Clay and John Randolph fought a duel near\\nWashington, neither of them, however, being injured. The cause of the\\nmeeting was words which Randolph had made use of when speaking of the\\ncoalition of Mr. Adams and Clay, which he designated as a combination\\nof the Puritan and blackleg.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0051.jp2"}, "52": {"fulltext": "A. man is judged by the com- H ^J **J Whoso walJceth uprightly shall\\npany he keeps* \\\\_J ^m oe saved.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary-\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\nJiilv\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\n7\\n9\\n11\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nApril\\ni\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\nOctober...\\n*7\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\nDecember\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n2 9\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nOn March 25th Capt Parry started on another attempt to reach the north pole,\\nbut returned in six months.\\nOctober 20th the allied fleet destroyed the Turkish-Egyptian fleet at Navarino,\\nevery vessel of the Turkish fleet being either bu-rned, sunk or disabled.\\nGreat Britain. France and Russia guarantee to protect Greece.\\nThe corn bill passed by the English Parliament June 1st.\\nCompletion of the Gloucester and Berkeley Ship Canal. England.\\nContinued bitter agitation of anti-Masons.\\nA tariff bi l was p ssed by the United States Congress during the year, which\\ncreated considerable dissatisfaction by many who considered it too pro-\\ntective.\\nIf it be possible as much as lieth in you, live peaceably with all men. Romans\\nxii, 18.\\nIn speaking of a person s faults,\\nPray do not forget your own;\\nRemember that with homes of glass\\nShould seldom throw a stone.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0052.jp2"}, "53": {"fulltext": "War a quod warfare, holati.j 4 \u00c2\u00a3V Be ye there/ore merciful, as\\nfaith and a good conscience. 1 J^k W \\\\L your Father also is merciful.\\n-1 Tim. I. 18-19. iO^O -Luke VI. 36.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMarch\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nNovember\\n1\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n12\\n7\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n22\\n23\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nDe Witt Clinton died February II.\\nRussia declared war against Turkey.\\nOn July 4 the construction of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was begun.\\nDaniel O Connell was elected to the British House of Commons from Ireland\\nJuly 5\\nThe Mark Lane (London) Corn Exchange was opened June 2\\nOn October 1 Emperor Nicholas, of Russia, defeated the Turks at Varna.\\nMarch 18 Solomon South wick was nominated for governor of New York by the\\nanti-Masons at Batavia; he received only 35 335 votes out of a total of\\n2 76.535 which were cast in the state\\nThe Corporation and Test Act which obliged the partaking of the Loid s Sup\\nper as a qualification for certain offices in England, was repealed during this\\nLet us proportion our alms to our ability, lest we provoke God to proportion His\\nblessings to our alms. Beveridge.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0053.jp2"}, "54": {"fulltext": "Thou shalt not commit adul- f 43 tf\\\\ A cheerful looh makes every\\ntery.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Exodus XX. 14. J| ^3 Jsd Jr dish a feast.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Messinger.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nAugust\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n1 1\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n31\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nSir Humphrey Davy died May 29. He was born December 17, 1778\\nAndrew Jackson and John C. Calhoun elected President and Vice-President of\\nthe United States. Number of states voting, 24; total electoral vote, 261;\\nelectoral vote secured by successful candidates, 178; popular vote, 647 231.\\nThe institution of slavery abolished in Mexico.\\nJohn Jay, an American statesman, died May 17.\\nOmnibuses were first used in England during this year.\\nA Spanish army invades Mexico and is defeated.\\nOn July 26 first passage of the Balkan Mountains was made by the Russian\\narmy\\nSix thousand persons perish by an earthquake in Spain on March 21.\\nSeptember 14, at a conference at Adrianople, peace was declared between Russia\\nand Turkey.\\nDuring this year the Indians of Wisconsin, Georgia and Florida waged a savage\\nwarfare agamst the white inhabitants of those states.\\nThe very essence of free governments consists in considering offices as public\\ntrusts, bestowed for the good of the country and not for the benefit of an\\nindividual or party. -John C. Calhoun.\\n_", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0054.jp2"}, "55": {"fulltext": "Guiltiness will speak though 4^ \\\\9 m\\\\ Life is too short and Eternity\\ntongues were out oftise Shakespeare M. C^ ^-J \\\\-F t\u00c2\u00b0\u00c2\u00b0 long to speculate about it.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n20\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n14\\n15\\nIO\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2S\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\nO\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n31\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nPaper envelopes were first used during this year.\\nOn the 30th of April Turkey acknowledged the independence of Greece.\\nJames G. Blaine born January 31.\\nTreaty made between the United States and Turkey May 7.\\nGeorge IV. of England died June 26.\\nRevolution in France. Charles X dethroned. LaFayette made commander of\\nthe National Guard.\\nOn August 9 Louis Philippe made king of the French.\\nGeneral Bolivar, the South American liberator, died December 17.\\nFifth census of the United States taken, showing 12,856,165 population. Num-\\nber of newspapers published, 1.000. Number of postoffices, 8,450.\\nThe United States mint at Philadelphia completed.\\nWilliam IV., the sailor prince, made king of England.\\nI hope to find my country in the right; however, I will stand by her, right or\\nwrong. J. Crittenden.\\nWhen a man assumes a public trust he should consider himself as public\\nproperty. Thos. Jefferson.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0055.jp2"}, "56": {"fulltext": "To bear is to conquer our fate. %3 ^J Beware of a slanderer who\\n\u00e2\u0080\u0094Campbell. J[ \\\\3 Ji tvhetteth his tongue like a sword.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n30\\n31\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nAugust....\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\nOctober...\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nTames Monroe fifth President of the United States, died July 4.\\nThe famous trial of Daniel O Connell began February 12.\\nJames A. Garfield born November 19.\\nThe Russians capture Warsaw on September 8, and thus end the freedom of\\nPoland.\\nFirst appearance of cholera in England October 26.\\nDecember 27 France abolished hereditary peerage.\\nLouis Philippe agrees to give 25 000,000 francs to indemnify the United States\\nfor spoliations on American commerce made under the operations of the\\ndecrees of Napoleon.\\nOur country! In her intercourse with foreign nations, may she alwavs be in the\\nright; but our country right or wrong. Stephen Decatur\\nSurely the love of our country is a lesson of reason, not an institution of nature.\\nBolingbroke\\nIt is not not fit the public trusts should be lodged in the hands of any till they\\nfirst be proved and found fit for the business they are to be trusted with.\\nTimothy iii.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0056.jp2"}, "57": {"fulltext": "xhe genueman is solid mahog-\\nany; the fashionable manis only\\nveneer.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 J. G. Holland.\\n1832\\nWhatever makes good Christi-\\nans, makes them good citizens.\\n\u00e2\u0080\u0094Daniel Webster, Dec. 22, 1820.\\nJanuary..\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril.\\nMay\\nJune\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust....\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n\u00c2\u00ab*5\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nM\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nT W\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n6\\nT F S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n0.7\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n*8\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n*9\\nHISTORICAL ETENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nGoethe, the great German author, died March 22.\\nBaron Cuvier, the naturalist, died May 18.\\nSir Walter Scott died September 21\\nCentennial celebration of Washington s birthday February 22\\nThe final absorption of Poland by Russia was consummated February 26\\nThe cholera became a severe epedemic in London, and Fast Day was appointed\\nFebruary 6 on account of it.\\nCholera appeared in New York and other eastern cities in June.\\nOn December 10 President Jackson issued his stirring proclamation against John\\nC. Calhoun and the Nullifiers of South Carolina.\\nProf. Morse conceived the idea of telegraphy.\\nThe Black Hawk War under that famous chief raged during this year. The\\nIndians were driven west of the Mississippi, and Black Hawk surrendered.\\nBecause of additional duties imposed South Carolina seceded from the Union.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0057.jp2"}, "58": {"fulltext": "Enter not into the path of the\\nwicked\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\n1833\\nAnd go not in the way of evil\\nmen. Prov. 4-14.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nM\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nW\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nh\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nT\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nF S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nHannah More, the celebrated authoress, died September 7.\\nCaptain Ross, the explorer, returned to England October 18; after four years\\nabsence in the Arctic regions.\\nA magnificent meteoric display occurred on November 13, which created great\\nexcitement throughout the United States.\\nThe compromise bill devised by Henry Clay, providing for the gradual reduction\\nof duties, was passed by Congress.\\nPresident Jackson ordered the removal of deposits from the United States Bank,\\nnotwithstanding the strenuous remonstrance of Mr. Duane, who had the\\nfunds in charge. There was great excitement regarding the matter, but the\\nPresident said: I take the responsibility.\\nDuring this year the Cherokee Indians sell all their lands east of the Mississippi\\nto the United States for $5,000,000\\nAndrew Jackson (second term). President, and Martin Van Buren, Vice-Presi-\\ndent, were elected. Number of states voting, 24; total electoral vote, 288;\\nsuccessful candidates received 230; popular vote 687.502.\\nI am not a Virginian, but an American. Patrick Henry, Sept., 1774.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0058.jp2"}, "59": {"fulltext": "A lying tongue is but for a jj 4J^ A He that tilleth the land shall\\nmoment.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 12-19. M. C31-a T* have plenty of bread.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nft\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMarch\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nOctober....\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nNovember\\n1\\n4\\nft\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nft\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nDecern ber\\n1\\nft\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n22\\n23\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nLucifer matches come into use.\\nThe Don Carlos revolution broke out in Spain July 10.\\nSamuel Taylor Coleridge died; was born October 21, 1772.\\nBy act of Parliament on August 1, nearly 800,000 slaves were set free in the\\nBritish possessions, and ^20.000,000 was paid to the owners.\\nNative magistracy was allowed this year in India by England.\\nThe Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad completed and locomotive engines used\\nupon it\\nThe English Houses of Parliament were burned October 16.\\nGeneral LaFayette died.\\nA large amount of emigration sets in through the Territory of Oregon.\\nThe first white settlement in Wyoming Territory was established this vear at\\nFort Laramie.\\nTwo parties among the Americans of Texas are agitating for an independent\\nstate, the other adhering to Santa. The war with Mexico was the final result.\\ni Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. Galatians vi, 7.\\n1", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0059.jp2"}, "60": {"fulltext": "Turn not to the right hand nor\\nto the left remove thy feet from\\nevil.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 4-27.\\n1835\\nTlie upright shall dtvetl in the\\nland and the perfect shall re-\\nmain in it.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 2-21.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nM\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n*4\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n*9\\nW\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nS\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nFrancis I, King of Austria, died March 2.\\nA disastrous fire occurred in New York City on December 16, destroying 6oo\\nstores, together with many public buildings. The value of property\\ndestroyed estimated at $17,000,000.\\nOn the 17th of December, the President of the United States officially\\nannounced to Congress the bequest of James Smithson, of England, of\\n;\u00c2\u00a3ioo,ooo for the founding of The Smithsonian Institution at Washington.\\nProf. S. F. B. Morse constructs a short telegraph line and succeeds in sending\\nmessages over it.\\nChief Justice Marshall, of the United States Supreme Court, died.\\nThe doctrine of international arbitration first proposed by William Ladd, of\\nNew England\\nThe Seminole Indian war commenced near the close of 1835. The government\\nattempted to remove the Indians, according to treaty, west of the Miss-\\nissippi, and they objected. Micanopy, their king, opposed the measure, and\\nOsceola, their most noted chief, said he wanted to rest with his children in\\nthe land of his fathers.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0060.jp2"}, "61": {"fulltext": "Thou shalt love the Lord thy\\nGod with all thy heart.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mark XII. 30\\n1836\\nTliou shall love thy neighbor as\\nthyself.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mark XII. 33.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nt\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust....\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nM\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nW\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nDavid Crocket a famous frontiersman, born August 17, 1786, was put to death by\\norder of Santa Anna, Sept 10, with five others, while defending Ft. Alamo.\\nA fire at Washington on December 15 destroyed the Patent Office and Postoffice\\nwith a large amount of valuable property and many important documents.\\nArkansas admitted into the Union.\\nThe Indian war in Georgia and Alabama was ended during the year by the\\nremoval of several thousand Indians west of the Mississippi.\\nImportant anti slavery movements are inaugurated in the Northern States.\\nThe Second United States Bank expires by the imitation of its charter, and\\nPresident Jackson successfully opposes its renewal.\\nGen. Sam Houston was made President of Texas, and by his signal defeat of\\nSanta Anna at San Jacinto, secures its independence.\\nGeneral Thompson and a few friends surprised by Osceola and a small band of\\nwarriors. All were killed, the general s body being found with fifteen bullet\\nholes in it. The Creeks had joined the Seminoles, and several hand-battles\\nwere fought, in which they lost heavily. The Creeks submitted, and several\\nthousands of them were sent west of the Mississippi, according to former\\ntreaty.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0061.jp2"}, "62": {"fulltext": "Swearing is a habit and a fool-\\nish habit at that.\\n1837\\nDo unto others as you would\\nthat they should do unto you.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS M T W T F S\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n07\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n*5\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n0.7\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR\\nMartin Van Buren, President of the United States. Number of states voting,\\n26; total electoral vote 294, number received by successful candidate, 170;\\npopular vote, 761,549. Richard M. Johnson was elected Vice-President by\\nthe senate.\\nMichigan was admitted into the Union making the twenty-sixth state\\nGreat financial distress throughout the United States, 260 heavy failures of busi-\\nness houses in New York City during May, and extensive ones in all the large\\ncities of the Union.\\nWilliam IV,. King of England, died June 20, and same date Queen Victoria\\nbecame ruler of England.\\nJames Madison, third President of the United States, died June 28.\\nElijah P. Lovejoy killed at Alton, 111., on November 7 for boldly publishing\\nabolition sentiments.\\nThe Declaration of Independence made by Texas.\\nOn September 1 an extra session of Congress was called by the President to con-\\nsider the business distress of the country.\\nOsceola, the Semino e chief, placed in prison at Fort Moultrie.\\nChicago incorporated as a city.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0062.jp2"}, "63": {"fulltext": "When the rich man dies what f 1^ 5 The barrel A mse bum took his\\ndoes he leave behind him m. C3 C3 fi rst the gin palace.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\nJulv\\n1\\n2\\n9\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\n7\\n9\\n8\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nApril\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\nOctober...\\n*7\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\nDecember\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nOn the 5th of January President Van Buren issued a proclamation against the\\nPatriots in the Canadian Rebellion.\\nOn the 15 of March the Canadian Patriots surrendered to United States\\nGeneral Wool.\\nTalleyrand died May 17.\\nOn the 5th of September Grace Darling and her father, lighthouse keeper, heroic-\\nFerdinand crowned King of Austria at Milan, September 6.\\nChartist riots in England December 12.\\nThe Wilkes Exploring Expedition sailed.\\nWar Steamers first used in England.\\nOn account of the disputed Maine boundary line, war with Great Britain seemed\\ninevitable.\\nSet your affections on things above, not on things on the earth Colossians iii, 2.\\nOsceola, the famous Seminole Chief, who had been captured by General Jessup\\nand confined in Fort Moultrie, died in January of fever.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0063.jp2"}, "64": {"fulltext": "Avoid the very appearance of r A reptitation which has required\\nevil evil communications cor- 1 l|C II years to build can be destroyed\\nrupt good manners. \\\\J %_J ^T In a moment.\\nJanuary...\\nFebruary-\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMay\\nJune\\ns\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nM\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\nT\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nW\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nF\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nS\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\ni\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nM\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nT\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nW\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nT\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nl\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nF\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nS\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nDaguerreotypes were first made.\\nThe Chinese Government destroyed more than 20,000 chests of opium.\\nAnti-Corn Law League founded in England by Richard Cobden and others.\\nTreaty made between the kingdoms of Holland and Belgium.\\nThe first national Whig Convention was held at Harrisburg, Pa., in December.\\nRussia grants the rights of citizenship to worthy Jews.\\nIn July a renewal of the Chartist riots occurred in England.\\nThe Florida war continued. Gen. Macomb induced a number of the chiefs to sign\\na treaty of peace. The Indians were to remain in the country until assured\\nof the prosperous condition of their friends who had emigrated The treaty\\nwas broken, murders ensued and finally the government offered a reward\\nfor every Indian taken dead or alive.\\nThough I speak with the tongues of men and angels, and have not charity, I am\\nbecome as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. Corinthians xiii, 1.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0064.jp2"}, "65": {"fulltext": "If two of you shall agree on\\nearth as touching any thing that\\nthey shall ask,\\n1840\\nIt shall be done for them of\\nmy Father which is in heaven.\\n-Matthew XVIII. 19.\\nJanuary.\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril...\\nMay.\\nJune.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\nft\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nM T W\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nT\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nGen. William Henry Harrison and John Tyler, President and Vice-President of\\nthe United States. Total electoral vote, 294; number received by successful\\ncandidates, 224; popular vote, 1,275,017.\\nNotwithstanding continued business distress there was great political excitement\\nthroughout the country, it being known as the Log Cabin and Hard Cider\\nCampaign.\\nThe Wilkes Exploring Expedition discover the Antarctic Continent, January 19.\\nStamped postage envelopes were first used in England.\\nLady Hester Stanhope, the English Arab queen in Syria, died June 23.\\nThe remains of Napoleon Bonaparte brought to Paris and interred.\\nTexas recognized as an independent republ c by France, England and Belgium.\\nSixth United States census taken showing a population of 16 069,453.\\nSub-Treasury Bill adopted by Congress.\\nIn December, Colonel Harney who had become the terror of the Seminoles, pene-\\ntrated into the extensive everglades of southern Florida and captured a band\\nof forty, nine of whom he caused to be executed for some previous massacre.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0065.jp2"}, "66": {"fulltext": "Over 44,000 brave Union men \u00c2\u00a3V a .4 Man s inhumanity to man\\nwere left dead on the battle fields 1 3^ makes countless thousands\\nof the War for the Union. J| \\\\J T M. mourn.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Burns.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1841 HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nHarrison and Tyler inaugurated President and Vice-President March 4.\\nOn Saturday, April 24, President Harrison died and John Tyler succeeded to the\\noffice.\\nThe New York Tribune was established by Horace Greeley.\\nOn March n the steamer President sailed from New York to Liverpool with\\nover one hundred passengers and was never heard from\\nOn May 21 the city of Canton was captured by the British army and surrendered\\nupon the payment of $6,000,000 ranson\\nAn extra session of Congress convened Mav 31, at which time the Sub-Treasury\\nbill was repealed and a general bankrupt act was passed.\\nA charter for a new bank of the United States, passed by Congress was vetoed\\nby President Tyler amid great excitement.\\nCongress passed a bill August 23 to distribute the proceeds of sale of public\\nlands among the several states, according to population.\\nI love my country s good with a respect more tender, more holy and profound\\nthan my own life. Shakespeare.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0066.jp2"}, "67": {"fulltext": "Good deeds in this world done, 4^ A r J As water on the root\\nAre paid beyond the sun; JL \\\\3 T JU -Is seen above in fruit.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Oriental.\\n1\\ni\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\nIO\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n30\\n31\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\nOctober...\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n8\\n4\\n5\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3(\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n2S\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nThe Ashburton Treaty concluded August 9.\\nAn insurrection broke out in Afghanistan against England, and on January 5\\n6 000 British troops were surrounded and all but one officer massacred.\\nOn May 30 an attempt was made to assassinate Queen Victoria.\\nThe Wilkes Exploring Expedition returned in June, having circumnavigated the\\nglobe and made important discoveries.\\nGrace Darling died October 20\\nBy the Ashburton Treaty the question of the Maine boundary was amicably set-\\nThe Florida war closed after seven vears continuance, and costing the United\\nStates $40,000,000.\\nLabor to keep alive in your breast that little spark of celestial fire, conscience.\\nFrom George W (Islington s Copybook.\\nPerpetual peace is a mere dream, and not even a beautiful one. Von Moltke.\\nEngland s wars during the 18th and 19th centuries cost $12,104 855\u00c2\u00bb T 45-", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0067.jp2"}, "68": {"fulltext": "The two P s that are not in har-\\nmony\u00e2\u0080\u0094 P-olitics and JP-rayers.\\n1843\\nSlander is poison A. slander-\\notts tongue is a serpent s tongue.\\nJanuary..\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMay\\nJune..\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust....\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nM\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n5\\n12\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n19 20\\n26 27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n6\\nW T F\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nOn the 5th of February Pointe a-Pitre, in the West India Islands, was nearly\\ndestroyed by an earthquake; 14,000 persons perished.\\nOn the 28th of February the gun called The Peacemaker exploded on the\\nUnited States ship Princeton during an excursion on the Potomac river,\\nby which the Secretary of State and several other persons were killed\\nOn the 7th of May an earthquake destroyed Cape Haytien and 7,000 of its\\ninhabitants.\\nThe Bunker Hill monument at Boston was completed on June 17th, and a\\nmagnificent oration delivered by Daniel Webster.\\nThe Sandwich Islands after being held by England for some time, were ceded\\nback to the authority of the native prince in July.\\nCongress of the United States granted Prof. Morse $30,000 for the construction\\nof a telegraph line between Baltimore and Washington.\\nThe steamship Missouri of the United States Navy, was burned at Gibraltar on\\nAugust 25 1843; #60,000 was expended by Congress in removing the\\nsunken hulk from the harbor.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0068.jp2"}, "69": {"fulltext": "For God, for home, for country.\\n-Frances E. Willard.\\n1844\\nThinU of your forefathers.\\nQuincy Adams in 1848.\\n-Joht\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\n11\\n32\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nS\\n9\\n1(\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2(\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS M\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nW\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nF S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nThomas W. Dorr incited a rebellion in Rhode Island by attempting to overthrow\\nthe state government, was arrested, tried and convicted for treason, and\\nsentenced to imprisonment for life.\\nThe first week in February was noted for being excessively cold throughout the\\nUnited States. A canal seven miles long was cut at Boston to pass an\\nEnglish steamer to sea.\\nOn the 12th of February Daniel O Connell was convicted of conspiracy.\\nNational Whig convention held at Baltimore in May, when Henry Clay and\\nTheodore Frelinghuysen were nominated.\\nOn June 27th Joe Smith, the Mormon, was murdered by a mob in Carthage\\n(Illinois) jail.\\nSerious outbreaks and anti-rent demonstrations occur in Rensselaer county,\\nNew York, during August.\\nThe 23d of October was set down by the Millerites as the end of the world;\\nmany people had prepared their ascension robes, and waited in the open air\\nfor the heavens to open.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0069.jp2"}, "70": {"fulltext": "The feet of a strange woman, 4 a mbm Righteousness exalteth a nation;\\ngo down to death, her steps take 1 3% /f E| but sin is a reproach to any peo-\\nhold on hell.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 5-5. K O U t-7 ple.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 14-34.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMarch\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nO\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nNovember\\n1\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nJuue\\n1\\n2,\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nDecember\\n1\\nft\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n22\\n23\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nImportant reciprocal treaty between the United States and China consummated\\nin January.\\nTexas annexed to the United States on March 1.\\nEx-President and General Andrew Jackson died June 8.\\nOn June 20 over 500 Moors suffocate in a cavern rather than surrender to the\\nFrench.\\nThe iron steamship Great Britain sailed from Liverpool for New York Julv 26.\\nFlorida admitted to the Union.\\nThe United States sub-treasury was restored.\\nEuropean emigration to the United States begins to greatly increase\\nJames K. Polk and George M. Dallas, President and Vice-President of the United\\nStates. Number of States voting. 26; total electoral vote, 290; number cast\\nfor successful candidates, 170; popular vote, 1 337 243.\\nThe United States Naval Academy at Annapolis was opened.\\nThe union of hearts, the union of hands and the flag of our Union forever\\n0. P. Morris.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0070.jp2"}, "71": {"fulltext": "He that oppresseth the poor to\\nincrease his riches shall surely\\ncome to tvant.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 22-16.\\n1846\\nA word fitly sjiohen is like\\napples of gold in pictures of\\nsilver.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 25-11.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nS\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n2S\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober....\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nM T W\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n*8\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nS\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nElias Howe secured patent on his invention of sewing machine. September 10.\\nDeclaration of war with Mexico by the United States.\\nOn January 13 the beginning of the war with Mexico was opened by the advance\\nof the United States troops under General Taylor to the Rio Grande.\\nMay 8, the victorious battle of Palo Alto.\\nMay 9, the battle of Resaca de la Palma, after which General Taylor took pos-\\nsession of Matamoras.\\nThe northern boundary line of the United States was fixed at 49\u00c2\u00b0 north latitude,\\nby a treaty with Great Britain, at Washington in June.\\nThe Corn laws of England were repealed June 26.\\nGeneral Fremont occupied California July 4.\\nMonterey was captured September 21.\\nSmithsonian Institution was founded at Washington.\\nIowa admitted into the Union.\\nWilmot Proviso discussed in Congress.\\nGun cotton invented.\\nFamine in Ireland.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0071.jp2"}, "72": {"fulltext": "He who believes in nobody ^j a pmt He is no wise man wlio will\\nknows that he himself is not to J^C J quit a certainty for an uncer-\\nbe trusted.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Auerbach. fl. U T* Jf tainty.\u00e2\u0080\u0094The Idler.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nPostage stamps first used in the United States.\\nBattle of Churabusco between General Scott and Santa Anna, August 20.\\nThomas A. Edison, the distinguished inventor, born at Milan, Ohio.\\nOn February 18. the United States ship Macedon was sent to Ireland with\\nbreadstuffs for the starving population, there being among other causes a fail-\\nure of the potato crop.\\nFebruary 23, battle of Buena Vista, General- Taylor defeating a Mexican army\\nfour times as large as his own.\\nMarch 16, capture of San Juan d Ulloa by General Scott.\\nApril 18, battle of Cerro Gordo.\\nDaniel O Connell died May 15.\\nSeptember 13, capture of Chapultepec and the City of Mexico by the victorious\\ntroops of General Scott.\\nIn July the canal from Durance to Marseilles opened being 83 000 meters loDg,\\nof which 17,000 meters were subterranean passages beneath the Alps.\\nKing Frederick William of Prussia gave his subjects a constitution.\\nThomas Wilson Dorr, who was sentenced to imprisonment for life, released\\nu.nder an act of general amnesty.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0072.jp2"}, "73": {"fulltext": "The ants area people, not strong .4 \u00c2\u00a3v a \u00c2\u00a3X Seestthwia man hasty in his\\nand yet they prepare their meat 1 /J j^k words There is more hope for\\nin the summer.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. XXI. 25. R \\\\J ^W KJ a fool ttian ofhim.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. XXIX. 20.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n20\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n30\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n5\\n6\\n*7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune...\u00c2\u00bb\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nWisconsin admitted into the Union.\\nFrench revolution. Louis Philippe expelled.\\nJohn Quincy Adams died February 23, at Washington.\\nIn June the city of Paris was in a state of siege, and General Cavaignac made\\nDictator, suppressing a great insurrection.\\nGold was discovered on the American fork of the Sacramento in California\\nJanuary 14. Crowds of adventurers flock there.\\nJohn Jacob Astor died March 29.\\nJuly 4 President Polk announced peace with Mexico.\\nThe Niagara Suspension Bridge opened July 30.\\nDecember 20 Louis Napoleon was elected President of the French Republic.\\nThe Guadalupe-Hida go treaty signed, by which New Mexico and California were\\nceded to the United States.\\nNational convention of the Free Soil party held in Buffalo, N. Y.. August 9,\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2nominated Martin Van Buren and Charles Francis Adams for President and\\nVice President\\nI propose to fight it out on this line if it takes all summer. U. S. Grant,\\nMay 11, 1864.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0073.jp2"}, "74": {"fulltext": "Rtim and Muin go hand in \u00c2\u00a3k A a^~\\\\ The Club House with liquors\\nhand\u00e2\u0080\u0094 abstain from the one and 1 J^C 11 and gaming is the Devil s Kin-\\nescape the other. \\\\J T dergarden.\\nJanuary...\\nFebruary-\\nMarch\\nApril\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\nM\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nT\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nW\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nil\\n20\\n27\\nT\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nF\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nS\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nJulv\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nM\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nW\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nT\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nF\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nS\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nMay\\nJune\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nThe year opened with a struggle in Hungary for independence, headed by Louis\\nKossuth.\\nIn April Russia lends assistance to Austria to crush Hungary.\\nThe Forrest and Macready riots in New York quelled by the military May 10.\\nCholora appeared in New York May 15.\\nJames K. Polk died June 15.\\nThe Associated Press formed in New York City, and Reuter s Telegram\\nCompany established in London.\\nZachary Taylor and Millard Fillmore President and Vice President of the United\\nStates. Number of states votiDg, 30; total number of* electoral votes, 290;\\nnumber cast for successful candidates, 163; popular vote, 1,360,101.\\nCalifornia adopted a constitution.\\nUnited States Department of the Interior organized.\\nSurrender of the Hungarian General, Gorgey, to the Russians, and end of the\\nHungarian revolution.\\nBe just and fear not; let all the ends thou aim st at be thy country s, thy God s\\nand truth Shakespeare.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0074.jp2"}, "75": {"fulltext": "Blessings are upon the head of\\nthe just. Prov. 10-6.\\n1850\\nSear instruction and be wise\\nand refuse it not.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 8-33.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\nIS\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS M\\n7\\n14\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n21 22\\n28 29\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n5\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nW\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n**8\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nF S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nWilliam Wordsworth died April 23; was born April 7, 1770.\\nOn May 4 nearly the whole of San Francisco destroyed by fire.\\nPresident Zachary Taylor died July 9.\\nThe Territory of Utah was formed.\\nThe Austrian General, Haynau, was attacked by London workmen for brutal\\ntreatment of Hungarians.\\nAt this time the total area of the United States was 3 016,013 square miles.\\nOn September 12 the Fugitive Slave bill was passed by the United States Con\\ngress. September 16 the slave trade suppressed in Washington.\\nA disunion meeting was held at Natchez, Miss., October 7, which, however, met\\nwith considerable opposition.\\nThe Clayton-Bulwer Treaty passed.\\nLarge Union meetings were held throughout the Union in view of the opposition\\nto the Fugitive Slave bill.\\nCalifornia admitted into the Union.\\nSeventh United States census taken, showing 23.191,876 population.\\nVery few in public affairs act with a view to the good of mankind. Franklin.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0075.jp2"}, "76": {"fulltext": "A strange woman s month is mm -4 Joying lips are an abomination\\nsmoother than oil her feet go 1 ItL m*. 1 to the Lord, but they that deal\\ndown to death.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 5. M. \\\\J %J JL truly are his delight.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 12-22.\\nJanuary...\\nFebruary-\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMay\\nJune\\nS\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\ni\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nM\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nT\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\nSO\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\nW\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nT\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nF\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nS\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nM\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\ni\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\ni\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nT\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nW\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nT\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nF\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nS\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nLouis Jacques Daguerre, inventor of the daguerreotype, died July 12.\\nJames Fennimore Cooper died September 14.\\nJohn James Audubon died January 27.\\nOn February 3, Gen. Quitman was arrested by the United States Marshal for\\nfitting out an expedition against Cuba.\\nA second large fire broke out in San Francisco June 22. Five hundred houses\\nburned.\\nThe Lopez revolutionary party sailed for Cuba August 4. After a few days\\nfighting all were captured, and the leader garroted by the Spanish author-\\nities.\\nLouis Kossuth, the Hungarian patriot, visited the United States in December,\\nand by his eloquence was warmly received, and his cause secured many\\nwarm friends.\\nLouis Napoleon became Emperor of the French by a coup d etat on the 2d of\\nDecember.\\nUnited States letter postage reduced to three cents.\\nMaine liquor law passed\\nRum and Ruin go hand in hand.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0076.jp2"}, "77": {"fulltext": "__ _ _ ^J f\\\\ tarn A^ Whatsoever ye shall loose on\\nWhatsoever ye sJiall bind on 1 W C J earth shall be loosed in heaven.\\nearth shall be bound in heaven; \\\\J ^J J^f \u00e2\u0080\u0094Matthew X VIII. 18.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nSeptennVr\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHIST0RIC4L EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nHenry Clay, Daniel Webster and Duke of Wellington died.\\nBy the new Constitution of France, Louis Napoleon was made President of the\\nRepublic for ten years.\\nSir Thomas Moore died February 26. He was born in 1779\\nIn April Gov. Bigler, in a message, called attention to the wholesale importation\\nof Chinese coolies.\\nElectric telegraph communication was opened between England and Ireland,\\nJune 1.\\nThe great international Exposition opened in London, July 14\\nThe second Free-Soil National Convention was held at Pittsburg, Pa when\\nJohn P. Hale and George W. Julian were nominated for President and Vice-\\nPresident\\nThe steamer Atlantic was lost on Lake Erie, August 20 with 250 passengers.\\nThe United States purchased a large tract of land in Minnesota from the Sioux\\nIndians.\\nAvoid a villain as you would a brand, which, lighted, burns; extinguished, smuts\\nthe hand. Oriental.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0077.jp2"}, "78": {"fulltext": "If we have any enemies Lord 4^ ^J In the name of our God we will\\nforgive them. Father s daily prayer. 4 C^ set up our banners.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Ps. XX-5.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n30\\n31\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n5\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\nOctober...\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nOn the nth of January, Russia, Austria and Prussia acknowledged Louis Napo-\\nleon as Emperor of France.\\nAn insurrection was commenced in Italy headed by Mazzini, which proved un-\\nsuccessful.\\nThe circulation of Uncle Tom s Cabin was forbidden in Italy.\\nThe Martin Koszta case occurred in June, when that individual was demanded\\nby Capt Ingraham from an Austrian man of war in the harbor of Smyrna\\nas an alleged American citizen.\\nCommodore Perry made an important treaty of peace and commerce with\\nJapan.\\nOn July 14 an International Exhibition opened in the Crystal Palace, New\\nYork.\\nFrom August n to 14, inclusive, intense heat prevailed throughout the United\\nStates, 400 deaths from it having occurred in New York City alone during\\nthe four days.\\nThe United States paid Mexico $10,000,000 for territory included in the Gadsden\\npurchase.\\nOne country, one constitution, one destiny. Daniel Webster.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0078.jp2"}, "79": {"fulltext": "If you are going in the t rong\\ndirection, turn about and go the\\nother way.\\n1854\\nThe proper sort of light read-\\ning is like palatable dressing for\\na Thanksgiving Turkey.\\nJanuary...\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMay..\\nJune\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nM\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n5\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n9\\n.16\\n123\\n30\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nW\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nOn April 11 Russia declared war against the allied powers of France and\\nEngland.\\nBattle of the Alma Wednesday, September 20\\nOn July 13 Commodore Hollins bombarded Greytown, Nicaraugua.\\nThe Missouri Compromise repealed May 24.\\nThe Collins steamer Arctic sunk by a collision September 27, and more than\\n300 lives lost.\\nRelics of Sir John Franklin discovered October 20\\nHistoric charge of the Light Brigade at Balaklava October 25.\\nThe Kansas-Nebraska Bill passed by Congress.\\nHavana authorities illegally seize the American steamship Black Warrior.\\nReciprocity treaty adopted by England and the United States.\\nThe tongue can no man tame; it is an unruly evil. James iii, 8\\nWith malice towards none, with charity for all. with firmness in the right, as God\\ngives us to see the right. Lincoln^ March 4 1863.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0079.jp2"}, "80": {"fulltext": "The sluggard cannot thrive\\nhis last days shall be a curse to\\nhim.\\n1855\\nBoys Don t swear don t drink\\ndon t smoke. Keep mouth and\\nbody clean.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS 1\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n.febrnary\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust...\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nM\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nW\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nT\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n*7\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nNicholas I, Czar of Russia, died March 2.\\nLocomotive with train of cars first crossed the Niagara Suspension Bridge\\nWednesday, March 14.\\nThe Paris Exhibition opened by Louis Napoleon May 15\\nAbbott Lawrence died August 18.\\nOn the 8th of September Sebastopol was evacuated by the Russian army and\\noccupied by the allies.\\nDr. Kane was brought home from his Arctic exploration October n.\\nOn December 23 the English exploring ship, Resolute, was found floating in\\nthe Atlantic Ocean\\nThe Panama Railroad was completed\\nSuspicions may arise from naught\\nBut malice, envy, want of thought;\\nThey say, Well, suppose they do,\\nBut can they prove this story true?\\nHe who believes in nobody knows that he himself is not to be trusted Auerbach.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0080.jp2"}, "81": {"fulltext": "Remember the sabbath day,\\nkeep it holy.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Exodus XX. 8.\\nto\\n1856\\nTJiou shalt not bear false witness\\nagainst thy neighbor.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Exodus XX. 16\\nJanuary\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril.\\nMay\\n31\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nJune.\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nW\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n29 30\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n6\\n13\\n20\\nQ7\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n*6\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n26 27\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nM\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n*8\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n*6\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n0|2\\n19\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nW\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n3 4\\nlOll\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nThe Collins steamship Pacific sailed from Liverpool to New York on Janu-\\nary 23. and no tidings of her ever received.\\nHenriche Heine died February 18\\nSecond treaty of peace, closing Crimean War, signed at Paris, March 30\\nNational Democratic Convention met at Cincinnati, and nominated James\\nBuchanan and John C. Breckinridge for President and Vice-President.\\nThe first National Republican Convention met on June 17, at Philadelphia and\\nnominated John C. Fremont and William L. Dayton for President and Vice-\\nIn Mayvigll^nce committees were organized in San Francisco to maintain public\\norder, and murderous characters were summarily dealt with.\\nCharles Sumner was assaulted by Preston Brooks in the Senate Chamber, at\\nWashington. Mav 22.\\nOn July 12 the Crimea was evacuated by the allies.\\nSubmarine telegraph cable laid across the Gulf of St Lawrence.\\nSerious political disturbances in Kansas between the Pro-Slavery and the Free\\nSoil parties.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0081.jp2"}, "82": {"fulltext": "-l\\nA drunkard is outlawed by 1 4^ C* You are only sure of TODAY,\\nhimself. ^J J Tomorrow NEVEIt comes.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nAugust\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n1 7\\nIS\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n31\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nlO\\n11\\n12\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL ETENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nDred Scott decision of the United States Supreme Court, issued March 1, creating\\ngreat excitement throughout the country.\\nJames Buchanan and John C. Breckinridge, President and Vice-President of the\\nUnited Slates. Number of States voting, 31; total electoral votes 296, of\\nwhich Buchanan received 174. Popular vote\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Buchanan, 1,838,169; Fremont,\\n1.341,264\\nDr. E E Kane, the Arctic explorer, died February 16.\\nIndian mutiny breaks out among the Sepoys in India\\nUpon the failure of the Ohio Life and Trust Company a financial panic begun\\nthroughout the country, and on September 21 the banks suspended specie\\npayments\\nRepresentatives of European powers, assembled in Paris, presented Samuel F.\\nB. Morse with 400 000 francs, in acknowledgment of his services for the\\ninvention of the electric telegraph\\nMountain Meadow Massacre of emigrants by the Mormons\\nTo be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving peace.\\nWashington to Congress, January 8, 17QO.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0082.jp2"}, "83": {"fulltext": "An honest man is still an un- t^ T 4^ If I lose mine honor, I lose\\nmoved rock.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Davenport. E. 13 %J C3 myself.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Shakespeare.\\nJanuary...\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\n1\\nS\\n2\\nJuly\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL ETENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nThomas H. Benton, author of Thirty Years in the Senate, died April io\\nJohn A. Washington contracted to sell Mount Vernon to the Mount Vernon\\nLadies Association for $200,000.\\nThe first telegraph message sent over the Atlantic cable August 16\\nSeptember 1 grand celebration of telegraph communications between America\\nand England.\\nThe first overland mail arrived in St. Louis from San Francisco October 9.\\nMinnesota admitted to the Union.\\nNovember 28 the yacht Wanderer landed 300 African slaves near Brunswick, Ga\\nSteam fire engines first introduced into eastern cities.\\nImprision not\\nWithin thy breast\\nNeedless germs of sorrow.\\nThe storm to-day,\\nWith fury bent\\nPrecedes sunshine to-morrow.\\n-Emma Thompson.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0083.jp2"}, "84": {"fulltext": "Fortunes have (teen tost oy put-\\nting off for a more convenient\\nseason.\\n1859\\nOn the question of .Eternal life\\ndo not speculate it is too mo-\\nmentous.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\no\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMav\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust....\\nSeptenib r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n*7\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nM\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nT\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nW T\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n*J|2\\n9\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EYENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nMacaulay, the historian, died December 28; was born October 25, 1800.\\nAlexander Humboldt died May 6, was born September 14, 1769.\\nWashington Irving died November 28; was born April 3, 1783\\nDeath of Gen. Havelock, November 24.\\nAustria declared war against France April 29, and crossed the Ticino.\\nJune 4, Battle of Magenta.\\nBattle of Solferino, June 24\\nFirst national banquet held by Americans in Paris, July 4.\\nAugust 28, splendid Auroral displays.\\nJohn Brown was hanged on December 2 at Charleston, Va., for inciting slaves\\nto insurrection.\\nAnti-slavery sentiment growing throughout the Union.\\nOregon admitted as a state.\\nThe English and French were repulsed by the Chinese while undertaking the\\npassage of the Peiho.\\nWe join ourselves to no party that does not carry the flag and keep step to the\\nmusic of the Union. Rufus Choate.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0084.jp2"}, "85": {"fulltext": "Me who serves his party best\\nserves his country best. R. B.\\nHayes, March 5, 1877.\\n1860\\nNo government is safe unless it\\nis protected by the good will of\\nthe 2 eople. \u00e2\u0080\u0094Nepos.\\nS\\n31\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2(\\n21\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nA.pril\\n1\\nflj\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7-\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\n2 December\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nM\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nW\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nT F S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nEighth United States census taken, showing 31 443 321 population.\\nOn May 16 the Republican National Convention met at Chicago and nominated\\nAbraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin for President and Vice-President\\nof the United States.\\nJune 18, Independent Democratic National Convention at Baltimore. Stephen\\nA. Douglas and Herschell V. Johnson nominated for President and Vice-\\nPresident.\\nThe regular National Democratic Convention was held at Charleston, S C\\nwhere John C Breckinridge and Joseph Lane were nominated for President\\nand Vice-President.\\nDecember 20 South Carolina passed an ordinance of secession from the Federal\\nUnion.\\nDecember 26 Major Anderson evacuated Fort Moultrie, in Charleston Harbor,\\nwith his garrison, and occupied Fort Sumter.\\nDecember 28 the Palmetto fla\u00c2\u00a3 was raised on the government buildings at\\nCharleston, and Castle Pinckey and Fort Moultrie were occupied by state\\ntroops.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0085.jp2"}, "86": {"fulltext": "Withhold not good from those to\\nwhom it is due\\n1861\\nWhen it is the power of thy\\nhand to do it.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 3-27.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptenuVr\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nM\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nW\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nNAHES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nOn January 2 Mississippi seceded from the Union, soon after followed by all the\\nSouthern States.\\nAbraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin inaugurated President and Vice-\\nPresident of the United States. Number of States voting 33. Total electoral\\nvote 303, of which Lincoln received 180; Breckinridge 72, and Douglas 12.\\nOf popular vote Lincoln received 1,866,352; Douglas, 1,375 157, and\\nBreckinridge, 845,763.\\nIn January there was a general seizure of United States property in the South-\\nern States by the Confederates.\\nApril 15 President Lincoln calls for 75,000 men to put down the Rebellion.\\nCol. E. E. Ellsworth was killed at Alexandria, Va., May 24.\\nHon. Stephen A. Douglas died at Chicago June 3.\\n^Continued on next page.)", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0086.jp2"}, "87": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1861-Continued.\\nNAMES AND DATES OF BATTLES,\\nNovember 8 Slidell and Mason taken from the English steamer Trent.\\nKansas admitted into the Union.\\nPrince Albert of England died December 14.\\nApril, 1861\u00e2\u0080\u0094 12th, Bombardment of Fort Sumter, S. C 15th, evacuation\\nof Fort Sumter, S. C. 19th, riots in Baltimore, Md.\\nMay 10th, Camp Jackson, Mo.; riots in St. Louis, Mo.\\nJune 1st, Fairfax C. H.,Va.; 3d, Phillippi, W. Va; 10th, Great Bethel, Va.;\\n11th, Romney, W. Va. 17th, Vienna, Va. Boonville, Mo.; Edwards Ferry,\\nMd.; 18th, Camp Cole, Mo.; 26th, Patterson Creek or Kelley s Island, Va.\\nJuly 2d, Falling Waters, Md 5th, Carthage or Dry Forks, Mo Newport News,\\nVa.; 6th, Middle Creek Fork, W. Va 7th, Great Falls, Va.; 8th, Laurel Hill\\nor Bealington, W. Va.; 10th, Monroe Station, Mo.; nth, Rich Mountain,\\nVa 12th. Barboursville or Red House, Va Beverly, W. Va. 14th, Carrick s\\nFord, W. Va. 16th, Millsville or Wentzville, Mo.; 16th, Fulton, Mo;\\nScarrytown, W. Va. Martinsburg, Mo.; Bunker Hill, Va. 18th, Blackburn s\\nFord Va.; 18th and 19th, Harrisonville and Parkersville, Mo.; Blst, Bull Run\\nor Manassas, Va. Union 481 killed, 1,011 wounded. 1,460 missing and cap-\\ntured. Confederate 269 killed, 1,483 wounded Confederate Brig. Gen ls\\nBee and Barton killed: 22d Forsyth, Mo.; 24th, Blue Mills, Mo.; 26th, Lane s\\nPrairie, near Rolla, Mo.; 27th, Fort Fillmore, N. Mex.\\nAugust 2d, Dug Springs, Mo.; 3d, Messilla, N. Mex; 5th, Athens, Mo.;\\nPoint of Rocks, Md.; 7th, Hampton, Va.; 8th, Lovettsville, Va.; 10th, Wil-\\nson s Creek, Mo. Union 223 killed, 721 wounded, 291 missing. Con-\\nfederate 265 killed, 800 wounded, 30 missing. Union Brig.-Gen. Nathaniel\\nLyon killed; Potosi, Mo.; 17th, Brunswick, Mo; 19th, Charleston or Bird s\\nPoint, Mo.; 20th, Hawk s Nest, W. Va.; 26th, Cross Lanes or Summerville,\\nW. Va. 27th, Ball s Cross Roads, Va.; 28th and 29th, Fort Hatteras, N. C.\\n29th, Lexington, Mo.; 31st, Munson s Hill, Va.\\nSeptember 1st, Bennett s Mills Mo.; Boone C. H W. Va.; 2d, Dallas,\\nMo., Dry Wood or Fort Scott, Mo.; Beher s Mills; 10th, Carnifex Ferry;\\n11th, Lewinsville, Va.; 12th, Black River, near Ironton, Mo.; 12th and 13th,\\nCheat Mountain, W, Va.; 13th, Boonville, Mo.; 14th, Confederate Privateer\\nJudah destroyed near Pensacola, Fla., by the United States Fagship\\nColorado; 15th, Pritchard s Mills, or Darnestown, Va. 12th to 20th,.\\nLexington, Mo.; 17th, Morristown, Mo.; Blue Mills, Mo.; 18th, Barbour-\\nville, W. Va.; 21st and 22d, Papinsville or Osceola, Mo.; 22d Eliotts* Mills\\nor Camp Crittenden, Mo.; 23d, Romney or Hanging Rock, W. Va.; 25th,\\nChapmansville, W. Va. 26th, Lucas Bend, Ky.; 29th, Camp Advance,\\nMunson s Hill, Va.\\nOctober 3d, Greenbrier, W. Va.; 4th, Alamosa, near Fort Craig, N.\\nMex.; Buffalo Hill, Ky.; 8th, Hillsboro, Ky.; 9th, Santa Rosa, Fla.; 12th,\\nCameron, Mo.; Upton Hill, Ky. Bayles Cross Roads, La.; 13th, Beck-\\nwith Farm (12 miles from Birds Point), Mo.; 15th, Big River Bridge, near\\nPotosi, Mo.; Lime Creek, Mo.; 16th, Bolivar Heights, Va.; Warsaw, Mo.;\\n17th to 21st, Fredericktown and Ironton, Mo.; 19th, Big Hurricane Creek,\\nMo.; 21st, Ball s Bluff, also called Edward s Ferrv, Harrison s Landing,\\nLeesburg, Va; Union 223 killed, 226 wounded; Confederate 36 killed, 264\\nwounded, 445 Union captured and missing; Union Acting Brig.-Gen. E. D.\\nBaker killed.; 22d, Buffalo Mills, Mo.; West Liberty, Ky.; Hodgeville,\\nKy.; 25th, Zagonyi s Charge, Springfield, Mo.; 26th, Romney or Mill\\nCieek Mills W. Va.; Saratoga, Ky.; 27th, Plattsburg, Mo.; 29th, Wood-\\nbury and Morgantown, Ky.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0087.jp2"}, "88": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1861-Continued.\\nNAHES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nNovember 1st, Renick, Randolph Co., Mo.; 6th, Little Santa Fe, Mo.;\\n7th, Belmont, Mo.; Union 90 killed, 173 wounded, 235 missing; Confed-\\nerate 261 killed, 427 wounded, 278 missing; Galveston Harbor, Tex. Port\\nRoyal, S. C; Bombardment by United States Navv; 9th, Piketown or Fry\\nMountain, Ky.; 10th, Guyandott, W. Va.; Gauley Bridge, W. Va.; 11th,\\nLittle Blue, Mo.; 12th Occoquan Creek, Va.; 17th, Cypress Bridge, Ky.;\\n18th, Palmyra, Mo.; 16th, Wirt C. H., W. Va.; 23d, Fort Pickens, Pensa-\\ncola, Fla.; 24th, Lancaster, Mo.; 26th, Little Blue, Mo.; Drainesville, Va.;\\n29th, Black Walnut Creek, near Sedalia, Mo.\\nDecember 3d, Salem, Mo.; Vienna, Va.; 4th, Anandale, Va.; Dunks-\\nburg, Mo. 11th, Bertrand, Mo 13th, Camp, Allegheny; 17th, Rowlett s\\nStation, also called Mumfordsville; 18th, Milford; 20th, Drainesville, Va.;\\n21st, Hudson, Mo.; 22d, Newmarket Bridge, Va.; 24th, Wadesburg, Mo.;\\n28th, Sacramento, Ky. Mt. Zion, Mo.\\nThe grog ration was abolished in 1863, and since then the crew has been\\nforbidden to drink while on duty.\\nMarines are the police on board ship. Originally they were employed to\\nprevent mutiny among the sailors.\\nThe guns of a battleship can carry from six to twelve miles, hurling a shot\\nweighing half a ton.\\nBehind the heavy armor there is a padding of either corn pith or cocoa\\nhusks.\\nIt costs $500 every time one of the big guns on board a ship is fired.\\nSailors are paid from $9.50 to $12 50 per month and board.\\nAn act of congress in 1872 abolished flogging in the navy.\\nThe American navy has practically all been built since 1883.\\nA captain in the navy ranks with a colonel in the army.\\nThe oldest iron vessel is the Michigan, built in 1844.\\nFive battleships are now under construction.\\nThe ships are painted white, except in time of war, when they are green.\\nBarnacles form on the hull of a ship, impeding its speed. Six months cruise\\nwill decrease the speed of a ship 15 per cent., and it must go into dry dock.\\nSixty-one merchant vessels belong to the auxiliary navy. These ships are\\nsubsidized, and by contract must be given to the United States on demand.\\nSome of the guns in the navy can fire a shot twelve miles, farther than\\na man can see, for the guns are aimed and sighted by machinery.\\nFive hundred and twenty-six men and forty officers are required to man\\nthe cruiser New York.\\nBattleships are covered with armor of nickel steel from five to seven\\ninches thick.\\nWe have six armored battleships the Indiana, Iowa, Massachusetts,\\nTexas, Kearsage and Kentucky.\\nA submarine torpedo boat, to be known as the Plunger, is now under\\nconstruction.\\nProjectiles thrown by naval guns are shaped much as the bullets shot by\\nthe ordinary rifle.\\nA big battleship has on board an electric plant capable of lighting a town\\nof 5,000 inhabitants.\\nThe boilers of the Iowa have a heating surface of eight acres, and hold\\nthirty-two tons of water\\nThe Kearsarge and Kentucky have just been added to our fleet of battle-\\nships.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0088.jp2"}, "89": {"fulltext": "Hatred stirreth up strifes\u00e2\u0080\u0094 love\\ncovereth all sins.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 10-12.\\n1862\\nThe lip of truth shall be\\nlished forever.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 12-19.\\nJanuary...\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMay\\nJune.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS M T W T F S\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n^9\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n*5\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n*8\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n\u00c2\u00ab*7\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nNAHI3S AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nThere was a great advance in gold coin in the United States, the premium in\\nDecember reaching 134.\\nWest Virginia was admitted into the Union.\\nJanuary-, 1862, 1st, Port Royal, S. C; 4th, Huntersville, Va.; Bath, Va. Alpine\\nStation and Hancock, Calhoun, Mo. 7th. Blue Gap, near Romney Va. Jennies\\nCreek. Ky.; 8th, Charleston, Mo.; Dry Forks, Cheat River, W. Va.; Silver\\nCreek, Mo.; 9th, Columbus, Mo.; 10th, Middle Creek and Prestonburg, Ky\\n19th and 20th. Mill Springs, Ky. Confed. Gen. F. K. Zollikoffer killed; 22d,\\nKnob Noster. Mo.; 29th. Occoquan Bridge, Va\\nFebruary 1st Bowling Green, Ky.; 6th, Fort Henry, Tenn.; U. S. Gunboats\\nEssex. Carondelet, St. Louis, Cincinnati, Conestoga, Tyler\\nand Lexington. 8th, Linn Creek, Va.; 10th, Elizabeth City, or Cobb s\\nPoint, N. C; 13th, Blooming Gap, Va 14th, Flat Lick Fords, Ky.; 14th,\\n15tb and 16th, Fort Donnelson, Tenn. Union 446 killed, 1,735 wounded, 150\\n(Continued on next page.)", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0089.jp2"}, "90": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EYENTS OF THE YEAR 1862\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nNArtES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nmissing. Confederate 231 -killed, 1,007 wounded, 13,829 prisoners. Union\\nMajor-General John A. Logan wounded. 17th, Pea Ridge, Mo.; 18th, Inde-\\npendence, Mo.; 2ist, Fort Craig, N. Mex.; 24th, Mason s Neck, Occoquan,\\nVa.; 26th Keytesville, Mo.\\nMarch 2d, Pittsburg Landing, Tenn.; 3d, New Madrid, Mo.; 5th, Occoquan, Va.\\n6th, 7th and 8th, Pea Ridge, Ark., including engagements at Bentonville,\\nLeetown and Elkhorn Tavern. Union 203 killed, 972 wounded, 174 missing.\\nConfederate 1,100 killed, 2,500 wounded, 1,600 missing and captured. Union\\nBrigadier General Asboth and Acting Brigadier-General Carr wounded.\\nConfederate Brigadier-General B. McCulloch and Acting-Brigadier-General\\nJames Mcintosh killed. 7th, Fox Creek, Mo.; 8th, near Nashville, Tenn.;\\n9th, Mountain Grove, Mo.; Hampton Roads, Va Union 261 killed, 108\\nwounded. Confederate 7 killed, 17 wounded. 10th, Burke s Station, Va.;\\nJacksboro Big Creek Gap, Tenn.; 11th, Paris, Tenn 12th, Lexington, Mo.,\\nnear Lebanon, Mo 13th, New Madrid, Mo.; 14th, Newberne, N. C. Union 91\\nkilled, 466 wounded. Confederate 64 killed, 106 wounded, 413 captured. 16th,\\nBlack Jack Forest, Tenn 18th, Salem, Ark.; 21st, Mosquito Inlet, Fla.; 22d,\\nIndependence, Mo.; 23d, Carthage, Mo.; Winchester Va.; 26th, Warrensburg,\\nMo Humonsville, Mo.; 26th, 27th and 28th, Apache Canon near Santa F6,\\nN. Mex 28th, Warrensburg, Mo.\\nThe law authorizing issue of Greenbacks went into effect February 25,\\nand they were placed before the public March 24.\\nApril 2d, Putnam s Ferry, near Doniphan, Mo.; 4th, Great Bethel, Va.; Crump s\\nLanding, Tenn. 6th and 7th, Shiloh or Pittsburg Landing, Tenn. Army\\nof Western Tennessee, commanded by Major-General U. S. Grant, as fol-\\nlows: 1st Division, Major-General J. A. McClernand; 2d Division, Major-\\nGeneral C. F. Smith; 3d Division, Brigadier-General Lew Wallace; 4th\\nDivision, Brigadier-General S. A. Hurlburt; 5th Division, Brigadier-General\\nW. T. Sherman; 6th Division, Brigadier-General B. M. Prentiss. Army of\\nthe Ohio, commanded by Major-General D. C. Buell, as follows: 2d\\nDivision, Brigadier-General A. M. D. Cook; 4th Division, Brigadier-Gen-\\neral W. Nelson; 5th Division, Brigadier-General T. L. Crittenden, 21st\\nBrigade of the 6th Division, Gunboats Tyler and Lexington. Union\\n1,735 killed 7,882 wounded, 3,956 captured. Confederate 1,728 killed, 8,012\\nwounded, 959 captured. Union Brigadier-General W. T. Sherman and\\nW. H. L. Wallace wounded, and B. M. Prentiss captured. Confederate\\nMajor-General A. S. Johnson, commander-in-chief, and Brigadier-General\\nA. H. Gladden, killed; Major-General W. S. Cheatham and Brigadier-\\nGeneral C. Clark, B. R. Johnson and J. S. Bowen, wounded. 8th, Island\\nNo. 10, Tenn. Major-General Pope s command and the Navy, under\\nFlag-officer Foote. Near Corinth, Miss. 10th, Fort Pulaski, Ga.; 11th,\\nHuntsville, Ala. Army of the Ohio; Yorktown, Va.; 12th, Little Blue\\nRiver, Mo.; Monterey, Va.; 14th, Pollocksville, N. C; Diamond Grove, Mo.;\\nWalkersville, Mo.; Montavallo, Mo.; 15th, Pechacho Pass. Ariz.; 16th,\\nSavannah, Tenn.; W T hite Marsh, Ga.; Lee s Mills, Va.; 17th, Holly River,\\nW. Va.; 18th, Falmouth, Va.; Edisto Island, S. C; 18th to 28th, Forts\\nJackson and St. Philip, and the capture of New Orleans, La.; Commodore\\nFarragut s fleet of war vessels and mortar boats, under Commander D. D.\\nPorter; 19th, Talbot s Ferry, Ark.; Camden, N. C; 23d, Grass Lick, W.\\nVa.; 25th, Fort Macon, N. C; 26th, Turnback Creek, Mo.; Neosha, Mo.; in\\nfront of Yorktown, Va.; 27th, Horton s Mills, N. C; 28th, Paint Rock Rail-\\nroad Bridge; Cumberland Mountain, Tenn.; Monterey, Tenn.; 28th,\\nBridgeport, Ala.\\nMay 1st, Clarke s Hollow, W. Va.; 3d, Farmington, Miss.; 4th, Licking, Mo.;\\nCheese Cake Church, Va.; 5th, Lebanon, Tenn. Lockridge Mills, Ky.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0090.jp2"}, "91": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1862\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nNAMES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nWilliamsburg, Va. 7th, West Point or Eltham s Landing, Va.; Somerville\\nHeights, Va.; 8th, McDowell, Va.; Glendale, near Corinth, Miss.; 9th, Elk-\\nton Station, near Athens, Ala.; Slatersville, Va. 10th, Fort Pillow, Tenn.;\\n11th, Bloomfield, Mo.; 13th, Monterey, Tenn.; 15th, Linden, Va Fort Dar-\\nling, James River, Va. Chalk Bluffs, Mo.; Butler, Bates county, Mo.; 15th,\\n16th and 18th, Princeton, W. Va.; General J. D. Cox s Division; 17th, in\\nfront of Corinth, Miss., Brigadier General M. L. Smith s Brigade; 19th,\\nSearcy Landing, Ark.; Clinton, N. C 21st, Phillip s Creek, Miss.; 22d,\\nFlorida, Mo.; 23d, Lewisburg, Va. Front Royal, Va. Buckton Station, Va.;\\nFort Craig, N. Mex.; 24th. New Bridge, Va. Chickahominy, Va 25th, Win-\\nchester, Va. 27th, Hanover C. H.,Va. Union 53 killed, 344 wounded.\\nConfederate 2C0 killed and wounded, 730 prisoners. Big Indian Creek,\\nnear Searcy Landing, Ark.; Osceola, Mo.; 28th, Wardensville, Va. 29th,\\nPocatalfigo, S. C; 30th, Booneville, Miss Front Royal Va.; 31st, Neosho,\\nMo.; near Washington, N. C. 31st and June 1st, Seven Pines and Fair Oaks,\\nVa., 2d Corps, 3d Corps and 4th Corps Army of the Potomac. Union 890\\nkilled, 3,627 wounded, 1,222 missing. Confederate 2,800 killed, 3,897\\nwounded, 1,300 missing. Union Brigadier-Generals O. O. Howard, Naglee,\\nand Wessells, wounded. Confederate Brigadier-General Hatton killed,\\nGeneral T. E. Johnson and Brigadier General Rhodes wounded, Brigadier-\\nGeneral Pettigrew captured.\\nJune 1st and 2d, Strasburg and Staunton Road, Va. 3d, Legare s Point, S. C;\\n4th, Jasper, Sweden s Cove, Tenn.; Blackland, Miss.; 5th, Tranter s Creek,\\nN. C; 6th, Memphis, Tenn.; Harrisonburg, Va.; General Ashby killed. 8th,\\nCross Ceys or Union Church, Va. Union 125 killed, 500 wounded. Con-\\nfederate 42 killed, 230 wounded. Confederate Brigadier-Generals Stewart\\nand Elzey wounded. 9th, Port Republic, Va.; 10th. James Island, S. C;\\n11th, Monterey, Owen county, Ky. 12th, Waddell s Farm, near Village\\nCreek, Ark.; 13th, Old Church. Va.; James Island, S. C 14th, Turnstall\\nStation, Va.; 16th, Secessionville or Fort Johnson, James Island, S. C;\\nHth, St. Charles, White River, Ark Warrensburg, Mo.; Smithville, Ark\\n18th, Williamsburg Road, Va.; 21st, Battle Creek, Tenn.; 22d, Raceland.\\nnear Algiers, La 23d, Raytown, Mo.; 25th, Oak Grove, Va Germantown,\\nTenn.; Little Red River, Ark.; 26th to 29th, Vicksburg, Miss U. S. Fleet,\\nunder command of Commodore Farragut; 26th to July 1st, The Seven Days\\nRetreat. Army of the Potomac, Major-General George B. McClellan com-\\nmanding, including engagements known as Mechanicsville or Ellison s Mill,\\non the 26th, Gains Mills or Cold Harbor and Chickahominy on the 27th,\\nPeach Orchard and Savage Station on the 29th, White Oak Swamp, also\\ncalled Charles City Cross Roads, Glendale, Nelson s Farm, Frazier s Farm.\\nTurkey Bend and New Market Cross Roads on the 30th, and Malvern Hili\\non July 1st. Union\u00e2\u0080\u0094 First Corps, Brigadier-General McCall s Division,\\n253 killed, 1,240 wounded, 1,581 missing; Second Corps, Major-General E.\\nV. Sumner, 187 killed, 1,076 wounded, 848 missing Third Corps, Major-\\nGeneral Heintzleman, 189 killed, 1,051 wounded, 833 missing; Fourth Corps,\\nMajor-General E. D. Keyes, 69 killed, 507 wounded, 201 missing; Fifth\\nCorps, Major-General Fitz-John Porter, 620 killed, 2,460 wounded, 1,198\\nmissing; Sixth Corps, Major-General Franklin, 245 killed, 1,313 wounded,\\n1,179 missing; Cavalry, Brigadier-General Stoneman, 19 killed, 60\\nwounded, 97 missing; Engineer Corps, 2 wounded, 21 missing; total,\\n1,582 killed, 7,709 wounded, 5,958 missing. Major-General Sumner\\nand Brigadier-Generals Mead, Brook and Burns, wounded. Confed-\\nerate\u00e2\u0080\u0094Major-General Hager s Division, 187 killed, 803 wounded, 360\\nmissing; Major-General Magruder s Division, 258 killed, 1,495 wounded, 30\\nmissing; Major-General Longstreet s Division, 763 killed, 3,929 wounded,", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0091.jp2"}, "92": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1862\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nNAMES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nof the Ohio, Major-General McCook; and Third Corps, Brigadier-General\\nGilbert. Union 916 killed, 2,943 wounded, 489 missing. Confederate, 2,500\\nkilled, wounded and missing. Union Brigadier-Generals J. S. Jackson and\\nTerrill killed. Confederate Brigadier-Generals Cleburne, Wood and\\nBrown wounded. 10th, Harrodsburg, Ky.; Hth, La Grange, Ark.; 17th\\nLexington, Ky.; 18th, Haymarket, Va.; 22d, Pocotaligo or Yemassee, S. C;\\n23d, Waverly, Tenn.; 24th, Grand Prairie, Mo.; 28th, Clarkson, Mo.\\nNovember 1st, Philomont, Va.; 2d and 3d, Bloomfield and Union.; 3d, Harri-\\nsonville, Mo.; 5th, Barbee s Cross Roads and Chester Gap, Va.; Nashville,\\nTenn.; 6th Garrettsburg, Ky.; 7th, Big Beaver Creek, Mo.; Marianna, Ark.;\\n8th, Hudsonville, Miss.; 17th, Gloucester, Va.; 18th, Rural Hills, Tenn.;\\n24th, Beaver Creek, Mo.; 26th, Summerville, Miss.; 28th, Cane Hill, Boston\\nMountain and Boonsboro Ark.; Hardwood Church, Va.\\nDecembe r 1st, Charleston and Berryville, Va.; 5th, Coffeeville, Miss.; Helena,\\nArk.; 7th, Prairie Grove, Ark.; Hartsville, Tenn.; 9th, Dobbin s Ferry,\\nTenn.; 12th, Little Bear Creek, Ala.; 12th to 18th, Foster s expedition to\\nGoldsboro N. C; 13th, Fredericksburg, Va. Army of the Potomac, Major-\\nGeneral Burnside; Second Corps, Major-General Couch; Ninth Corps,\\nMajor-General Wilcox. Right Grand Division, Major-General Sumner;\\nFirst Corps, Major-General Reynolds; Sixth Corps, Major-General W. F.\\nSmith. Left Grand Division, Major-General Franklin; Fifth Corps, Major-\\nGeneral Butterfield. Third Corps, Major-General Stoneman. Centre Grand\\nDivision, Major-General Hooker. Union 1,180 killed, 9,028 wounded, 2,145\\nmissing. Confederate 579 killed, 3,870 wounded, 127 missing Union\\nBrigadier-General Jackson and Bayard killed, and Gibbons and Vinton\\nwounded. Confederate Brigadier-General T. R. R. Cobb killed, and\\nMaxey Gregg wounded. 14th, Kingston, N. C; 18th, Lexington, Tenn.;\\n20th, Holly Springs, Miss.; Trenton, Tenn 21st, Davis Mills, Miss 24th,\\nMiddleburg, Miss.; Glasgow, Kv.; 25th, Green s Chapel, Kv.; 26th Bacon\\nCreek, Ky.; 27th, Elizabethtown, Ky.; Dumfries, Va.; 28th, Elk Fork,\\nTenn.; 28th and 29th, Chickasaw Bayou, Vicksburg, Miss.; Army of\\nTennessee, Major-General W. T. Sherman; 30th, Wautauga Bridge and\\nCarter s Station, Tenn.; Jefferson, Tenn.; Parker s Cross Roads, Tenn.;\\n31st to January 2d, Murfreesboro or Stone River, Tenn.; Army of the\\nCumberland, Major-General Rosecrans. Right Wing, McCook s Corps;\\nCentre, Thomas Corps; Left Wing, Crittenden s Corps. _ Union 1,533\\nkilled, 7,245 wounded, 2,800 missing. Confederate, 14,560 killed, wounded\\nand missing. Union Brigadier-General Sill killed and Kirk wounded.\\nConfederate Brigadier-Generals Raines and Hanson killed, and Chalmers\\nand Davis wounded.\\nThe United States is the fifth naval power in the world. The navies of Great\\nBritain. France, Russia and Italy rank ahead in the order named. Germany and\\nthe United States are about tied.\\nThe battleship Iowa weighs about 12,000 tons, and as twenty tons is the\\naverage load of a freight car and twelve cars is a good load for a locomotive\\nengine, it would take fifty locomotives to haul the great steel structure.\\nThe powder used in the big guns is brown and in chunks the size of a cara-\\nmel. A charge for the biggest guns weighs 500 pounds and is hoisted to the\\nbreech by a derrick, the powder being sewed up in burlap bags.\\nArmor plates are tested by firing steel projectiles weighing from 100 to 1,500\\npounds at them, from guns charged with 500 pounds of powder and at a distance\\nof a city block.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0092.jp2"}, "93": {"fulltext": "Go to the ant, thou sluggard,\\nconsider her ways and be wise.\\n\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 6-6.\\n1863\\nA. good name is rather to be\\nchosen than great riches, Prov.\\n22-1.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nM\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nW\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nF\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nS\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nNAMES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nAfter one hundred days warning, on January i, President Lincoln issued his\\nfamous proclamation of Emancipation.\\nOn January 22 there was an insurrection in Poland.\\nThe French enter the city of Mexico June 10.\\nSam Houston died July 25.\\nJuly 20 Louis Napoleon declares Mexico an Empire, and Maximilian of Austria\\nis made Emperor.\\nDraft riots occurred in New York City in July, and considerable property\\ndestroyed.\\nIn September great distress reported in the cotton manufacturing districts of\\nEngland.\\nOctober 31 large subscriptions made to United States 5-20 loan.\\nCzar Alexander II abolishes serfdom in Russia.\\nNational Banking Law passed by United States Congress.\\n(Continued on next page.)", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0093.jp2"}, "94": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1863-Continued.\\nNAHES AND DATES OF BATTLES,\\nJanuary, 1863\u00e2\u0080\u0094 1st, Galveston, Tex.; 7th and 8th, Springfield, Mo.; 11th, Fort\\nHindman, Ark.; Hartsville, Mo.; Confederate Brig.-Gen. McDonald\\nkilled; 14th, Bayou Teche, La.; 24th, Woodbury, Tenn.; 30th, Deserted\\nHouse; 31st, Rover, Tenn.\\nFebruary 3d, Fort Donnelson or Cumberland Iron Works, Tenn.;\\n14th, Brentsville, Va.; 16th, near Romney, W. Va.; 21st, Prairie Station,\\nMiss.; 24th, Mississippi river below Vicksburg; U. S. Gunboat Indianola.\\nMarch 1st, Bradyville, Tenn.; 4th, Skeet, N. C; 4th and 5th, Thomp-\\nson s Station, Tenn.; Union 100 killed, 300 wounded, 1,306 captured; Con-\\nfederate 150 killed, 450 wounded; 8th, Fairfax C. H., Va.; Brig.-Gen\\nStoughton and thirty-three men captured by Mosby in his midnight raid;\\n10th, Covington, Tenn.; 13th to April 5th, Fort Pemberton, Miss.; 14th, Port\\nHudson, La.; 17th, Kelly s Ford, Va.; 20th, Vaught s Hill, Tenn.; 22d Mt\\nSterling, Ky 24th, Danville, Ky. Ponchatoula, La.; 25th, Brentwood,\\nTenn.; Franklin and Little Harpeth, Tenn.; 28th, Pattersonville, La.;\\n29th, Somerville, Tenn.; 30th, Dutton s Hill, Ky.; Point Pleasant, W. Va.;\\n30th to April 4th, Washington and Rodman s Point, N. C.\\nApril 2d and 3d, Wookbury and Snow Hill, Tenn.; 7th, bombardment Fort\\nSumter, S. C; 10th, Franklin and Harpeth River, Tenn.; Antioch Station,\\nTenn.; 12th to 14th, Irish Bend and Bisland, La.; Union 350 killed,\\nwounded and missing. Confederate 400 wounded, 2,000 missing and cap-\\ntured; 12th to May 4th, siege of Suffolk, Va.; 15th, Dunbar s Plantation,\\nLa.; 17th to May 2d, Grierson s expedition from La Grange, Tenn., to\\nBaton Rouge, La. 18th and 19th, Hernando and Coldwater, Miss 20th,\\nPatterson, Mo.; 24th, Tuscumbia, Ala.; White Water, Mo.; 26th, Cape Gir-\\nardeau, Mo.; 27th to May 3d, Streight s raid, Tuscumbia, Ala., to Rome,\\nGa.; 27th to May 8th, Stoneman s cavalry raid in Virginia; 29th, Fairmont,\\nW. Va.; Grand Gulf, Miss., gunboat fleet; 30th, Spottsylvania, C. H., Va.;\\n30th and May 1st, Chalk Bluff and St. Francois River, Mo.\\nMay 1st, Port Gibson, Miss, (the first engagement in Grant s campaign against\\nVicksburg). Thirteenth Corps, Major General McClernand and 3d Divis-\\nion, Seventeenth Corps, Major General McPherson. Union 130 killed,\\n718 wounded. Confederate 1,150 killed and wounded, 500 missing. Con-\\nfederate Brigadier General Tracy killed. 1st, La Grange, Ark. Monti-\\ncello, Ky.; 1st to 4th, Chancellorsville, Va., including battles of Sixth\\nCorps at Fredericksburg and Salem Heights. Army of the Potomac,\\nMajor General Hooker; First Corps, Major General Reynolds; Second\\nCorps, Major General Couch; Third Corps, Major General Sickles; Fifth\\nCorps, Major General Meade; Sixth Corps, Major General Sedgwick;\\nEleventh Corps, Major General Howard; Twelfth Corps, Major General\\nSlocum. Union 1,512 killed, 9,518 wounded, 5,000 missing. Confederate\\n1,581 killed, 8,700 wounded, 2,000 missing. Union Major General Berry\\nand Brigadier General Whipple killed, Devan and Kirby wounded. Con-\\nfederate Brigadier General Paxton killed, Lieutenant General J. S. Jack-\\nson, Major General A. P. Hill, Brigadier Generals Hoke, Nichols,\\nRamseur, McGowan, Heth and Pender wounded. 3d, Warrenton Junc-\\ntion, Va.; 4th, siege of Suffolk, Va., raised; 11th, Horse Shoe Bend, Ky.;\\n12th, Raymond, Miss., Confederate General Telghman killed; 13th, Hall s\\nFerry; 14th, Jackson, Miss., Fifteenth Corps, Major General Sherman;\\nSeventeenth Corps, Major General McPherson. 16th, Champion Hill,\\nMiss. Hovey s Division, Thirteenth Corps and Seventeenth Corps.\\nUnion 426 killed, 1,842 wounded, 189 missing. Confederate 2,500 killed\\nand wounded, 1,800 missing. 17th, Big Black River, Miss., Carr s and\\nOsterhaus Divisions, Thirteenth Corps, Major General McClernand.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0094.jp2"}, "95": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1863\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nNAHES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nUnion 29 killed, 242 wounded. Confederate 600 killed and wounded, 2.500\\ncaptured. i8th to July 4th, siege of Vicksburg. Thirteenth Corps, Fif-\\nteenth Corps and Seventeenth Corps, commanded by Major General U. S\\nGrant, and gunboat fleet commanded by Admiral Porter. Assault on Fort\\nHill on May 1 9th and general assault on the 20th, in which Confederate\\nBrigadier General Green was killed. Three divisions of the Sixteenth Corps\\nand two divisions of the Ninth Corps, and Major General Herron s division\\nwere then added to the besieging forces. Union 545 killed, 3,688 wounded,\\n303 missing. Confederate, 31,277 killed, wounded and prisoners, ,20th to\\n28th, Clendenin s raid below Fredericksburg, Va.; 21st. Middleton. Tenn\\n25th, near Helena, Ark.; 27th, Lake Providence, La 27th to July 9th, siege\\nof Port Hudson, La. Union 500 killed, 2,500 wounded. Confederates 100\\nkilled, 700 wounded, 6,408 prisoners. Union Brigadier Generals T. W.\\nSherman and H. E. Paine wounded.\\nJune 4th, Franklin, Tenn.; 5th, Franklin s Crossing, Rappahannock River, Va.\\n6th to 8th, Milliken s Bend, La 23d Iowa and three regiments colored troops.\\n(No quarter shown.) Union 154 killed, 223 wounded, 115 missing. Confed\\nerate 125 killed, 400 wounded, 200 missing. 9th, Monticello and Rocky Gap,\\nKy. Beverly Ford and Brandy Station, Va. Union 500 killed, wounded and\\nmissing. Confederate 700 killed, wounded and missing. 11th, Middleton,\\nVa.; 13th and loth, Winchester, Va. Union 3.(00 killed, wounded and\\nmissing. Confederate 850 killed, wounded and missing. 14th, Martins-\\nburg, Va.; 16th, Triplett s Bridge, Ky.; 17th, Aldie, Va.; Westport, Mo.;\\ncapture of rebel gunboat Atlanta by U. S. ironclad Weehawken; 20th,\\nRocky Crossing, Miss.; 20th and 21st, La Fourche Crossing, La 21st, Up-\\nperville, Va.;22d, Hill s Plantation, Miss.; \u00c2\u00a33d, Brashear City, La.; 23d to\\n30th, Rosecrans campaign Murfreesboro to Tullahoma, Tenn.; 28th, Don-\\naldsonville, La 29th, Westminster, Md.; 30th, Hanover, Pa\\nJuly 1st to 3d, Gettysburg, Pa Army of the Potomac, Major General George\\nG. Meade; First Corps. Major General Reynolds; Second Corps, Major Gen-\\neral Hancock; Third Corps, Major General Sickles; Sixth Corps, Major Gen-\\neral Sedgwick; Eleventh Corps, Major General Howard; Twelfth Corps.\\nMajor General Slocum; Cavalry Corps, Major General Pleasanton. Union\\n2,834 killed, 13,709 wounded, 6,643 missing. Confederate 3,500 killed,\\n14,500 wounded, 13.621 missing. Union Major General Reynolds, Brigadier\\nGenerals Weed. Zook and Farnsworth killed; Major Generals Sickles and\\nHancock, Brigadier Generals Paul, Rowley Gibbons and Barlow wounded.\\n(General Lucius Fairchild, Commander-in Chief, Grand Army of the Repub-\\nlic, lost his arm on the first day.) Confederate Major General Pender, Brig-\\nadier Generals Garnett. Barksdale and Semmes killed; Major Generals\\nHood, Trimble and Heth, Brigadier Generals Kemper. Scales, Anderson,\\nHampton, Jones, Jenkins. Pettigrew and Posey wounded. 1st to 26th.\\nMorgan s raid into Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio; finally captured at New\\nLisbon, Ohio, by Brigadier General Shackleford s cavalry. Union 22 killed,\\n80 wounded, 790 missing Confederate 86 killed, 385 wounded, 3.0(0 cap-\\ntured. 4th, Helena. Ark., Major General Prentiss division of Sixteenth\\nCorps and gunboat Tyler. Union 57 killed, 117 wounded. 32 missing. Con-\\nfederates 173 killed. 687 wounded, 776 missing 4th and 5th, Bolton and\\nBirdsong Ferry, Miss., Major General Sherman s forces. Confederate 2,(00\\ncaptured; Monterey Gap and Smithburg. Md., and Fairfield, Pa Kilpat-\\nrick s cavalry; 5th, Lebanon, Ky.; 6th Quaker Bridge. N. C; Hagerstown\\nand Williamsport, Md 7th and 9th.Iuka Miss.; 7th to 9th, Boonsboro, Md.;\\n9th to 16th, Jackson, Miss., Union 100 killed, 800 wounded and 100 missing;\\nConfederate 71 killed, 504 wounded, 764 missing. 10th to September 6th,\\nsiege of Fort Wagner, Morris Island, S. C; 12th, Ashby Gap, Va. 13th,", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0095.jp2"}, "96": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EYENTS OF THE YEAR 1863-Continued.\\nNAMES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nYazoo City, Miss., Major General Herron s division and three gunboats;\\nJackson, Tenn Donaldsonville. La 13th to 15th, draft riots in New York\\nCity, in which over 1,000 rioters were killed; 14th, Falling Waters, Md.,\\nConfederate Major General Pettigrew killed; Elk River, Tenn., advance of\\nthe Fourteenth Corps, Army of the Cumberland; Near Bolivar Heights,\\nVa.; 15th, Pulaski, Ala.; Halltown, Va 16th, Sheppardstown, Va.; 17th,\\nHoney Springs, I. T. Wytheville, W. Va Canton, Miss 18th to 21st, Pot-\\nter s cavalry raid to Tar River and Rocky Mount. N. C 21st to 23d, Manassas\\nGap and Chester Gap, Va 26th, Pattacassey Creek, N. C 30th, Irvine,\\nKy.; 24th, Big Mound, Dak 26th, Dead Buffalo Lake, Dak.; 26th, Stoney\\nLake, Dak.;3uth, Missouri River, Dak.\\nAugust 1st to 3d, Rappahannock Station, Brandy Station and Kelly s Ford, Va\\n3d, Jackson, La.; 5th, Dutch Gap, James River, Va. 7th, New Madrid, Mo.;\\n9th, Sparta, Tenn.; cavalry Army of the Cumberland; 13th, Grenada, Miss\\nPineville, Mo.; 14th, West Point, White River, Ark.; 21st, Quantrell s plun-\\nder and massacre of Lawrence, Kan., in which 140 citizens were killed and\\n24 wounded, Confederates 40 killed; Coldwater, Miss 24th, Coyle Tavern,\\nnear Fairfax C H., Va.; 25th to 80th, Averill s raid in West Virginia; 26th,\\nRocky Gap, near White Sulphur Springs, Va.; 25th to 31st, Brownsville, Ark.\\nSeptember 1st, Barbee s Cross Roads, Va Devil s Back Bone, Ark.; 5th, Lime-\\nstone Station, Tenn. 8th, night attack on Fort Sumter. S. C. 9th, Cumberland\\nGap, Tenn.; 10th, Little Rock, Ark. 11th, Ringgold, Ga.; 12th, Sterling s\\nPlantation, La.; 13th, Culpepper, Va Lett s Tan Yard, near Chickamauga,\\nGa.; 14th, Rapidan Station, Va Vidalia, La.; 19th. Rapidan Station, Va.\\n19th and 20th, Chickamauga, Ga. Army of the Cumberland, Major General\\nRosecrans: Fourteenth Corps. Major General Thomas; Twentieth Corps.\\nMajor General McCook; Twenty-first Corps, Major General Crittenden, and\\nReserve Corps, Major General Granger. Union 1,644 killed, 9,262 wounded,\\n4 945 missing. Confederate 2,389 killed, 13,412 wounded, .2,003 missing.\\nUnion Brigadier General Lyttle killed, and Starkweather, Whittaker and\\nKing wounded. Confederate Brigadier Generals Preston, Smith, Deshler\\nand Helm killed, and Major General Hood, Brigadier Generals Adams,\\nGregg, Brown, McNair, Bunn, Preston, Cleburne, Benning and Clayton\\nwounded. 21st, Bristol, Tenn.; 22d, Madison C. H., Tenn.; Blountsville.\\nTenn. Rockwell, Md.;26th; Calhoun, Tenn.; 27th, Moffat s Station, Ark\\n29th. Near Morganzia, La.\\nOctober 1st, Anderson s Gap, Tenn.; 2d, Anderson s Cross Roads, Tenn.; 3d,\\nMcMinville. Tenn.; 4th, Neosho, Mo.; 5th, Stockade at Stone River, Tenn.;\\nGlasgow, Tenn.; 6th, Quantrell s attack on the escort of Major General Blunt\\nat Baxter Springs, Ark.; 7th, Near Farmington, Tenn 10th, Rapidan, Va\\nJames City, also called Robertson s Run, Va, Blue Springs, Tenn. 11th, Hen-\\nderson s Mill, Tenn Collierville, Tenn. 12th,Jeffersonton, Va 12th and 13th,\\nIngham s Mills and Wyatts, Miss.; Culpepper and White Sulphur Springs,\\nVa Merrill s Crossing to Lamine Crossing, Mo.; Blountsville, Tenn Bull-\\ntown, Va.; 14th, Auburn, Va.; Bristoe Station, Va., Union 51 killed, 329\\nwounded, Confederate 750 killed and wounded, 450 missing, Union Briga-\\ndier General Malone killed, Confederate Brigadier Generals Cooke, Posey\\nand Kirkland wounded; 15th, McLean s Ford or Liberty Mills, Va. 15th to\\n18th, Canton, Brownsville and Clinton, Miss.; 16th, Cross Timbers, Mo\\n17th, Tampa, Fla.; 18th, Charlestown, W. Va.; Berrysville, Va 19th,\\nBuckland Mills, Va.; 20th and 22d, Philadelphia, Tenn.; 21st, Cherokee Sta-\\ntion, Ala.; 22d, Beverly Ford, Va 25th, Pine Bluff, Ark.; 26th, Cane Creek,\\nAla.; Vincent s Cross Roads or Bay Springs, Miss.; 27th, Brown s Ferry.\\nTenn.; Wauhatchie, Tenn.; 28th, Leiper s Ferry, Tenn.; 29th, Cherokee\\nStation, Ala.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0096.jp2"}, "97": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR\u00e2\u0080\u0094 1863 Continued.\\nNAIIES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nNovember 3d, Centerville and Piney Factory, Term.; Grand Coteau, La.; 8d\\nand 4th, Collierville and Moscow, Tenn.; 6th, Rogersville. Tenn Droop\\nMountain, Va. 7th, Rappahannock Station, Va., Union 370 killed and\\nwounded, Confederates 11 killed, 98 wounded, 1,629 missing; Kelly s Ford\\nVa.; 8th, Clarksville, Ark Muddy Run, near Culpepper, Va 11th, .Natchez,\\nMiss.; 13th, Trinity River, Cal.; 14th, Huff s Ferry, Tenn.; Rockford Tenn.;\\nMarysville, Tenn.; 15th, Loudon Creek, Tenn 16th, Campbell s Station.\\nTenn., Union 60 killed, 340 wounded, Confederate 570 killed and wounded;\\n17th, Mount Jackson, Va. ;l7th to December 4th, siege of Knoxville, Term\\nArmy of the Ohio, commanded by Major General Burnside, complete cas\\nualties not recorded, at Fort Sanders November 29th the losses we*e Union\\n20 killed, 80 wounded, Confederate 80 killed, 400 wounded, 300 captured;\\n19th, Union City, Tenn.; 23d to 25th, Chattanooga, Lookout Mountain,\\nOrchard Knob and Missionary Ridge, Tenn Fourth and Fourteenth Corps,\\nArmy of the Cumberland, Major General George H. Thomas, Eleventh,\\nGeary s division of the Twelfth and the Fifteenth Corps Army of the Ten-\\nnessee, Major General W. T. Sherman, Union 757 killed, 4,529 wounded,\\n330 missing. Confederate 361 killed, 2.181 wounded. 6,142 missing; 24th.\\nSparta, Tenn.; 26th to 28th, operations at Mine Run, Va. Union 100 killed,\\n400 wounded Confederate 100 killed, 400 wounded; 27th, Cleveland, Tenn.;\\nRinggold and Taylor s Ridge, Ga. 27th to 29th, Fort Esperanza, Texas.\\nDecember 2, Walker s Ford, W. Va.; 1st to 4th, Ripley and Moscow Station,\\nMiss., and Salisbury Tenn.; 7th, Creelsboro, Ky., and Celina, Tenn.; 8th,\\nto 21st, Averill s raid in southwestern Virginia; 10th to 11th, Bean s Station\\nand Morristown, Tenn. Union 700 killed and wounded. Confederate 932\\nkilled and wounded, 150 prisoners; 17th to 26th, Rodney and Port Gibson,\\nMiss.; 19th, Barren Fork, I. T.; 24th and 25th, Bolivar and Summerville,\\nTenn.; 28th, Charleston Tenn.; 29th, Talbot s Station and Mossy Creek,\\nTenn.; 30th, St. Augustine, Fla. Greenville, N. C; Waldron, Ark.\\nOur battleships have a speed of from fifteen to seventeen knots an hour.\\nCruisers make nineteen to twenty-four knots, while the monitors can travel\\nonly five to seven knots.\\nThe biggest guns in the navy are forty-nine feet long, big enough for a\\nman to crawl into; four feet in diameter at their largest part, and weigh\\nI 35.5\u00c2\u00b0\u00c2\u00b0 pounds or thereabouts.\\nIn a battle at sea the woodwork and all articles of wood are either stowed\\nbelow or thrown overboard lest the men be injured by splinters\\nThe origin of the navy department may be said to date from October 13,\\n1775, when congress authorized the equipment of two cruisers.\\nThe fastest vessels in the navy are the torpedo boats Porter and Dupont,\\neach of which can travel 27.5 knots an hour.\\nBattleships cost from $2,500 000 to $3 750,000, and cruisers from $600,000\\nto $3 000,000. A good torpedo boat costs over $100 000.\\nBattleships are for heavy work; cruisers are commerce destroyers; monitors\\nare useful only for coast defense.\\nThe Indiana could lie outside Sandy Hook and throw 1,200-pound shots\\ninto New York at the rate of four a minute.\\nThose artists who show smoke in their pictures of naval battles are wholly\\nwrong. Smokeless powder is used.\\nAll of the cruisers are named in honor of cities, and the battleships, except\\nthe Kearsarge, in honor of states.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0097.jp2"}, "98": {"fulltext": "Intemperance S A Peace, and hope, and gladness\\nOnce the demon enters, 1 r\\\\ /fl Dwell there nevermore.\\nStands within the door, J[ \\\\J \\\\J T \u00e2\u0080\u0094Chellls.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n2(\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\nOctober...\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nN\\\\MES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nThe Pullman Palace Sleeping Car patented.\\nNathaniel Hawthorne, a distinguished American author, died May 19th; was\\nborn Julv 4 1804\\nOn June 19, the Confederate cruiser Alabama was sunk in a fight off the coast\\nof France, by the United States steamer Kearsarge.\\nJuly a strong Confederate movement was made against Baltimore and Wash-\\nington without success.\\nIn July gold reached 285, the highest premium ever known.\\nAugust 4 was appointed as a national fast day.\\nAdmiral Farragut, commanding the Western Gulf Squadron, captures Forts\\nGaines and Morgan, below Mobile.\\nIn September and December, Gen. W. T. Sherman makes his famous march\\nto the sea, entering Savannah, Georgia, December 21.\\nNevada admitted into the Union.\\n(Continued on next page)", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0098.jp2"}, "99": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1864- Continued.\\nNAMES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nNational Republican Convention at Baltimore nominating Abraham Lincoln\\nand Andrew Johnson for President and Vice-President.\\nNational Democratic Convention at Chicago, nominating Gen. George B.\\nMcClellan and Geo. H. Pendleton for President and Vice-President.\\nJanuary, 1864\u00e2\u0080\u0094 1st to 10th, Rectortown and Loudon Heights, Va.; 3d, Jones-\\nville, Va.; 7th, Martin s Creek, Ark.; 12th, Mavfield, Kv.; 13th, Mossy\\nCreek, Tenn. 14th, Bealton, Va. 16th and 17th, Dandrid ge, Tenn.; 20th,\\nTracy City, Tenn.; 23d, Rolling Prairie, Ark.; 24th, Baker Springs, Ark.;\\nTazewell, Tenn.; 27th, Fair Gardens or Kellv s Ford, Tenn.; 28th, Tunnel\\nHill, Ga.; 29th, Medley, W. Va.\\nFebruary 1st, Smithville, Va. 1st to 3d, New Berne, N. C; 1st to March 8th,\\nExpedition up the Yazoo River, Miss.; 3d to March 5th, Expedition from\\nVicksburg to Meridian, Miss., including Champion Hills, Raymond, Clin-\\nton, Jackson, Decatur, Chunky Station, occupation of Meridan, Lauderdale\\nSprings and Marion, Miss. Union 56 killed, 138 wounded, 105 missing.\\nConfederate 503 killed and wounded, 212 captured. 5th, Qualltown, N. C.\\nCape Girardeau, Mo.; 6th, Bolivar, Tenn.; Morton s Ford, Va.; 7th, Vidalia]\\nLa.; 9th, Morgan s Mills, Ark.; 9th to 14th, Barber s Place, St. Mary s\\nRiver, Lake City andGainesville, Fla.; 10th to 25th, Smith s Raid from\\nGermantown, Tenn., into Mississippi; 12th, Rock House, W. Va.; 14th,\\nRoss Landing, Ark.; Brentsville, Va.; 14th and 15th, Waterproof, La.;\\n19th, Grosse Tete Bayou, La.; near Batesville, Ark.; 20th, Holston River,\\nTenn.; Olustee or Silver Lake, Fla. Union 193 killed, 1,175 wounded, 460\\nmissing. Confederate 100 killed, 400 wounded. 22d, Mulberry Gap,\\nTenn.; Drainesville, Va. Johnson s Mills, Tenn.; 23d and March 18th, Calf\\nKiller Creek, Tenn.; 25th to 27th, Buzzard Roost, Tunnel Hill and Rocky\\nFace, Ga. 28th to March 4th, Kilpatrick s Raid, Stevensburg to Rich-\\nmond, Va.; Kilpatrick s Cavalry. Union 330 killed, wounded and\\ncaptured. Confederate 308 killed, wounded and captured.\\nMarch 1st, Standardsville and Burton s Ford, Rapidan, Va.; 2d, Harrisonburg,\\nLa.; 5th, Panther Springs, Tenn.; 7th, Decatur, Ala; Army of the Tennes-\\nsee, commanded by Brigadier-General Dodge; 9th, Suffolk, Va.; 14th, Fort\\nDe Russy, La.; 15th, Clarendon, Ark.; 17th, Manchester, Tenn.; 21st, Hen-\\nderson Hills, La.; 24th, Union City, Ky.; 25th, Fort Anderson, Paducah,\\nKy. Confederate Brigadier-General Thompson killed. 26th to 30th, Long-\\nview and Mt. Elba, Ark.; 28th, Charleston, 111 .attack on 54th Illinois by\\nmob of Copperheads while returning to the front from veteran furlough;\\n29th, Bolivar, Tenn.; 31st, Near Snydersville, Miss.\\nApril 1st, Near Augusta, Ark. 2d, Spoonville, Ark.; Crump s Hill or Piney\\nWoods, La.; 3d, Okalona, Ark.; 4th, Campti, La.; 4th to 6th, Elkin s Ford,\\nArk.; 5th, Roseville, Ark.; Stone s Farm; 6th, Quicksand Creek, Ky.; 7th,\\nWilson s Farm, La; Near Port Hudson, La. 8th and 9th, Sabine Cross\\nRoads and Pleasant Hills, La. Union 300 killed, 1,600 wounded, 2,100\\nmissing. Confederate 600 killed, 2,400 wounded, 500 missing. Union\\nMajor-General Franklin and Brigadier-General Ransom wounded. Con-\\nfederate Major-General Mouton and Brigadier-General Parsons killed.\\n10th to 13th, Prairie D Ann, Ark.; 12th, Pleasant Hill Landing, La.; 13th,\\nMoscow, Ark.; 13th and 14th, Paintsville and Half-Mount, Ky.; 14th,\\nSmithfield or Cherry Grove, Va.; 15th, Bristoe Station, Va.; 15th and 16th,\\nLiberty P. O.: and occupation of Camden, Ark.; 17th, Decatur, Ala.; 17th\\nto 20th, Plymouth, N. C; Lieutenant-Commander Flusser, U. S. N., killed;\\n18th, Poison Springs, eight miles from Camden, Ark.; Boykin s Mills, S.\\nC: 21st, Cotton Plant, Cache River, Ark.; Red Bone, Miss.; 22d, Near\\nTunica Bend, Red River, La.; 23d, Nickajack Trace, Ga.; Moneti s Bluff,\\nCane River and Cloutersville, La.; 25th, Mark s Mills, Ark.; 25th and 26th,", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0099.jp2"}, "100": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1864-Continued.\\nNAHES AND DATES OF BATTLES,\\nWautauga Bridge, Tenn. 26th, Moro Creek, Ark.; 29th, Princeton, Ark.;\\n30th, Jenkin s Ferry, Saline River, Ark.\\nMay 1st, Jacksonville, Fla.; 1st to 8th, Hudnot s Plantation, and near Alexan-\\ndria, La.; 2d, Governor Moore s Plantation, La.; 3d, Red Clay, Ga.; Rich-\\nland, Ark.; 4th, Doubtful Canon, Ariz.; 4th to 12th, Kautz s Cavalry Raid\\nfrom Suffolk, Wall s Bridge, Stoney Creek Station, Jarrett s Station, White s\\nBridge to City Point, Va.; 4th to 13th, Yazoo City expedition, including\\nBenton and Vaughn, Miss.; 5th, Roanoke River, N. C; U. S. Gunboats;\\nDunn s Bayou, Red River, La.; 5th to 7th, Wilderness, Va.; Army of the\\nPotomac, Major-General George G. Meade; Second Corps, Major-General\\nHancock; Fifth Corps, Major-General W T arren; Sixth Corps, Major-General\\nSedgwick; Ninth Corps, Major-General Burnside and Sheridan s Cavalry.\\nUnion 5 597 killed, 21,463 wounded, 10,677 missing. Confederate 2,000\\nkilled, 6,000 wounded, 3,400 missing. Union Brigadier-Generals Wads-\\nworth, Hays and Webb killed. Confederate Ge nerals Jones and Pickett\\nkilled, and Longstreet, Pegram, Stafford, Hunter and Jennings wounded.\\n5th to 9th, Rocky Face Ridge, Ga., including Tunnel Hill, Mill Creek Gap\\nand Buzzard s Roost; Army of the Cumberland, Major-General Thomas;\\nArmy of the Tennessee, Major-General McPherson; Army of the Missis-\\nsippi, Major-General Sherman. Union 200 killed, 637 wounded. Confed-\\nerate 600 killed and wounded. 6th, James River, near City Point, Va.; U.\\nS. Gunboat Commodore Jones; 6th and 7th, Richmond and Petersburg\\nRailroad, near Chester Station, Va.; 7th, Bayou La Mourie, La.; 8th, Todd s\\nTavern, Va.; 8th to 18th, Spottsylvania, Fredericksburg Road, Laurel Hill\\nand Ny River, Va.; Army of the Potomac, Major-General Meade; Second\\nCorps, Major-General Hancock; Fifth Corps, Major-General Warren; Sixth\\nCorps, Major-General Wright; Ninth Corps, Major-General Burnside and\\nSheridan s Cavalry. Union 4,177 killed, 19,687 wounded, 2,577 missing.\\nConfederate 1,000 killed, 5 000 wounded, 3,000 missing. Union Major-Gen-\\neral Sedgwick and Brigadier-Generals Rice, Owens and Stevenson killed,\\nBrigadier-Generals Robertson, Bartlett, Morris and Baxter wounded.\\nConfederate Generals Daniels and Perrin killed, Hayes and Walker\\nwounded, and Major-General Ed. Johnson and Brigadier-General Stewart\\ncaptured. 9th, Varnell s Station, Ga.; 9th and 10th, Swift Creek or Arrow-\\nfield Church, Va.; Cloud s Mountain and New River Bridge, Va. Union\\n126 killed, 585 wounded. Confederate 600 killed and wounded, 300 missing.\\n9th to 13th, Sheridan s Cavalry Raid in Virginia, engagements Beaver\\nDam Station, South Anna Bridge, Ashland and Yellow Tavern. Union 50\\nkilled, 174 wounded, 200 missing. Confederate killed and wounded not\\nrecorded; 100 prisoners. Confederate Major-General J. E. B. Stuart killed,\\nand J. B. Gordon wounded. 12th to 16th, Fort Darling, Drury s Bluff, Va.;\\n12th to 17th, Kautz s Raid on Petersburg Lynchburg Railroad, Va.; 13th\\nto 16th, Resaca, Ga. Fourth, Fourteenth, Twentieth and Cavalry Corps,\\nArmy of the Cumberland, Major-General Thomas; Fifteenth and Sixteenth\\nCorps Army of the Tennessee. Major-General McPherson, and Twenty-\\nthird Corps Army of the Ohio, Major-General Schofield. Union 600 killed,\\n2.147 wounded. Confederate 300 killed, 1,500 wounded, 1,000 missing.\\nConfederate Brigadier-General Wadkins killed. 15th, Mount Pleasant\\nLanding, La.; New Market, Va.; Major-General Sigel s Command. Union\\n120 killed, 560 wounded, 240 missing. Confederate 85 killed, 320 wounded;\\nTanner s Bridge, Ga.; 16th to 30th, Bermuda Hundred, Va Union 200\\nkilled, 1,000 wounded. Confederate 3,000 killed, wounded and missing.\\n17th and 18th, Adairsville and Calhoun, Ga.; 18th, Rome and Kingston,\\nGa.; Bayou De Glaize or Cahoun Station, La.; 19th to 22d, Gassville, Ga.;\\n21st, Mount Pleasant, Miss.; 23d to 27th, North Anna River, Jericho Ford", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0100.jp2"}, "101": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1864-Continued.\\nNAMES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nor Taylor s Bridge, and Talopotomy Creek, Va.; Major-General Meade.\\nUnion 223 killed, 1,460 wounded, 290 missing. Confederate 2,000 killed\\nand wounded. 24th, Holly Springs, Miss.; Wilson s Wharf, Va. Nash-\\nville, Tenn., 25th to June 4th, Dallas, Ga., also called New Hope Church\\nand Allatoona Hills; Fourth, Fourteenth, Twentieth and Cavalry Corps\\nArmy of the Cumberland, Major-General Thomas; Twenty-third Corps,\\nMajor-Genrral Schoneld Fifteenth, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Corps\\nArmy of the Tennessee, Major-General McPherson; Army of the Missis-\\nsippi, Major-General Sherman. Union 2,400 killed, wounded and missing.\\nConfederate 3,000 killed, wounded and missing. Confederate Major-Gen-\\neral Walker killed. 25th, Cassville Station, Ga.; 26th, Torpedo explosi n\\non Bachelor s Creek, N. C; 26th to 29th, Decatur and Moulton, Ala.; 27i.i\\nand 28th, Hanoverton, Hawe s shop and Salem Church, Va 30th, Hanover\\nand Ashland, Va.; Old Church, Va.; Torbett s Cavalry.\\nJune 1st to 12th, Cold Harbor. Va., including Gaines Mills, Salem Church and\\nHawe s Shop; Second, Fifth, Sixth, Ninth and Eighteenth Corps and\\nSheridan s Cavalry. Union 1,905 killed, 10,570 wounded, 2,456 missing.\\nConfederate 1,200 killed and wounded, 500 missing. Union Brigadier-\\nGenerals Brookes and Byrnes killed, and Tyler, Stannard and Johnson\\nwounded. Confederate Brigadier-Generals Doles and Keitt killed, and\\nKirkland, Finnegan, Law and Lane wounded. 2d, Bermuda Hundred,\\nVa.; 3d to 6th, Panther Gap and Buffalo Gap, W. Va.; 5th, Piedmont, W.\\nVa.; portion of Army of West Virginia, commanded by Major-General\\nHunter. Union 130 killed, 650 wounded. Confederate 460 killed, 1,450\\nwounded, 1.060 missing. Confederate General W. E. Jones killed. 6th,\\nLake Chicot, Ark.; 9th, Point of Rocks, Md.; Mt. Sterling, Ky.; 9th to\\n30th, Kenesaw Mountain, Marietta or Big Shanty, Ga., including general\\nassault on the 27th, Pine Mountain, Golgotha, Cu lp s House and Powder\\nSprings Fourth, Fourteenth and Twentieth Corps, Army of the Cumber-\\nland, Major-General Thomas; Fifteenth, Sixteenth and Seventeeth Corps,\\nArmy of the Tennessee, Major-General McPherson; Twenty-third Corps,\\nMajor-General Schoneld; Army of the Mississippi, Major-General W. T.\\nSherman. Union 1,370 killed, 6,500 wounded, 800 missing. Confederate\\n1,100 killed and wounded, 3,500 missing. Union Brigadier-Generals Har-\\nker and McCook killed. Confederate Lieutenant-General Leonidas Polk\\nkilled. 10th, Petersburg, Va.; Brice s Cross Roads, nearGuntown; 55th\\nand 59th U. S. Colored, Brigadier-General Grierson s Cavalry. Union 223\\nkilled, 394 wounded, 1,623 missing. Confederate 131 killed, 475 wounded.\\nCynthiana and Keller s Bridge, Ky. 10th and 11th, Lexington, W. Va.\\n11th, Cynthiana, Ky.; 11th and 12th, Trevillian Station, Va.; 13th, White\\nOak Swamp Bridge, Va.; 14th, Lexington, Mo.; 15th, Samaria Church,\\nMalvern Hill, Va. 15th to 19th, Petersburg, Va. (commencement of the\\nsiege that continued to its fall, April 2, 1865) Tenth and Eighteenth\\nCorps, Army of the James, Major-General B. F. Buttler; Second, Fifth,\\nSixth and Ninth Corps, Army of the Potomac, Major-General George G.\\nMeade. Union 1,298 killed, 7,474 wounded, 1,814 missing. 16th, Otter\\nCreek, near Liberty, Va. 17th and 18th, Lynchburg, Va. Union 100 killed,\\n500 wounded, 100 missing. Confederate 200 killed and wounded. 19th,\\nCapture of the Alabama off Cherbourg, France, by U. S. Steamer Kear-\\nsarge; 20th to 30th, In front of Petersburg, Va. Union Generals Cham-\\nberlain and Egan wounded; 21st, Salem, Va Naval engagement on the\\nJames River, near Dutch Gap; Buford s Gap, Va.; 22d, White River, Ark.;\\n22d and 23d, Weldon Railroad, Williams Farm or Jerusalem Plank Road,\\nVa. Union 604 killed, 2.494 wounded, 2,217 missing. Confederate 300\\nwounded, 200 missing. 22d to 30th, Wilson s Raid on the Weldon Rail-", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0101.jp2"}, "102": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1864\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nNAHES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nroad, Va. Union 92 killed, 317 wounded, 734 missing. Confederate 365\\nkilled and wounded. 23d and 24th, Jones Bridge and Samaria Church,\\nVa.; 25th to 29th, Clarendon, St. Charles River, Ark.\\nJuly 1st to 31st, In front of Petersburg, including Deep Bottom, New Market\\nand Malvern Hill, on the 27th, and mine explosion on the 30th. Union 898\\nkilled, 4,060 wounded, 3,110 missing. Confederate loss at Deep Bottom 400\\nkilled, 600 wounded, 200 missing. 2d, Pine Bluff, Ark.; Fort Johnson,\\nJames Island, S. C; 2d to 5th, Nickajack Creek, Ga.; 3d, Leetown, Va.;\\nHammack s Mills, W. Va.; 3d to 9th, Expedition from Vicksburg to Jack-\\nson, Miss.; 4th, Vicksburg, Miss.; 4th and 5th, Coleman s Plantation, near\\nPort Gibson, Miss.; 4th to 7th, Bolivar and Maryland Heights; 5th, Hagers-\\ntown, Md.; 5th to 7th. John s Island, S. C; 5th to 18th, Smith s Expedition,\\nLa Grange, Tenn., to Tupelo, Miss.; 6th, Little Blue, Mo.; 6th to 10th,\\nChattahoochee River, Ga.; Army of the Ohio, Major-General Schofield\\nArmy of the Tennessee, Major-General McPherson^ Army of the Cumber-\\nland, Major-General Thomas; Army of the Mississippi, Major-General W.\\nT. Sherman. Union 80 killed, 450 wounded, 200 missing. 7th, Solomon s\\nGap and Middleton, Md.; 9th, Monocacy, Md.; 11th to 22d, Rosseau s Raid\\nin Alabama and Georgia; 12th, Fort Stevens, Washington, D. C. Union 54\\nkilled, 319 wounded. Confederate 500killed and wounded. 12th, Lee s Mills,\\nnear Ream s Station, Va.; 14th, Farr s Mills, Ark.; 14th and 15th, Ozark\\nMo.; 16th and 17th, Grand Gulf, Port Gibson, Miss.; 17th and 18th, Snick-\\nker s Gap, and Island Ford, Va.; 18th, Ashby s Gap, Va.; 19th and 20th,\\nDarksville, Stevenson s Depot and Winchester, Va. 20th, Peach Tree\\nCreek, Ga. Fourth, Fourteenth and Twentieth Corps, Major-General\\nGeorge H. Thomas. Union 300 killed, 1,410 wounded. Confederate 1,113\\nkilled, 2,500 wounded, 1,183 missing. Confederate Brigadier-Generals\\nFeatherstone, Long, Pettis and Stevens killed. 22d, Atlanta, Ga. (Hood s\\nfirst sortie); Fifteenth, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Corps, Major-General\\nMcPherson. Union 500 killed, 2,141 wounded, 1,000 missing. Confederate\\n2,482 killed, 4,000 wounded, 2,017 missing. Union Major-General McPher-\\nson and Brigadier-General Greathouse killed. 22d, Decatur, Ga. Confed-\\nerate Major-General Walker killed; 23d and 24th, Kernstown and\\nWinchester, Va.; Portion of Army of West Virginia. Union 1,200 killed\\nand wounded. Confederate 600 killed and wounded. 26th, Wallace s\\nFerry, Ark.; 26th to 31st, Stoneman s Raid to Macon Ga. McCook s Raid\\nto Lovejoy Station, Ga.; 27th, Mazzard Prairie, Fort Smith, Ark.; 28th,\\nAtlanta, Ga. (second sortie, at Ezra Chapel); Fifteenth, Sixteenth and\\nSeventeenth Corps, Major-General Howard. Union 100 killed, 600 wounded.\\nConfederate 642 killed, 3,000 wounded, 1,000 missing. 28th to September\\n22d, Siege of Atlanta, Ga.; Army of the Military Division of the Mississippi,\\nMajor-General W. T. Sherman; 29th, Clear Springs, Md. 30th, Lee s Mills,\\nVa.; Lebanon, Ky.; 28th, Tah-Kah-o-Kutz, Dak.\\nAugust 1st to 31st, In front of Petersburg, Va. Union 87 killed, 484 wounded.\\n2d, Green Springs, W. Va.; 5th, Donaldson ville La.; 5th to 23d, Forts\\nGaines and Morgan, Mobile Harbor, Ala.; Thirteenth Corps and Admiral\\nFarragut s Fleet of War Vessels. Union 75 killed, 100 drowned by sinking\\nof the Tecumseh, 170 wounded. Confederate 2,344 captured. 6th,\\nPlaquemine, La.; 7th, Moorefield, Va.; 7th to 14th, Tallahatchie River,\\nAbbeville, Oxford and Hurricane Creek, Miss.; 9th, Explosion of ammuni-\\ntion at City Point.Va. 10th and 11th, Berry ville Pike, Sulphur Springs Bridge\\nand White Post, Va.; 13th, near Snicker s Gap, Va.; 14th, Gravel Hill, Va.;\\n14th to 16th, Dalton, Ga.; 14th to 18th, Strawberry Plains, Va.; Second and\\nTenth Corps and Gregg s Cavalry. Union 400 killed, 1,755 wounded, 1,400", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0102.jp2"}, "103": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1864\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nNAMES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nmissing. Confederate 1,000 wounded. 15th, Fisher s Hill, near Strasburg,\\nVa. 16th, Crooked Run, Front Royal, Va.; 17th, Gainesville, Fla. Win-\\nchester, Va.; 18th, 19th and 21st, Six-mile House, Weldon Railroad, Va.\\nUnion 212 killed, 1,155 wounded, 3,176 missing. Confederate 2,000 wounded,\\n2,000 missing. Confederate Brigadier-Generals Saunders and Lamar\\nkilled, and Claigman, Barton, Finnegan and Anderson wounded. 18th to\\n22d, Kilpatrick s Raid on the Atlanta Railroad; 19th, Snicker s Gap, Pike,\\nVa.; Martinsburg, Va., Averill s Cavalry; Pine Bluff, Tennessee River;\\nTenn., 21st, Summit Point, Berry ville and Flowing Springs, Va. Memphis,\\nTenn.; 21st and 22d, College or Oxford Hill, Miss.; 23d, Abbeville, Miss.;\\n24th, Fort Smith, Ark.; Jones Hay Station and Ashley Station, Ark.; 24th\\nand 25th, Bermuda Hundred, Va.; 24th to 27th, Halltown, Va.; 25th, Smith-\\nfield and Shepherdstown, Va.; Ream s Station, Va. Union 127 killed, 546\\nwounded, 1,769 missing. Confederate 1,500 killed and wounded. 27th and\\n28th, Holly Springs, Miss.; 29th, Smithfield, Va.; 31st, Block House, No. 5,\\nNashville Chattanooga Railroad, Tenn.; 31st and September 1st, Jones-\\nboro Ga. Union 1,149 killed and wounded. Confederate 2,000 killed,\\nwounded and missing. Confederate Brigadier-Generals Anderson, Cum-\\nmings and Patten killed. 8th, Two Hills, Dak. (Bad Lands); 12th, Little\\nBlue, Dak. 28th, Fort Cottonwood, Nevada.\\nSeptember 1st to 8ih, Rosseau s pursuit of Wheeler in Tenn. 1st to October 80th,\\nin front of Petersburg; army of the Potomac Union 170 killed, 823\\nwounded. 812 missing. Confederate 1,000 missing; 2d, Fall of Atlanta,\\nGa.; twentieth corps. Confederate 200 captured; 2d to 6th, Lovejoy Station,\\nGa 3d and 4th, Berryville, Va. Greenville, Tenn.; Confederate Gen. John\\nMorgan killed; 6th. Searcy, Ark.; 10th, capture of Fort Hell Va 13th,\\nLock s Ford. Va.; 16th. Sycamore Church, Va. 16th and 18th, Fort Gibson,\\nInd Ter 17th. Belcher s Mills, Va.; 19th to 22d, Winchester and Fisher s\\nHill, Va.; Sixth, Eighth and 1st and 2d Divisions of the Nineteenth Corps;\\nAverill s and Torbett s Cav., Maj. -Gen. Phil. Sheridan Union 693 killed,\\n4,033 wounded, 623 missing. Confederate 3.250 killed and wounded, 3,600\\ncaptured. Union Brig.-Gen ls Russell and Mulligan killed, and Mcintosh\\nUpton and Chapman wounded. Confederate Maj -Gen ls Rhodes and Brig\\nGen ls Gordon and Goodwin killed, and Fitz Hugh Lee, Terry, Johnson and\\nWharton wounded; 23d, Athens, Ala. Rockport. Mo. 24th, Fayette, Mo 26th\\nand 27th, Pilot Knob or Ironton, Mo. Union 28 killed, 56 wounded, 100 miss-\\ning. Confederate 1,500 killed and wounded; 27th. Centralia, Mo.; Marianna.\\nFla.; 23th to 30th. New Market Heights or Laurel Hill, Va. Union 400\\nkilled, 2,029 wounded. Confederate 2,000 killed and wounded; 29th. Cen-\\nterville, Tenn.; 29th and 30th, Leesburg and Harrison, Mo 30th and Octo-\\nber 1st, Poplar Springs Church, Va. Union 141 killed, 788 wounded. 1,756\\nmissing. Confederate 800 wounded, 100 missing; Arthur s Swamp, Va.\\n16th to 18th, Fort Gibson, Indian Ter.; 18th; Fort Cottonwood, Nevada; 19th,\\nCabin Greek, Indian Ter.; 27th, Fort Rice. Dak.\\nOctober 2d, Waynesboro, Va.; Saltville, Va.; 5th, Jackson, La.; Allatoona.\\nGa. Union 142 killed. 352 Wounded, 212 missing. Confederate 231\\nkilled, 500 wounded, 411 missing; 7th, New Market, Va. 7th to 11th,\\nJefferson City, California and Boonville, Mo. (Price s Invasion); 7th and\\n13th. Darbytown Road, Va. Confederate Gen. Gregg killed; 9th, Tom s\\nBrook Fisher s Hill.Va 10th, East Point, Miss 11th. Fort Donnelson.Tenn.\\n13th, Reconnoissance to Strasburg, Va.; Dalton, Ga.; Buzzard Roost. Ga.;\\n15th, Glasgow, Mo. Union 400 wounded and missing. Confederate 50\\nkilled and wounded; 19th. Lexington, Mo.; Cedar Creek Va (Sheridan s\\nRide.) Sixth Corps Eighth Corps and 1st and 2d Divisions Nineteenth", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0103.jp2"}, "104": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1864-Continued.\\nNAHES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nCorps, Merritts, Custer s and Torbett s Cav. Union 588 killed, 3.516\\nwounded, l,b9l missing. Confederate 3,000 killed and wounded, 1,200\\nmissing. Union Brig -Gen ls Bidwell and Thorburn killed, Ma j -Gen ls\\nWright, Ricketts and Grover, and Brig.-Gen ls Ketchem, McKenzie, Pen-\\nrose, Hamlin, Devins, Duval and Lowell wounded. Confederate Maj-\\nGen. Ramseur killed and Battle and Conner wounded; 21st and 2-d,\\nLittle Blue and Independence, Mo 23d, Hurricane Creek Miss.; 26th to\\n29th; Decatur, Ala.; 27th, Hatcher s Run, Va. 27th and 28th, Fair Oaks\\nVa 28th. Morristown, Tenn.; 28th 30th, Newtonia, Mo.; 29th, Beverly, W.\\nVa 30th, Near Brownsville, Ark.\\nNovember 1st to 4th, Union Station, Tenn,; 5th, Fort Sedgwick or Fort Hill,\\nVa. 9th, Atlanta, Ga. 12th, Newton and Silver Springs, Va.; 13th, Bull s\\nGap. Tenn.; 16th, Lovejoy Station and Bear Creek Station Ga. 17th, Ber-\\nmuda Hundred, Va.; 18th, Myerstown, Va- 20th. Macon, Ga.; 22d, Gris-\\nwoldville, Ga.; Rood s Hill, Va.; Lawrenceburg. Campbellville and Lynn-\\nville, Tenn.; 26th. Saundersville, Ga 26th to 29th, Sylvan Grove. Waynes-\\nboro Brown s Cross Roads. 29th and 30th. Spring Hill and Franklin,\\nTenn. Union 189 killed, 1,033 wounded, 1,104 missing. Confedrate 1,750\\nkilled, 3.800 wounded, 702 missing. Union Major General Stanley and\\nBradley wounded Confederate Major General Cleborne, Brigadier Gen-\\nerals Adams, Williams. Strahl, Geist and Granberry killed. Major General\\nBrown and Brigadier Generals Carter, Manigault, Quarles Cockrell and\\nScott wounded. 30th, Honey Hill or Grahamville, S. C. Union 66 killed,\\n645 wounded.\\nDecember 1st, Stoney Creek Station, Weldon Railroad, Va.; twelve miles from\\nYazoo, Miss.; 1st to 14th, in front oi Nashville, Tenn.; 1st to 31st. in front\\nof Petersburg, Army of the Potomac; 2d and 3d, Block house No. 2, Mill\\nCreek, Chattanooga, Tenn.; 3d. Thomas Station, Ga.; 4th, Block house No.\\n7, Tenn.; 5th to 8th. Murfreesboro, Tenn., General Rosseau s troops; 6th to\\n9th, Deveaux s Neck, S. C. Union 39 killed, 390 wounded, 200 missing.\\nConfederate 400 killed and wounded. 7th to 9th, Eden Station. Ogeeohee\\nRiver Ga.; 7th to 11th, Weldon Railroad expedition; 8th and 9th. Hatcher s\\nRun, Va. 8th to 28th, raid to Gordonsville, Va. 10th to 21st, siege of Savan-\\nnah, Ga. Union 200 wounded. Confederate 800 missing. 12th to 21st.\\nStoneman s raid from Bean s Station, Tenn., to Saltville, Va. 13th. Fort\\nFort McAllister, Ga 14th, Memphis, Tenn. 15th and 16th. Nashville,\\nTenn. Union 400 killed, 1 740 wounded. Confederate 4,462 missing. 17th,\\nFranklin. Tenn.; 17th to 19th. Mitchell s Creek, Fla and Pine Barren Creek,\\nAla 20th, Lacey s Springs; 25th, Fort Fisher, N. C; 28th, Egypt Station,\\nMiss. Confederate Brigadier General Gholson killed.\\nBILTMORE.\\nMr. George W. Vanderbilt s estate at Biltmore, N. C, is probably the largest of\\nits kind in the world. It contains 100,000 acres, and is under scientific culti-\\nvation. Landscape gardening is an art with him, and German, English,\\nFrench, Italian and American florists and g\u00c2\u00abardeners of high degree are\\nemployed to make this place the most beautiful in the world. His handsome\\nvilla embraces wealth, elegance, comfort and convenience, and the works of art\\nto be found within its walls are from the world at large. The estate is an edu-\\ncator and is not maintained to flatter the pride, the appetite or the vanity of\\nthe owner. Nearly one thousand persons are employed, and they are satis-\\nfied to live in America, to work for an American, and to be paid in American\\ngold.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0104.jp2"}, "105": {"fulltext": "If we live beyond our means\\nwe are dishonest~some one else\\npays the bills.\\n1865\\nYour words are like pebbles\\nthrown into the sea the ripples\\ngo on forever.\\nJanuary...\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMay\\nJune.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n28\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust....\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nM\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nW T\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nNAHES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nEdward Everett died January 15; was born April 11, 1794.\\nAbraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson, President and Vice-President of the\\nUnited States. Number of States voting, 25; number not voting. 11; elec-\\ntorial votes cast 233, of which Lincoln received 212, McClellan, 21; popular\\nvote for Lincoln, 2,216,067; for McClellan, 1,808.725.\\nOn March 11 there was a great lockout of the ironworkers of North Strafford\\nshire. England, causing the loss of $600,000 weekly wages.\\nRichard Cobden died April 2.\\nA day of thanksgiving was recommended by the President, April 14, and cel-\\nebrated with joy throughout the loyal States, but the joy was suddenly\\nclouded when on the evening of Friday. April 14. President Lincoln was\\nassassinated by J. Wilkes Booth in the National Theatre at Washington.\\nLord Palmerston died October 18.\\nAt the close of the Civil war, the United States National debt was about\\n$2,600,000 000.\\n(Continued on next page).", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0105.jp2"}, "106": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1865-Continued.\\nNAMES AND DATES OF BATTLES.\\nJanuary, 1865, 2d, Franklin, Miss.; 2d and 3d. Nauvoo and Thornhill, Ala\\n11th, Beverly, W. Va.; 13th to 15th, Fort Fisher, N. C 14th to 16th, Poco-\\ntaligo, S. C; 16th, explosion of the magazine at Fort Fisher, N. C; 25th to\\nFebruary 9th, Combahee River and River s Bridge, Salkahatchie, S. C.\\nFebruary 5th to 7th, Dabney s Mills, Hatcher s Run, Va. Union 232 killed,\\n1.06^ wounded, 186 missing. Confederate 1,200 killed and wounded. Union\\nBrigadier Generals Morrow, Smythe, Davis, Gregg, Ayres, Sickel and Gwyn\\nwounded. Confederate General Pegram killed and Sorrel wounded. 8th to\\n14th, Williston, Aiken and Blackville, S C; 10th, James Island, S. C.\\nMarch 6th, Olive Branch, La.; Natural Bridge, Fla.; 8th to 10th, Wilcox s Bridge,\\nN. C. Union 80 killed, 420 wounded, 600 missing. Confederate 1,500\\nkilled, wounded and missing. 16th, Averysboro N. C. Union 77 killed,\\n477 wounded. Confederate 108 killed, 540 wounded, 217 missing. 19th to\\n21st, Bentonville, N. C. Union 191 killed, 1,168 wounded, 287 missing.\\nConfederate 267 killed; 1,200 wounded, 1,625 missing. 25th, Fort Steadma\\nin front of Petersburg, Va. Union 68 killed, 337 wounded, 506 missing.\\nConfederate 800 killed and wounded, 1,881 missing. Assault of the Second\\nand Sixth Corps. Union 103 killed, 864 wounded, 2(9 missing. Confeder-\\nate 834 captured. 26th to April 9th, siege of Mobile, Ala., including Spanish\\nFort and Port Blakely. Union 213 killed, 1,211 wounded.\\nApril 1st, Five Forks, Va. First, Second and Third cavalry divisions and Fifth\\nCorps. Union 124 killed, 706 wounded. Confederate 3,000 killed aDd\\nwounded, 5,500 captured. 2d, fall of Petersburg. Union 296 killed, 2,565\\nwounded, 500 missing. Confederate 3.000 prisoners. 8d, Namozin Church\\nand Willlcomack, Va.; 3d, fall of Richmond, Va. Confederate 6,(00 prison-\\ners, of whom 5,000 were sick and wounded. 5th, Amelia Springs. Va.; 6th,\\nSailor s Creek, Va. Union 166 killed, 1,014 wounded. Confederate 1,0(0\\nkilled and wounded, 6,000 prisoners. High Bridge, Appomattox River,\\nVa. Union 10 killed, 31 wounded. 1,000 missing and captured. 7th, Farm-\\nville, Va. Union 655 killed and wounded. 8th and 9th, Appomattox C. H\\nVa. Union 200 killed and wounded. Confederate 500 killed. 9th, Lee sur-\\nrendered to the Armies of the Potomac and James, Major General U. S\\nGrant. Confederate 26,000 prisoners. 17th, surrender of Mosby to Major\\nGeneral Hancock. Confederate 7 0 prisoners. 26th. Johnson surrendered\\nto the Armies of the Tennessee, Georgia and Ohio, Major General Sherman\\nConfederate 29,924 prisoners.\\nMay KHh, capture of Jefferson Davis at Irwinsville Ga First Wisconsin and\\nFourth Michigan Cavalry. Union 2 killed. 4 wounded, caused by the pur-\\nsuing parties firing on each other. Tallahassee, Fla., surrender of Sam\\nJones command to detachment of Wilson s cavalry, Major General McCook.\\nConfederate 8,000 prisoners. 11th, Chalk Bluff. Ark., surrender of Jeff\\nThompson s command to forces under General Dodge. Confederate 7,4.^4\\nprisoners. 13th, Palmetto Ranche, Texas, Thirty-fourth Indiana, Sixty-\\nsecond U. S. Colored and Second Texas Cavalry. Union 118 killed and\\nwounded. 26th, surrender of Kirby Smith to Major General Canby s com-\\nmand. Confederate 20,000 prisoners.\\nThe foregoing abstract, taken from the records of the government, is as\\nnearly reliable as can be compiled. Much no doubt could be added were it possi-\\nble to consult the recollection of every veteran who took part in the engage-\\nments. January 1. 1861, the army of the United States for active service\\nconsisted of 14 663 men. May 1, 1865, there were 797,807 men on active\\nduty, while 202,709 more were absent. During the struggle there were 44,00\\nkilled in battle, 186 000 died from disease, 26 000 died in prisons, 49,000 died\\nfrom wounds, 280 000 were wounded, and 185 000 are recorded as captured and\\nmissing. During the four years there were over 2,80 000 enlistments.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0106.jp2"}, "107": {"fulltext": "A. single moment of passion\\nhas caused a life time of sorrotv.\\n1866\\nSome people thinh it is manly\\nto swear\u00e2\u0080\u0094 it is just the opposite.\\nJanuary...\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril.\\nMay\\nJune...\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n31\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nW\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nT F S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nJanuary 29. George Peabody gave a second donation of $500,000 for the relief of\\nthe poor of London.\\nThe Civil rights bill passe d by Congress, April 9.\\nThe first Atlantic telegraph cable laid.\\nA seven weeks war between Italy and Austria.\\nBattle of Sadowa between the Austrians and Russians.\\nGreat fire in Portland, Maine, July 4.\\nThe Grand Army of the Republic was organized at Decatur, 111., April 6 by Dr.\\nB. F. Stephenson of Springfield, 111 who was made provisional command-\\ner-in chief on July 12.\\nBuilding of the Union and Central Pacific Railways.\\nLewis Cass died June 17.\\nWithdrawal of the French troops from Mexico.\\nThe work of reconstructing the Southern States proceeded with considerable\\ndifficulty\\nLet our object be our country, our whole country, and nothing but our country.\\nDaniel Webster.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0107.jp2"}, "108": {"fulltext": "Be consistent in every-day life\\n-practice as you preach.\\n1867\\nAvoid the path of the wicked,\\nturn from it and pass away.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n8\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n2fi\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nM\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n^2\\n9\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n*6\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nW\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nAlaska and the Aleutian Islands purchased from Russia for $7 200,000 adding\\nto the area of the United States 577,390 square miles, and making the total\\narea 3 593 403 square miles.\\nMarch 29th, the Dominion of Canada formed.\\nMaximilian was shot atQueretaro, Mexico and the Juarez government established\\nJune 17.\\nPresident Andrew Johnson issued a general and unconditional proclamation of\\namnesty.\\nJohn A. Andrew, the twenty-first governor of Massachusetts, died October 30.\\nCelebration of the three hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the Reformation\\nOctober 31.\\nElias Howe, inventor of sewing machines died October 3.\\nGeorge Peabody gave $2,000,000 to endow schools in the Southern States.\\nNational Bankrupt Law passed by United States Congress.\\nNebraska admitted in the Union.\\nInternational Exposition at Paris.\\nThe Abyssinian war breaks out.\\nThe noblest motive is the public good. Virgil.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0108.jp2"}, "109": {"fulltext": "But woe unto you that are rich!\\nfor ye have received your conso-\\nlation.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Luke VI. 24.\\n1868\\nAn angry man stirreth up\\nstrife. A. man s pride shall bring\\nhim low.-prov. XXIX. 20-21.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n1()\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n31\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n9\\nAY\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nS\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nThe Burlingame treaty made with China.\\nViolent eruption of Mount Vesuvius, January 27, causing considerable damage.\\nOn March 11. a hurricane in the Mauritius causes the loss of 50 000 lives.\\nMagdalain Abyssinia stormed by the British, when King Theodore commits\\nsuicide rather than be captured.\\nJames Buchanan died June 1.\\nOn February 24 the House of Representatives passed a resolution that President\\nJohnson be impeached for high crimes and misdemeanors yeas, 126; nays,\\n47; not voting, 17. The Senate refused to concur by a two-thirds vote as re-\\nquired by law guilty 35. not guilty, 19.\\nCongress passed the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution\\nNational Democratic Convention held in New Y^rk, Horatio Seymour and Frank\\nP. Blair being nominated for President and Vice-President\\nNational Republican Convention held in Chicago, Ulysses S Grant and Schuy-\\nler Colifax being nominated for President and Vice-President\\nBets at first were fool traps, where the wise like spiders lay in ambush for the\\nflies. Dryden.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0109.jp2"}, "110": {"fulltext": "Time and tide wait for no\\nman. NO W is the accepted time.\\nImprove it.\\n1869\\nThe 19th Century is nearly\\ngone. What have I done for the\\nunfortunate?\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0\u00e2\u0080\u00a27\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nM\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nT\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nW\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nT\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nS\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nMarch 4. Ulysses S. Grant and Schuyler Colfax, President and Vice-President of\\nthe United States. Number of States voting 34; not voting 3; total electoral\\nvotes cast 294, of which Ulysses S Grant received 214 and Horatio Seymour,\\n80. Popular vote for Grant, 3 015.071; for Seymour, 2 709, 613.\\nMay 9, completion of the Union Pacific and Central Pacific Railroad connections,\\nmiking the first through railroad route across the continent\\nGeorge Peabody gave an additional million dollars to the American Southern\\nEducational Fund\\nFrench Atlantic Telegraph Cable laid July 24.\\nSeptember 24 called Black Friday, when a great panic occurred in the money\\nand stock markets of all the large cities in the United States.\\nFranklin Pierce died October II.\\nGeorge Peabody died November 4.\\nCommodore Stewart Old Ironsides died November 6.\\nGeneral John A. Rawlins died September 6\\nTroublous outlook between Germany and France.\\nDaniel Webster struck me much like a steam engine in trowsers. Sidney Smith.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0110.jp2"}, "111": {"fulltext": "A nation cannot exist half slave 1 $^^7 f\\\\ They also serve who only stand\\nand half free.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Lincoln. M. C5 J \\\\3 and wait. Milton.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n30\\n31\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nAugust\\nk\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\nSO\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\nOctober...\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMav\\n1\\nS\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\nNovember\\n6\\n7\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nAlexander Dumas died December, born 1803.\\nUnited States Congress passed the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution and\\nthe Enforcement act.\\nCharles Dickens died June 9\\nSeptember I, surrender of Louis Napoleon at Sedan with 80 000 men. Same\\ndate, the French Republic declared.\\nSeptember 19, the siege of Paris by the German Army.\\nCapitulation of Strasburg September 28.\\nOctober 27, the surrender of the French Army of 170,000 men to the Germans.\\nFrench Government located at Bordeaux in December.\\nRome again the capital of Italy.\\nUnification of Germany.\\nNinth United States census taken, showing 38,558,371 population.\\nGeneral Robert E Lee died October 12.\\nAdmiral D. G. Farragut died August 14.\\nFenian raids into Canada February 3.\\nPeace is the soft and holy shadow that virtue casts. H. W. Shaw.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0111.jp2"}, "112": {"fulltext": "The light house warns the mar-\\niner watch the beacon light.\\n1871\\nA. lost gem may be found a\\nlost moment is gone forever.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2(\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober....\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nM\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nW\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n*7\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n*9\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nKing William was proclaimed Emperor of Germany at Versailles on January 18.\\nThe city af Paris capitulated to the German Army January 28, which practically\\nclosed the Franco-Prussian War.\\nTerrible scenes in Paris while in the hands of the Commune, April 6.\\nDestruction of the Column of the Vendome by the Communists of Paris, May 16.\\nMay 10, Treaty of Peace between France and Germany signed at Frankfort.\\nTreaty to consider the Alabama claims signed at Washington.\\nOctober 9 the greatest fire ever known in the United States broke out at Chicago,\\nresulting in the loss of an unknown number of lives and $200,000,000 worth\\nof property. Over 18 000 buildings were destroyed.\\nThe Grand Duke Alexis of Russia visited the United States December 1.\\nGeneva tribunal on Alabama claims convened December 15.\\nO God, Thy power is wonderful;\\nThy glory passing bright;\\nThy wisdom, with its deep on deep,\\nA rapture to the sight Faber.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0112.jp2"}, "113": {"fulltext": "Hie gambler is a moral sui- 1 j^.^J ^J Generosity is the flower of jus-\\ncide.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Calton. A O J tice.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Hawthorne.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n14\\n15\\n1617\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n31\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n30\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR\\nGeneral amnesty bill passed by United States Congress January 16.\\nJapanese embassy arrived at Washington March i.\\nSamuel F. B. Morse, inventor of the telegraph, died April 2\\nNational Republican Convention at Philadelphia renominated Ulysses S. Grant\\nfor President, and Henry Wilson for Vice-President.\\nThe Democratic and Liberal National Convention met at Cincinnati and nomi-\\nnated Horace Greeley and B. Gratz Brown for President and Vice-President.\\nSeptember 14, an award of $15,500 000 was made by the Geneva tribunal to the\\nUnited States for losses incurred by the Anglo-Confederate cruisers.\\nOn October 23, the Emperor of Germany decided in favor of the United States.\\nregarding the San Juan boundary.\\nThe epizootic plague among horses prevailed during October.\\nNovember 6, evacuation of French territory by German troops.\\nGreat fire in Boston November 9, nearly 800 buildings being destroyed, involving\\na loss of $73 600,000.\\nWilliam H. Seward died October 10.\\nHorace Greeley died November 29.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0113.jp2"}, "114": {"fulltext": "\u00e2\u0096\u00a0r d /~b ?sf it biteth like a ser-\\nZook not thou upon the wvne 1 St V P ent and stingeth like an adder.\\nwhen it is red\u00e2\u0080\u0094 J| %J %J \u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 23-31.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMarch\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nSeptemb r\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\n1()\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\ni\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a07\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nNovember\\n1\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nJune...-\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE TEAR.\\nLouis Napoleon died at Chiselhurst, England, January 9.\\nSir Edward Bulwer-Lytton died January 18.\\nMexican Railway opened from Vera Cruz to the capital in January.\\nUlysses S. Grant and Henry Wilson, President and Vice President of the United\\nStates. Number of States voting 37; total electoral vote, 366; of which\\nGrant received 286. Of the popular vote, Grant received 3 597 070 and\\nGreeley, 2 834,079.\\nOn April it, the Modoc Indians massacred the three peace commissioners sent by\\nthe Government.\\nDr Livingstone the famous explorer, died in Africa, May 4.\\nSalmon P. Chase, Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court died May 7.\\nHiram Powers, sculptor, died.\\nOn September 18, the banking house of Jay Cooke Co., failed, precipitating a\\nsevere financial panic\\nExtradition treaty between the United States and Great Britain, signed at Vienna,\\nDecember 3.\\nLouis Agassiz, the distinguished naturalist, died Deeember 14.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0114.jp2"}, "115": {"fulltext": "Me that tnaheth haste to be rich\\nshall not be innocent. Prov. 28-20.\\n1874\\nThe drunkard and the glutton\\nsliall come to poverty.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 23-21.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nM T W\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\nS\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n25 26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nHISTORICAL EYENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nThe celebrated Siamese twins died January 17.\\nSignal defeat of the Carlists at Bilboa, Spain, January 29.\\nMillard Fillmore died, March 8.\\nCharles Sumner died, March 11.\\nThe Swiss Federal Constitution adopted, April 19.\\nCongress passed a bill in May limiting the United States currency to\\n$382,000,000.\\nThe regular army of the Uniled States fixed at 20,000 men.\\nLodyguin and Kossloff, two Russians residing in London, invent the electric\\nlight.\\nThe great bridge across the Mississippi River, at St Louis, opened in July.\\nPostal convention between France and the United States ratified at Washington,\\nJuly 27.\\nCelebration of the 1000th anniversary of Iceland. August 2.\\nM Francis Guizot died September 12; was born October 4, 1787.\\nGive me neither poverty nor riches, lest I be full and deny thee, or lest I be poor\\nand steal. Prov. xxxi, 8. 9", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0115.jp2"}, "116": {"fulltext": "The soul, immortal as its Sire, 43 An honest man is the noblest\\nshall never die !\u00e2\u0080\u0094F. Montgomery. M C3 Jr %3 work of God.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Pope.\\nJanuary-\\n8\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\n1\\nS\\n2\\nJuly\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nThe proposition to extend the term of the President of the United States to six\\nyears without re-election was rejected by Congress, January 27.\\nReciprocity treaty between the United States and Canada defeated in the\\nUnited States Senate, February 3.\\nThe Force bill passed by the United States Congress February 28.\\nTreaty between the Un ted States and Belgium ratified March 10.\\nJohn C. Breckinridge died May 17.\\nCentennial celebration of the battle of Bunker Hill, June 17.\\nAndrew Johnson died July 31.\\nHans Christian Andersen died August 4.\\nRev. Charles G. Finney, a noted preacher and religious writer, died August 16.\\nOn November I, the British Government secured control of the Suez Canal, by\\nthe payment of \u00c2\u00a34 000,000 for shares.\\nHenry Wilson died at Washington November 22.\\nMy bark is on a troubled sea;\\nThe winds and waves may adverse be;\\nBut hope, my anchor, s firmly cast\\nWithin the vale, for ever fast. Campbell.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0116.jp2"}, "117": {"fulltext": "Honor thy father and thy mother\\nthat thy days may be long in the\\n1876\\nland which the Lord thy God\\ngiveth thee.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Exodus XX. 12.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\n8\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nM\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\nW\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n1920\\n26 27\\nT\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n11\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nThe year opened with general celebration of the approaching Centennial through-\\nout the United States.\\nApplication for patent on telephones, filed by Prof. Elisha Gray, in patent office,\\nFebruary 14.\\nOpening of the Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia, May 10\\nSlaughter of Gen. Custer and his command by the Indians at Little Horn,\\nJune 25\\nJuly 4, celebration of the looth anniversary of the Declaration of Independence\\nby the United States.\\nColorado, the thirty-eighth State, admitted to the Union.\\nThe first crematory furnace in the United States, built at Washington, Penn.,\\nin November.\\nDemocratic National Convention, at St. Louis, nominated Samuel J. Tilden and\\nThomas A. Hendricks for President and Vice-President.\\nRepublican National Convention, at Cincinnati, nominated Rutherford B.\\nHayes and William A. Wheeler for President and Vice-President.\\nThe organization of the National Prohibition party completed, and Green Clay\\nSmith nominated for President", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0117.jp2"}, "118": {"fulltext": "Be hind to one another\u00e2\u0080\u0094 it will I 4^ 7 ^7 Angry words cast ugly shad-\\nbe a pleasant reflection. J^ J ows let the sunshine in.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\nJulv\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nApril\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\nOctober\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2(\\n21\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\nDecember\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nCornelius Vanderbilt died January 4.\\nThe United States Electoral Commission appointed January 28\\nMarch 1, Rutherford B. Hayes and William A. Wheeler were declared President\\nand Vice-President by the Electoral Commission. Number of States voting\\n38; total electoral vote, 369; number declared for Hayes, 18^; number de-\\nclared for Tilden, 184. Of popular vote Hayes received 4,033 950, and\\nTilden 4,284 885 and Green Clav Smith (Prohibition) 9,522.\\nMarch 23. the Mormon leader, John D. Lee, was shot by the United States Gov-\\nernment for participation in the Mountain Meadow Massacre in l857-\\nRussia declared war against Turkey April 24.\\nJohn Lothrop Motley died May 29\\nThe Balkan Mountains crossed by the Russian Armv in July.\\nJuly 21, riots of railway employes at Pittsburg and burning of Pennsylvania\\nRailway s property there and at other points\\nCentennial celebration of the Battle of Bennington, Auerust 15 and 16.\\nBrigham Young, head of the Mormon Church, died August 29\\nMons. A. Thiers died September 3.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0118.jp2"}, "119": {"fulltext": "TJie path of the just is as the\\nshining light.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 4-18.\\n1878\\nHe that tvalketh uprightly\\nwalketh surely.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov- 10-9.\\nJanuary\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMay.\\nJune\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS M\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nT W\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nF S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nHenry M. Stanley returned from his famous African explorations in January\\nVictor Emanuel, King of Italy, died January 9, and was succeeded by his son,\\nnow King Humbert.\\nPope Pius IX, head of the Catholic Church, died February 7\\nRev. Alexander Duff, a celebrated missionary, died February 12\\nOne hundred and sixty Russian Nihilists sentenced to Siberia February 16.\\nElection of Pope Leo XIII February 20.\\nThe treaty of San Stefano between Russia and Turkey, signed March 3.\\nRepeal of the United States bankrupt law April 15.\\nThe Erie Railway was sold at auction April 24.\\nOpening of the second International Exposition at Paris, May 1.\\nJohn S. Motley, the historian, died May 30\\nWilliam Cullen Bryant died June 12; was born November 3, 1794.\\nThe closing of the City of Glasgow bank in October resulted in the arrest and\\npunishment of its directors.\\nBayard Taylor died in Berlin, Germany, December 19.\\nTrue sympathy is putting ourselves in another s place; and we are moved in pro-\\nportion to the realty of our imagination.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0119.jp2"}, "120": {"fulltext": "Be not wise in thine own eyes fmm g-\\\\ I love them that love me and\\nfear the Lord and depart from 1 5% J II they that seek me early, shall\\nevil.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 3-7. 1 \\\\J M jf fi n me.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 8-17.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMarch\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nOctober.\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n3\\nNovember\\n1\\n4\\nft\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE TEAR.\\nJanuary i, resumption of specie payments in the United States in compliance\\nwith the act approved January 14, 1875.\\nSeventeen hundred French communists pardoned January 15.\\nThe Zulu war began January 22.\\nElihu Burritt, The Learned Blacksmith, died March 9.\\nChili at war with Peru April 5.\\nIn April, Solovieff, a Russian Nihilist, attempted to assassinate the Czar.\\nGeneral John A. Dix died April 21.\\nMay 24 William Lloyd Garrison died.\\nUnlimited silver coinage bill passed by the United States Congress May 24.\\nPrince Louis Napoleon killed by the Zulus in South Africa June 1.\\nProtec ive tariff bill passed by Germany.\\nSir Rowland Hill, originator of the penny postage system in England, died Sep-\\ntember 2\\nSerious outbreak of yellow fever in the Southern states.\\nResist the devil and he will flee from you. James iv, 7.\\nThere are three sexes men, women and clergymen. Sidney Smith.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0120.jp2"}, "121": {"fulltext": "WJiat concerneth every man is .4 g\\\\ V according to the light which\\nnot whether he fail or succeed, J L 1^\u00c2\u00a3 E a wjri// /kjw 6eew given him until\\nbut that he do his duty, \\\\J/ \\\\J? \\\\J he die. Ian McLaren.\\np\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nAttempted assassination of the Emperor of Russia at the Winter Palace in St.\\nPetersburg, February 17.\\nOn March 2 President Hayes issued a message concerning the proposed Inter-\\nOceanic Canal of Panama, refusing to surrender it to foreign control.\\nDemocratic National Convention at Cincinnati, nominating General Winfield S.\\nHancock and William H. English for President and Vice-President.\\nRepublican National Convention at Ch cago, nominating James A. Garfield and\\nChester A. Arthur for President and Vice-President.\\nNeal Dow, of Maine, was Prohibition candidate for President\\nThe centennial establishment of Sunday schools was celebrated June 30.\\nOn August 14 the last stone was put on Cologne Cathedral, which was begun\\nAugust 14. 1242\\nTenth United S ates census taken, showing 50,152,866 population.\\nIf all that has been said by orators and poets since the creation of the world, in\\npraise of women, was applied to the women of America, it would not do\\nthem justice for their conduct during the war. Lincoln.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0121.jp2"}, "122": {"fulltext": "I lay me down to sleep, 4 45 (5 1 Whether my waking find\\nWith little care J| ^J ^J J| Me here or there.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 M. W. Howland\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n30\\n31\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\nOctober....\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nThomas Carlyle died February 5, was born 1795.\\nMarch 4, James A. Garfield and Chester A. Arthur, President and Vice-President\\nof the United States. Number of States voting, 38. Total electoral vote\\n369, of which Garfield received 214, and Hancock 155; of popular vote Gar-\\nfield received 4,449,053; Hancock 4,442,035, and Neal Dow 10,305.\\nMarch 13, the Emperor of Russia assassinated by dynamite bombs.\\nAlexander III proclaimed Emperor of Russia, March 14.\\nBenjamin Disraeli, Lord Beaconsfield, died April 9; born December 21, 1805.\\nIssue of the Revised Edition of the New Testament May 17.\\nMay 28, England paid the United States $75,000 in settlement of the Fortune\\nBay dispute.\\nPresident Garfield shot by an assassin on the morning of July 2.\\nPresident Garfield removed to Long Branch September 6, where he remained\\nand died on the evening of September 20.\\nFather! the sweetest, dearest name\\nThat men or angels know!\\nFountain of Life, that had no fount\\nFrom which itself could flow! Fabet.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0122.jp2"}, "123": {"fulltext": "When you seek associates let\\nthem be of the very best\u00e2\u0080\u0094 they\\ncan benefit you.\\n1882\\nA rich man is often very poor\\n\u00e2\u0080\u0094and a poor man is often very\\nrich.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n1.5\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n31\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nW T F S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nHenry W. Longfellow died March 24; was boru Febrnary 27, 1807.\\nRalph Waldo Emerson died April 27; was born in 1803.\\nGreat earthquakes in Costa Rica March 13.\\nSaturday morning May 6, Lord Cavendish, secretary for Ireland, and Thomas\\nA. Burke, undersecretary, were brutally murdered in Phoenix Park, Dublin.\\nAfter desperate attempts to get an acquittal Charles J. Guiteau, the murderer of\\nPresident Garfield, was hung on June 80.\\nTuly 11. bombardment of Alexandria by the British fleet.\\nSeptember 10, defeat of Arabi Pasha by the English forces under Sir Garnet\\nWolseley at Tel-el Kebir, and virtual close of the war.\\nTransit of Venus December 6.\\nOutrageous persecution of the Jews in Russia.\\nAttempted assassination of Queen Victoria.\\nMrs. Abraham Lincoln died July 15.\\nThe man of pure and simple heart,\\nThrough life disdains a double part,\\nHe never needs the screen of lies\\nHis inward bosom to disguise. Gay.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0123.jp2"}, "124": {"fulltext": "Obscene books are the devil s\\nliterature they are filled with\\npoison.\\n1883\\nGet wisdom, get understand-\\ning she shall preserve thee, she\\nshall keep thee.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nM\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nW\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n*5\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nF S\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nPeter Cooper died April 6.\\nThe Irish National League formed in convention at Philadelphia April 26.\\nThe East River Bridge between New York and Brooklyn opened on May 24.\\nEmperor Alexander III, of Russia, crowned at Moscow May 30.\\nOn the 23d of May a foot of snow fell in some of the Southern States.\\nWhile being launched in the river Clyde, the steam vessel Daphne overturned,\\ncausing the loss of 124 lives.\\nCharles H. Stratton (General Tom Thumb) died July 15, aged forty-five years.\\nEarthquake on the island of Ischia (Italy), by which 4 0* persons perished.\\nFirst Civil Service examination in progress for Government employes.\\nLove of country produces among men such examples as Cincinnatus, Alfred,\\nWashington, pure, unselfish, symmetrical; among women, Madame Roland,\\nCharlotte Corday, Jeanne Dare, romantic, devoted, marvelous. Lamartine.\\nWise men ne er sit and wait their loss,\\nBut cheerly seek how to redress their harm Shakespeare.\\nThe body sins not; tis the will\\nThat makes the action good or ill Herrick.\\nJ", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0124.jp2"}, "125": {"fulltext": "The man -who pauses on his\\nhonesty wants little of the vil-\\nlain. Ma rtyn\\n1884\\n(Jesus lives and so shall I;\\nDeath, thy stiny is gone forever.\\n\u00e2\u0080\u0094Gellert.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2()\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\n9\\n11\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly...\\nAugust\\nSeptenib r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS M T\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n155\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nW\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n1884\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nState Civil Service Law enacted by the Massachusetts legislature.\\nTerrible floods in the Ohio River February 7-14, destroying over $3,00\\\\0f\\nworth of property. The water at Cincinnati was seventy four feet above low\\nwater mark, ihe highest since 1832.\\nThe first newspaper ever printed by electricity, March 13, at Ilion, N. Y.\\nRepublican National Convention at Chicago, June 6, nominating James G. Blaine\\nfor President, and Gen. John A. Logan for Vice-President.\\nDemocratic National Convention at Chicago nominating Grover Cleveland for\\nPresident, and Thomas A. Hendricks for Vice President.\\nJohn P. St. John was candidate for Prohibitionist President.\\nRiots in Cincinnati in which many lives were lost and the courthouse burned.\\nThat this nation under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that gov-\\nernment of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from\\nthe earth. Abraham Lincoln s Gettysburg Speech, Nov. ig, /86j.\\nSeek out and aid the deserving poor, who would rather starve than press their\\nnecessities upon you. G. A. R. Ritual.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0125.jp2"}, "126": {"fulltext": "Boast not thyself of to-morrow\\nthou Jcnowest not what a day\\nmay bring forth.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 27-1.\\n1885\\nA wise man is strong yea, a\\nman of knowledge increaseth\\nstrength.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 24-5.\\nJanuary\\nFebruary.\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMay\\nJune\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\n1\\nF\\n2\\nS\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nM\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nT\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nW\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nT\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nS\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nJanuary 24, the explosion of dynamite in Parliament buildings, London.\\nFebruary 21, dedication of the Washington monument in Washington.\\nMarch 23, the Edmunds anti-polygamy law declared constitutional by the Su-\\npreme Court.\\nMay 7. the printing of one and two dollar greenbacks stopped.\\nDec. 18, Congress votes a pension of $5,0\u00c2\u00ab\u00c2\u00bb0 a year to the widow of Gen. Grant.\\nGrover Cleveland and Thomas A. Hendricks, President and and Vice-President\\nof the United States. Number of States voting, 38; total electoral vote, 401,\\nof which Grover Cleveland received 219, and James G. Blaine, 182. Of the\\npopular vote Cleveland received 4,911,017; Blaine, 4,848,334, and St. John,\\n151,809.\\nVictor Hugo died May 22.\\nEx-President Ulysses S. Grant died at Mount McGregor, N. Y., July 23.\\nGen. George B. McClellan died October 29.\\nWilliam H. Vanderbilt died December 8.\\nFebruary 4. passage by the Senate of Cullom s Inter-State Commerce Bill.\\nNovember 25, Thomas A. Hendricks died.\\nSir Moses Montefiore, the Jewish philanthropist, died July 20.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0126.jp2"}, "127": {"fulltext": "If a thing is worth doing at O O ^L Tour influence for good or bad\\nall it is worth doing well. J[ ^5 ^5 \\\\-f wil1 be f elt forever.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nn\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nOctober.\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n31\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n39\\nJune...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nGeneral W. S. Hancock died February 9; was born February 14, 1824.\\nApril 1, the United States Senate votes $500,000 for a monument to Lincoln to\\nbe erected at Washington.\\nOn the evening of May 4 the Haymarket riot occurred at Chicago, when at a\\ngathering of Anarchists a dynamite bomb was thrown into the ranks of the\\npolice, killing and wounding upwards of sixty.\\nMay 5 and 6, Anarchists arrested. Trial of Anarchists commenced June 21,\\nwas concluded by a verdict of guilty August 20; seven Anarchists were con-\\ndemned to be hung, and one to imprisonment for fifteen years.\\nPensions paid by the United States during the fiscal year ending June 30, were\\n$63,797,831.61.\\nThe Morgan Art Collection in New York, including the famous peachblow\\nvase, sold for $1,207,052.\\nFranz Liszt died July 31. Samuel J. Tilden died August 4.\\nChester A. Arthur died November 5. Charles Francis Adams died November 21.\\nDisastrous earthquake shock at Charleston, S. C, August 31.\\nThere were serious labor troubles during this year in various parts of the United\\nStates.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0127.jp2"}, "128": {"fulltext": "Don t scoff at those who are \u00c2\u00a3X pmm The place that now knows ME\\nanxious about you and would do 1 J^C J will soon knoiv me no more for-\\nyougood. J| \\\\J yj J ever. Am I saved?\\nJanuary...\\nFebruary-\\nMarch\\nApril\\nMav\\nS\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nio\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nM\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nT\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\ni\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nW\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nT\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nF\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober....\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\ni\\nJune\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nJanuary 9, Scrgt. William Ballantine, an eminent English barrister died.\\nGen. William B. Hazen died January 16. Henry Ward Beecher died March 8.\\nJenny Lind died November 2.\\nSeptember 14 the Supreme Court of Illinois confirmed the death sentence in the\\nAnarchist cases, and fixed November 11 as the day for execution.\\nSeptember 26, Oscar W. Neebe, the Anarchist, goes to Joliet prison to begin his\\nOctober 21, the Lincoln statute in Chicago, unveiled.\\nNovember 10, the Governor of Illinois commutes the sentences of the Anarchists\\nFielden and Schwab to imprisonment for life. Louis Lingg, one of the\\nAnarchists, commits suicide in his cell by exploding a dynamite bomb in his\\nmouth.\\nNovember 11, August Spies, Albert R. Parsons, George Engel and Adolph\\nFischer, condemned Anarchists, executed in Chicago jail.\\nMay 25, burning of the Opera Comique in Paris, France; 200 lives lost.\\nJuly 31, Alfred Krupp. the famous manufacturer of Germany, died.\\nNovember 22, M Jules Grevy, President of the French Republic, resigns.\\nNumber of postoffices in the United States June 30, 55,157.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0128.jp2"}, "129": {"fulltext": "Man shall not live by bread \\\\2 1^ 5^ A good name is better than prec-\\nalone.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Deut. VIII. 3. M ^5 ^5 ^5 ious ointment.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Ecclesiastes 7-1.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\nJuly\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n1\\n5\\n6\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24.\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\nDecember\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nJanuary 1, public debt of the United States, 81,225,598,402.\\nEmperor William of Germany died March 9.\\nDemocratic National Convention at St. Louis, June 4.\\nRepublican National Convention at Chicago June 19.\\nCentennial celebration of the Ohio Valley and Central States at Cincinnati. July\\n4 to October 27.\\nHenry Bergh, founder and president of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty\\nto Animals, died at New York March 12.\\nMarch 10, 11 and 12, severe snow storm and blizzard in New York City and Pos-\\nton, both cities being shut out of communication by telegraph and railwavs\\nseveral people frozen in the streets of the first-named city.\\nMarch 23. Morrison R. Waite, Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court,\\ndied at Washington.\\nMatthew Arnold, a distinguished English author, died April 16.\\nRoscoe Conkling, a prominent American statesman, died April 18.\\n1\\n1", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0129.jp2"}, "130": {"fulltext": "Happy is the man that findeth\\nwisdom\\n1889\\nAnd the man that getteth un-\\nderstanding.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 3-13.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16j\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nt i\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nM\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nW\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nF S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nHISTORICAL EYENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nJanuary I, i88g, the great Q strike ended\\nJanuary 3. big battle in Hayti, 1,300 men killed.\\nGreat fire in St. Louis, $5,000 000 loss.\\nMrs. Cleveland s most brilliant New Year s reception at Washington.\\nNew planet discovered.\\nPrivate Joe Fifer, of Illinois, inaugurated governor, and Uncle Dick\\nOglesby retires and becomes a grnager.\\nJohn M. Clayton, of Arkansas assassinated.\\nCrown Prince Rudolph, of Austria, died suddenly at Mierling January 30.\\nUnveiling monument to Lewis Cass, Washington, D. C, February 18.\\nKing William III. of the Netherlands, died.\\nJohn C. Flood, bonanza king, died at Heidelberg February 21.\\nGeneral Benjamin H-arrison, of Indiana, as President, and Levi P. Morton of\\nNew York, as Vice-President, inaugurated under dripping skies at Wash-\\nington on March 4.\\nJohn Ericsson, of Monitor fame, dies in New York City on March 8.\\n(Continued on next page.)\\n-5", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0130.jp2"}, "131": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EYENTS OF THE YEAR-1889 Continued.\\nCongressman E. W. Townsend, of Illinois, dies at Washington March 12, and\\nJustice Stanley Matthews on the 22d.\\nRobert T. Lincoln appointed minister to England and Fred D. Grant to Austria.\\nJohn Bright, of England, born on November 16, 1811, dies on March 27.\\nLouis Kossuth, the Hungarian patriot; King William, of Holland; Edwin\\nBooth, the actor and the Duchess of Kent, aunt to Queen Victoria, die.\\nParis April 25, Carl Rosa, musical director, died to day.\\nDr. P. H. Cronin, of Chicago, disappears, and his body is found in a catch-basin\\non May 23.\\nPresident Carnot, of France, fired at; the Paris Exposition opened.\\nWashington Irving Bishop, the noted mind reader, dies.\\nUnveiling of the Haymarket monument occurred on May 31.\\nThe great Johnstown flood, whereby 12,000 people lose their lives.\\nGeneral Hippolyte, insurgent leader of Hayti, defeated Legitime and is pro\\nclaimed President.\\nGreat fire at Seattle on June 8; loss, $10 000,000.\\nLeonard Swett, noted Chicago lawyer, dies on June 9.\\nMrs. Maybrick, arrested in England for poisoning her husband.\\nSimon Cameron, of Pennsylvania, and Mrs. Lucy Webb Hayes, of Fremont,\\nOhio, die on June 25.\\nWalter W. Phelps is appointed minister to Germany.\\nCarlotta Patti, the noted singer, died at Paris on June 28, and Mrs. ex-President\\nTyler at Richmond, Va., on July I.\\nEarl of Fife and Princess Louise, of England, wed, on July 27.\\nJudge David S. Terry, of California, shot and killed by a United States marshal\\nfor assaulting Justice Field.\\nHon. S. S. (Sunset) Cox, of Ohio, and Wilkie Collins, of London, die Septem-\\nber 23\\nOld Gabriel, the oldest known living man in the world, n sides in California\\nat this date. He was born in 1739, is 150 years old, in his third childhood,\\nhale and hearty.\\nChicago bid $10,000 000 for the World s Fair.\\nJames G. Blaine chosen president of the Pan-American Congress October 2.\\nSteamer Corona explodes at New Orleans October 3, and forty people killed.\\nTalmadge s Brooklyn Tabernacle burned October 14.\\nKing Louis, of Portugal, dies at Lisbon on October 19, and Hon. John Crerar, of\\nChicago, dies the same date.\\nThe great Cronin murder trial commences on October 24, Hon J. M. Longe-\\nnecker prosecuting.\\nNovember 10, Catholic birthday: iooth anniversary of the American hierarchy,\\nBaltimore the Mecca, imposing opening of Church s centennial; cardinal\\nofficiates, supported by many of the high prelates; a most impressive cere-\\nmony. The great Catholic university dedicated at Washington November 13.\\nCivil war in Brazil; Dom Pedro abdicates and sails for Portugal; republic pro-\\nclaimed November 16.\\nHenry M. Stanley heard from on November 21 from the jungles of Africa.\\nJefferson Davis, ex-Confederate president, dies at New Orleans on December 5.\\nGreat Auditorium, of Chicago, dedicated to music and the people; Adelina Patti\\nsings. President Harrison and Vice-President Morton in attendance.\\nLondon, December 13. Robert Browning died.\\nHenry M. Grady, editor of the Atlanta Constitution died on December 23.\\nReverends John Shanley, of St. Paul. Minn James McGolrick, of Minneapolis,\\nand Joseph Cotter, of Winona, were consecrated as bishops of the Catholic\\nChurch.\\nLisbon, December 27, Carlos I proclaimed king.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0131.jp2"}, "132": {"fulltext": "In all thy ways acknowledge\\nHim. He shall direct thy paths.\\n\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 3-6.\\n1890\\nForsake the foolish and live;\\nand go in the ivay of under-\\nstanding.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 9-6.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n1\\n8\\n1 la re ii\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptenib r\\nOctober...\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nM\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nW\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n*5\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nS\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nJanuary 2, President Harrison s first New Year s reception\\nThe royal palace of the King of Belgium burned on January 3.\\nDowager Empress Augusta, of Germany, died on January 7. She was born\\nSeptember 3, 1811.\\nHon. W. D Kelly Pig Iron of Pennsylvania, died on January 9 Walker\\nBlaine died on January 16.\\nAmadeus, ex-King of Spain, died January 18, and Senator Riddleburger and\\nWilliam Bross, of the Chicago Tribune, died on January 27.\\nJohn Ruskin adjudged insane January 18\\nSecretary of the Navy Tracy s Washington house burned on the evening of\\nFebruary 9, and his wife, daughter and maid lost their lives.\\nThe Louisiana lottery invades Dakota and the Pacific Express robbed of $35,000.\\n(Continued on next page.)", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0132.jp2"}, "133": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR-1890 Continued.\\nFielden and Schwab, of Haymarket riot fame, granted a writ of error.\\nGeneral Sherman 70 years old February 8 and is honored with a banquet.\\nFebruary 11, Mormon rule at Salt Lake forever at an end.\\nFebruary 11, serious riots in Lisbon.\\nFebruary 12, Due d Orleans condemned to serve two years imprisonment.\\nFebruary 25, Chicago wins the World s Fair.\\nBritish steamer Quetta struck a rock, sank, and 200 lives lost.\\nWilliam B. Allison, of Iowa, elected senator for a fourth term.\\nMarch 18, disastrous fire at Indianapolis, and twelve firemen burned.\\nBerlin, March 18, Prince Bismarck retired as chancellor of the empire, and\\nGeneral Von Caprivi named as his successor.\\nMajor General George Crook dies on March 21.\\nSamuel J. Randall died at Washington on April 13 Bishop Borgess, of Kala-\\nmazoo, and Senator Beck, of Kentucky, on May 3.\\nLondon, May 3, great Labor Day parade, 500,000 persons participated.\\nHon. Andrew Shuman, a veteran Chicago editor, died on May 5.\\nPresident Cummings, of the Northwestern University, dies at Evanston May 7.\\nWalt Whittman and Wirt Dexter, of Chicago, die on May 7.\\nMonument to the memory of General R. E. Lee dedicated at Richmond May 29.\\nMay 30, Memorial Day in the United States.\\nGeneral Clinton B. Fisk died in New York on July 9. 1\\nMinnesota visited by a terrible cyclone near St. Paul resorts also Lake Pepin;\\nloss over 300.\\nGeneral John C. .Fremont died at New York City on July 13.\\nRevolution in the Argentine Republic and many killed.\\nGeneral Barillas, of Guatemala, deposed on August 9.\\nGardner, Chase Co., of Boston, fail for over $2,000,000.\\nColonel George R. Davis elected director general of the World s Fair.\\nComte de Paris visited the grave of General McClellan on October 6.\\nThe wife of General William Booth, of the Salvation Army, died in London in\\nOctober.\\nJustice Samuel F. Miller died in Washington on October 14.\\nA. B. Mullitt, for years supervising architect for the government, committed\\nsuicide at Washington October 20.\\nBritish torpedo cruiser Serpent foundered off the coast of Spain and 273 persons\\nlost.\\nBaring Brothers failed.\\nPrince Adolph and Victoria, of Prussia, wed at Berlin on November 19.\\nGeneral Seliverskoff, of Russia, assassinated at Paris November 19.\\nCountess of Rosebery died on November 19 and King William III of Holland,\\non November 23.\\nSitting Bull, a noted Sioux chief, killed while resisting arrest at Standing Rock\\nAgency on December 15.\\nGeneral Francis E. Spinner died at Jacksonville, Fla., December 31.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0133.jp2"}, "134": {"fulltext": "Trust in the Lord with all thine g^ .4 Keep thy heart with all dili-\\nheart; and lean not unto thine %k 1 1 I genre for out of it are the issues\\nown understanding .\u00e2\u0080\u0094Prov. 3-5. M. %J jf JL \u00c2\u00b0f life.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Prov. 4-23.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nJuly...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nAugust\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n1\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\ng\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n31\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nEmma Abbott, the sweet singer, died at Salt Lake City on January 5.\\nLieutenant Casey, of the 22d Infantry, killed by the Indians.\\nGeorge Bancroft, historian, dies at Washington, D. C, January 17.\\nKing Kalakua, of the Hawaiian Islands, died at the Palace Hotel in San Fran-\\ncisco on January 20.\\nHon. David B. Hill, of New York, elected United States senator; 100 guns fired\\nin honor of the result.\\nThe great snow storm in New York occurred on January 25.\\nThe first stake driven for the World s Fair on January 27.\\nHon. William Windom, secretary of the treasury, dies in New York on the even-\\ning of January 29.\\nMeissonier, the great French painter, died at Paris January 31.\\nContinued on next page.)", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0134.jp2"}, "135": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1891\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nMiss Catherine Drexel, of Philadelphia, gave up a fortune of $7 000,000 and a\\nfashionable life to become Mother Superior of the Order of the Blessed\\nSacrament, instituted by her for work among the Indians and colored people.\\nAdmiral David D. Porter died suddenly at Washington. His father was a dis-\\ntinguished commodore in the war of 1812.\\nGeneral William Tecumseh Sherman died in New York on February 14. He\\nfought his last fight and surrendered peacefully at ten minutes to 2 p. m.\\nQueen Regent Liliuokalani declared Queen of the Hawaiian Islands on Feb-\\nruary 7.\\nSenator Hearst, of California, died at Washington February 28, and Prince\\nJerome Napoleon at Rome March 17.\\nLawrence Barrett died in New York on March 20.\\nGeneral Joseph E Johnson, of the Confederate army, died at Washington on\\nMarch 21. He was the last, save Beauregard, of the six full generals.\\nKing Humbert demands that the New Orleans Mafia lynchers be punished. An\\nindemnity was subsequently paid.\\nThe Grand Army of the Republic celebrated its silver jubilee at Decatur, 111., on\\nApril 6\\nP. T. Barnum died on April 7 at Bridgeport, Conn., in his 81st year.\\nBerlin, April 24, Marshal Count Von Moltke died to-day in his 8istyear.\\nOttawa, May 20, Sir John McDonald suffered a stroke of paralysis, from which\\nhe died June 6 at Earnscliffe.\\nAn attempt was made on May 29 to steal the body of P. T. Barnum.\\nBuffalo Bill, of the great Wild West Show, visits the historic field of Waterloo.\\nEx-Senator Joseph E. McDonald, of Indianapolis, died on June 21.\\nHon. Hannibal Hamlin, of Maine, died suddenly at his home in Bangor on\\nJuly 1.\\nRight Rev. Frederic Xaver Katzer, of Milwaukee, was honored by Pope\\nLeo XIII in the conferring upon him of the pallium, on May 20. Archbishop\\nK?tzer was born on February 7, 1844, at Ebensee, Austria.\\nJames Russell Lowell died on August 12 at Boston.\\nGeorge Jones, editor New York Times, and Herman Raster, of the Chicago\\nStaats Zeihing. died August 12.\\nMrs. Polk, wife of the tenth President of the United States, died at Nashville on\\nAugust 15.\\nTerrible battle at Valparaiso, Chile, on August 23. Balmaceda defeated and a\\nfugitive.\\nIllinois veterans dedicate and place regimental monuments in position at Get-\\ntysburg.\\nJules Grevy died at Paris on September 9, in his 85th year.\\nWilliam Waldorf Astor deserts America and becomes a full-fledged Englishman.\\nPresident Balmaceda, of Chile committed suicide at Santiago on September 10.\\nBrussels, September 20, General Boulanger, of France, committed suicide by\\nshooting. He was found in the cemetery.\\nLondon. October 7, Charles Stewart Parnell died to-day the end of a remark-\\nable career.\\nWilliam J Florence, the actor died at Philadelphia on November 19.\\nGovernor A P. Hovey. of Indiana, died on November 23.\\nNew York. November 29. three shots were fired at Rev. John Hall, of the Fifth\\nAvenue Presbyterian Church.\\nDom Pedro. ex-Emperor of Brazil, died at Paris on December 5\\nAttempt made to kill Russell Sage in his office in New York on December 4.\\nSenator Preston B. Plumb, of Kansas, died December 20.\\nJerome I. Case, of Wisconsin, died December 22.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0135.jp2"}, "136": {"fulltext": "Be ye ready, for the Son of man f\\\\f\\\\ Bridle your tongue. Unkind\\ncometh at an hour when ye think 1 \\\\L II W words are like coals of fire; they\\nnot.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Luke XII. 40. M. V^ Zr Jmd burn and leave a scar.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n28\\n29\\nBO\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\nOctober...\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a21\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMay\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\nNovember\\n6\\n7\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nGreat famine in Russia; 30,000,000 on the border of starvation.\\nBold plot to overthrow President Hippolyte, Haytian ruler, on January 8.\\nCardinal Manning died in London on January 8.\\nTewfik Pasha, Khedive of Egypt, dies January 7.\\nChili demands the recall of Minister Egan.\\nPrince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence, dies on June 14th of pneumonia.\\nNihilists routed out in St. Petersburg. High officials implicated.\\nAssociate Justice Josiah P. Bradley dies at Washington on January 22.\\nWashington, D. C, January 29th, Chili must salute the flag, and she did.\\nRev. Chas. H. Spurgeon dies at Mentone, England, January 31.\\nHon. Alex McKenzie, of Canada, dies.\\n(Continued on next page.)", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0136.jp2"}, "137": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1892-Continued.\\nPattrick O Suliivan, of Dr. Cronin murder fame, died in prison at Joliet, on\\nMay 5.\\nArchbishop John Ireland s schools at Faribault and Stillwater, Minn., are\\nrecognized by the Pope.\\nVenezuelan insurgents capture the City of Bolivar on May 15.\\nA hurricane swept the Island of Mauritius on May 30th, and 1200 people were\\nkilled.\\nGolden wedding of the Danish King and Queen on May 26.\\nJames G. blaine resigns as secretary of state on June 4.\\nEmin Pasha dies in the interior of Africa on June 1st, and Sidney Dillon on June\\nqth, in New York.\\nPresident Benjamin Harrison nominated at Minneapolis for a second term, and\\nWhitelaw Reed as Vice-President.\\nGrover Cleveland nominated for President, and Adlai Stevenson for Vice-Presi-\\ndent, at Chicago on June 23.\\nSt. Johns, N. F., nearly wiped out by fire on July 7.\\nThomas Cook, founder of the Cook excursions, died in London, July 19.\\nJuly 29th the hottest day of the year in New York 300 prostrations, 94 deaths.\\nThe family of Hiram Sibley and guests, eleven in all, lost in Georgian Bay\\nAugust 26.\\nGeorge Wm. Curtis dies at Livingston, Statan Island, August 31st, and John G.\\nWhittier on September 7th, at Hampton Falls, N. H.\\nFour of the Dalton gang of bank robbers killed at Coffeyville, Kas.\\nLord Tennyson died in London on October 5.\\nCharles T. Yerkes donates the largest telescope in the world to the Chicago\\nUniversity. It is located at Lake Geneva, Wis., and with the land and\\nbuildings cost $1,000,000.\\nMrs. Harrison, wife of the President, dies in Washington, D. C, on the 25.\\nMilwaukee, Wis., suffers a great fire on October 28; 3 000 people homeless.\\nJay Gould dies in New York on December 2d He was one of the most remark-\\nable organizers and financiers of the century, starting life with $100 and end\\ning with $100,000,000. He was quiet unostentatious and generous.\\nMartin Burke, one of Dr. Cronin s murderers died of consumption in Joliet.\\nThe Columbian half dollars arrived in Chicago on December 19 and the first one\\ncoined was purchased by Wycoff, Seamans Benedict, proprietors of the\\nRemington Typewriter, for $10,000\\nTHE COST OF STRONG DRINK.\\nFor the fiscal year ending June 30 1896, there were reported to be 4 648\\nwholesale and 204 294 retail dealers of whisky and beer, from which the United\\nStates received in revenue $114,480 720. The number of breweries in the United\\nStates is 1,771, and the annual production from them is 75,000,000 gallons of\\ndistilled spirits, and 1,115 959,482 gallons of fermented liquors, for which the\\nconsumers pay $1,000,000,000.\\nThis is but an annual statement, and what an awful statement it is. In its\\ntrail come tears, blood, crime, death, damnation, and Christians and statesmen\\nlegalize it by not crushing it out We build war ships, strengthen forts and\\nmobilize armies to crush out an insurrection that lasts but a few days. We hold\\nthe Spaniard accountable for Cuban atrocities, and yet we build breweries and\\nlicense rum sellers whose sole aim and business is to degrade, debauch and damn\\nour young men and young women\\nAmerica! wake up God will bless you for lending a sympathetic ear to\\nCuba; but He will hold you accountable for aiding and abetting the brewers and\\nrum sellers in their nefarious business.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0137.jp2"}, "138": {"fulltext": "Cling close to innocency, for it\\nwill bring you peace at last.\\n1893\\nYoung Man There is only one\\npath to prosperity\u00e2\u0080\u0094 strict honesty\\nJanuary-\\nFebruary.\\nMarch....\\nApril.\\nMay...\\nJune\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nM\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nT\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nW T\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n*6\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nS\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n31\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nW T F\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nlO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nJohn P. Altgeld inaugurated Governor of Illinois.\\nGeneral Benj. F. Butler died in Washington, suddenly, on January 11\\nFather Wheadon, venerable circuit rider of the M. E. Church, died at Evan-\\nston on June 10.\\nEx-President R. B. Hayes died at Fremont, Ohio, on January 18.\\nDan Coughlin, of the Dr. Cronin murder fame, granted a new trial.\\nL. Q C. Lamar, of the United States Supreme Court, died at Washington, Janu-\\nary 23. Bishop Phillips Brooks died at Boston same date.\\nJames G. Blaine died at Washington on June 27.\\nRevolt in Hawaii and the Queen deposed on June 6.\\nU. S. Flag was raised with pomp and ceremony over the Government House in\\nHawaii on February 1.\\nGeneral Beauregard, last of the full rank generals of the Confederacy, died sud-\\ndenly in New Orleans, February 20.\\nNew York, February 23, Rufus Hatch died to-day.\\n(Continued on next page.)", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0138.jp2"}, "139": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL ETENTS OF THE YEAR 1893\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nWashington, D. C, March 3, Benjamin Harrison and Grover Cleveland again\\ngreet each other, but the tables are turned.\\nGrover Cleveland and Adlai Stevenson inaugurated as President and Vice-Presi\\ndent of the United States, March 4.\\nParis, March 17, Jules Ferry, French statesman died suddenly.\\nTremont Temple of Boston burned on March 19, loss 500,000\\nEx-Senator Saulsbury, of Delaware, died on March 22, and Colonel Elliott F.\\nShepard. New York, on March 24.\\nGeneral E. Kirby Smith, late of the Confederate army, died at Nashville, Tenn.,\\non March 28.\\nApril 5, Carter Harrison elected Mayor of Chicago Majority, 20,000.\\nLondon, April 12, the English, Scotch and Australian Bank has failed, with\\n$40,000,000 liabilities.\\nPresident Cleveland visits the Fair grounds on April 30.\\nMay 2d, opening ceremonies of the World s Fair; President Cleveland presses\\nthe button at 12 09, and the greatest event of the century is inaugurated\\nMay 11, at Muscatine, Iowa, three dwellings blown to atoms by dynamite.\\nThe Infanta Eulalie and Prince Antoine received in Washington on May 19.\\nand in Chicago on June 6.\\nEdwin Booth died in New York on June 7.\\nFargo, N. D., swept by a fire on June 8. Loss, $3 000,000.\\nMayor Carter H. Harrison gave a breakfast at his residence, in honor of the\\nSpanish Queen s representative, on June 27.\\nWashington, D. C, the historic Ford s Theater, used by the Pension and War\\nDepartment, collapsed, and twenty-one persons killed.\\nH. M. S. Victoria, flag ship of the Mediterranean squadron, collided with the\\nCamperdown and was sunk off the coast of Tripoli, on June 22. Admiral\\nTyron and 430 others were drowned.\\nAnarchists Fielden, Schwab and Neebe are liberated June 26.\\nThe Duke of York and Princess Victoria May wed in London, July 6.\\nThe Spanish Caravals reach Jackson Park on July 8.\\nThe cold-storage fire at Jackson Park on July 10.\\nThe Viking ship came into port on July 12.\\nThe religious Parliament connected with World s Fair, and which has never had\\na counterpart in the world s history, ends its sessions amid hallelujahs on\\nSeptember 28.\\nArchduke Franz Ferdinand, of Austria, visited the Fair on October 4.\\nOctober 9, Chicago Day at the Fair, and 713,646 paid admissions was the\\nrecord. The city transportation lines carried 2,556 616 persons to and from\\ntheir homes\\nMarshal McMahon, famous French soldier and statesman, late President, dies\\nat Paris on October 17.\\nCharles Francis Gounod dies in Paris, and Mrs. Lucy Stone Blackwell, of Dor-\\nchester. Mass., died on October 19.\\nCarter H. Harrison. Mayor of Chicago assassinated at his home on October 29;\\nshot down and dies in twenty minutes.\\nCaptain Hedberg, of U. S. A shot and killed at Fort Sheridan, on October 30,\\nby Lieutenant J A. Maney.\\nThe World s Fair closed, amid the booming of cannon, on October 31.\\nCarter H. Harrison, late Mayor, buried on November 1. Eighty thousand persons\\nviewed the remains while lying in state at the City Hall, and the funeral\\ncortege was the largest ever seen in Chicago Regulars. National Guards and\\nCivic Societies participating.\\nGeneral Jere M Rusk dies at h s home in Wisconsin, November 21.\\nParis, December 9 bomb explosion in the Chamber of Deputies, whereby many\\nare wounded.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0139.jp2"}, "140": {"fulltext": "It is manly to say NO when\\nyour conscience dictates it.\\nDon t be afraid.\\n1894\\nBoys, don t call your mother\\nthe old woman. She is your\\nbest friend.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2(\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly.\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober.\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n31\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n*7\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n*5\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n1JP\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nAV\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nT F\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nCaptain Alfred Dreyfus, an Alsatian Jew of the French army, accused of selling\\nimportant information to the Germans, is arrested.\\nEx-Governor Gear, of Iowa, elected to the United States senate.\\nGeorge W. Childs, of Philadelphia, died on February 3.\\nWashington, D. C, February 8, the old Kearsarge struck a reef near Mosquito\\nCoast, Central America.\\nKiel, February 16. German man-of-war Brandenburg, exploded a steam pipe\\n39 seamen killed.\\nNew York, February 21, Erastus Wiman, capitalist, sent to the Tombs.\\nRev. R. W. Patterson died at Evanston, 111., on April 30.\\nDan Coughlin, of Dr. Cronin murder fame, after a second trial, was acquitted.\\nTurin, March 20, General Louis Kossuth, Hungarian patriot, died.\\n(Continued on next page.)", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0140.jp2"}, "141": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1894-Continued.\\nCoxey s commonweal army on the march to Washington.\\nMilwaukee, April 9, serious fire, Davidson s Theater burned; nine perish.\\nNew Y\u00c2\u00abrk, April 13, David Dudley Field died to-day.\\nSenator Vance, of North Carolina, died in Washington April 14.\\nJesse Seligman, banker, of New York, died at San Francisco April 23.\\nFrank Hatton, postmaster general under President Arthur, died in Washington\\nApril 30.\\nCoxey s commonweal army arrived at Washington April 28.\\nThe Pullman strike commenced on May 12.\\nTalmadge s Brooklyn Tabernacle burned for the third time.\\nGeneral Coxey, of the commonweal, goes to jail at Washington, D. C, for walk-\\ning on the government grass.\\nLord Coleridge died in London June 14.\\nLyons, France, June 21, M. Sade-Carnot, president of the French republic, assas-\\nsinated.\\nParis, June 28, M. Casimer Perier elected to fill vacancy caused by the dea h of\\nPresident Carnot.\\nJune 28, great railroad strike in Chicago, United States troops called out to quell\\nrioters; prompt action saved the city.\\nHamburg, Mich., ex-Governor Winans died on July 4.\\nPatrick Eugene Prendergast hanged July 13 for the assassination of Mayor\\nHarrison.\\nJuly 18, Eugene V. Debs the disturber, sent to jail.\\nJapanese cruiser sinks Chinese ships; war imminent.\\nLyons, France, August 3, Santo Geronimo Csesario guillotined August 16 for the\\nassassination of President Carnot.\\nJohn C. Gault, well-known railroad manager, died August 29.\\nHinckley, Minn., September I, great forest fires; towns burn and 1,000 persons\\nperish.\\nProfessor David Swing, of Chicago, died October 3.\\nBoston, Mass., Oliver Wendell Holmes died October 7.\\nBellefontaine, Pa., ex-Governor Andrew G. Curtin died October 7.\\nMontreal, Quebec, ex-Premier Mercer died October 30.\\nSt. Petersburg, November 1, Czar Alexander died at Livadia this afternoon.\\nPrinceton, N. J., Dr. McCosh died November 5.\\nRobert Louis Stevenson died suddenly of apoplexy at Apia, Samoa, on\\nDecember 8.\\nSan Francisco, ex-Senator Fair died suddenly at the Lick House December 29.\\nTHE WAR GOVERNORS.\\nIsrael Wasburn, Jr., Maine. Richard Yates, Illinois.\\nJohn A. Andrews, Massachusetts. Samuel J. Kirkwood, Iowa.\\nNathaniel S. Berry, New Hampshire. Austin Blair, Michigan.\\nWilliam Sprague, Rhode Island. Alex W. Randall Wisconsin.\\nJohn A. Dix and E. D. Morgan, New Alex. Ramsey, Minnesota.\\nYork. Wm. A. Buckingham, Connecticut.\\nAndrew G. Curtin, Pennsylvania. Erastus Fairbanks, Vermont.\\nDavid Todd, Ohio. Charles S. Olden, New Jersey.\\nOliver P. Morton, Indiana.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0141.jp2"}, "142": {"fulltext": "Save I a soul to save? The\\nBible says so and the Bible is the\\nWord of God.\\n1895\\nShun the ways of the wicked\\nfor their counsel leads to destruc-\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober..\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nS M\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nW\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nF S\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE TEAR.\\nInd., December 31, Bishop Knickerbocker, of\\n1895\\nthe Episcopal\\nIndianapolis,\\nChurch, died to-day.\\nWashington, D. C, General Philip Sidney Post, congressman from Illinois, died\\nJanuary 6.\\nParis, January 15, M. Cassimir-Perier. president of France, resigned to-day,\\nand Felix Faure elected to fill the vacancy.\\nLondon, January 30, the steamer Elba, from Bremen to New York, sunk on the\\ncoast of Holland; 344 drowned.\\nNew York, January 31, Ward McAllister, leader of the 400 died to-day.\\nWashington, D. C, February 20, Frederick Douglass, noted ex-slave and states-\\nman, died to-day at his home.\\nWar opened between Cuba and Spain February 24.\\nRidgewood, N. J., General Adam Badeau died at the age of 64 years, on March\\n19, of appoplexy.\\nLi Hung Chang, the Chinese peace envoy to Japan, shot (not fatally) by a young\\nJapanese on March 4.\\n(Continued on next page).", "height": "3815", "width": "2534", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0142.jp2"}, "143": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1895-Continued.\\nAnton C. Hesing, of the Staats Zeitung, died suddenly in Chicago April i.\\nApril 3, George B Swift elected mayor of Chicago over four other candidates by\\n41,930 majority.\\nJames W. Scott, of the Times-Herald, of Chicago, died suddenly in New York on\\nApril 14.\\nThe steamer Chicora foundered in Lake Michigan April 15; all lost.\\nHerman H. Kohlsaat purchased the Chicago Times-Herald and Evening Post,\\nSaturday, April 19.\\nSioux Center, Iowa, May 3, a terrible cyclone passed over the country here; many\\nlives lost.\\nMay 15, Florence Nightingale, the famous nurse of the Crimea, is 75 years old\\nWashington, May 28, Walter Q. Gresham, secretary of state, died early this\\nmorning at the Arlington Hotel\\nDanville. N. Y., August 5, Mrs. T. De Witt Talmage died here this morning.\\nGeorge F. Root, composer of famous war songs, died on August 6 at Bailey s\\nIsland. Casco Bay, near Portland, Me.\\nDenver, Colo., the Gurney Hotel wrecked by an explosion and forty lives lost.\\nLeonard W. Polk, the sculptor, died in Osceola. Wis., August 17.\\nAtlanta, Ga.. September 18, President Cleveland at Gray Gables set Atlanta s\\nexposition in motion.\\nBartalome Masso was elected president of the Cuban republic September 10.\\nS. Corning Judd, ex-postmaster of Chicago, died at his home in Chicago Sep-\\ntember 23\\nParis, September 29, Professor Louis Pasteur died at his home September 29.\\nWashington, D. C, General William Mahone died at 1 p. m., October 8.\\nNew York, October 18, the Duke of Marlborough arrested for scorching.\\nEx-Governor Oliver Ames, of Massachusetts, died at his home, North Easton,\\nOctober 22.\\nGeneral Van Wick, ex-United States senator from Nebraska, died at Washington\\nOctober 25.\\nWashington. D C, Monsignor Satolli, delegate apostolic to the United States,\\nwas created a cardinal by the Pope.\\nEugene Field poet and writer, died in Chicago, early Monday, November 4.\\nJohn B. Drake, of the Grand Pacific Hotel, Chicago, died November 12.\\nDr. S. F. Smith, author of America, died in Boston, Mass., November 16.\\nPeter McGeoch, great wheat and pork speculator, committed suicide at Mil-\\nwaukee, November 28.\\nAlexander Dumas died at Paris November 27.\\nColumbus, Ohio, Judge Allan G. Thurman died at his residence on the afternoon\\nof December 13. He was born in Lynchburg, Va., November 13, 1813. He\\nhad been a member of congress and served twelve years in the senate.\\nThe following was taken from Henry Watterson s address of welcome to the\\nmembers of the G. A. R. at the Louisville encampment in 1895:\\nAnd the flag! God bless the flag! As the heart of McCallum More\\nwarmed to the tartan, do all hearts warm to the flag Have you upon your\\nrounds of sight-seeing missed it hereabouts? Does it make itself on any hand\\nconspicuous by its absence? Can you doubt the loyal sincerity of those who\\nfrom house top and roof-tree have thrown it to the breeze Let some sacri\\nlegious hand be raised to haul it down, and see No, no, comrades, the people\\nen masse do not deal in subterfuges; they do not stoop to conquer; they may be\\nwrong; they may be perverse, but they never dissemble. These are honest flags\\nwith honest hearts behind them. They are the symbols of a nationality as\\nprecious to us as to you. They fly at last as Webster would have them fly. bear-\\ning no such mottoes as What is all this worth or Liberty first and Union\\nafterward, but blazing in letters of living light upon their ample folds, as they\\nfloat over the sea and over the land, those words dear to every American heart\\n1 Union and liberty, now and forever, one and inseparable.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0143.jp2"}, "144": {"fulltext": "Am I going in the wrong f\\\\ ^C If so, I must turn about and\\ndirection m. C^ r vJ ffo ie other way.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nOctober....\\n3\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n31\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nBaltimore, Md., January 5, Archbishop Francis Satolli, Apostolic delegate to the\\nUnited States, invested with the red berreta creating him a Cardinal Prince\\nin the church.\\nMadrid, January 17, Captain-General Martinez de Campos retires from Cuba.\\nGeneral Thomas Ewing, of Ohio, dies from an accident in New York, January 21.\\nPrince Henry of Battenberg dies in Ashantee, Africa.\\nVulcan coal mine explodes in Colorado; 60 killed.\\nNew York, February 22, Ballington Booth and wife, of the Salvation Army,\\nrevolt, and refuse to go to England.\\nRome, March 4, Italy is shaken; population protest against further troops going\\nto Africa.\\nMadrid, March 4 Students tore down and burned the American flag.\\nContinued on next page).", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0144.jp2"}, "145": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EYENTS OF THE YEAR 1896-Continued.\\nSt. Louis, March 4, Archbishop Kenrick died, in the qoth year of his age.\\nRome, March 7, Premier Crispi and ministry resign, and Marquis di Rudini\\nsucceeds,\\nThomas Hughes, noted writer and statesman, died in London, March 22.\\nNew York, April 6, ex-President Harrison married to Mary Lord Dimmick.\\nLeon Say, distinguished French Diplomat, died at Paris, April 21.\\nBaron Hirsch, the great Jewish philanthropist, died at Vienna on April 21.\\nH. C. Bunner, editor of Puck, died at Nutley, N. J., May 11.\\nCyclone at Sherman, Texas, on May 15; killed more than 100 people.\\nGeneral Lucius Fairchild died at Madison, Wis., on May 23.\\nSt. Louis, May 27, A cyclone sweeps over the city, and 1,000 people killed.\\nFrank Mayo, actor, died on the Union Pacific train on June 8.\\nParis, June 8. Jules Simon, French statesman, died suddenly.\\nSt. Louis, Mo., June 18, William McKinley, of Ohio, nominated on the firstballot\\nfor President 661^ votes and Garret A. Hobart, of New Jersey, for Vice-\\nPresident. Governor Foraker, of Ohio, nominated Major McKinley, and it\\nstarted a tremendous demonstration. Senators Teller and Cameron bolted\\nthe Convention.\\nPeoria, June 23, Governor John P. Altgeld nominated for re-election by\\nacclamation.\\nLyman Trumbull was buried in Oakwoods, Chicago, on June 26.\\nChicago, July II. William Jennings Bryan nominated for President on the fifth\\nballot\u00e2\u0080\u0094 639 votes and Arthur Sewell, of Maine, nominated for Vice-\\nPresident.\\nParis, July 14, President Faure, while reviewing the troops, fired upon by an\\nanarchist, who was arrested.\\nEx-Governor William E. Russell, of Mass., died suddenly in a camp near Quebec\\non July 16.\\nW. J. Bryan and Thomas E. Watson nominated by the Populists for President\\nand Vice-President.\\nMayor Pingree, of Detroit, nominated for Governor of Michigan August 6.\\nHamilton, Mass., August 17, Gail Hamilton died of paralysis.\\nNew York, August 31, Li Hung Shang, the great Chinese statesman, visits\\nAmerica.\\nCincinnati, Ohio, September 2. Bishop S. M.Merrill, of the Methodist Episco-\\npal Church, celebrated his half century of service in the church at the Cin-\\ncinnati Conference, where he first entered the ministry in 1846.\\nIndianapolis, Ind., September 13, the Gold Democrats nominated General John\\nM. Palmer, of Illinois, for President, and General Simon Bolivar Buckner,\\nof Ky., for Vice-President.\\nCleveland, Ohio, September 9, ex-Senator Henry B. Payne died at his home\\nto-day.\\nLondon, October 8, George du Maurier, author of Trilby, died this morning.\\nLondon, October n, Archbishop of Canterbury died of appoplexy suddenly.\\nNovember 4, the greatest political battle ever fought in America closed to-day.\\nWilliam McKinley, of Ohio, was elected President, and Garret A Hobart, of\\nNew Jersey, Vice-President.\\nMilwaukee, Wis.. December 5, wholesale poisoning; 600 persons affected by\\neating bread supposed to contain arsenic.\\nHavana, December 8, General Maceo, the great insurgent general, reported\\nkilled.\\nChicago, December 22, the Illinois National Bank closes its doors, and carries\\ndown four other banks.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0145.jp2"}, "146": {"fulltext": "You are right or you are wrong* 1 f\\\\ *j Cheers for the living comrade\\nThere is NO MIDDLE GROUND I O JS J and tears for the dead.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Iagersoll.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\ns\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31 J\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nt\\\\\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21 1\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n281\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4 I\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18 1\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\nOctober...\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n31\\n1\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nNovember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6!\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nIB\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EYENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nSpringfield, III January 19, W. E. Mason elected United States senator from\\nIllinois on first ballot.\\nWashington, D. C, General Alfred Pleasonton, of cavalry fame, died on Feb-\\nruary 7.\\nFebruary 18, 2.000 Moslems massacred at Sitia, Crete.\\nManilla, Philippine Islands, February 19, the Spaniards have captured the insur-\\ngent town of Selang and 500 insurgents killed.\\nBinghamton, N. Y, February 19, Major General John C. Robinson, who lost a\\nleg at the battle of the Wilderness, died at 80 years of age.\\nCanea. Crete, February 21, foreign war ships bombard the insurgent camp.\\nHavana, February 21, Dr. Ruiz, an American citizen, slain in a Spanish dungeon.\\nWashington, March 4, William McKinley, of Ohio, and Garrett A. Hobart, of\\nNew Jersey, inaugurated as President and Vice-President.\\nAthens, March 25, Christian insurgents in Crete blow up a fort with dynamite,\\nand Turkish troops routed.\\n(Continued on next page).", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0146.jp2"}, "147": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE TEAR 189 7- Continued.\\nHavana, March 29, General Ruiz Rivera, captured by the Spaniards.\\nGuthrie, O. T, a tornado at Chandler destroyed three fourths of the town, and\\n45 were killed.\\nApril 6 Carter H. Harrison elected mayor of Chicago over four candidates in\\nthe field. The mantle of Carter, Si., has fallen on the son.\\nLondon, April 18, forces of Greece and Turkey meet in relentless and bloody\\nwar- fierce battle fought at Milouna Pass, and both armies lose heavily.\\nThe tomb of General Grant, at Riverside Park, N. Y., dedicated on April 27.\\nSixty thousand men march amid the boom of cannon, and crowd of wit-\\nnesses estimated at 3,000,000.\\nParis, May 4, fire in a bazar; more than one hundred titled ladies perish in the\\nflames.\\nLondon, May 15, Domokos lost to the Greeks; great excitement in Athens.\\nLondon, May 19, bloody sword of the Turk sheathed by command of the Russian\\nCzar.\\nMatthew Laflin, Illinois pioneer, died in Chicago on May 20.\\nCambridge, Mass Professor Alvan Clarke, the great telescope lens maker, died\\nhere on June 9. _\\nParis, Tune 15, an attempt made to assassinate President fraure.\\nLondon, June 14, Barnato. the famous diamond king, leaps overboard from the\\nsteamer Scott while on the way to England.\\nLondon, June 21, the Queen s diamond jubilee inaugurated to day; the most\\nimpressive procession England ever saw.\\nLondon, July 20, Jean Ingelow, poet and novelist, died July iy.\\nThe Logan statue unveiled in Chicago on July 22. _\\nProvidence R. I., ex-United States Senator James R. Doohttle died July 27.\\nMadrid, August 8, Senor Antonio Canovas, prime minister of Spain, was assas-\\nsinated to-day by an anarchist.\\nCity of Mexico, September 16, President Diaz escaped assassination on Mexico s\\nIndependence Day. _\\nNew York October 8, ex-Senator McPherson, of New Jersey, died to-night\\nWindsor, Nova Scotia, was swept by fire on October 17 and 3,000 people are\\nGeorg\u00c2\u00b0e m M. e p S ullman died suddenly at his residence in Chicago on October 19.\\nNew York, October 29. Henry George, mayoralty candidate, dropped dead.\\nNew York. November 2, Robert Van Wyck was elected first mayor of Greater\\nColumbus. Ohio, Marcus A. Hanna, who conducted President McKinley s cam-\\npaign. elected United States senator.\\nParis November 15, Dr. Thomas W. Evans, the noted American dentist, died\\nsuddenly on November 14. It was he who aided Empress Eugenie to escape\\nfrom Paris after the defeat of the French by the German army.\\nLondon, November 19. great fire in London; $25,000,000 loss\\nCanton, Ohio, Mrs. Nancy Allison McKinley, mother of the President, died on\\nDecember 12. __ -r,\\nHavana, December 17. huge frauds have been found in Weyler s accounts. He\\ngot away with the boodle.\\nThe Leiter wheat deal, the greatest of its kind ever known, began during the\\nPos/no^^G. A. R. Department of Indiana, was organized at Notre Dame on\\nOctober 5. All the members are priests. Very Rev. William E. Corby, the\\ncommander was chaplain of the 88th New York, and did good service at Get-\\ntysburg; Father Olmstead. one of the members, was lieutenant colonel of the\\n2d New York. Commander Corby died December 23.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0147.jp2"}, "148": {"fulltext": "When a man is down extend f^ \u00c2\u00a3V A. man crazed xoith drink is a\\nthe helping hand. It is a good 1 \\\\L II fiend and yet ive license ram\\ninvestment. J[ \\\\J jr \\\\J selling.\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\nJuly\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n30\\n31\\n31\\nFebruary..\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nAugust\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n5\\nSeptemb r\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\nOctober...\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nMay\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n13\\n7\\n14\\nNovember\\n6\\n7\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\nIO\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3()\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nDecember\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nSan Quentin. Cal., January 7, Theodore Durant hanged for the murder of\\nBlanche Lamont\\nAugusta Ga., January 8, Major Moses P. Handy died.\\nColumbus, Ohio, January 12, Marcus A. Hanna elected to the U. S. Senate.\\nParis, January 15, France insane over the Dreyfus case.\\nHavana, January 14, city in disorder; mob defies troops and police.\\nHavana January 21, Cubans win a victory; the Spaniards lose heavily.\\nPresident Dole and wife are guests of the United States.\\nWashington, D. C warship Maine ordered to Havana.\\nChicago, January 29, wheat goes to $1 00, Joseph Leiter in control.\\nOdessa, January 30, Russia sends 10 000 troops to China.\\n(Continued on next page).", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0148.jp2"}, "149": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1898\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nWashington, D. C Spanish Minister Dupuy de Lome insults the President and\\nis recalled on February 9.\\nChicago, February 10, Luetgert, the wife murderer, sentenced to prison for life.\\nBattleship Maine blown up by torpedoes in Havana harbor on February 15,\\n258 marines perish.\\nNew York, February 17, Miss Frances E. Willard died at the Empire Hotel at\\nmidnight on the 17th. Miss Willard was the Uncrowned Queen of\\nAmerica; she was an American by birth, but belonged to the World. In\\nearly life she lived on a farm, and loved the country home and country\\nmanners; did not attend school until fourteen years of age, yet, with a mind\\nreceptive to all that was sensible and good, she became a ripe scholar and a\\nprofound thinker, an organizer and a safe leader. She stood a peer among\\nthe great educators in America, and a stalwart in her life work purity and\\nsobriety. Frances Willard goes down to future generations as a martyr, and\\ntis well. The great cause for which she labored and died needed such a\\nsacrifice to stimulate her co laborers to greater work in this part of the Mas-\\nter s vineyard. She died on the battlefield of temperance and purity with\\nher face towards the enemy, and, it is fitting that a monument be erected to\\nher memory, to commemorate her many hard struggles and self-sacrificing\\ndevotion to a work honored of God. The Temple. built and burdened\\nwith debt, should be re-dedicated and redeemed. Let Willard Temple free\\nfrom debt, from this on, be the war cry of all the ribboners the Red,\\nWhite and Blue and before the nineteenth century goes out the temperance\\npeople can, with a just pride, point to a beautiful and enduring monument,\\nerected to the memory of the world s greatest temperance advocate and\\nleader Frances E. Willard.\\nNew York, February 28, I am for war, if war is declared, not only as an Ameri-\\ncan but as a Catholic priest. Father Sylvester Malone, Church of SS. Peter\\nand Paul, Williamsburg, N Y.\\nRome, March 2, Pope Leo XIII to-day celebrates his eighty-eighth birthday.\\nCount Kolnocky, Austrian premier, died at Vienna.\\nBenjamin Butterworth, of Washington, D. C, died at Thomasville, Ga.\\nLos Angeles, Cal., March 11, Gen. W. S. Rosecrans, the last of the army com-\\nmanders of the civil war, died at his home, near Renonda, at 7 o clock P. m.\\nHavana, March 14, Mrs. Thurston, wife of Senator Thurston, of Nebraska, died\\nsuddenly in the yacht Anita, while entering the harbor of Saqua.\\nWashington, March 14, Senator Wm. E. Mason, of Illinois, received a challenge,\\nfrom a bull-fighting Spanish editor of Madrid to fight a duel. The senator\\naccepted the challenge to fight him with jokes or snow balls.\\nMarch 16th, disastrous fire in Chicago thirty lives lost, and #1,000,000 money\\nloss.\\nWashington, D. C, March 17th, Hon. B. K. Bruce, ex-United States Senator\\nand registrar of the treasury, died to day.\\nWashington, D.C., March 21st, Captain Sigsbee, of the Maine, assigned to active\\nduty again.\\nSpanish torpedo fleet en route from Spain to Puerto Rico.\\nNewport News, March 24th, the battleships Kearsage and Kentucky launched\\nto-day, the former christened with Old Rye, the latter with Adam s Ale.\\nWashington, March 25th, the naval reserves of the middle and western states\\nnotified to be in readiness for a call to arms.\\nHon. Wheelock G. Veasey, of Vermont, past commander-in-chief of the G. A. R.,\\ndies to-day.\\nHavana. March 20th, American officials and all remaining officers of the battle-\\nship Maine, leave Havana.\\nWashington, D. C, March 28th: Spain won t pay indemnity, eh? Well, we\\nwill see. Uncle Sam.\\nGen. Wm. Booth, of the Salvation Army, visits Chicago.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0149.jp2"}, "150": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EYENTS OF THE YEAR 1898\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nMadrid, March 31. Sagasta notifies Minister Woodford that Americas de-\\nmands are rejected.\\nWashington, D. C, April 2. President McKinley refuses to change his\\ncourse at the request of Peace-at-any-price men.\\nPreliminary instructions sent to Minister Woodford to leave Madrid.\\nCypress Junction, 111., April 3. Two hundred and fifty persons were drowned\\ntoday by the inundation of Shawneetown.\\nWashington, D. C, April 5. Capt. Sigsbee charges the blowing up of the\\nMaine to Spain.\\nHavana, April 6. Over two hundred reconcentrados who left Havana to renew\\ntheir labors were massacred by Spanish troops near Guines.\\nMadrid, April 7. Spanish populace will rise in rebellion unless allowed to\\nfight.\\nWashington, D. C, April 7.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Europe s representatives informed by the Presi-\\ndent that no meddling will be tolerated.\\nWashington, D. C, April 8.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Governors of States are requested to furnish mus-\\nter rolls.\\nMadrid, April 10. City in an uproar. Excited crowds carry feeling to a dan-\\nger point.\\nWashington, D. C, April 11. President McKinley sent in his Cuban message\\nto Congress today diplomacy has failed and force must be applied.\\nWashington, D. C, April 13. Spain is guilty. The Maine Commission so de-\\ncides. She must answer for the Maine disaster.\\nWashington, D. C, April 14. Resolved, That the President is hereby\\nauthorized and directed to intervene at once and stop the war in Cuba.\\nWashington, D. C, April 15. Orders from headquarters sets our army in\\nmotion.\\nMadrid, April 16. American Consulate at Malaga attacked by a mob.\\nWashington, D. C, April 18. War resolutions pass both houses yeas 352\\nnays 41.\\nLondon, April 20 Spain will fight. Warlike address by Sagasta.\\nWashington, D. C, April 22\u00e2\u0080\u0094 War McKinley so decides. Flying Squadron\\nstarts south. Minister Woodford notified. Spain threw down the gage of\\nbattle.\\nWashington, D. C, April 23.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 President McKinley issued a proclamation call-\\ning for 125,000 men.\\nMatanzus, Cuba, April 27. The first battle of the war with Spain between\\nCommodore Sampson s fleet and the shore batteries.\\nManila, May 1. Admiral Dewey won his great victory over Spain in Manila\\nBay by sinking eleven of Admiral Montijo s fleet and capturing two. Amer-\\nican loss in ships and men none.\\nMadrid, May 3.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 City is now under martial law. Rioters shot.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 They ask for\\nbread and get bullets.\\nSan Juan, Cuba, capitulated to Commodore Sampson on May 13.\\nKey West, Fla., May 14 American warships pour a deadly fire into the city\\nof Cienfuegos. 400 Dons killed.\\nSan Francisco, Cal., May 15. Edward Remenyi, famous Hungarian violinist,\\ndied today.\\nLondon, May 19. William E. Gladstone, England s greatest statesman, died\\nat Hawarden at 5 a. m.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0150.jp2"}, "151": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1898\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nWashington, D. C, May 25.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The President issued a call for 75,000 more men.\\nWashington, D. C, May 30.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Admiral Cevera s fleet caught in the trap at\\nSantiago.\\nCruiser Columbia collides with and sinks a British steamship near Fire Island.\\nMadrid, May 31. The Epoca, one of the leading Spanish papers, pleads for\\npeace.\\nNew York, June 1.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Comedian T. W. Keene died today at the Smith In-\\nfirmary.\\nCape Haytien, Hayti, June 1. Comodore Schley silenced fortifications at\\nSantiago Harbor.\\nWashington, D. C, June 3. Sampson advanced on Santiago batteries again\\nthis morning.\\nJune 4. The Merrimac was sunk in the Santiago Channel by Spanish guns.\\nHobson and his crew miraculously escaped death but are made prisoners.\\nWashington, D. C, June 5.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Capt. Charles W. Gridley, commander of Com-\\nmodore Dewey s flag ship, Olympia, died yesterday at Kobe, Japan.\\nBody was cremated and remains sent home.\\nPort au Prince, Hayti, June 6. The first troops, 5000 men, have been landed at\\nPunta Cabrera, Cuba.\\nCape Haytien, Hayti, June 11. Old Glory floats over Ciamanera, in Guan-\\ntanamo Bay.\\nLondon, June 12. Ambassador Hay cables the State Department that Manila\\nhas surrendered.\\nJune 16. 5000 Spanish soldiers desert to the insurgents.\\nGuantanamo Bay bombarded by Sampson.\\nJune 17. Sampson batters Santiago forts, all of which were rendered useless\\nexcepting El Morro.\\nLondon, June 17. Special despatches say American troops have arrived at\\nManila; that Capt. Genl. Augusti has resigned, and that his wife and child-\\nren are prisoners in the hands of the insurgents.\\nHavana, June 20. Marriano Salva tries to assassinate Capt. Genl. Blanco.\\nWashington, D. C, June 21. Shafter s army now landing at Santiago.\\nLondon, June 25. An attempt to poison the Czar and Czarina, of Russia, dis\\ncovered.\\nJaragua, Cuba, June 25.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Col. Wood s Roosevelt s) Rough Riders lured into\\nan ambush and sixteen killed including Capt. Allyn K. Capron and\\nHamilton Fish, Jr. Fifty were wounded.\\nBattle of Sevilla, Cuba, fought June 24 estimated loss, 22 killed, 80 wounded.\\nPort Said, Egypt, June 26 Spanish fleet, 12 vessels Rear Admiral Camara,\\nentered harbor this morning.\\nSan Francisco, June 26. Third Manila expedition leaves today.\\nWashington, D. C, June 27. Commodore Watson has received orders to cross\\nthe Atlantic and attack Spain at home.\\nSan Francisco, Cal., June 29. Major General Merritt set sail on the S. S. New-\\nport, for the Philippines.\\nPlaya del Este, Cuba, July 1, 11:30 a. m\u00e2\u0080\u0094 A general assault on Santiago by land\\nand sea began at 7 a. m.\\nWashington, D. C, July 1. General Shafter demanded the immediate surren-\\nder of Santiago de Cuba.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0151.jp2"}, "152": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1898\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nLadrone Islands captured and Stars and Stripes float over them.\\nJuly 1.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 General Shafter assaulted the Spanish outposts at Santiago. Battle\\nraged fiercely all day. Spaniards driven into the city. At dark American\\ntroops occupied the Spanish intrenchments outside the city, within half a\\nmile of the city walls. American loss about 1500 killed and wounded.\\nJuly 2. Fighting was resumed at Santiago. American troops held the ground\\noccupied the day before.\\nJuly 3.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 General Shafter demanded a surrender of the city under penalty of\\nbombardment, to begin at 10 a. m., July 4. The demand was refused.\\nJuly 3.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Admiral Cevera s squadron made an effort to escape from Santiago\\nharbor. The Oregon, Indiana, Iowa and Brooklyn, under Commodore\\nSchley, pursued and destroyed the Vizcaya, Almirante Oquendo, Maria\\nTeresa and Christobal Colon, taking Admiral Cervera and 1,500 of his men\\nprisoners, The Spanish loss in killed was 360. The American ships were\\nuninjured in the battle and but one man was killed.\\nSiboney, July 3.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The fleet under my command offers the Nation a Fourth of\\nJuly present in the destruction of the whole of Cevera s fleet. Not one\\nescaped. Sampson.\\nJuly 4.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 At the urgent request of the foreign Consuls, General Shafter agreed\\nto a truce until July 5, noon, in order to give time for the removal of women\\nand children from Santiago.\\nHalifax, N. S., July 6.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 La Bourgogne, French line steamer, collided with Brit-\\nish ship Cromartyshire 60 miles south of the Sabine islands and 553 persons\\nwere drowned.\\nWashington, D C, July 6. The annexation of Hawaii was accomplished\\ntoday.\\nWashington, D. C, July 6.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Alfonso XII, Spanish warship, in trying to escape\\nfrom Havana was shot to peices by an American cruiser.\\nSuez, Egypt, July 8.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The Spanish squadron, under Admiral Camara, has re-\\nturned here and is preparing to enter the canal on its way back to Spain.\\nSt. Louis, July 8.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Cloud burst causes great damages.\\nLondon, July 8. Spain makes informal overtures for peace.\\nWashington, D. C, July 9, Bombardment of Santiago commenced today at\\nnoon.\\nWashington, D. C, July 9. Spanish offer to surrender Santiago refused.\\nCavite, July 9. Admiral Dewey took the Isle Grande with 1300 men, arms and\\nammunition.\\nJuly 10. President McKinley s proclamation requesting all Christian churches\\nin the United States to observe Sunday, July 11, as a day of thanksgiving\\nand prayer was complied with by Protestant and Catholic, Jew and Gentile.\\nRev. Frank Bristol of the Metropolitan M. E. Church in Washington\\nsaid\\nThe men who offer their lives on liberty s holy altar today caught their inspir-\\nation from the men who fought for their convictions in our civil war; and those great\\nmen of our civil war had heard of the revolutionary heroes and were proud to emulate\\ntheir deeds of patriotic valor but the men of the revolution had inherited the spirit\\nof the pilgrim fathers and were determined to prove themselves worthy of their noble\\nsires; the pilgrims had the mantels of the reformers resting upon their broad her-\\nculean shoulders; and the reformers remembered with reverence the martyrs; and the\\nmartyrs had seen the apostles; and the apostles had touched the Christ. There is\\nyour providence in history.\\nArchbishop Ireland of the Archdiocese of Minnesota, at St. Paul, said\\nGod s power and will are above armies and navies, and on Him far more than\\non armies and navies nations depend. Let us praise and thank God. He blesses us", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0152.jp2"}, "153": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1898-Continued.\\nin the war our armies wage to-day. Victory follows victory; the starry banner waves\\ntriumphant in Cuba and in the far distant Philippines. Small has been the sacrifices\\ndemanded as the price of victories. Wondrously great is the result of our victories.\\nA new America has risen. A new era has dawned in our history. America as\\nnever before is conscious of her power; the nations of the earth as never before un-\\nderstand her power. The child of a century is a giantess whose arms reach beyond\\nher own vast continent across distance oceans. God indeed has blessed her. The\\nideals of America are in God s designs the ideals of all humanity. And America tri-\\numphs that popular liberty may triumph and a new order of things spring up for all\\nhumanity.\\nThis is why greatness comes to her, and greatness yet will come to her beyond\\nall that human vision to-day is able to see. She will grow into this new stature as by\\nthe very laws of nature, and God s hand will be with her then as it is now, guarding\\nher in her true mission and preserving for her sake and that of the world her price-\\nless liberty.\\nPortsmouth, N. H., July 10.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Admiral Cervera and staff and 638 of his men\\nhave arrived here.\\nSiboney, July 10. The Spanish General Toral declined to surrender to Gen-\\neral Shafter.\\nWashington, D. C, July 11. Joint bombardment between army and navy about\\nSantiago.\\nMadrid, July 12. Senor Sagasta and Spanish Cabinet resigned.\\nAdmiral Camera s squadron returningto Spain.\\nSantiago de Cuba, July 12.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 General Toral refuses to surrender the city.\\nWishes to consult Madrid.\\nWashington, D. C, July 13 \u00e2\u0080\u0094Hostilities with Spain are costing Uncle Sam\\n$1,000,000 daily.\\nWashington, D. C, July 14. Santiago surrendered at 3 p. m. Spanish troops\\nto be sent back to Spain.\\nWashington, D. C, July 16. Eben Brewer, who had charge of all postal ar-\\nrangements of the United States in Cuba, died near Santiago to-day.\\nSantiago de Cuba, July 17. The stars and stripes raised over Santiago to-day\\nat 12 amid booming of cannon, the army and navy saluting, bands playing\\nStar Spangled Banner.\\nThe greatest sea fight known in the history of the world was fought on Sunday,\\nJuly 3rd, off the harbor at Santiago, between the American fleet, Admiral\\nSampson, and the Spanish fleet, Admiral Cervera. The results astonish\\nthe world. The American yet sails, the pride of the nation; the Spanish,\\nannihilated, rests on the bottom of the Carribean Sea. Capt. Evans, whose\\ngood ship Iowa was the first to spy the Spanish Admiral stealing away, says\\nI was sitting in my cabin talking to my son, who was a cadet on the Massachu-\\nsetts, but who had been left behind in a picket launch when his ship went up the\\nbay to coal. Some one shouted What s that black thing coming out of the harbor?\\nA moment later the Iowa was at general quarters and the engine bell rang full speed\\nahead. I put the helm to starboard and the Iowa crossed the bows of the Infanta\\nMaria Teresa, the first ship out. As the Spanish Admiral swung to the westward the\\ntwelve-inch shells from the forward turret of the Iowa seemed to strike him fair in\\nthe bow, and the fight was a spectacle.\\nIt was a superb sight to see the squadron come out\u00e2\u0080\u0094 beautifully spaced as to\\ndistance and gradually increasing its speed to thirteen knots.\\nThe Iowa from this moment kept up a steady fire from its heavy guns, heading\\nall the time to keep the Infanta Maria Teresa on its starboard bow, and hoping to\\nram one of the leading ships.\\nIn the meantime the Oregon, Indiana, Brooklyn and Texas were doing excel-\\nlent work with their heavy guns. In a short time the enemy s ships were all clear of\\nthe harbor mouth, and it became evidently impossible for the Iowa to ram either the\\nfirst or the second ships on account of their speed.\\nThe range at this time was 2,000 yards from the leading ships. The Iowa s\\nhelm was immediately put hard to the starboard, and the entire starboard broadside\\nwas poured into the Infanta Maria Teresa. The helm was then quickly shifted to\\nport, and the ship went cross the stern of the Teresa in an effort to head off the\\nOquendo. All the time the engines were driving at full speed ahead, while a per-", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0153.jp2"}, "154": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1898\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nfeet torrent of shells from the enemy passed over the smokestacks and superstruct-\\nure of the ship, but none struck her.\\nThe Cristobal Colon, being much faster than the rest of the Spanish ships,\\nwent rapidly to the front in an effort to escape, and in passing the Iowa the\\nColon placed two six-inch shells fairly in our starboard bow. One passed through\\nthe cofferdam and dispensary, wrecking the latter and bursting on the berth-deck,\\ndoing considerable damage. The other passed through the side at the water line\\nwithin the cofferdam, where it still remains.\\nAs it was now obviously impossible to ram any of the Spanish ships, on ac-\\ncount of their superior speed, the Iowa s helm was put to the starboard, and she ran\\non a course parallel with the enemy. Being then abreast of the Almirante Oquendo\\nat a distance of 1,100 yards, the Iowa s entire battery, including the rapid-fire guns,\\nwas opened on the Oquendo. The punishment was terrific. Many twelve and eight-\\ninch shells were seen to explode inside of her, and smoke came through her hatches.\\nThe Oquendo seemed to stop her engines for a moment and lost headway; but she\\nimmediately resumed her speed and gradually drew ahead of the Iowa and came\\nunder the terrific fire of the Oregon and Texas.\\nAt this moment the alarm of Torpedo boats was sounded, and two torpedo-\\nboat destroyers were discovered in the starboard quarter at a distance of 4.000\\nyards. Fire was at once opened on them with the after battery, and a twelve-inch\\nshell cut the stern of one destroyer squarely off. As the shell struck a small torpedo\\nboat fired back at the battleship, sending a shell within a few feet Of my head. I said\\nto Executive Officer Rogers: That little chap has got a lot of cheek. 1 Rogers\\nshouted back: She shoots very well, all the same.\\nWell up among the advancing cruisers, spitting shots atone and then another,\\nwas the little Gloucester, shooting first at a cruiser, then at a torpedo boat, and hit-\\nting a head wherever she saw it. The marvel was ihat she was not destroyed by the\\nrain of shells. In the meantime the Vizcaya was slowly drawing abeam of the\\nIowa, and for the space of fifteen minutes it was give and take between the two\\nships. The Vizcaya fired rapidly, but wildly, not one shot taking effect on the Iowa,\\nwhile the shells from the Iowa were tearing great rents in the sides of the Vizcaya.\\nAs the latter passed ahead of the Iowa she came under the murderous fire of the\\nOregon. At this time the Infanta Maria Teresa and the Almirante Oquendo, leading\\nthe enemy s column, were seen to be heading for the beach in flames. The Texas,\\nOregon and Iowa pounded them unmercifully. They ceased to reply to the fire, and\\nin a few moments the Spanish cruisers were a mass of flames and on the rocks with\\ntheir colors down, the Teresa flying a white flag at the fore.\\nThe crews of the enemy s ships, stripped, began jumping overboard, when one\\nof the smaller magazines began to explode.\\nMeantime the Brooklyn and the Cristobal Colon were exchanging compliments\\nin lively fashion at apparently long range, and the Oregon, with her locomotive\\nspeed, was hanging well on the Colon, also paying attention to the Vizcaya. The\\nTeresa and the Oquendo wei*e in flames on the beach just twenty minutes after the\\nfirst shot was fired. Fifty minutes after the first shot was fired the Vizcaya put her\\nhelm to port, with a great burst of flame from the after part of the ship, and headed\\nslowly for the rocks at Acceraderes, where she found her last resting place.\\nAs it was apparent that the Iowa could not possibly catch the Cristobal Colon,\\nand that the Oregon and Brooklyn undoubtedly would, and as the fast New York was\\nalso on her trail, I decided that the calls of humanity should be answered and atten-\\ntion was given to 1,200 or 1,500 Spanish officers and men who had struck their colors to\\nthe American squadron commanded by Admiral Sampson. I therefore headed for the\\nwreck of the Vizcaya, now burning furiously fore and aft. When I was in as far as\\nthe depth of water would admit I lowered all my boats and sent them at once to the\\nassistance of the unfortunate men, who were being drowned by dozens or roasted on\\nthe decks. I soon discovered that the insurgent Cubans from the shore were shooting\\nmen who were struggling in the water, after having surrendered to us. I immediately\\nput a stop to this, but I could not put a stop to the mutilation of many bodies by the\\nsharks inside the reef. These creatures had become excited by the blood from the\\nwounded mixing with the water.\\nMy boats crews worked manfxtlly and succeeded in saving many of the wounded\\nfrom the burning ship. One man, who will be recommended for promotion, clambered\\nup the side of the Vizcaya and saved three men from burning to death. The smaller\\nmagazines of the Vizcaya were exploding with magnificent cloud effects. The boats\\nwere coming alongside in a steady string, and willing hands were helping the lacera-\\nted Spanish officers and sailors onto the Iowa s quarter deck. All the Spaniards were\\nabsolutely without clothes. Some had their legs torn off by fragments of shells. Others\\nwere mutilated in every conceivable way.\\nThe bottoms of the boats held two or three inches of blood. In many cases dead\\nmen were lying in it. Five poor chaps died on the way to the ship. They were after-\\nward buried with military honors from the Iowa. Some examples of heroism, or more\\nproperly, devotion to discipline and duty, could never be surpassed. One man on the\\nVizcaya had his left arm almost shot off just below the shoulder. The fragments were\\nhanging by a small piece of skin, but he climbed unassisted over the side and saluted as\\nif on a Visit of ceremony.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0154.jp2"}, "155": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1898\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\n11 Immediately after him came a strong-hearted sailor whose left leg had been shot\\noff above the knee. He was hoisted on board the Iowa with a tackle, but never a\\nwhimper came from him. Gradually the mangled bodies and naked men accumulated\\nuntil it would have been almost difficult to recognize the Iowa as a United States\\nbattleship.\\nBlood was all over her usually white quarterdeck, and 272 naked men were being\\nsupplied with water and food by those who a few minutes before had been using a\\nrapid-fire battery on them, Finally came the boat with Capt. Eulate, commander of\\nthe Vizcaya, for whom a chair was lowered over the side, as he was evidently wounded.\\nThe Captain s guard of marines was drawn up on the quarterdeck to salute him, and I\\nstood waiting to welcome him.\\nAs the chair was placed on the deck the marines presented arms. Capt.\\nEulate slowly raised himself in the chair, saluted me with grave dignity, unbuckled his\\nsword-belt and, holding the hilt before him, kissed it reverently with tears in his eyes,\\nand then surrendered it to me.\\nOf course I declined to receive it, and as the crew of the Iowa saw this they\\ncheered like wild men. As I started to take Capt Eulate into the cabin to let the\\ndoctors examine his wounds the magazines on board the Vizcaya exploded with a tre-\\nmendous burst of flame. The captain, extending his hands, said, Adios, Vizcaya.\\nThere goes my beautiful ship, captain, and so we passed on to the cabin, where the\\ndoctors dressed his three wounds.\\nIn the meantime, thirty officers of the Vizcaya had been picked up, besides 272 of\\nher crew. Our wardroom and steerage officers gave up their staterooms and furnished\\nfood, clothing and tobacco to the naked officers from the Spanish vessel. The pay-\\nmaster issued uniforms to the naked sailors, and each was given all the corned beef,\\ncoffee and hard tack he could eat. The war had assumed another aspect.\\nAs I knew the crews of the first two ships wrecked had not been visited by any\\nof our vessels, I ran down to them. I found the Gloucester with Admiral Cervera and\\na number of his officers aboard and also a large number of wounded, some in a fright-\\nfully mangled condition. Many prisoners had been killed on shore by the fire of the\\nCubans. The Harvard came off and requested Capt. Cotton to go in and takeoff\\nthe crews of the Infanta Maria Teresa and the Almirante Oquendo and by midnight\\nthe H\u00c2\u00bbvard had 976 prisoners aboard, a great number of them wounded.\\nFor courage and dash there is no parallel in history to this action of the Span-\\nish admiral. He came, as he knew, to absolute destruction. There was one single\\nhope\u00e2\u0080\u0094 that was that the Cristobal Colon would steam faster than the Brooklyn. The\\nspectacle of two torpedo-boat destroyers, paper shells at best, deliberately steaming\\nout in broad daylight in the face of the fire of a battleship can be described in one\\nway\u00e2\u0080\u0094 it was Spanish and it was ordered by Blanco. The same must be said of the\\nertire movement.\\nIn contrast to this Spanish fashion was the cool, deliberate Yankee work. The\\nAmerican squadron was without sentiment, apparently. The ships went at their\\nSpanish opponents and literally tore them to pieces. But the moment the Spanish\\nflag came down, it must have been evident that the sentiment was among the Ameri-\\ncans and not among the Spaniards.\\nI took Admiral Cervera aboard the Iowa from the Gloucester and received him\\nwith a full admiral s guard. The crew of the Iowa crowded aft over the turrets, half\\nnaked and black with powder, as Cervera stepped over the side bareheaded. Over\\nhis undershirt he wore a thin suit of flannel borrowed from Lieutenant-Commander\\nWainwright of the Gloucester. The crew cheered vociferously. Cervera was every\\ninch an admiral, even if he had no hat. He submitted to the fortunes of war with a\\ngrace that proclaimed him a thoroughbred.\\nCaptain Evans is intensely proud of his ship and her men. The Iowa fired thirty-\\none twelve-inch, foi*ty-eight eight-inch, \u00c2\u00a370 four-inch, 1,060 six-pound and 120 one-\\npound shots.\\nThe officers of the Viscaya said they simply could not hold their crews at the\\nguns on account of the rapid fire poured upon them. The decks were flooded with\\nwater from the fire hose, and blood from the wounded made this a dark red. Frag-\\nments of bodies floated in this along the gun-deck. Every instant the crack of\\nexploding shells t Id of new havoc, One of the twelve-inch shells from the Iowa\\nexploded a torpedo in the Viscaya s bow, blowing twenty-one men against the deck\\nabove and dropping them dead and mangled into the fire which at once started\\nbelow.\\nThe torpedo boat Ericsson was sent by the flagship to help in the rescue of the\\nViscaya s crew. Her men saw a terrible sight. The flames leaping out from the\\nhuge shot-holes in the Viscaya s sides licked up the decks, sizzling the flesh of the\\nwounded, who were lying there shrieking for help. Between the frequent explosions\\nthere came awful cries and groans from the men penned in below. This carnage was\\nchiefly due to the rapidity of the Americans fire. Corporal Smith of the Iowa fired\\n135 aimed shots in fifty minutes from a four-inch gun. Two shells struck within ten\\nfeet of Smith and started a small fire, but the corporal went on pumping shots into\\nthe enemy, only stopping to say They ve got it in for this gun, sir.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0155.jp2"}, "156": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EYENTS OF THE YEAR 1898\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nFrom two six-pounders 440 shots were fired in fifty minutes. Up in the tops the\\nmarines banged away with one pounders and were too excited to step back or duck\\nas the shells whistled over them.\\nOne gunner of a secondary battery, under a twelve-inch gun, was almost blinded\\nby smoke and saltpeter from the turret and his crew was driven off, but putting a\\nwet handkerchief over bis face, with holes cut for the eyes, he stuck to his gun.\\nFinally, as the six-pounders were so close to the eight-inch turret as to make it\\nimpossible to stay there with safety, the men were ordered away before the big\\ngun was fired, but they refused to leave. When the eight inch gun was fired the\\nconcussion blew two men ten feet from their guns and threw them to the deck as deaf\\nas posts. Back they went again, however, and were again blown down and finally\\nhad to be dragged away from their stations. Such bravery and dog determination\\nunder the heavy fire was of frequent occurrence on all the ships engaged.\\nDuring his stay on the Iowa, Admiral Cervera endeared himself to all. After\\nBlanco s order was issued he wanted to come out on the night of July 2, but General\\nLinares said: Wait till to-morrow morning. You will catch them at divine service\\nthen.\\nThe Spaniards say that no torpedo boats ever came out to attack Admiral Samp-\\nson s squadi-on. The Pluton and Furor, they say, kept guard every night inside the\\nharbor.\\nThe Indiana was hit only twice. She fired no armor-piercing shells except from\\nthe smokeless-powder six-pounders. The Oregon was hit three times, twice by frag-\\nments of shells. The Iowa was struck nine times.\\n\u00e2\u0080\u0094Copyrighted by the Associated Press, July, 1898.\\nWashington, D. C, July 14.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Spanish forces in Santiago and Eastern Cuba have sur-\\nrendered to the United States.\\nSeattle, July 20. Five Yukon river vessels bound for St. Michael lost; passengers all saved.\\nSantiago de Cuba, July 20.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 General Garcia angry and declines to serve longer under\\nGeneral Shatter.\\nJuly 21.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Nine Spanish ships destroyed by Commander Todd, at Mandzanillo on July 18.\\nJuly 21.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 General Miles with 10,000 men left for Porto Rico.\\nWashington, D. C, July 21.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Porto Rico will be held by the United States as a permanent\\npossession.\\nSantiago de Cuba, July 23. Cubans send petition to Washington, asking that the flag of\\nAmerica be raised over them.\\nBrussels, July 24.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Don Carlos, pretender to the Spanish throne, with wife and suite, left\\nthe city ostensibly for Switzerland.\\nWashington, D. O, July 24. Emperor of Germany sends message of friendliness to Presi-\\ndent McKinley.\\nWashington, D. C, July 25. Sagasta reported to have asked Great Britain to propose\\npeace terms.\\nWashington, D. C, July 25. -No Spanish tricks will be tolerated. Madrid must sue for\\npeace direct, and ask terms before hostilities cease.\\nWashington, D, C, July 26.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The White Dove of Peace is spreading her pinions. Thanks\\nbe to God who giveth us the victory.\\nMadrid, July 27.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Spain objects to the landing of American troops in Porto Rico, after she\\nhas sued for peace. They are being landed all the same.\\nHalifax, N. S. The decision of the Court of Inquiry exhonorates the officers of the Cro-\\nmartyshire from all blame of La Bourgogne disaster.\\nWashington, D. C, July 28.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Spain must play square in her peace proposals. Her peace\\npropositions must be sincere and to the point.\\nSt. Thomas, D. W. I., July 28.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Battle at Guanica\u00e2\u0080\u0094 twenty-three Spaniards killed and\\nwounded.\\nWashington, D. C, July 28. The Cabinet agrees that Spain must relinquish all control\\nover Cuba and Porto Rico without conditions.\\nSt. Paul, Minn., July 28.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 On the occasion of the laying of the corner stone of the new\\nCapitol building yesterday, Senator Cushman K. Davis was the orator, and in com-\\nmenting on it The London Daily Mail of July 29th says: With the remarkable speech\\nof United States Senator Davis of St. Paul, two peoples have buried the past.\\nAmerican and British friendship is assured.\\nChicago, 111., July 29.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The greatest rain and hail storm ever known visited Chicago this\\nevening. Hail stuns were two to three inches in diameter, and many of them\\nweighed a pound.\\nJuly 29.- Manila is ours. General Augusti has surrendered.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0156.jp2"}, "157": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1808\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nManila Bay, July 29. General Merritt arrived at Manila on the 29th.\\nJuly 30. Peace terms made known to Madrid, Philippine Insurgents\\ndefiant.\\nFriedrichsruhe, July 30. Prince Bismarck died shortly before 11 o clock\\ntonight. The end came peacefully. Born April 1, 1815.\\nNew York, July 30. Mme Romeo, wife of Senor Romeo, Mexican\\nMinister to the United States, died at Atlantic City, on the 29th.\\nNew York, July 30. Mme. Romeo, wife of Senor Romeo, Mexican\\nNapolean s once magnificient home. It will be set up in New York.\\nPonce, Porto Rico, July 31. Volunteers surrender to Gen. Miles.\\nMadrid, July 31. Gen. Augusti at Manila, says he will resist Americans.\\nMost Rev. John Walsh, Archbishop of Toronto, Canada, died on Sunday\\nnight, July 31.\\nBerlin, Aug. 1. Kaiser Wilhelm offers a royal tomb for the remains of\\nPrince Bismarck, declined.\\nParis, Aug. 1. Miss Jessie Schley was obliged to leave Madrid.\\nWashington, D. C, Aug. 2. The United States demands the immediate\\nevacuation of Porto Rico and the concession of an island in the La-\\ndrones; also will occupy and hold the city, bay and harbor of Ma-\\nnila pending the conclusion of a treaty of peace.\\nUpon the acceptance of these terms, commissioners will be named.\\nMadrid, Aug. 2. Spain accepts the terms of the United States.\\nPlaya del Este, Cuba, Aug. 2. General Garcia reported to be in a heavy\\nfight with the Spaniards.\\nVictoria, B. C, Aug. 3. Gold and drafts amounting to $3,000,000 came\\nfrom Klondyke, but thousands of luckless ones do not find work or\\ntreasure.\\nManila, Aug. 4. The first land battle fought and America won, loss 13\\nkilled and wounded, Spain s loss 350 killed and 900 wounded.\\nMadrid, Spain, Aug. 6. Spain accepts the conditions imposed by the Uni-\\nted States. The queen and public men assent.\\nSantiago, Aug. 7. Rough Riders sail for home.\\nCopenhagen, Aug. 7. Prince George of Greece made governor of Crete.\\nPonce, Porto Rico, Aug. 7. American troops closing in on san Juan.\\nThe enemy fleeing.\\nWashington, D. C, Aug. 8. Captain Sigsbee of the ill-fated Maine, placed\\nin command of the Texas.\\nHong Kong, Aug. 9. American and Spanish forces meet on the night\\nof July 31 at Manila, our loss 9 killed and 44 wounded.\\nWashington, D. C, Aug. 9. Spain tries to dodge the responsibility of\\nCuba s debt.\\nMadrid, Spain, Aug. 11. French Abassador Cambon authorized by Spain\\nto sign the protocol an immediate ending of the war looked for.\\nWashington, D. C., Aug. 12. Peace procotol signed at 4:23 P. M., by\\nSecretary of State Day for the United States and French Ambassa-\\ndor Cambon for Spain, and the war declared at an end.\\nManila City, Aug. 13.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The hardest fighting at the Capture of Manila was\\nby the Astor Battery. They lost ten killed and wounded.\\nManila, Aug. 14. General Merritt takes full control.\\nNew York, Aug. 14.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Colonel Roosevelt and his famous Rough Riders\\narrive at Montauk Point.\\nWashington, D. C, Aug. 14.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Col. Hay succeeds William R. Day as Sec-\\nretary of State.\\nWashington, D. C. Aug. 15.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Dewey bombards Manila,\u00e2\u0080\u0094 City surrenders.\\nHonolulu, U. S. A., Aug. 16.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Old Glory in Hawaii. Flag of the United\\nStates replaces the emblem of the Pacific Islands at Honolulu.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0157.jp2"}, "158": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1898-Continued.\\nNew York, Aug. 23. The American Peace Commissioners appointed by\\nthe President are as follows:\\nWilliam R. Day, Sec y of State.\\nCushman K. Davis, United States Senator from Minn.\\nWilliam P. Frye, United States Senator from Maine.\\nAssociate Justice E. D. White, of Louisiana.\\nGeneral Benj. F. Tracy of New York.\\nSt. Petersburg, Aug. 28. The Czar urges all Europe to disarm.\\nParis, Aug. 31. Lieut. Col. Henry of the French Army and accuser of\\nCapt. Dreyfus, commits suicide in prison.\\nLondon, Sept. 1. General Kitchener encounters and defeats the Dervish-\\nes near Omdurman.\\nAmsterdam, Sept. 3. Wilhelmina coronated. Joy throughout Holland.\\nHonolulu, Sept. 3. The territory of Hawaii is the name decided upon\\nby Senator Cullom s Commission.\\nPekin, Sept. 7. L. Hung Chang is deposed, dismissed because of his\\nintrigues with Russia.\\nNaples, Sept. 10. Travellers from all parts of Europe are flocking to see\\nVesuvius in eruption.\\nGeneva, Sept. 10. The Empress of Austria was assassinated by an Anar-\\nchist about 2 o clock to-day.\\nNarragansett Pier, Sept. 19. Miss Minnie Davis, daughter of the Con-\\nfederacy died yesterday, after a painful illness.\\nFort Myer, Va., Sept. 18. Captain Allyan Capron, one of the Artillery he-\\nroes of Santiago, died to day. from ?n attack of Typhoid fever.\\nHe fired the first gun at El Caney.\\nMadrid, Sept. 21. Admiral Cervera cheered and General Toral jeered\\nMontojo of Manila suspended.\\nParis, Sept. 26. Captain Dreyfus granted a new trial.\\nDuxbury, Mass., Sept. 26. Fanny Davenport, actress, died to-night at\\n10:30.\\nSaratoga, N. Y. Sept. 27. Col. Theodore Roosevelt nominated for Gov-\\nernor of New York by 753 to 218.\\nParis, Oct. 1. The Peace Commission held its first session to-day.\\nPhiladelphia, Oct. 3. Senator Quay and his son arrested, charged with\\nthe unlawful use of public money.\\nNewport News, Oct. 4. Battleship Illinois is launched.\\nWalker Minn., Oct. 6. Battle with Indians on Bear Island.\\nCanton, Ohio, Oct. 7. George D. Saxton, brother of Mrs. Mckinley, was\\nkilled by Mrs. Anna C. George.\\nSan Juan, Porto Rico, Oct. 12. The American flag will be raised here\\non Oct. 18th.\\nLondon, Oct. 14. Steamer Mohegan wrecked off the Cornish Coast and\\n200 lives are lost.\\nAlexandria, Egypt, Oct. 14.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Plan to assassinate Emperor William frus-\\ntrated by the police.\\nChicago, Oct. 18.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 President McKinley an L. L. D. from date. The de-\\ngree was conferred by the University of Chicago.\\nParis, Oct. 25. The French Crisis is on, the entire Cabinet resignes.\\nParis, Oct. 25.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Spaniards finally accept America s refusal to reorganize\\nthe Cuban debt.\\nParis, Nov. 3. It is impossible for us either to accept or refuse the\\nconditions the United States impose. Spanish Commissioners.\\nParis, Nov. 5. Harmony once more reigns, disturbing factors relegated\\nto the background.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0158.jp2"}, "159": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1 SOS\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nCharleston, S. C. Nov. 5. The late Spanish flagship Maria Teresa\\nswamped during a storm, 30 miles north of the Island of San Sal-\\nvador.\\nLondon, Nov. 6. English troops are mobilizing. Extensive war plans.\\nWashington, D. C, Nov. 6. The Supreme Court Chamber, the Con-\\ngressional law library containing 75,000 volumes destroyed by fire.\\nMoney loss $1,000,000.\\nNew York, Nov. 8. Col. Roosevelt elected Governor of New York by a\\nlarge majority.\\nChicago, Nov. 9. Republicans win in Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan\\nand Nebraska.\\nBrick Church, N. J., Nov. 12. Rev. Luke Hitchcock, D. D. of Chicago,\\nfor twenty years head of the Methodist Book Concern, died at six\\no clock to-night.\\nWashington, D. C, Nov. 4. Commercial necessity has compelled ter-\\nritorial expansion. Lyman J. Gage.\\nChicago, Nov. 5. The free silver movement is practically dead.\\nRichard Croker.\\nPhiladelphia, Pa., Nov. 8. John W. Keely of motor fame died to-day.\\nLondon, Nov. 26. Mme Dreyfus demonstrates the innocence of her\\nhusband. She says: Men of honor do not betray their country.\\nMy husband was a man of honor.\\nMadrid, Nov. 30. Sagasta is alarmed Carlist uprising imminent.\\nWashington, D. C, Nov. 30. Congratulations come from all nations,\\npleased by the ceding of the Phillipines to the United States.\\nVienna, Dec. 2. Franz Josef of Austria celebrates the fiftieth anniversary\\nof his reign.\\nWashington, D. C, Dec. 5. Congress re-assembled to-day under circum-\\nstances of peculiai interest. The same Congress six months ago\\ndeclared war. Reading of the President s Message.\\nNew York, Dec. 5. Great fire in New York City Sky scrapers suc-\\ncumb to the flames.\\nBaltimore, Md., Dec. 5. Eight hundred houses are unroofed by a gale.\\nParis, Dec. 10. The treaty of peace was signed at 8:45 this evening.\\nThe essential features of the peace treaty signed in Paris are as follows:\\nFirst\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The customary preface of treaties in the nature of an expression\\nof amity and of hope for perpetual peace.\\nSecond The relinquishment by Spain of her sovereignty over Cuba.\\nThird\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The withdrawal of all Spanish troops.\\nFourth\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Relinquishment by Spain of sovereignty over Porto Rico.\\nFifth Spain s Cession of the Philippines.\\nSixth The withdrawal of the Spanish troops there.\\nSeventh Payment by the United States of $20,000,000 for the Philip-\\npines.\\nEight\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The provision for the open door commercial policy in the\\nPhilippines.\\nNinth Cable station rights in other Spanish colonies.\\nTenth\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Release of Cuban and Philippine political prisoners.\\nEleventh Mutual abandoning of all claims for indemnity.\\nWashington, D. C, Dec. 1. General Calixto Garcia, distinguished Cu-\\nban warrior, died at 10 a. m. to-day.\\nWashington, D. C, Dec. 12. The Fourth regiment of regulars has been\\nordered to proceed to Manila.\\nPhiladelphia, Pa., Dec. 3. Gideon W. Marsh, wrecker of the Keystone\\nNational Bank was sentenced to the penitentiary.\\nBerne, Switzerland. Dec. 15. M. Mueller, has been elected to be presi-\\ndent of the Swiss Confederation.\\nAtlanta, Ga., Dec. 15. President McKinley visits Atlanta.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0159.jp2"}, "160": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1898\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued.\\nNew York, Dec. 15. Colonel Calvin S. Brice died at his city home of\\npneumonia.\\nMadrid, Dec. 15. The Spanish Goverment has agreed to pay the Janu-\\nary coupons on the Cuban debt.\\nWashington, D. C, Dec. 15. Major General Brooke is appointed to the\\nSupreme Command in Cuba.\\nTasmania, Dec. 19. Capt. Borchgrevink s expedition has sailed for the\\nAntarctic regions.\\nWashington, D. C, Dec. 21. Hon. Ethan Allen Hitchcock nominated\\nand confirmed as Secretary of the Interior vice Bliss resigned.\\nHavana, Dec. 24. General Arolas, the Spanish military governor of Ha-\\nvana, delivered over his command to-day.\\nWashington, D. C, Dec. 24. The American peace commisioners arrived\\nin Washington, and presented the President with the Peace Treaty\\nas a Christmas present.\\nMontreal, Canada, Dec. 25,, Penny postage goes into effect to-day\\nthroughout England and her colonies.\\nNew York, Dec. 27. Mrs. Isabel Mallon, writer, died to-day. Her nora\\nde plume was Ruth Ashmere.\\nChicago, Dec. 28. Total eclipse of the moon in Chicago at 6 p. m.\\nWashington, D. C, Dec. 28. Senator Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont died\\nto-day.\\nWashington, D. C, Dec. 28. Iloilo, Chief city in the Visays group of\\nislands has been surrendered to the insurgents by the Spaniards.\\nLondon, Dec. 28. The Anglo-French disputes over territorial possess-\\nsions in Africa have been opened up for diplomatic settlement.\\nHavana, Dec. 20. The Cuban patriotic Committee, consisting of 150\\nleading Cubans, decided to yield without further reservation to the\\nwishes of Gen. Brooke and postpone the six days celebration.\\nWashington, D. C, Dec. 30. Senor Romero, Ambassador of Mexico\\ndied this morning at 4. a. m., aged 62 years.\\nLondon, Dec. 30. Lord and Lady Curzon, nee Miss Leiter of Chicago,\\nare welcomed at Bombay with military and naval honors.\\nThe prowess of the American Navy has undergone a change since Sunday, May\\n1st. Admiral Dewey demonstrated then that we were at least second,\\nand on Sunday, July 3, Admiral Sampson, after sinking the pride of Spain,\\nAdmiral Cevera s fleet, off the Santiago Harbor, placed us in the front\\nrank.\\nMr. H. S. Washburn, of Worcester, Mass., was author of The Vacant\\nChair and was written in memory of Lieut. Grout of the 15th Mass. In-\\nfantry. He lost his life at Balls Bluff, Oct. 21, 1861.\\nThe largest flag in the world is Old Glory, the one made expressly to wave\\nover Morro Castle, Havana, when Spain surrenders. It is 120x43^ feet.\\nSpecial bunting was made for it and is 42 inches wide. The Union is 40\\nfeet in length and in width covers the space of seven stripes. The\\nstars, from point to point, measure 14 inches. A patriotic Wall street man\\nhad the flag made. Weight 250 pounds Cost $300. Long may it wave.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0160.jp2"}, "161": {"fulltext": "Dives in hell and Zazarus in\\nAbraham s bosom. Which?\\n1899\\nRum and Huin are Cause and\\nEffect.\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nJanuary...\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nFebruary-\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nMarch\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nApril\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nio\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nMay\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nJune\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nJuly\\nAugust\\nSeptenib r\\nOctober....\\nNovember\\nDecember\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nM\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nW T F\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n*7\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0161.jp2"}, "162": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1899-Conthiued.\\nHavana., Jan. i, 1899. Stars and Stripes raised in Cuba.\\nManila, Jan. 1. News just received from Iloilo indicates that the city will\\nnot be peaceably yielded by the insurgents.\\nAlbany, N. Y., Jan. 2. Rough Rider Roosevelt Governor of New York\\ninaugurated to-day.\\nWashington, Jan. 15. Filipino argument by Agoncillo filed to-day.\\nAuckland, N. Z. Jan. 18. War begins in Samoa.\\nWashington D. C, Jan. 19. Gen. Eagan of U. S. Army placed under\\narrest.\\nWashington, D. C., Jan. 2. Regulars will be forwarded via San Francisco\\nand Suez as last as transports can be secure, and light draft vessels\\nwill be sent to re-enforce Admiral Dewey.\\nWashington, D. C, Jan. 23. Government advised that Aguinaldo pub-\\nlicly proclaimed the Republic of the Phillipines.\\nWashington, D. C, Jan. 27. Court Martial decides that Gen. Eagan is\\nguilty.\\nWashington, D. C, Feb. 3. Gen. Gomez comes to government terms.\\nArmy to be disbanded.\\nWashington, D. C, Feb. 3. The President orders an investigation of\\nGen. Miles conduct in the Eagan controversy.\\nManlia, Feb. 5. The rebels opened fire upon Manila.\\nWashington, D. C, Feb. 5. Colonel James A. Sexton, Commander in\\nChief Grand Army of the Republic, died this morning.\\nWashington, D. C, Feb. 5. Agoncillo is a fugitive and on his way to\\nCanada.\\nWashington, D. C. Feb. 6. The peace treaty passed, by a vote 57 to 27.\\nManila, Feb. 6. Filipinos lost up to date 2,000 dead, 3,500 wounded, 5,000\\nprisoners.\\nManila, Feb. 9. The advance on Iloilo has begun.\\nManlia, Feb. 14. Forces under Gen. Miller have captured Iloilo.\\nParis, Feb. 16. President Felix Faure died to-night of apoplexy.\\nParis, Feb. 18. Emile Loubet elected President to succeed Faure.\\nMadrid, Feb. 20. Sagasta presented bill to the Cortes authorizing the\\ncession of the Phillipines to the United States for $20,000,000.\\nManila, Feb. 23. The rebels fired the city in many places last night.\\nMadrid, March 3. Admiral Montojo is imprisoned pending trial for his\\nconduct at Manila.\\nManila, March 15. General Lloyd Wheaton attacked and defeated 2,000\\nFilipinos at Pasig, inflicting heavy loss.\\nNew York, March 17. The Windsor Hotel burned. Many lives lost\\namong whom were Warren F. Leland s (the proprietor), wife and\\ndaughter.\\nManila, March 27. Col. Henry C. Egbert of the 22nd. U. S., Infantry was\\nkilled while leading his regiment on a charge.\\nManila, March 29. Gen. McArthur is now within eight miles of Malolas.\\nChicago, Apr. 7. Warren F. Leland was buried to-day.\\nNew York Apr. 7. The home of Wallace C. Andrews destroyed by fire,\\n13 persons burned including the Andrews family.\\nWashington, D. C, Apr. 12. Massacre of Americans and British in\\nSamoa.\\nChicago Apr. 17. Prof. Hans Balatka died to-day.\\nPhiladelphia, Apr. 21. Senator Quay declared to be not guilty of the\\ncharge of using state funds unlawfully.\\nElkhart, 111., April 24. Ex-Governor Richard J. Oglesby died to-day.\\nWashington, D. C, May 2.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Anti Imperialist documents for the Phil-\\nlipines barred from the mails.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0162.jp2"}, "163": {"fulltext": "HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR 1899-Continued.\\nLondon, May 16.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The Earl of Strafford killed by a train. He was the\\nhusband of Mrs. Colgate of N. J.\\nThe Hague, May 17. The delegates to the Peace Conference met to-\\nday.\\nTopeka, Kan., May 18. Ex U. S. Senator Peffer renounced Populism.\\nManila, May 20.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Admiral Dewey s flagship Olympia sailed from port to-\\nday at 4. p. m. homeward bound.\\nFalmouth, May 21.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The great liner The Paris on the rocks.\\nVictoria, B. C, May 23. Dawson City nearly destroyed by fire.\\nManila, May 23. The Aguinaldo Commisioners refuse terms offered h y\\nAmerican Commissioners.\\nParis, May 26. Rosa Bonheur, famous animal panter died about mid\\nnight.\\nParis, June, 1. Col. Du Paty De Clam, alleged Dreyfus forger arrested.\\nParis, June, 3. The Court of Cassation gives Dreyfus a new trial.\\nParis, June 4. Royalists try to mob President Loubet.\\nParis, June 7. Augustin Daly died at 2 p. m.\\nParis, June 10. 150,000 Socialists assemble to uphold President Loubet.\\nNew Richmond, Wis. June 13. A cyclone nearly destroyed the town.\\nManila, June 13. Gen. Lawton and 3,000 men won a signal victory.\\nParis, June 22. New French Cabinet named.\\nNew London, Conn., June 29. Harvard won three victories over Yale.\\nRennes, June 30. Capt. Dreyfus arrived here to-day.\\nSaratoga, July 6. Bishop John Philip Newman (M. E.) died.\\nNew York, July 6. Robert Bonner died.\\nLondon, July 11. Steamer Paris is free.\\nBar Harbor, Me. Over 20 people killed by the collapse of a landing stage.\\nPonce, Porto Rico, Aug. 10. A hurricane swept over the island, spread-\\ning ruin and desolation. Over 200 dead bodies recovered. Loss of\\nlife in the West Indies estimated at 2,000.\\nParis, Aug. 12. Deroulede and other plotters against the government\\narrested. Guerin barricades his house and defies the police.\\nRennes, Aug. 14. Matire Labori, counsel for Dreyfus, shot down in the\\nstreet. Not dangerously wounded.\\nParis, Aug. 21. Rioting in Paris. The interior of a church is demolished\\nby a mob.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0163.jp2"}, "164": {"fulltext": "The saloon is a disgrace to f\\\\ M\\\\ How much longer shall I live\\nAmerican citizenship. A r\\\\J\\\\F And what then?\\nJanuary...\\nFebruary-\\nMarch\\nApril\\nS\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\ni\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\nM\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nT\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nW\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nT\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nF\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nS\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nJnlv\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\nM\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\nW\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\nT\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\nF\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n31\\n*7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n5\\n12\\n19\\n26\\n2\\n9\\n16\\n23\\n30\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\nS\\n7\\n14\\n21\\n28\\n4\\n11\\n18\\n25\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\n6\\n13\\n20\\n27\\n3\\nIO\\n17\\n24\\n1\\n8\\n15\\n22\\n29\\nAugust\\nSeptemb r\\nOctober....\\nNovember\\nDecember\\nMay\\nJune\\nHISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE YEAR.\\nEaster Sunday, April 15.\\nClosing year of the nineteenth century.\\nThe year 1900 is not a leap year for the following reasons\\nThe Gregorian rule of intercalation now in vogue runs as follows Every year\\nof which the number is divisible by four, without a remainder, is a leap year,\\nexcepting centesimal years, which are only leap years when divisible by four\\nwere common years, and 1900 is also a common year. The year 2000 will be\\na leap year, and so on.\\nThere is no use of money equal to that of beneficence; here the enjoyment grows\\non reflection.\\nA beneficent person is like a fountain watering the earth and spreading fertility;\\nit is. therefore, more delightful and more honorable to give than to receive.\\nEpicurus.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0164.jp2"}, "165": {"fulltext": "leoi\\nen\\n3\\nA\\nM_\\n1\\nI\\n2\\nX\\n3\\nX\\n4\\n5\\n_S_\\nJL\\n2\\n3\\nx\\n4\\nx\\n5\\nS\\nD\\nx\\n1\\nx\\n2\\nw\\n3\\nx\\n4\\nF_\\n5\\ns\\nb\\n8\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\ns\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nV\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n10\\no.\\nM\\n15\\nlb\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n3\\nM\\n15\\nID\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\nn\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nca\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2D\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\nJ\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n2^\\n2D\\n27\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n-j\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n28\\n20\\n30\\n3 1\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n3\\n10\\nk\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nu\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nIb\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n3\\n11\\n12\\n*5\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\nE\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\nX)\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\nC\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n3\\n18\\n10\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23 1\\na.\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n31\\nz\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30 i\\nT\\nT\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n14\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n14\\nx\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\nC\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\ns\\nX\\n8\\n9\\n13\\nu\\nS\\n9\\nJ 3\\nu\\n10\\n11\\n12 13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nE\\n15\\n16\\n17\\nIS\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nE\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n3\\n-5\\n10\\n17\\n18\\n10\\n20\\n21\\n22\\na.\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2D\\n27\\n28\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\nor,\\n27\\n28\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n29\\n30\\n2\\n20\\n3C\\n31\\nThis Calendar of 1901 represents also the years 1907, 191 8, 1929,\\n1935, 1946, 1957, 1963, 1974.\\n1902\\n_\u00c2\u00a7_\\nn\\nJ_\\nW_\\nx\\n3\\n10\\n8_\\n4\\n11\\nX\\nX\\n1\\nw_\\nx\\n3\\n10\\nx\\n4\\n11\\nx\\n5\\n12\\nx\\nx\\nx\\nw\\nx\\n3\\n10\\nx\\n4\\n11\\nx\\n5\\n12\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nla\\n.r,\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nC\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n3\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nID\\n1:\\n18\\n10\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nis\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n3\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2D\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n2.1\\n25\\n20\\n*9\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0n\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n27\\n2S\\n20\\n3o\\n31\\n2b\\n27\\n2S\\n20\\n30\\n3i\\n1\\n8\\n1\\n2\\n9\\n3\\n10\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\nL\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n2\\n3\\n4\\ns\\n6\\n7\\n3\\n9\\n10\\n1 1\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nS3\\n1 1\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n3\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\nID\\nE\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\ni.S\\nXl\\nlb\\n17\\niti\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\nc\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n3\\n17\\n18\\n10\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\nIb\\n17\\n18\\n10\\n20\\n21\\n22\\nB.\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n27\\n2 8\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n31\\n24\\n25\\n2D\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3^\\n23\\n,0\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\nS\\n12\\nb\\n7\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nf\\\\\\n3\\n10\\n4\\nII\\ns\\n12\\n6\\nx\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n8\\n9\\n13\\nB\\nX\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n13\\nk\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n1.3\\nu\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nc\\n15\\nid\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nE\\n14\\ni.S\\nID\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\nF\\n14\\ni.S\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n10\\n20\\n3\\n1\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n3\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a03\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2D\\n27\\n28\\nw\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n23\\n50\\n25\\noh\\nXJ\\nOS\\n29\\n20\\n30\\ns*\\n-8\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n08\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n3i\\nQI\\n_\\nThis Calendar of 1902 represents also the years 191 3, 191 9, 1930,\\n1 94 1, 1947, 1958, 1969, 1975.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0165.jp2"}, "166": {"fulltext": "1903\\nX\\ni.\\nX\\n_W\\nx\\nx\\nx\\n3\\n10\\nx\\nx\\nw\\nI\\nx\\nx\\n3\\n10\\nx\\n4\\n11\\n8\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nx\\nJV1_\\nx\\nw\\nx\\nT\\nx\\nx\\n3\\n10\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\nb\\na\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nX\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\n16\\n17\\nO.\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n3\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nO\\nII\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n8)\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\nJ\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\nO\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n9\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n3i\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nb\\n7\\n*4\\nT\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nfi\\n7\\n14\\n8\\n9\\n13\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0M\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nU\\nXI\\n8\\n9\\n13\\n3\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n(9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\nib\\n3\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\nE\\n!5\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n2b\\n21\\nla\\nX)\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\nC\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\nu\\n3\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\nV\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n24\\n3i\\n25\\nnh\\n27\\noK\\n29\\n30\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2\u00c2\u00abr\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n3i\\n25\\nob\\n27\\n?8\\n29\\n29\\n30\\nu.\\nd.\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nu.\\nI\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nja\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\ny\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\njg\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\nb\\ny\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\nla\\ni.S\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nc\\n14\\n15\\nlb\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\nE\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nE\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\ncd\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n3\\n-1\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n*1\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\nu\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nQ\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\nThis Calendar of 1903 represents also the years 191 4, 1925, 1 931,\\n1942, 1953, 1959, 1970.\\n1904\\nCS\\nX\\nM.\\nx\\n_W\\nx\\nF\\n1\\n8\\nx\\n2\\n8\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n8\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\ns\\nX\\n8\\nM\\nx\\n_ W\\nx\\nx\\nx\\n1\\n8\\n1\\n3\\n2\\n9\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\n-1\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n3\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nlb\\nD.\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\niS\\nib\\n3\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\ned\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n2 9\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n31\\n31\\n30\\n3i\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n1^\\n13\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nvi\\n7\\n3\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nX\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n3\\n14\\nIS\\n16\\n17\\n18\\nig\\n20\\n(8\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n3\\n14\\nis\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\nE\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nh\\nX)\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\nC\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\nbo\\n3\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n28\\n29\\n29\\n3 C\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n27\\n23\\n29\\n30\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n3\\n10\\nT\\np\\n3\\n10\\nS\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n8\\nX)\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\ni\\n4\\n4\\ns\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n13\\nM\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nB\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nE\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\nE\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n1\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n3\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\ns\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n3 1\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nu\\n*1\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\na\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nThis Calendar of 1904 represents also the years 1932, i960, all\\nLeap Years.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0166.jp2"}, "167": {"fulltext": "1905\\n8^\\n1\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\nx\\n5\\n12\\nF\\nb\\nx\\n7\\n14\\n3\\nM\\nT|W\\nT\\nF\\ns\\n1\\n_M_\\nT\\n_W\\nx\\nx\\n_S\\n3\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\n8\\nI\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nb\\n7\\n14\\na\\n8\\n9\\n13\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\nla\\nXi\\n8\\n9\\n13\\n3\\nC\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nQ.\\n9\\n10\\nII\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\n3\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n*5\\nc\\n15\\nib\\n17\\nIS\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n83\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\nJ\\n16\\n17\\nIS\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\nn\\n22\\n23\\n24\\nas\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n3i\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\noh\\n7-\\noS\\n29\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\noh\\n27\\noS\\n29\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\nII\\nr\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nft\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\ns\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n13\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nla\\na\\ns\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n83\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n3\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nE\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nX)\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n2-1\\n25\\nC\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n^7\\n3\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n2b\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\na.\\n2 b\\n27\\n28\\n2S\\n20\\n30\\n3i\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\nz\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n1\\n3\\n10\\nXI\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nS\\n9\\n4 5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\na\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nL.\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\na\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\nIS\\nC\\nII\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\n16\\n17\\nE\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\nE\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\n16\\ns\\ns\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n3\\n-5\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\nIS\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n31\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n2\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nThis Calendar of 1905 represents also the years 191 1, 1922, 1933,\\n1939, 1950, 1 96 1, 1967.\\n1906\\n_s_\\n2\\nw\\n3\\nx\\n4\\nx\\n5\\nS\\n6\\n8\\nM\\nT\\nw\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n_S\\n1\\n2\\nx\\n3\\nW\\n4\\nx\\n5\\nF\\nb\\n8_\\n7\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nw\\nT\\nF|S\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5 6\\na\\n7\\ns\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\ns\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nu\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12 13\\n3\\nc\\n14\\nIS\\nlb\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\na\\nIS\\nlb\\n17\\nIS\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n3\\nIS\\nIb\\n17\\nIS\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n1920\\na\\n-5\\n21\\n2S\\n22\\n29\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n3i\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n22\\n29\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n22\\n29\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n21\\n2S\\n22\\n29\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\nT\\n3\\n10\\nf\\n3\\n10\\n4\\nII\\n5\\n12\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nC J\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nla\\n4\\nS\\n6\\n7\\nS\\n9\\n3\\n1 1\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n83\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\n10\\n17\\n10\\n19\\n3\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nE\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n16\\n17\\nXi\\nIS\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\nc\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n2 5\\n2b\\n3\\n10\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\nu.\\naS\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n31\\nz\\n25\\n2D\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\nS\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nX)\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\nla\\n41\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\na\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\nC\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\nE\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nE\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n83\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n3\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n4J\\n16 17\\n18\\n10\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\nQ\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n11\\nQ\\n2324\\n3031\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nThis Calendar of 1906 represents also the years 191 7, 1923, 1934,\\n1945, 1 95 1, 1962, 1973.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0167.jp2"}, "168": {"fulltext": "1907\\nA\\nJL\\nT\\n2\\nx\\n3\\nx\\n4\\nx\\n5\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\n8\\nx\\nx\\nx\\n2\\nw\\n3\\nx\\n4\\nx\\n5\\ns\\nb\\nx\\nK\\nx\\n1\\n2\\nx\\n3\\nx\\n4\\n_s_\\n5\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nu\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\nU\\n12\\n13\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n3\\n13\\nm\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\na\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n3\\n14\\ni.S\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\nO\\n13\\nm\\ni.S\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nM\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n~5\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\nr\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n3\\n10\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n\u00e2\u0099\u00a6j\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n3\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\nE\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\nc\\nT 9\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n3\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\nLL\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\nZ\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nT\\nT\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nh\\n7\\nM\\nT\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n12\\nh\\n7\\nr\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\n4\\n\u00c2\u00a31\\ny\\n13\\n9\\n13\\nu\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nT 5 lb\\nc\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nE\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nE\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nOS\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a09\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\na\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n8\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n24\\n3i\\n25\\noh\\n27\\n?H\\n?n\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n23\\n3n\\n24\\n25\\noh\\n?7\\n?H\\n29\\n29\\n30\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n*1\\nill\\nThis Calendar of 1907 represents also the years 191 8, 1929, 1935,\\n1946, 1957. 1963, 1974.\\n1908\\nla\\nC3\\n_S_\\n1\\nx\\nT\\nx\\nx\\n3\\n10\\nx\\n4\\n8\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\ns\\nx\\nM_\\nx\\nW_\\nx\\nx\\n3\\n10\\n_S_\\n4\\n11\\n1\\nK\\nx\\nw\\nx\\nx\\nx\\n3\\n10\\ni\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n5\\n6\\n7\\ns\\n9\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nV\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\nC\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\na\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n3\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n19\\n2021\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\nT\\nr\\nT\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nb\\n7\\n14\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n8\\n8\\n9\\n13\\n3\\n9\\n10\\nII\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n3\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nE\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nX)\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\nc\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n3\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n4\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n0\\n23\\n24\\n25\\noh\\n27\\n08\\n29\\n24\\n3i\\n25\\nob\\n27\\noH\\n29\\n30\\nr\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n3i\\n25\\noh\\n27\\n08\\n29\\nO\\n29\\n30\\nUrn\\nZ\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\nI\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\nu\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nJA\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nu\\nXi\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\nu\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\na\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nc\\nI4|i5\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\nE\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nE\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n3\\n21 22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\na\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n8\\nG\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n28 29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\nThis Calendar of 1908 represents also the years 1936, 1964, all\\nLeap Years.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0168.jp2"}, "169": {"fulltext": "1909\\nb\\nX\\nA\\nX\\nw\\nx\\nA\\n_8_\\n1\\nJ_\\nW\\nx\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM_\\nx\\nW\\nx\\nx\\nA.\\n3\\n10\\nX\\nx\\nw\\nx\\nx\\nx\\n3\\n10\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nu\\nu\\nX)\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\ne\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\na.\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n3\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\nes\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\nIS\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\nJ\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\niQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n25\\n2 b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n31\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n23\\n29\\n30\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nb\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nh\\n7\\n14\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\ns\\n12\\nh\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n13\\n2\\n3\\n4\\ns\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n8\\n9\\n13\\nu\\n8\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nJ 3\\n3\\n14\\n*5\\n10\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\na\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\n3\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\nE\\n14\\ni.S\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\nXI\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\nC\\nIb\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n3\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n2=;\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n2.S\\n2b\\n27\\nX\\n?H\\n23\\n30\\n2 1\\n25\\n?h\\n27\\n?8\\n29\\n\u00c2\u00abf\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n08\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n31\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nb\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n3\\n10\\n4\\nn\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\nX\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n13\\nc\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n\u00c2\u00abl\\nXI\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nu\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nu\\nla\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nE\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nE\\n12\\n1.3\\nM\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nes\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\nn\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\nu\\nu\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n23\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3o\\nu\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\nThis Calendar of 1909 represents also the years 191 5, 1926, 1937,\\n1943, 1954, 1965, I97\u00c2\u00bb-\\nIOIO\\nX\\nX\\nW|T\\nX\\nS_\\n1\\n8\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nw\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nx\\n1\\nx\\n1\\nx\\nx\\nI\\n8\\nX\\n2\\n9\\nu\\n11\\nS 1 M\\nx\\nW|T\\nx\\nx\\nI\\n8\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nS\\n6\\n7\\ne\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\na\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n3\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\ne\\nQ\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n\u00c2\u00abS\\na\\n-i\\nID\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n^3\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\ns\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n2S\\n2Q\\n30\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n31\\nSi\\n}o\\n*i\\nla\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n3\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n1 1\\n12\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nu\\nb\\n7\\n8\\nQ\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n3\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n10\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nJ 9\\n20\\n21\\n3\\n14\\nis\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\nF\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\n16\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\nX\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n2^\\n25\\n2b\\nC\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\nM\\n3\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n2.S\\n2b\\n27\\nu\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\nLi.\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n2S\\n29\\n30\\nT\\n2\\n1\\nI\\ns\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n3\\n10\\n3\\n10\\nX!\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nIO\\n11\\n12\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\na\\nX)\\n4\\ns\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n4\\ns\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nlb\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nc\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nE\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\nIb\\n17\\nF\\n11\\n12\\nn\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\nS\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n-1\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n1 8\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n2}\\n24\\n41\\niS\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n2}\\n24\\n27\\n28\\n2Q\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n31\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n2Q\\n30\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n(1\\na\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n2930\\n31\\nThis Calendar of 19 10 represents also the years 1921, 1927, 1938,\\n1949. 1955. 1966.\\n1", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0169.jp2"}, "170": {"fulltext": "1\u00c2\u00a911\\n1_\\nca\\ns\\nT\\nX\\n1_\\n3\\n10\\nW|T\\nF\\nb\\n_\u00c2\u00a7_\\n7\\n_S_\\nM\\nT\\n_w\\nx\\nx\\nx\\nT\\nS\\n1.\\nx\\nW\\nx\\nx\\nA\\nj}\\n1\\nx\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\nx\\n5\\n12\\nF\\nh\\n_8_\\n7\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\ns\\n9\\n13\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nL.\\n4\\nX)\\n8\\n9\\n13\\nc\\nis\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n0.\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n*4\\n15\\n3\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\ni.S\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nca\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\nJ\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n3i\\n23\\n2 1\\n2 c;\\n7,b\\n27\\n?8\\n29\\n23\\nSO\\n24\\n^1\\n25\\noh\\n?7\\n?K\\n29\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n30\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\nr\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nfi\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n13\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\ni.\\n4\\n3\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n3\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nE\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nXi\\n,19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n2-4\\n25\\nC\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n3\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\nu.\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n3i\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\nz\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n11\\nT\\n3\\n10\\nX!\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nX)\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nc\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\nE\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\nE\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n3\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\nu\\n17\\n18\\n10\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n4\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nQ\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nThis Calendar of 191 1 represents also the years 1922, 1933, 1939,\\n1950, 1 96 1, 1967.\\n1912\\n_\u00c2\u00a7_\\n1\\n2\\nW|T\\n_F_\\n5\\nS\\n6\\nX\\n1\\nI\\n2\\n3\\n4\\nF\\n8\\nx\\n1\\nI\\nx\\n2\\nw\\n3\\nx\\n4\\nx\\n5\\nS\\n6\\nx\\nM.\\nx\\nvv\\n2\\nT j F\\nx\\n5\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n3\\n4\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n0)\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n3\\nc\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n3\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nlb\\n20\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nca\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\nJ\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n3i\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\nT\\n3\\n10\\nr\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0M\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n41\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\nca\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n3\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\nE\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n*i\\n15\\n16\\nX)\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\nC\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n60\\n3\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n2 #22\\n23\\nu\\nu.\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n3i\\nZ\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nT\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nb\\n7\\n14\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nb\\n7\\n14\\nX\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n4\\nX)\\n8\\n9\\n13\\nu\\n41\\n8\\n9\\n13\\nla\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\nc\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nE\\ni.S\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nF\\ni.S\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\nca\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n3\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n2728\\n41\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n24\\nQT\\n25\\noh\\n27\\noH\\n29\\n30\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n25\\noh\\n27\\n08\\n29\\nSi\\n29\\n30\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\ni-j\\nThis Calendar of 1912 represents also the years 1940, 1968, all\\nLeap Years.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0170.jp2"}, "171": {"fulltext": "1013\\ns\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nII F\\ns\\nSlM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\ns\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nw\\nT\\nF\\n8\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\nII\\n1\\n3\\nr\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\nb\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nU\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nQ\\n3\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\nD.\\n13\\n1 1\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n3\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\nc\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nC3\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n-t.\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\nJ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n2^\\n2b\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n2}\\n24\\na.S\\n-5\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n3i\\n27\\n28\\n-9\\n30\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\nk\\n1\\nS\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\n3\\n10\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n9\\nL.\\n1\\n8\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n3\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\na\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n3\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nis\\n16\\nE\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a04\\nIS\\nX)\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\nC\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n3\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\nD\\n[6\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n2C\\n2]\\n22\\nII\\nu.\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n31\\n24\\n3i\\n25\\n2h\\n27\\n2 8\\n20\\n30\\n23\\n24\\n2 5\\n2b\\n27\\n2 8\\n2Q\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\nn\\n7\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nr,\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n1 1\\n_\\nh\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n8\\n9\\n12\\n13\\nu\\n7\\n8\\n13\\nu\\n7\\n8\\n12\\n13\\nu\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nc\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nE\\nM\\n15\\nIb\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\nF\\n4\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n13\\n10\\n2D\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n-5\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n2 8\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n0\\nJ\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n2;\\n26\\n7\\n23\\n3n\\n24\\nST\\n25\\n?h\\n27\\n?H\\n2Q\\n20\\n30\\n-8\\n29\\n30\\ntf\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\nQ\\nThis Calendar of 1913 represents also the years 191 9, 1930, 1941,\\n1947, 1958. 1969, 1975.\\n1914\\nla\\na\\nSlMlT\\nWtT\\nX\\n_S_\\n_s_\\nK\\nJ_\\nT\\nx\\nX\\n3\\n10\\nX\\n4\\n11\\n1\\nM_\\nx\\nW\\nx\\nx\\n3\\n10\\ns\\n4\\n11\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nIO\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n1.\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\nc\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n0. 12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n3\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nc\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\n16\\n17\\na\\n-5\\nlb\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n3\\n24\\n25\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\na\\n18\\niQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n31\\n2 b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n20\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n30\\n8i\\nI 1\\n2 3\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nn\\n7\\ni\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nfi\\n7\\n14\\n8\\n9\\nlo\\n13\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n8\\n9\\n13\\nit 15\\n16\\n17\\n18\\nJ 9\\n20\\n21\\na\\n10\\n1 1\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n3\\n9\\n10\\nI I\\n12\\n18\\n14\\n15\\nE\\n13\\nib\\nT 7\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2C\\n22\\nV\\n24\\n25\\n20\\n27\\n28\\nC\\ni/\\n1 a\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n3\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n10\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n23\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n24\\n25\\noh\\n27\\n?H\\n29\\n30\\n\u00c2\u00abr\\n23\\n24\\n3i\\nh\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n29\\n30\\nZ\\nI\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\nj\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\nI\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n3\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n3\\nr\\nh\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n7\\nB\\n9\\n10\\n1 1\\n12\\n13\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\nu\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n10\\nII\\n12\\nu\\nu\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20 2I\\nc\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n10\\n20\\nE\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\nE\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\n16\\n17\\nIS\\nIQ\\n3\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n^5\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n-5\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n23\\n2b\\n0)\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\na.S\\n2b\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n28\\n20\\n30\\nH3\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n30\\n1)\\n2\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n30\\n31\\nThis Calendar of 191 4 represents also the years 1925, 1931, 1942,\\n1953, 1959, 1970.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0171.jp2"}, "172": {"fulltext": "ioi.-\\n_s_\\nJL\\nx\\n_W\\nX\\nX\\n_S_\\n3\\nM\\nT\\nw\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nw\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n1\\n1\\nx\\nw\\nx\\nx\\nj$_\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n3\\n10\\n3\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nX)\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\nc\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\na\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n3\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\n16\\n83\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\nJ\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\nr\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3o\\n3i\\n24\\n31\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nb\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nb\\n7\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\nla\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n13\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0M\\n8\\n9\\n13\\nla\\nX\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n13\\n3\\nm\\ni.S\\n16\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\n3\\nis\\nIb\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nE\\n14\\nis\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\nla\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\nc\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\nfed\\n3\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\nU\\n^8\\n23\\n30\\n24\\n31\\n25\\noh\\n27\\n?fl\\n29\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n08\\n29\\n30\\nU.\\nz.\\n3\\n10\\n4\\nn\\n5\\n12\\nb\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\nII\\n5\\n12\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\nX\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n13\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\ns\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nla\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n2\\n14\\nr 5\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\nc\\n13\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18 19\\nE\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nE\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nca\\n5\\n21\\n22\\n2.1\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n3\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n2526\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n\u00c2\u00ab0\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n3i\\nThis Calendar of 191 5 represents also the years 1926, 1937, 1943,\\n1954, 1965, I97i.\\n1916\\n3\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\nS\\nS\\nM\\nT\\nW\\nT\\nF\\n3\\n8\\nM\\nT\\nw\\nT\\nF\\nS\\n8 1 M\\nT\\nw\\nT\\nF\\n8\\nT\\nil 2\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nb\\n7\\n14\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n2\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n3\\nla\\nV\\nX\\n8] 9\\n13\\n3\\nC\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\na\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\n3\\n9\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\nM\\n15\\n15\\nIb\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\nM\\nlb\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\na\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n2 3\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n20\\n29\\n3^\\n3i\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n31\\n30\\n3o\\n3i\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\nr\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n6\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n5\\n12\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n13\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0\u00e2\u0099\u00a6J\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n3\\n13\\nM\\nIS\\n16\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nes\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n3\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\n18\\n19\\nE\\nI2|l3\\n14\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nX\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\nc\\n21\\n2 2\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n26\\n27\\n3\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n4\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n9\\n24\\n4S\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n28\\n2Q\\n30\\n31\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3\u00c2\u00b0\\n3i\\nO\\nz\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n4\\n11\\nT\\n3\\n10\\n5 6\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n1)\\nXl\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\nla\\n3\\n4\\n5\\nb\\n7\\n8\\n9\\n1213\\nM\\n15\\nib\\n17\\n18\\nB\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\n17\\nE\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\nIS\\nib\\nE\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n19 20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n25\\n3\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n24\\n17\\n18\\n19\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n41\\n17\\n18\\nIQ\\n20\\n21\\n22\\n23\\n26 27\\n28\\n29\\n3C\\n3i\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\n1\\n24\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n3o\\n24\\n3i\\n25\\n2b\\n27\\n28\\n29\\n30\\nThis Calendar of 191 6 represents also the years 1944, 1972, all\\nLeap Years.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0172.jp2"}, "173": {"fulltext": "A Thrilling Narrative of the Great Sioux War in Minnesota in 1862\\nand 1863\\nWas written by Colonel A. P. Connolly, of Chicago, who at that time was a\\nSergeant in Company A of the Sixth Minnesota Infantry, and who was a par-\\nticipant in the two campaigns. The outbreak occurred on August 18th, 1862, and\\nnothing up to that time indicated that the Indians were particularly dissatisfied;\\nbut they were. The agents, traders and gamblers, who were always ready to\\npluck the poor Indians, thought their victims had gotten used to this pleasant\\npastime, and would continue to acquiesce in it to the end of time; but a tornado\\nwas preparing becauseof this unjust and nefarious treatment, to swoop down upon\\nthe unsuspecting, law-abiding, confiding, God-fearing settlers, and LI ITLE CROW\\nwas the storm center. He was a brave warrior, a shrewd politician, and a relent-\\nless foe in whom the turbulent Indian element had an abiding faith. When he\\ntold them that the time was ripe for a strike to regain a lost patrimony, they be-\\nlieved him. When he told them that the war then being waged in the South was\\ncalling away all able bodied men, leaving none at home but old men, women and\\nchildren, they believed him, and were ready to do his bidding. He sent scouts out\\nto the various tribes of the Sioux Nation, to arouse their animosity to the white\\nsettlers, and inform them that war would be declared by him against the settlers.\\nIn an unsuspecting moment, the work of death and devastation commenced. The\\ntraders and settlers about the agencies were set upon, and only one man escaped.\\nEven the missionaries and teachers who had long been among them to teach a bet-\\nter way of living, and to point them to a Saviour, were victims. A few escaped.\\nThe terrible news reached Governor Ramsey, who at once set about to send troops\\nup to the frontier to punish the Indians and restore confidence among the people.\\nEx-Governor Henry H. Sibley was chosen by Governor Ramsey as the most suit-\\nable person to place in command of the hastily prepared Army of Invasion.\\nCompanies A, B, and E, of the Sixth Minnesota Infantry, were placed on\\nboard a small steamer then lying at the landing near Fort Snefling, and were at\\nonce steaming up the narrow, winding Minnesota River. We were recruits and\\nready for adventure. Indian hunting was to us much like any other hunting, and\\nwe were anxious to get on the territory where the game existed. The news^from\\nthe upper country was rather startling, and it looked like a very serious matter.\\nRefugees were coming to places of safety from all directions. The plain facts were\\nbad enough, but the exaggerated stories of the affrighted people filled the air, and\\nit required the presence of soldiers to restore confidence among the people. We made\\nthe campaign,entered far into the country of the Indians, withstood sieges, fought\\nbattles, captured 700 Indians, rescued the 300 women and children, tried, con-\\ndemned and hung 39 Indians on one scaffold, restored confidence among the set-\\ntlers, and cleared the atmosphere of the Indian scare. The book contair.s375 pages,\\na few of which appear here. It is embellished with 75 illustrations of Indians,\\nbattle scenes, native houses, prairie fires, blizzards, etc. It is truthful, interesting\\nand historical. It is cloth bound, and retails at One Dollar.\\nThe first edition is exhausted and the second will soon be issued from the\\npress.\\nBishop S. M. Merrill, of the Methodist Church, says: You have the\\nfoundation for the best book I ever read.\\nArchbishop John Ireland says: Of course 1 want it, because you wrote it,\\nand no doubt it contains interesting facts. 1\\nUnited States Senator Cushman K. Davis says: It is most interesting, and\\nbears the impress and freshness of personal experience.\\nColonel James A. Sexton, Past Commander-in-Chief G. A. R.,said: I never\\nread a more interesting book. I had only one fault to find with it- there was not\\nenough of it. (I have since added 100 pages.)\\nD. A. Monfort, President of the Second National Bank of St. Paul, says: I\\nam glad indeed to get it. I have read it three times, and it acts like a tonic to me.\\nI could add hundreds of others from the best men in the Uuited States, but it\\nis not necessary. If you desire a copy of this most interesting book, written by\\none who took an active part as a soldier in the campaign, send to A.P.CON-\\nNOLLY, Chicago, III., for it.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0173.jp2"}, "174": {"fulltext": "MINNESOTA MASSACRE\u00e2\u0080\u0094 1862.\\n67\\nLITTLE CROW,\\nCHAPTEE X.\\nSIEGE OF NEW ULM.\\nLittle Crow, finding himself baffled in his attempt to\\ncapture the fort, and learning from his scouts that Colonel\\nSibley was on his way with two regiments to relieve the\\ngarrison, concentrated all his forces and proceeded to New", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0174.jp2"}, "175": {"fulltext": "63 MINNESOTA MASSACRE\u00e2\u0080\u0094 1862.\\nUlm, about thirteen miles distant, which he intended to\\nwipe out the next morning. Here, again, he was disap-\\npointed. The hero of New Ulm was Hon. Charles E.\\nFlandreau, who deserves more than a passing notice. By\\nprofession he is a lawyer, and at this time was a judge on\\nthe bench, and is now enjoying a lucrative practice in St.\\nPaul. By nature he is an organizer and a leader, and to\\nhis intrepid bravery and wise judgment New Ulm and her\\ninhabitants owe their salvation from the savagery of Little\\nCrow and his bloodthirsty followers. He had received\\nthe news of the outbreak at his home near St. Peter in the\\nearly morning of August 19, and at once decided what\\nshould be done to save the people.\\nHis duty to wife and children was apparent, and to\\nplace them in safety was his first thought, which he did\\nby taking them to St. Peter. He then issued a call for\\nvolunteers, and in response to this soon found himself\\nsurrounded by men who needed no second bidding, for\\nthe very air was freighted with the terror of the situation.\\nArmed with guns of any and all descriptions, with bottles\\nof powder, boxes of caps and pockets filled with bullets,\\none hundred and twenty men, determined on revenge,\\npressed forward to meet this terrible foe.\\nWhere should they go? Rumors came from all direc-\\ntions, and one was that Fort Ridgely was being besieged\\nand had probably already fallen. Their eyes also turned\\ntoward New Ulm, which was but thirteen miles distant\\nand in an absolutely unprotected condition. Its affrighted\\npeople were at the mercy of this relentless enemy. The\\nwork Judge Flandreau performed in perfecting an organi-\\nzation was masterful, for the men who flocked in and\\noffered their services he could not control in a military", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0175.jp2"}, "176": {"fulltext": "78\\nMINNESOTA MASSACRE\u00e2\u0080\u0094 1862.\\nJJES. ESTXICK AND CUILDBEN.\\nCHAPTER XII.\\nMRS. EASTLICK AND FAMILY.\\nThe note of alarm sounded throughout the neighbor-\\nhood and without a moment s warning hurried prepara-", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0176.jp2"}, "177": {"fulltext": "MINNESOTA MASSACRE\u00e2\u0080\u0094 1862. 79\\ntions were made for the exodus. Women and children\\nand a few household goods were loaded into wagons and a\\nstart made for a place of safety. Indians suddenly ap-\\npeared and commenced an indiscriminate fire upon the ter-\\nror-stricken refugees.\\nThe individual cases of woman s heroism, daring, brav-\\nery, cunning and strong-willed self-sacrifice, could be re-\\ncounted by the score, and in some instances are past belief.\\nTheir achievements would be considered as pure fiction\\nbut for our own personal knowledge. Many of the real\\noccurrences would seem like legends, when the father had\\nbeen murdered and the mother left with two, three and\\neven five and six children to care for, and if possible save\\nthem from the ferocity of the painted red devils, whose\\nthirst for blood could seemingly not be satiated. One\\nnoted case was the Eastlick family, and this was only one\\nof a hundred. Eleven men of the party had already been\\nkilled, and Mr. Eastlick among the number. The women\\nwith their children were scattered in all directions in the\\nbrush, to escape if possible the inevitable fate in store for\\nthem if caught. The Indians shouted to them to come out\\nfrom their hiding places and surrender and they should be\\nspared. The remaining men, thinking perhaps their lives\\nmight be saved if they surrendered, urged their wives to\\ndo so, and the men would, if possible, escape and give the\\nalarm. Thus, without a word or a look lest they should\\nbetray the remaining husbands, were these women driven\\nfrom their natural protectors and obliged to submit to the\\ntender mercies of their hated red captors. The supposed\\ndead husbands watched the receding forms of their devoted\\nwives, whom in all likelihood they never would see again.\\nBurton Eastlick, the fifteen-year-old boy, could not endure", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0177.jp2"}, "178": {"fulltext": "112 MINNESOTA MASSACRE\u00e2\u0080\u0094 1862.\\nCHAPTER XVIII.\\nBATTLE OF BIRCH COOLIE.\\nThe battle of Birch Coolie was fought September 2 and\\n3, 1862. It has never taken its proper place in history, but\\nwith the exception of the massacre at the Little Big Horn,\\nin 1876^ it was the hottest and the most desperate battle\\nfought during the war of the Rebellion or any of our In-\\ndian wars. In comparison to the number of men and\\nhorses engaged, I know of no conflict, the one above re-\\nferred to excepted, where the casualties were as great as\\nthey were here.\\nThe Indian custom is to make an attack about four\\no clock in the morning, so this relief had been especially\\ncautioned, and soon after the guard was placed one of them\\nthought he saw something moving in the grass. It proved\\nto be an Indian, and they were slowly moving in upon us,\\ntheir intention being to shoot the pickets with arrows, and\\nas noiselessly as possible rush in and destroy us in our con-\\nfusion. The sentinel fired at the moving object, and in-\\nstantly our camp was encircled by fire and smoke from the\\nguns of five hundred Indians, who had hemmed us in.\\nThe guard who fired escaped the bullet intended for him.\\nHe said he thought the moving object in the grass might\\nbe a hog or it might be an Indian, and, hog or Indian, he\\nintended to kill it if he could. The fire was returned by the", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0178.jp2"}, "179": {"fulltext": "IN GOING TO ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS\\nThe wise traveler selects the Chicago,\\nMilwaukee St. Paul Railway.\\nWhy?\\nIt is the best road between Chicago and the\\nTwin Cities.\\nIt has the most perfect track.\\nIts equipment is the finest.\\nIts sleeping cars are palaces.\\nIts dining-car service is equal to the best hotels.\\nIts electric-lighted trains are steam heated.\\nIts general excellence has no equal.\\nIt is patronized by the best people.\\nIt is the favorite route for ladies and children,\\nas well as for men.\\nIt is the most popular road west of Chicago.\\nIt gives the choice of seven trains daily.\\nCity ticket office, 95 Adams Street, Chicago.", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0179.jp2"}, "180": {"fulltext": "The Morion Ooute h as\\n4 Trains each day between Chicago, Indianapolis and Cincinnati\\n3 Trains each day between Chicago and Lafayette\\n2 Trains each day between Chicago and Louisville\\nTHE ONLY LINE TO THE FAMOUS HEALTH RESORTS So So\\nFrench Lick, West Baden and Paoli Springs.\\nTrains Equipped with all the Modern Appliances.\\nTicket Office, 232 Clark Street. CHICAGO.", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0180.jp2"}, "181": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0181.jp2"}, "182": {"fulltext": "AMERICA FOREVER\\nO, beautiful and grand,\\nMy own, my native land\\nOf thee I boast\\nGreat empire of the West,\\nThe dearest and the best,\\nMade up of all the rest,\\nI love thee most.\\nl^_\\nA", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0182.jp2"}, "183": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0183.jp2"}, "184": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3805", "width": "2503", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0184.jp2"}, "185": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3790", "width": "2473", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0185.jp2"}, "186": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3832", "width": "2492", "jp2-path": "nineteenthcentur00conn_0186.jp2"}}