This Is The File GUTINDEX.02. It Contains Etexts Published By 3253 Contents Introduction by Theodore Roosevelt Editor s Preface by Arthur Gift Book Committee of The Militia of Mercy May 2002 Albrecht Durer s http://www.artfiles.org/gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.02
Chartwell Booksellers Jeffrey, Keith Editor The Bodley Head for Army Records Society 1st EnglishEdition. Militia of Mercy, The Gift Book Committee John Lane Company http://www.churchill-books.com/list.cfm?category=1st WW
Browse By Author: M - Project Gutenberg Europe Marshall, Logan, Editor. Sinking of the Titanic and Great Sea Disasters (English) ed. by the Gift Book Committee of the Militia of Mercy (English) http://pge.rastko.net/browse/authors/m
Extractions: Project Gutenberg Europe Online Book Catalog Author: Title Word(s): EText-No.: Advanced Search Recent Books Top 100 Offline Catalogs ... In Depth Information Authors: A B C D ... other Titles: A B C D ... other Languages: Afrikaans Albanian Aleut Basque ... Yiddish Recent: last 24 hours last 7 days last 30 days Connor Magan's Luck and Other Stories Connor Magan's Luck; Why Mammy Delphy's Baby Was Named Grief; Sammy Sealskin's Enemy; Nannette's Live Baby; Brothers For Sale; A Story of a Clock; Naughty Zay; The Legend of the Salt Sea; The Man with the Straw Hat; Ruffles and Puffs; Sugar River; A Pioneer "Wide Awake"; Surprised; April Fools and Other Fools (English) The Compleat Cook
Projecto Gutenberg Marshall, Logan, Editor. Sinking of the Titanic and Great Sea Disasters and our own country, ed. by the Gift Book Committee of the Militia of Mercy http://mirror.bn.pt/gutenberg/browse/IA_M.HTM
Extractions: Project Gutenberg Online Book Catalog Quick Search Author: Title Word(s): EText-No.: Advanced Search Recent Books Top 100 Offline Catalogs ... In Depth Information Authors: A B C D ... other Titles: A B C D ... other Languages with more than 50 books: Chinese Dutch English Finnish ... Spanish Languages with up to 50 books: Afrikaans Aleut Bulgarian Catalan ... Yiddish Categories: Audio Book, computer-generated Audio Book, human-read Data Music, recorded ... Pictures, still Recent: last 24 hours last 7 days last 30 days See: Casanova, Giacomo, 1725-1798 The Complete Memoirs of Jacques Casanova (English) Memoirs of Casanova â Volume 01: Childhood (English) Memoirs of Casanova â Volume 02: a Cleric in Naples (English) Memoirs of Casanova â Volume 03: Military Career (English) Memoirs of Casanova â Volume 04: Return to Venice (English) Memoirs of Casanova â Volume 05: Milan and Mantua (English) Memoirs of Casanova â Volume 06: Paris (English) Memoirs of Casanova â Volume 07: Venice (English) Memoirs of Casanova â Volume 08: Convent Affairs (English) Memoirs of Casanova â Volume 09: the False Nun (English) Memoirs of Casanova â Volume 10: under the Leads (English)
James Otis Pre-revolutionist By John Ridpath This Book, plus Mercy Warren s plays, history of the American Revolution had held high judicial offices and Militia appointments in the Gift of the King http://www.samizdat.com/warren/jamesotis.html
Extractions: BY JOHN CLARK RIDPATH, LL.D. AUTHOR OF A "Cyclopaedia of Universal History," "Great Races of Mankind," "Life and Times of William E. Gladstone," etc., etc. THE CHARACTER OF JAMES OTIS BY CHARLES K. EDMUNDS, Ph.D. WITH AN ESSAY ON THE PATRIOT BY G. MERCER ADAM Late Editor "Self-Culture" Magazine, Etc., Etc. TOGETHER WITH ANECDOTES, CHARACTERISTICS, AND CHRONOLOGY This book, plus Mercy Warren's plays, history of the American Revolution (1300+ pages), other books and documents related to the American Revolution are available on CD: What do Mercy Otis Warren, Thomas Jefferson, Alexis de Tocqueville, Samuel Adams, and Thomas Paine have in common? They all wrote about the American Revolution and/or the Early Republic and their works are on the same American Revolution CD , in plain text, with software that lets you listen as well as read. If you would like to read Mercy's history of the American Revolution on your palm, for $5 you can buy a zipped file with that entire book formatted for Palm Reader (.pdb), TomeRaider (.tr) and Microsoft Reader (.lit) at www.palmgear.com Near the northeast corner of the old Common of Boston a section of ground was put apart long before the beginning of the eighteenth century to be a burying ground for some of the heroic dead of the city of the Puritans. For some quaint reason or caprice this acre of God was called "The Granary" and is so called to this day. Perhaps the name was given because the dead were here, garnered as grain from the reaping until the bins be opened at the last day's threshing when the chaff shall be driven from the wheat.
F&M College: Special Collections: Muench Family Papers 4/15 from American Women s Committee for Mercy Ships for European Children. 5/4 Bride s Gift Book. nd. Notes When she married Alfred George Muench. http://library.fandm.edu/archives/Muench.html
Extractions: MS 44 The Muench collection documents the ancestors and family of Sarah Ellmaker [McIlvaine] Muench of Lancaster County PA. Several prominent families in Lancaster County history are represented in the collection including: the Ellmaker, McIlvaine, Hubley, Fordney, Cox, Jenkins, and Michael families, . The collection consists of correspondence, notes, legal documents, newspaper clippings, articles, programs, postcards and photographs dating from the mid-18th through the 20th century. The earliest item in the collection dates from 1734 with the bulk of the material covering the period from 1870 to 1939. The collection is arranged into the following seventy-seven (79) series primarily arranged by date and by the relation of the person to Sarah McIlvaine Muench. A. Paternal Side I. Ellmaker, Elias
Mennonite Church USA Historical Committee & Archives However, instead of accepting this Gift from God, we often commit violence against It appears that some Editors have decided, If it bleeds, it leads. http://www.mcusa-archives.org/library/resolutions/nooneshallmakethemafraid.html
Extractions: Jesus came that we might have life and have it abundantly (John 10:10). However, violence, the threat of violence, and the fear of violence permeate life in North America, often robbing us of this abundant life. Violence is also pervasive in our world. Perpetrated by individuals, groups, social systems, and governments, it leaves countless victims around the globe. For the purpose of this statement, violence is defined as the human exercise of physical, emotional, social, or technological power which results in injury or harm to oneself or others. The perpetrators of violence often exploit an imbalance of power to dominate, control, or use others. The various kinds of violence form a continuum. At one end are acts of physical violence, rape, incest, and sexual abuse, which result in serous psychological damage, severe bodily injury, and/or death. At the other end are acts of intimidation, threats, and emotional and verbal abuse, which result in fear and the destruction of personhood. Any form of human violence, wherever it might appear on the continuum, is an expression of evil. Violence was present in the first human family. Since then, the spirits of revenge, greed, and domination, along with unresolved anger, have multiplied violence many times. Violence alienates us from God and from each other, and the fear of violence is a prison in which our very souls shrivel.
Extractions: CHARLES SPRAGUE. At the middle of August, 1860, I visited the theatre of events described in the preceding chapter. I went down to Niagara Falls from Buffalo in a railway train on the afternoon of the 16th. A violent thunder-storm greeted our arrival at five oclock. As business, not pleasure, was my errand to that great gathering-place of the fashionable and of tourists in summer, I rode to the northern part of the village, and took lodgings at the quiet "Niagara House," where I found room in abundance in chamber and at table. On the following morning, accompanied by the late Colonel P. A. Porter, then a resident of Niagara Falls village, I crossed the suspension bridge, rode up the western bank of the river to Streets Creek, opposite Navy Island, and visited the battle-ground of Chippewa with Colonel Cummings, a surviving aid of the British general Riall, who commanded in that engagement. Of that visit and its results I shall write hereafter.
Extractions: OAS_AD('Top'); PICTORIAL FIELD-BOOK OF THE WAR OF 1812. BY BENSON J. LOSSING CHAPTER XXIV. THE WAR IN NORTHERN OHIO - CONSTRUCTION OF PERRY'S FLEET. Lawrence to be the Flag-ship. Lack of Men. Perrys Earnestness and Unselfishness. Relations of Chauncey and Perry. Erie menaced. Preparations for an Attack. Passage of Vessels over Erie Bar. First Cruise of Perrys Fleet. Re-enforcements under Captain Elliott. Islands around Put-in-Bay. Harrison visits Perry on his Flag-ship. Sickness in the Fleet. Put-in-Bay. A Reconnoissance by Perry. The Circumspection of the British commander. "Sound, oh sound Columbias shell! And beat the drums." C. L. S. JONES. While these events were occurring in the extreme Northwest, the naval preparations were going on vigorously at Presque Isle (Erie), and another and efficient arm of the service had been created, or rather materially strengthened. Richard M. Johnson, a representative of Kentucky in Congress, who had been with Harrison the previous autumn, had proposed to the Secretary of War the raising of a regiment of mounted men in his state, to traverse the Indian country from Fort Wayne along the upper end of Lake Michigan, round by the Illinois River, and back to the Ohio near Louisville. The secretary approved the plan, and early in January
Officer's Reports Our Gift can not begin to undo the damage done or replace the treasures lost . National Chairman, Buy Irish Committee Buy Irish Book Campaign http://www.aoh.com/reports/main99_02.htm
MS163 27th District); executive director, New Hampshire Committee for the Reelectionof the First Family Gift Register - Book. First Family Gift Register http://library.uncwil.edu/special/manuscripts/ms163.html
Extractions: The collection consists of political papers, photographs, notebooks, and memorabilia covering Mr. Jones' career in California and national staff politics from 1966-1978. His positions included assistant director of Republican Associates of Los Angeles County (California); field representative to Congressman Ed Reinecke (R-CA, 27 th District); assistant manager, Barry M. Goldwater, Jr., congressional campaign; administrative assistant to Congressman Goldwater (R-CA., 27 th District); executive director, New Hampshire Committee for the Re-election of the President (Richard M. Nixon, 1972); assistant and advance representative to President Gerald R. Ford, including world-wide travel for and with Ford performing advance duties in 1975-76, including the Bicentennial year and presidential election of 1976; and planning and executing a 1978 campaign rally for successful Virginia U.S. senatorial candidate John Warner, featuring President Ford (Warner was then married to actress Elizabeth Taylor). Included in this historical collection are many personal and official White House photographs, some unpublished, first edition newspapers, one of a kind posters, prints, special edition booklets and magazines . Each Presidential advance is documented with handwritten memos, diagrams covering all movement, letters, Secret Service and White House Communications assignments, and detailed timelines. There are no restrictions on this collection.
Davis H. Bays' 1897 Book, Part 2 plates had been translated by the Gift and power of God, and that the Book of TESTIMONY OF Mercy R. THOMPSON. SALT LAKE CITY, January 31, 1886. http://olivercowdery.com/smithhome/1880s-1890s/1897Bay2.htm
Extractions: Professor Anthon and Martin Harris The "words of a book" Joseph Smith's transcript presented to the Professor Read this, I pray thee I cannot read a sealed book Joseph Smith, not Martin Harris, made the statement Times and Seasons for May 2, 1842 Mr. Kelley states the case The Professor could not decipher the characters Characters were Egyptian, Chaldaic, Assyrian and Arabic Self-contradictory Correctly translated Professor Anthon's statement Contradicts Mr. Harris No other Witnesses The statements compared Smith-Harris testimony incompetent. H AVING discussed that portion of the question which relates to Isaiah's prophecy and its fulfillment in the history of the Israelitish people, I wish now to take up the claim respecting the presentation of certain characters by Martin Harris to Professor Charles Anthon, of New York City, for examination by that gentleman. These characters are said to have been transcribed from the plates of the Book of Mormon by Joseph Smith. This transcript was taken to the city and presented to the Professor, with the request to decipher them. This transcript is claimed to be the "words of a book," mentioned in Isaiah 29:11, and hence the fulfillment of the prophecy. As to the object of this interview all parties are agreed. But as to what was said and done at the time there is quite a difference. The statements of Professor Anthon differ very materially from those made by Mr. Harris. The statement of Mr. Harris has never been verified; in fact, there is no evidence that
American Poetry Full-Text Database: Bibliography With an ODE, in honour of the Pennsylvania Militia , and the small band of Gilman, Caroline Howard 17941888 1850, A Gift Book of stories and poems http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/efts/AmPo1/AmPo.bib.html
Extractions: Bibliography SEARCH Database Home Chadwyck-Healey The ARTFL Project ... Back to EFTS Adams, Oscar Fay 1855-1919 [ Post - Laureate Idyls and other poems by Oscar Fay Adams (Boston: D. Lothrop and Company, 1886 ) [ AdamsOF,PostLIA Adams, Oscar Fay 1855-1919 [ [The distressed poet, in] Pickings from Puck. Being a choice collection of preeminently perfect pieces, poems and pictures from Puck: Fifth Crop. The pieces and poems by R. K. Munkittrick, Williston Fish, W. J. Henderson, Bill Nye, Scott Way, P. H. Welch, J. H. Williams, E. Reed, Will J. Lampton, A. W. Munkittrick, F. E. Chase, E. Frank Lintaber, H. C. Dodge, Salem Dorchester, John Van de Bogert, F. Munan, W. E. S. Fales, R. W. Clarke, Ruth Hall, Eke Young, and others. The pictures by J. Keppler, F. Opper, C. Jay Taylor, Syd. B. Griffin, E. Zimmermann, J. A. Wales, M. Woolf, G. F. Ciani, A. B. Shults, J. S. Goodwin, C. G. Bush, and others. Fifth Crop AdamsOF,TheDPIP Adams, Oscar Fay 1855-1919 [ [Renunciation, in] Representative sonnets by American poets with an essay on the sonnet, its nature and history, including many notable sonnets of other literatures; also biographical notes, indexes, etc. By Charles H. Crandall (Boston; New York; Cambridge: Houghton, Mifflin and Company; The Riverside Press, 1890 ) [
Open Book: March 2004 Archives 3) If you d like any of our books as an Easter Gift, please order by Friday Thousands of East Timorese were still being held by Militia in camps in http://amywelborn.typepad.com/openbook/2004/03/
Extractions: var site="sm4openbook" Powered by TypePad Main Last year, I believe, there were a number of bloggers who were in the process of becoming Catholic at Easter. This year, there may be some, but I've not searched them out - and if you're out there - God bless you! I've been alerted to a new blog by someone who's beginning RCIA with an eye to Easter 2005! So go check it out and say hello. Permalink Comments (3) TrackBack A round-up of Passion-related confessions Permalink Comments (9) TrackBack Eileen McNamara says revoke the Church's tax-exempt status.
Open Book: July 2004 Archives Attacks by the Arab Janjaweed Militia, which is backed by the Khartoum Their deal isn t books, though it s Gift geegaws, and CBA is a big show for http://amywelborn.typepad.com/openbook/2004/07/
Extractions: var site="sm4openbook" Powered by TypePad Main From Toledo The monthly prayer session at Our Lady of Toledo Shrine, 655 South Coy Rd., Oregon, will start at 2 p.m. Aug. 7, but there will be no apparition of the Virgin Mary, according to a spokesman. Instead, a prayer service will start at 11:30 p.m. Aug. 15 with an apparition anticipated at midnight for the Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Shrine-goers are advised to bring a chair and arrive by 11:15 p.m.; all lights will be turned out when prayers begin at 11:30 p.m.
Mexican-American War And The Media RE45v41i77p2c5, January 3, 1845 To the Editors of the Enquirer Resolved,That the Committee on the Militia Laws enquire into the expediency of http://www.history.vt.edu/MxAmWar/Newspapers/RE/RE1845aJanJune.htm
WFNS: Winners Of The 2001 Atlantic Writing Awards The Brimer Award Committee of the Nova Scotia Library Association, This isher first Book; since its publication, Penguin Canada has published her novel http://www.writers.ns.ca/pr25may01.html
Extractions: May 25, 2001 The Brimer Award Committee of the Nova Scotia Library Association, the Steering Committee of the Dartmouth Book Awards, the Atlantic Independent Booksellers Association and the Writers' Federation of Nova Scotia are proud to announce the winners of the Richardson, Raddall, Ann Connor Brimer, Atlantic Poetry and Dartmouth Book, Booksellers Choice and Cunard First Book Awards. Recently reprinted by Nimbus Publishing, In the Wake of the Alderney: Dartmouth, Nova Scotia 1750-2000 provides the most up-to-date history of the city from the days of early settlement to a flourishing present. Harry Chapman is the author of several other books, including Sketches of Old Dartmouth Dartmouth's Day of Anguish and The Mustard Seeds . A regular contributor to Seniors' Advocate , he has worked as the Dartmouth editor and bureau chief of the Halifax Herald , managing editor of both the Dartmouth Free Press and Yarmouth's Fundy Group Publications, public information officer for the Nova Scotia Government and militia information officer for the Canadian Army Militia.
WFNS: Shortlist For 2001 Atlantic Writing Awards cover for Mercy Among the Children The Dartmouth Book Awards SteeringCommittee joined forces last year with WFNS and the NS Library Association to http://www.writers.ns.ca/pr23apr01.html
Extractions: Canada Book Day - April 23, 2001 17 remarkable books are in the running for this year's Atlantic writing prizes. The sheer diversity of imagination and subject matter is astonishing, ranging from the vaults of a lunatic asylum to the sere heat of North Africa to the 24th century. In announcing the shortlist on Canada Book Day, the organizers of the Atlantic Writing Awards look forward to promoting these writers in the weeks leading up to the Awards ceremony, Friday May 25, 4:30 pm, in the Alderney Landing Theatre in Nova Scotia. The awards are: the Evelyn Richardson Prize for Non-Fiction , the Atlantic Poetry Prize , the Ann Connor Brimer Award for Children's Literature , the Thomas Head Raddall Atlantic Fiction Prize , the Dartmouth Book Awards for Fiction and Non-fiction and the Booksellers Choice Award