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Knight's Mechanical Encyclopedia (ed. Knight) 6 0 Browse Search
The Atlanta (Georgia) Campaign: May 1 - September 8, 1864., Part I: General Report. (ed. Maj. George B. Davis, Mr. Leslie J. Perry, Mr. Joseph W. Kirkley) 1 1 Browse Search
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 7. (ed. Frank Moore) 1 1 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: January 22, 1863., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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The Atlanta (Georgia) Campaign: May 1 - September 8, 1864., Part I: General Report. (ed. Maj. George B. Davis, Mr. Leslie J. Perry, Mr. Joseph W. Kirkley), chapter 97 (search)
esborough, arriving there at dark. The regiment now has 170 enlisted men carrying muskets, and 13 commissioned officers. I cannot , close this report without giving credit to the brave officers and men of the command. For four months they have endured the campaign, and have always behaved themselves in a manner worthy the name of American soldiers. Great credit is due Major Widmer for the bravery and skill he has always displayed in his management of the skirmish line. The loss of Captain Doty, Captain Rynearson, and Captain Fitzsimmons is deeply felt by the regiment. They were gallant officers, and loved and respected by their men. I append a list of casualties. Nominal list (omitted) shows 3 officers and 22 men killed, 2 officers and 71 men wounded, and 5 men missing; total, 103. I am, captain, very respectfully, your obedient servant, Douglas Hapeman, Lieutenant-Colonel, Commanding Regiment. Capt. J. W. Ford, A. A. A. G., First Brig., First Div., 14th Army Corps
grants bound north to the mines, and here recruiting their animals. Here also was an encampment of several lodges of Shoshones (or Snake) Indians, numbering in all, including those who came in the next day, two hundred and fifty or three hundred. They were well mounted, and had grazing in the vicinity a considerable quantity of stock. These Indians were reliably represented to me as friendly and peaceable, and have been living at the ferry during the past winter. Being accompanied by Judge Doty, Superintendent of Indian Affairs for Utah, a conference was held with the Indians on the night of our arrival, attended by the chiefs, old and young men, and squaws. Through an interpreter many questions were asked as to the locality of hostile chiefs and their bands, and the power of Government duly impressed upon them. They were informed that the troops had been sent to this region to protect good Indians and whites, and equally to punish bad Indians and bad white men. That it was my
en in the figure. By this separation the lowest block for the time being is distinctly presented to the paper or envelope which is placed beneath it, and raised to the type by the treadle which raises the table a. Bowlus's addressing machine. Doty's addressing machine. Bowlus, May 1, 1860. The endless chain has type-boxes e, which have spring sides for clasping the forms, each of which constitutes an address. The forms are placed in a column in the feed-box A, are taken one at a time printing-roller M has a travelling apron which feeds the strip of paper to the forms, and the latter are cleansed, as they return in the reversed position, by the rotary brush N, which rotates in the wash-tub O, and in contact with the type. Doty, January 26, 1864. This machine is for cutting off addresses from a strip of paper previously printed and gummed on the respective sides. The strip is fed from a spool O, and is drawn over the concave bed K by the oscillating arm F, whose finger
educed to the state of sesquioxide, and remains with the iron and a portion of the alumina base, firmly united with the tissue. Oscillating tan-vat. 3. The alum process consists in applying to the skins a saturated solution of alum and salt, followed by dressings of flour, yolk of eggs, oil, etc. See tawing. Plunging-vat. For tanning in vacuo, see patents: — No.Name.Date.No.Name.Date. 23,360.Fergusson.Mar. 29, 185960,524.Johnston.Dec. 18, 1866 29,656.AldrichAug 21, 186075,391DotyMar 10, 1868 48,361.Brewer et al.June 27, 186584,190.HosmerNov. 17, 1868 Rotary-movement tan-vat. Symonds' process for utilizing the useful matters which are not withdrawn from the bark by steeping, consists in burning the spent bark and conducting the products of combustion into a trough filled with water, where the solid and soluble portions are retained. Tan′ning-appa-ra′tus. A vat with devices for moving the hides in the liquor, or for circulating the liquid about the hides, <
From Nassau, N. P. --An arrival at Charleston, S. C., brings Nassau dates to the 10th inst. Rev. Moses D. Hoge, of Richmond, had arrived there safely, and would shortly sail for England. Sam Whiting, U. S. Consul at Nassau, had been recalled, on complaint of the Governor, for getting drunk and abusing Queen Victoria and her subjects in a violent manner. A Mr. Doty, of the staff of Gov. Morgan, of New York, has been appointed his successor. Sam published a card before he left thanking some friends for a serenade of U. S. national tunes, which "were so rarely heard in Nassau." A citizen of Charleston, S. C., who reached Nassau a few days since thus writes to the Courier: The sentiment appears to be all one way; the natives of the North living here are mostly pro- Southern, or at least in favor of peace; and, more strange than all, the negroes — the victims of British "freedom"--throw up their hats for "Dixie" I have talked with a number of intelligent Northern gent