Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: June 16, 2025
That exception is, however, no unimportant one. In our view, it is the crowning excellence of the first volume, its distinctive feature and principal attraction. We refer to the third chapter of the volume, from page 260 to page 398, the description of the condition of England at the period of the accession of James II. We know of nothing like it in the entire range of historical literature.
The public expenditures during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1858, amounted to $81,585,667.76, of which $9,684,537.99 were applied to the payment of the public debt and the redemption of Treasury notes with the interest thereon, leaving in the Treasury on July 1, 1858, being the commencement of the present fiscal year, $6,398,316.10.
Bulletin No. 44 of the Department of Agriculture gives the residuum of an exhausting examination of 3,398 warbler stomachs, from seventeen species of birds, and the result is: 94.99 per cent of insect food, mostly bad insects, too, and 5.01 per cent vegetable food. What more can any forester ask of a bird? THE SPARROWS. All our sparrows are great consumers of weed seeds.
So far back as 1875 a real uneasiness began to be felt as to the future supplies of box. In the Gardeners' Chronicle for September 25, of that year, page 398, it is said that the boxwood forests of Mingrelia in the Caucasian range were almost exhausted.
The aggregate traffic on our railroads for the year 1891 amounted to 704,398,609 tons of freight, compared with 691,344,437 tons in 1890, an increase of 13,054,172 tons.
The development of the United States as a commercial power was seen in the increased use of consuls as agents for procuring and publishing industrial and commercial information. Cf. Fish, American Diplomacy, 398. For later aspects of the controversy, see below, pp. 532-533. Cf. map p. 10.
That exception is, however, no unimportant one. In our view, it is the crowning excellence of the first volume, its distinctive feature and principal attraction. We refer to the third chapter of the volume, from page 260 to page 398, the description of the condition of England at the period of the accession of James II. We know of nothing like it in the entire range of historical literature.
Robertson, N. and H. i. 392; and see Lamon, 398; also see remarks of von Holst, vi. 277. Lincoln and Douglas Deb. 93. W.P. Fessenden, "who," says Mr. Blaine, "always spoke with precision and never with passion," expressed his opinion that if Fremont had been elected instead of Buchanan, that decision would never have been given. Twenty Years of Congress, i. 133.
The report of the Secretary of the Treasury gives a full and interesting exhibit of the financial condition of the country. It shows that the ordinary revenues from all sources for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1883, amounted to $398,287,581.95, whereof there was received From customs $214,706,496.93 From internal revenue 144,720,368.98 From sales of public lands 7,955,864.42
Middlesex 3 73 London within the walls and without 120 Surrey 6 140 Sussex 18 312 Kent 17 398 Cambridge 4 163 Bedford 9 13 Huntingdon 5 78 Rutland 2 47 Berkshire 11 150 Northampton 10 326 Buckingham 11 196 Oxford 10 216 Southampton 18 248 Dorset 19 279 Norfolk 26 625 Suffolk 25 575 Essex 18 415
Word Of The Day
Others Looking