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Lane. LEWIS, GERTRUDE RUSSELL. *Designer of Dawns, A. Pilgrim Press. MCCLUNG, NELLIE L. Next of Kin, The. Houghton-Mifflin. MACKAY, HELEN. *Journal of Small Things. Duffield. MEIROVITZ, JOSEPH M. Path of Error, The. Four Seas Co. MERWIN, SAMUEL. Temperamental Henry. Bobbs-Merrill. NEWTON, ALMA. Memories. Duffield. NOBLE, EDWARD. Outposts of the Fleet. Houghton-Mifflin.
McClung as the principal speaker. On June 9 in the rotunda of the Capitol at St. Paul an impressive program of addresses and ringing resolutions was given, 3,000 people taking part in this celebration of the submission of the Federal Suffrage Amendment by Congress on the 4th. A. L. Searle marshalled the 250 gaily decorated automobiles carrying the Minneapolis delegates, accompanied by a band.
Paul took place in May, 1870, when the old Concert Hall building on Third street, near Market, was destroyed. Concert Hall was built by the late J.W. McClung in 1857, and the hall in the basement was one of the largest in the city. The building was three stories high in front and six or seven on the river side. It was located about twenty-five feet back from the sidewalk.
We fought until 9 o'clock, A. M., capturing 40 prisoners and killed 9 rebels, among them a Capt. McClung. Our loss was two killed and a few wounded. Then falling back, we struck the railroad east of the place where we again commenced tearing up the track. We were saluted with the enemy's artillery until noon, shelling the woods we had left.
"This is our fishin' place," Toby volunteered. "We fishes here in summer, and lives in the house where you sees the smoke. The other houses belongs to Mr. McClung from Newfoundland. The mail boat were takin' he and three men that fishes with he, and their gear, and they takes Dad's fish, too." "You stay here, don't you?
Automobile speaking trips were made. Money, organizers and speakers were contributed to the Iowa campaign. In December, 1917, the convention again met in Minneapolis with Mrs. Nellie McClung of Edmonton, Alberta, as speaker. Pledges were made of $8,000 for State work and $3,000 to the National Association as the State's apportionment.
McClung, in his valuable Sketches of Western Adventure, in describing this sanguinary battle, speaks of the Indians fighting from behind a breastwork; Stone, in his Life of Brant, says the Indians were forced to avail themselves of a rude breastwork of logs and brushwood, which they had taken the precaution to construct for the occasion.
At any rate, he strongly urged the necessity of reconnoitering the ground carefully before the main body crossed the river." McClung, in his "Western Adventures," doubts whether the plan of operation proposed by Colonel Boone would have been more successful than that actually adopted; suggesting that the enemy would have cut them off in detail, as at Estill's defeat.
"About the same time," says McClung, "Captain James Ward, at present a highly-respectable citizen of Mason County, Kentucky, was descending the Ohio, under circumstances which rendered a rencontre with the Indians peculiarly to be dreaded.
Some of the names heard then have never been forgotten by me. There was the giant Heffelfinger whom every one seemed anxious to meet. I was told that he was the crack Yale guard. I looked at him, and, then and there, I joined the hero worshippers. I also remember Lee McClung, the Yale captain, who seemed to realize the responsibilities that rested upon his shoulders.
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