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Encyclopedia Americana, Volume 14

Hot Springs
Hot Springs, Ark., City And County-seat Of Garland County, And One Of The Most Famous Sanatoriums Of The United States, In The South Eastern Centre Of The State, 55 Miles Southwest Of Little Rock And 397 Miles From Saint Louis. On The Saint Louis, Iron Mountain And South Ern, The ...

Hotels In America
Hotels In America. The Public House, Or Hotel, Was Established In The Early Days Of The Colonies To Afford Accommodation For Those Who Might Be Compelled To Journey From One Place To Another. As Roads Were Poor, In Those Days, And Stage Transportation Was Slow, Many Of These Houses Were ...

Hottentots
Hottentots, Hot'en-tots, An African Race, The Aboriginal Occupants Of The South End Of That Continent, Near The Cape Of Good Hope. The Name Now Given To The Whole Race Was That Of The Tribe In The Immediate Vicinity Of The Cape Of Good Hope, With Which The Dutch Settlers First ...

Houdon
Houdon, Jean Antoine, Zhon Oo-don, French Sculptor: B. Versailles, 20 March 1741; D. Paris, 15 July 1828. Having Gained The First For Sculpture In The Ecole Des Eleves Proteges At Paris In 1761, He Went In 1764 To Italy Where He Studied At The Academy In Rome Until The Latter ...

House
House, Edward H., American Author, Journalist And Musician: B. About 1843; D. Tokio 18 Dec. 1908. Prominent In Promoting Friendship Between Japan And The United States And In Interpreting The Men Of The Two Civili Zations To Each Other, Reaching The English Speaking World Through His Brilliant Writings. Educated At ...

House Ant
House Ant. See Red Ant. A Combination Of Boat And House, Used Largely As Pleasure Craft On Rivers, Canals And Lakes In Great Britain, The United States And Other Parts Of The World. While Palatial House-boats Were Used By Roman Em Perors And Have Been In Continuous Use In China ...

House Of Representatives
House Of Representatives, The Branch Of Most State Legislatures, And Of Congress, Which Has The More Numerous Mem Bers, Elected From Smaller Districts, And In Some Cases For Shorter Terms. Congress — According To The First Article Of The Constitution —con Sists Of A Senate And House Of Representa Tives. ...

House Of The Seven
House Of The Seven Gables. A Romance Written By Nathaniel Hawthorne Immediately After The 'scarlet Letter' (q.v.) And Published In 1852. The Scene Is Laid In Salem, The Author's Native Town, Which He Had Quitted For A Residence In Western Massachu Setts When His Fellow Townsmen Became In Censed Over ...

House_2
House, Edward Mandell, Universally Known As Colonel House, Personal Representa Tive Of President Wilson To European Govern Ments During The War: B. Houston, Tex., 26 July 1856. His Father, Thomas William House, Was An Englishman Who Settled In Texas And There Built A Mansion In Which He Lived With His ...

Houston
Houston, Sam, American Soldier And Statesman: B. Near Lexington, Va., 2 March 1793; D. Huntsville, Tex., 26 July 1863. In 1806, After The Death Of His Father, The Family Moved To Tennessee. Some Years Later He Left Home, Crossed The Tennessee River And Took Up His Abode With The Indians, ...

Houston
Houston, Tex., City And County-seat Of Harris County, On The Houston Ship Channel And The Houston And Texas Central; Galveston, Harrisburg And San Antonio; Texas And New Orleans; Beaumont, Sour Lake And Western; Houston East And West Texas; International And Great Northern; Trinity And Brazos Val Ley; San Antonio And ...

Hovey
Hovey, Richard, American Poet: B. Nor Mal, Ill., 4 May 1864; D. New York, 24 Feb. 1900. He Was Graduated At Dartmouth 1885, Studied Theology For A Year, But Soon Went Abroad And Led A Bohemian Life, Being In Turn Actor, Journalist, Dramatist And Poet, And Finally Lecturer On English ...

Howard
Howard, John, English Philanthropist: B. Probably Hackney, 2 Sept. 1726; D. Kherson, Russia, 20 Jan. 1790. From 1742-70 He Made Repeated Journeys To The Continent. In 1756 He Became A Member Of The Royal Society. In 1773 He Was Appointed High Sheriff Of Bed Fordshire, When The Subject Of Prison ...

Howard_2
Howard, Oliver Otis, American Gen Eral: B. Leeds, Me., 8 Nov. 1830; D. 1909. He Was Graduated From Bowdoin In 1850, And From West Point In 1854. He Was Then As Signed To The Ordnance Department Of The Regu Lar Army, Served In Florida Against The Semi Noles And Was ...

Howe
Howe, Elias, Juttioa, American Inventor: B. Spencer, Mass., 9 July 1819; D. Brooklyn, N. Y., 3 Oct. 1867. He Lived With His Father, Who Was Both Farmer And Miller, Till 1836, Work Ing Upon The Farm And In The Mill And Attend Ing The District School During The Winters. He ...

Howe_2
Howe, John, English Puritan Divine: B. Loughborough, Leicestershire, 17 May 1630; D. London, 2 April 1705. He Was Educated At Christ's College, Cambridge, And Magdalen Col Lege, Oxford, Of Which Latter He Was A Fellow And Chaplain. About 1654 He Was Appointed Per Petual Curate Of Great Torrington, Devonshire; In ...

Howe_3
Howe, Joseph, Canadian Journalist, Orator And Statesman: B. North West Arm, Halifax, 13 Dec. 1804; D. Halifax, 1 June 1873. He Was The Son Of John Howe, A United Empire Loyal Ist, The Deputy Postmaster-general Of Nova Scotia And Founder Of The Weekly Chronicle. He Learned The Art Of Printing ...

Howe_4
Howe, Julia Ward, American Author And Philanthropist: B. New York, 27 May 1819; D. Middletown. R. I., 17 Oct. 1910. She Was Care Fully Educated And In 1843 She Married S. G. Howe (q.v.) Of Boston And Immediately Be Came Active In Philanthropical Work. Their Home Quickly Became A Centre ...

Howe_5
Howe, Samuel Gridley, American Phi Lanthropist: B. Boston, 10 Nov. 1801; D. There, 9 Jan. 1876. He Was Graduated From Brown University In 1821, Which Later Gave Him The Honorary Degree Of Ll.d., And From The Har Vard Medical School In 1824. Immediately After Completing His Studies He Joined The ...

Howells
Howells, William Dean, American Novelist, Poet And Critic: B. Martin's Ferry, Ohio, 1 March 1837. During His Boyhood His Father Owned And Published Daily Papers In Hamilton And Dayton, Ohio, Successively, And He Learned The Printer's Trade And Gradually The Whole Business Of Conducting A Newspaper. In 1851 He Was ...

Howitt
Howitt, William And Mary, English Au Thors Commonly Named Together; The One Pub Lishing 50 Works And The Other Over 100. Wu. Liam (b. Heanor, Derbyshire, 18 Dec. 1792; D. Rome, Italy, 3 March 1879), Showed Such A Bias To Literature That He Published Verses At 13. In 1821 He ...

Hozier
Hozier, Pierre D', Seigneur De La Garde, French Genealogist : B. Marseilles, 10 July 1592; D. Paris, 1 Dec. 1660. He Acquired A Prodigious Knowledge Of The Histories Of Principal Families And Of Heraldry, And In 1616 Began Genealog Ical Researches. In 1628 The King Honored Him With The Order ...

Hrabanus Maurus
Hrabanus Maurus. See Rabames Maurus. Hrdlidka, Dlich'ka, Ales, American An Thropologist: B. Humpoletz, Bohemia, 30 March 1869. After A Preliminary Education In Bo Hemia He Emigrated To The United States And Undertook Studies At The Eclectic College And The Homeopathic College. His Work Led Him To Undertake Special Research Among ...

Hubbard
Hubbard, Leonidas, Jr., American Jour Nalist, Writer And Explorer: B. Waldron, Mich., 12 July 1872; D. Labrador, 18 Oct. 1903. He Was A Teacher In The Public School At Angola, Ind., While Still In His Teens And Early In Life Showed Keen Interest In Writing, Exploration And Athletics. He Was ...

Hubnerite
Hubnerite. A Mineral Consisting Of Manganese Tungstate, Mnwo4, Containing 76.6 Per Cent Of Tungsten Trioxide When Pure. A Source Of Tungsten, Ferrotungsten And Sodium Tungstate. Mined In Places Near Diagoon And From Quartz Veins In Granite At Arivaca, Ariz. In Colorado Occurs In Gold Ore At Leadville, And Mined In ...

Huch
Huch, Hoog', Ricarda, German Novelist: B. Braunschweig, 18 July 1864. She Lost Her Parents Early And Was Educated By Her Grand Mother, To Whom She Dedicated Her Drama 'evoe' (1892). This Is An Historical Renaissance Drama And Has Been Called An Overture To Her Later Works. Being Desirous Of Obtaining ...

Hudibras
Hudibras. This Satirical Mock-epic By Samuel Butler, Perhaps The Wittiest Poem Ever Written In The English Language, Consists Of 11,000 Lines Of So-called Verse (iambic Tetrameter, With Burlesque Rhymes), And Is Divided Into Three Parts, Each Of Several Cantos. The Action, Which Fills Only About 1,800 Lines, Is Constantly Interrupted ...

Hudson
Hudson, The Largest River In The State Of New York, Has Its Head Waters In Hamilton And Essex Counties, And Flows Southwest Into Saratoga County, Then Nearly Directly East To Sandy Hill In Washington County, And From This Point South Through New York Bay Into The Atlantic Ocean. It Is ...

Hudson
Hudson, Henry, English Navigator. (some Authorities Gave His Name As Hendrick). The Time And Place Of His Birth Appear To Be Lost. We Only Know That He Had Earned, Per Haps By The Time He Was 40, Sufficient Reputa Tion As A Bold And Skilful Navigator To Be Placed In ...

Hudsons Bay Company
Hudson's Bay Company, The Great Fur-trading And Later Landholding And Adminis Trative Company Of Northwest Canada, Incor Porated 1670. It Originated In The Dissatisfac Tion Of Two French Protestant Employees Of The French Fur-trading Monopoly At Quebec, Gro Seilliers And Radisson, Over Its Unwillingness To Extend The Trade To Hudson ...

Huelva
Huelva, Warva, Spain. (1) A Maritime Province In The Southwest, Bounded On The North By Badajos; On The East By Seville; South By The Gulf Of Cadiz, And West By Portugal. The Sierra De Aracena Cross The Province In A Southwesterly Direction. The Chief Rivers Are The Guadalquivir And The ...

Huerta
Huerta, Victorian, Mexican Military Officer And President: B. Colotlin, Jalisco, 23 Dec. 1854; D. El Paso, Tex., 13 Jan. 1916. He Was A Full-blooded Indian And Prided Him Self On His Ancestry. At The Age Of 17 He Was Made Secretary To General Guerra And Soon Afterward Was Admitted To ...

Huesca
Huesca, Wrska, Spain. (1) A Province Of Northern Spain, Formed In 1833 Of Districts Once Belonging To Aragon; Bounded On The North By France, West And Southwest By Sara Gossa, Southeast By Lerida And Northwest By Navarre. The Pyrenees Traverse The Northern Part, Reaching An Altitude At Monte Perdido Of ...

Huffcut
Huffcut, Ernest William, American Lawyer And Educator: B. Kent, Conn., 1860; D. 1907. He Studied Law At Cornell University, Being Graduated In 1888. He Then Established A Practice In Minneapolis, Minn. (1888-90), Which He Abandoned For The Chair Of Law At Indiana University (1890-92). From 1892 93 He Taught At ...

Huggins
Huggins, Lifig'inz, Sir William, English Astronomer: B. London, 7 Feb. 1824; D. There, 12 May 1910. He Was Educated At City Of Lon Don School, And In 1856 Erected An Observatory At Tulse Hill, In Northeastern Surrey. When In 1859 Professor Kirchoff Of The University Of Heidelberg Announced The True ...

Hugh
Hugh, Hit, Saint, Of Avalon, Bishop Of Lincoln: B. About 1140; D. London, 16 Nov. 1200. When Hugh Was A Young Child, About Eight Years Old, His Father, Lord Of Avalon, Re Tired With Him To The Monastery At Villard Benoitt Near Grenoble. Here He Received His Early Training; And ...

Hughes
Hughes, Charles Evans, Americanju Rist: B. Glens Falls, N. Y., 11 April 1862. He Attended The Public Schools And Madison, Now Colgate, University, 1876-78, And Was Graduated From Brown University In 1881; He Then Taught Greek And Latin In The Academy, Delhi, N. Y., Studying Law At The Same Time. ...

Hughes_2
Hughes, David Edward, English-amer Ican Inventor: B. London, 16 May 1831; D. There, 22 Jan. 1900. When Very Young Came With His Parents To The United States, Of Which He Became A Citizen. He Was Educated At Saint Joseph's College, Bardstown, Ky., Where He Was Appointed Professor Of Music (1850) ...

Hughes_3
Hughes, John, American Roman Catholic Prelate: B. Annaloghan, County Tyrone, Ire Land, 24 June 1797; D. New York, 3 Jan. 1864. His Parents Were Poor But Made Sacrifices To Give Him The Opportunity Of Acquiring An Ele Mentary Education; And By His Own Efforts He Continued His Studies So That ...

Hughes_4
Hughes, Thomas, English Author: B. Uffington, Berkshire, 20 Oct. 1823; D. Brighton, Sussex, 22 March 1896. He Was Educated At Rugby And Oxford, Later Studied Law At Lin Coln's Inn, Was Called To The Bar Of The Inner Temple In 1848, And Began Practice At Once. In 1869 He Was ...

Hugo
Hugo, We (fr. Irgo), Victor Marie, French Poet And Novelist: B. Besancon, 26 Feb. 1802; D. Paris, 22 May 1885. Major Hugo, His Father, Having Entered The Service Of Joseph Bonaparte, King Of Italy And Afterward Of Spain, Victor's Earlier Years Were Partly Spent In These Countries. At The Age ...

Huguenots
Huguenots, Hirge-ndts, A Term Of Un Known Origin, Believed To Be A Diminutive Of The Personal Name Hugo, Applied To The Protes Tants Of France During The Religious Straggles Of The 16th And 17th Centuries. During The Early Part Of The 16th Century The Doctrine Of Calvin, Notwithstanding The Opposition ...

Huguenots In America
Huguenots In America. The French Protestant Settlements In The New World Divide Themselves Into Two Classes : Those Of Choice (or At Least With Time And Opportunity To Make Choice) And Those Of Necessity. The Former Extend From The Middle Of The 16th Century Down To The Capture Of New ...

Huguenots_2
Huguenots, The, A Dramatic Opera In Five Acts By Giacomo Meyerheer, Libretto By Augustin Scribe And Deschamps. This Is Re Garded As The Best Of Meyerbeer's Operatic Compositions, The Music Being Intensely Dra Matic, With Brilliant Orchestration And Fine Themes. The Subject Is The Persecution Of The Protestants By The ...

Hull
Hull, Isaac, American Commodore: B. Derby, Conn., 9 March 1773; D. Philadelphia, 13 Feb. 1843. He Commenced His Career In The Merchant Service, And Was Commissioned As Lieu Tenant In The Navy At The Commencement Of Hos Tilities With France In 1798. In 1800, When First Lieutenant Of The Constitution, ...

Hull_2
Hull, William, American Soldier: B. Derby, Conn., 24 June 1753; D. Newton. Mass., 29 Nov. 1825. He Was Graduated At Yale Col Lege In 1772, Then Taught School And Studied Theology For One Year, But Finally Studied Law At Litchfield, Conn., And Was Admitted To The Bar In 1775. He ...

Hull_3
Hull, Officially Hull, England, A City, River Port, Municipal And Parliamentary Borough, And Self-contained County, Situated In The East Riding Of York, On The North Shore Of The Estuary Of The Humber, Where It Is Joined By The Hull, 34 Miles East Southeast Of York. Its Total Area In Land ...

Hullah
Hullah, John Pyle, English Musical Composer: B. Worcester, 27 June 1812; D. Lon Don, 21 Feb. 1884. In 1833 He Entered The Royal Academy Of Music. His First Important Com Position, An Opera Entitled 'the Village Co Quettes,' Of Which The Words Were By Charles Dickens, Was Successfully Produced At ...

Humanism 1
Humanism. (1) That Phase Of The Re Naissance Which Consisted In A Renewed Study Of The So-called Humanities— The Latin And Greek Classics. Like The Entire Movement Of The Renaissance, Humanism Had Its Source In Italy, Which Had At All Times Maintained A Con Tinuous (through Often A Slender) Tradition ...

Humanism And Historiography 1
. Humanism And Historiography 1. The Renaissance And Humanism.— Re Cent Research And A More Critical Examination Of The Intellectual Currents Of European His Tory Have Profoundly Modified The Exaggerated Opinions Of Burckhardt And Symonds With Re Gard To The Relation Of The So-called °renais Sance* To The Development Of ...

Humboldt
Humboldt, Hilm'bolt (ger. Boom'bolt), Friedrich Heinrich Alexander, Baron Von, German Traveler And Naturalist: B. Berlin, 14 Sept. 1769; D. There, 6 May 1859. His Father Was Chamberlain To The King Of Prussia. He Studied At The Universities Of Frankfort-on-the Oder, Berlin And Gottingen, And In 1790 Traveled Along The Rhine ...

Humboldt_2
Humboldt, Karl Wilhelm, Baron Vox, German Statesman And Philologist, Brother Of The Preceding: B. Potsdam, 22 June 1767; D. Tegel Near Spandau, 8 April 1835. He Studied Law At Berlin, At Frankfort-on-the-oder And At Gottingen, And At The Same Time Devoted Equal Attention To Antiquities, Esthetics And The Phi Losophy ...

Hume
Hume, David, Scottish Historian And Meta Physician; B. Edinburgh, 26 April 1711; D. There, 26 Aug. 1776. He Appears To Have Entered The University Of Edinburgh At 12 And To Have Left At 14 Or 15 Without Taking A Degree. He Began The Study Of Law, But Abandoned It First ...

Hummel
Hummel, Johann Nyomuck, Austro Hungarian Composer And Pianist : B. Pressburg, 14 Nov. 1778; D. Weimar, 17 Oct. 1837. His Father Became Music-director In One• Of The Theatres Of Vienna, And Removed His Family There When The Boy Was Seven Years Old. In Vienna He Attracted The Notice Of Mozart, ...

Humming Birds
Humming-birds, A Family Of Small Birds, ..the Trocisilider, Closely Allied To The Swifts, Peculiar To America And Almost Exclu Sively Tropical. They Are Distinguished By Small Size,• Iridescent Plumage, Long Slender Bill And• The Peculiar Form Of The Tongue, Which Con Sidts Of A Double Tube Tapering And Separating At ...

Humphreys
Humphreys, Andrew Atkinson, Amer Ican Soldier: B. Philadelphia, Pa., 2 Nov. 1810; D. Washington, D. C., 27 Dec. 1883. He Was A Grandson Of Joshua Humphreys (q.v.) And Was Graduated At West Point 1831, Receiving A Com Mission In The Artillery. He Took Part In The Seminole War. Resigning In ...

Humphreys_2
Humphreys, David, American Writer And Diplomat: B. Derby, Conn, 10 July 1752; D. New Haven, 21 Feb. 1818. 14e Was Educated At Yale And Graduated In 1771; After Teaching For A Few Years He Entered The Army At The Be Ginning Of The Revolutionary War, Serving As Aide-de-camp To Generals ...

Humphry Clinker
Humphry Clinker. (humphry Clinker,' The Last Of Smollett's Novels, Was Published In 1771, Just Before The Author's Death. It Is The Story Of A Welsh Gentleman Named Matthew Bramble, A Crusty, Bachelor Who, Suffering From Gout And Imaginary Dis Eases, Makes A Tour Of England And Scotland In Order To ...

Hunan
Hunan, Hoo'nan, China, An Inland Prov Ince, Bounded On The North By Hupeh, On The East By Kiangsi, On The South By Kwangsi And Kwangtung And On The West By Kweichau And Szechuan. The Country Is Hilly, With Con Siderable Elevation In The South, Southeast And Along The Western Border. ...

Hundred Years War
Hundred Years' War, The Name Given To The Prolonged Struggle Between France And England Which Began In 1337 And Ended In 1453. Among The Chief Of The Immediate Causes Of The War Was Edward Iii's Claim To The French Throne, But The Keen Rivalry Of The Two Nations Rendered Conflict ...

Huneker
Huneker, James Gibbons, American Musical And Dramatic Critic: B. Philadelphia, 31 Jan. 1860. In Paris He Was A Pupil Of Barili, Ritter And Dontrcleau, And Subsequently Became An Instructor In Piano At The National Conservatory Of New York. He Was Musical And Dramatic Critic Of The New York Recorder In ...

Hungary
Hungary (in Hungarian, Magyar Orszig, *land Of The Magyars*); Germ., Ungain; Fr., La Hongrie; Ital., Ungheria; Turk., Magyaristan; Latin, Hungaria: A Country In The Middle Of The Southern Half Of Europe, Lying In The Basin Of The Danube. Until The Break-up Of The Austrian Empire In October 1918, The Then ...

Hungary And The War
Hungary And The War. It Is Too Early Yet To Weigh — With Even Approximate Ac Curacy — The Influence And Responsibility Of Hungary In Provoking The War And Abetting The Designs Of Austria And Germany. Two Cir Cumstances, However, Seem To Be Clearly Re Vealed: Whereas Austria Was Drawn ...

Hunt
Hunt, Richard Morris, American Archi Tect: B. Brattleboro, Vt., 31 Oct. 1828; D. New Port, R. I., 31 July 1895. He Began The Study Of Architecture In Europe At An Early Age, At Tended The Ecole Des Beaux-arts In Paris, Traveled In Germany, Italy, Asia Minor And Egypt, And Under ...

Hunt
Hunt, Henry Jackson, American Soldier: B. Detroit, Mich., 14 Sept. 1819; D. Washington, D. C., 11 Feb. 1899. He Was Graduated From West Point In 1839, Receiving A Commission In The Artillery. He Saw Service In The Canadian Rebellion 1837-38; Afterward In The Mexican War. In General Scott's Advance On ...

Hunt_2
Hunt, Thomas Sterry, American Chemist, Mineralogist And Geologist: B. Norwich, Conn., 5 Sept. 1826; D. New York, 12 Feb. 1892. In 1845 He Became An Assistant To The Elder Rh Man At Yale College; Was Chemist And Miner Alogist To The Canadian Geological Survey 1847-52, Professor Of Chemistry At Laval ...

Hunt_3
Hunt, William Holman, English Painter Of Religious Subjects: B. London, .2 April 1827; D. There, 7 Sept. 1910. He Studied At The Royal Academy In 1845, And Next Year Exhibited His First Picture, 'hark!) Repre Senting A Child Holding A Watch To Her Ear. His Early Years As An Artist ...

Hunter
Hunter, John, British Surgeon And Phys Ologist : B. Long Calderwood, Lanarkshire, 13 Feb. 1728; D. London, 16 Oct. 1793. He Was A Younger Brother Of William Hunter (q.v.). In 1749 And 1750 He Studied Surgical Pathology At Chelsea Hospital, London, And Already Began To Make Original Observations, Which, His ...

Hunter_2
Hunter, Robert Mercer Taliaferro, American Statesman: B. Essex County, Va., 21 April 1809; D. 18 July 1887. He Was Graduated At The University Of Virginia, And, Choosing The Law For His Profession, Commenced Practice In 1830. He Soon Began To Take An Active Part In Politics, And At 24 Was ...

Hunting
Hunting, The Pursuing Of Wild Animals As A Sport. Hunting For The Market Is Termed Pot-hunting. Among Sportsmen Certain Con Ventionalities Obtain, And The Hunter Who Does Not Observe These Unwritten Rules Is Stigma Tized As Unsportsmanlike. Within Comparatively Recent Years The In Discriminate Slaughter Of Wild Game Has Moved ...

Huntington
Huntington, Collis Potter, American Capitalist: B. Harwinton, Conn., 22 Oct. 1821; D. Pine Knot Camp, Near Lake Raquette, N. Y., 13 Aug. 1900. He Worked On His Father's Farm, Until His 14th Year. In His 16th Year He Pro Cured Credit In New York For $3,000 Worth Of Clocks And ...

Huntsville
Huntsville, Ala., City And County Seat Of Madison County, On The Nashville, Chattanooga And Saint Louis And The Southern Railroads, 96 Miles Due North Of Birmingham, 97 Miles Due West Of Chattanooga, 125 Miles South Of Nashville And 210 Miles East Of Mem Phis. The City Is Located In The ...

Huron
Huron, Lake, One Of The Great Lakes On The Boundary Between The United States And Canada. Canada Is On The North And East, Canada And Michigan On The South And Michi Gan On The West. It Receives The Waters Of Lake Superior Through The Saint Mary's River, And The Waters ...

Hurt
Hurt, U-v, Pierre Daniel, French Roman Catholic Scholar: B. Caen, 1630; D. Paris, 1721. After Studying At The Jesuit School At Caen, He Went To Paris In 1651. In The Following Year His Friend And Teacher, Samuel Bochart, Was Invited To The Court' Of Queen Christina At Stockholm, Whither Huet ...

Husband And Wife
Husband And Wife. The Legisla Tion Of The Past 50 Or 60 Years, Beginning With The Married Woman's Property Acts Of The 40's In The Last Century, Have Profoundly Affected The Rights And Obligations Of The Parties To A Marital Contract, With Respect To Each Other As Well As With ...