26 PRICE LIST 50 4TH EDITION 



CRITTENDEN, JOHN JORDAN. 



Calendar of papers of John Jordan Critte'nden ; prepared from original man- 

 uscripts in Library of Congress by C. N. Feamster. 1913. 335 pages, 

 large 8 Cloth, 60c. LC 4.2 : C 86 



Crittenden was born In 1787, lived in Kentucky, was a Henry Clay Whig in 

 politics, and held many public places. He resigned from the United States 

 Senate in 1819, 1841, and 1848, probably holding the record as a resigning Senator. 

 He was Attorney General in the elder Harrison's Cabinet and also in Fillmore's. 

 He was nominated for Justice of the Supreme Court, but failed of confirmation. 

 He was Governor of Kentucky. He was Senator from Kentucky in the years imme- 

 diately preceding the war between the States, and then came most prominently 

 before the public because of his earnest efforts to compromise the difficulties be- 

 tween North and South, and thus prevent civil war. When the war came, two of 

 his sons joined the armies, one on the northern and one on the southern side, both 

 becoming generals. 



See also Grant, II. S. 



DAKOTA; by P. M. McClure. (In Commerce and Navigation, 1889, vol, 2, pages 

 131 to 167. ) Cloth, 70c. T 37.1 : 889 s 



History, description, transportation and resources. 

 See also South Dakota. 



DAUGHTERS OF AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 



The primary objects of this society are the preservation of historic places, 

 objects, and records pertaining to the American Revolution, and the erection of 

 monuments on historic sites. The annual reports are replete with Revolutionary 

 lore and plates showing monuments, inscriptions and relics. 



This society was incorporated by act of Congress in 1896, with headquarters in 

 the District of Columbia in the magnificent Continental Hall, which has since been 

 erected. 



Report SI 5.1 : 



[1st, Oct. 11] 1890 to [Oct. 11] 1897. 129 pages, illus. Paper, 25c. 



2d, 1898. 340 pages, illus. (56th Cong., 1st sess., S. Doc. 425. Bound 

 with other docs.;' serial no. 3877.) Cloth, $1.25. 



3d. 1000. 5GO pages, illus.. map. Cloth, $1.25. 



4th, 1901. 506 pages, illus., man. Cloth, $1.25. 



5th, 1902. 526 pages, illus., maps. Paper, $1.00; cloth, $1.25. 



6th, 1903. 475 pages, illus. Paper, 50c. 



Same. (58th Cong., 2d sess., S. Doc. 277; serial no. 4618.) Sheep, $2.00. 



7th, 1904. 455 pages, illus. Paper 45c. 



Sth, 1905. 240 pages, illus. Paper, 50c. 



9th, 1906. 207 pages, illus. Paper, 30c. 



10th, 1907. 294 pages, illus. Paper, 40c. 



llth, 1908. 217 pages, illus. Paper, 30c. 



12th, 1909. 174 pages, illus. Paper, 30c ; buckram, 50c. 



13th, 1910. 187 pages, illus. Paper, 25c ; buckram, 40c. 



14th, 1911. 179 pages, illus. Paper, 20c ; buckram, 40c. 



15th, 1912. 288 pages, illus. Paper, 30c ; buckram, 45c. 

 Report favoring setting apart grounds in Washington [D. C.] for use of 



National Society of Daughters of American Revolution for memorial 



building. 1900. 7 pages. (56th Cong. 1st sess., S. Rept. 975.) Paper, 5c. 



DAVIS, JEFFERSON. 



Letter of Howell Cobb to Daniel E. Sickles, Sept. 1866 [petitioning for re- 

 lease of Jefferson Davis from imprisonment]. (In American Historical 

 Association Report, 1911, vol. 2, pages 682 to 684.) Cloth, 65c. 



SI 4.1 : 911 2 



As Cobb was a champion of Davis, many references to the career of Davis be- 

 fore, during, and after the Confederacy are found in this volume. 



See also Lincoln's Assassination. 



Pursuit and capture of Jefferson Davis, May 1-10, 1865. (In War of Re- 

 bellion, Official Records of Armies, series 1, vol. 49, pt. 1, pages 515 to 

 557.) Cloth, 75c. W 45.5: 103 



DEBATES AND PROCEEDINGS OF CONGRESS. See Price List 49, Pro- 

 ceedings of Congress. 



DECATUR and the Philadelphia. Speech of J. H. Moore of Pa. in House, 

 Feb. 7, 1913. (In Congressional Record, vol. 49, no. 51, pages 2788 to 

 2793.) Paper, lie. 



In favor of raising the wreck of the Philadelphia which has been reposing since 

 1804 in the harbor of Tripoli. 



