AMERICAN HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY 27 



DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. 



Address delivered by Samuel A. Witherspoon in Tammany Hall, July 4, 

 1914. (In Congressional Record of July 11, 1914, vol. 51, no. 179, pages 

 13074 to 13076.) Paper, 5c. 



Deals with the Declaration and the Constitution. 

 Address of President Wilson at Independence Hall, Philadelphia, July 4, 



1914. 9 pages. Paper, 5c. Pr 28.2 : P 53 



Antecedents of Declaration of Independence, by James Sullivan; with, 

 Historic phrase, by W. A. Dunning. (In American Historical Association 

 Report, 1902, vol. 1, pages 65 to 85.) Cloth, 50c. SI 4.1 : 902 1 



The first paper deals with the doctrines of the Declaration as treated by Greek, 

 Roman and ecclesiastical jurists of ancient and mediaeval times. 



The second paper traces the phrase " are, and ought to he, free " backward 

 from Thomas Jefferson, through R. H. Lee, Dean Swift, the Bill of Rights of 

 1689, to the House of Commons in 1621, and concludes it was a commonplace 

 of political English. 



Declaration of Independence, 1776 [with historical note]. 1911. 11 pages. 

 Paper, 5c. S1.2:D35 3 



A literal print of this famous document, the original of which is preserved In 

 the Department of State. 



See also Carroll, Charles Continental Congress Registers. 

 DELAWARE. See Archives, 7th report Mason and Dixon line. 



DESERET. 



This Mormon territory as conceived by Brigham Young, the Mormon leader, 

 covered Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Colorado, Oregon, Wyoming, San Diego and Los 

 Angeles. 



See Nevada Utah. 



DETROIT, MICH. Historical sketch, [by J. C. Holmes, with Detroit in 1880]. 

 (In Social Statistics of Cities, 1880, pt. 2, pages 598 to 616, map, 4.) 

 Cloth, $1.35. 1 11.5 : 19 



Describes the town in the days of its struggles with Indians and with the 

 British and its prosperous growth. 



DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. See Virginia. See also Price List 54, Miscel- 

 laneous. 



DIX, DOROTHEA LYNDE. Report favoring bill for monument to Dorothea 

 Lynde Dix. 1906. 7 pages. (59th Cong. 1st sess., S. Rept. 1215.) Pa- 

 per, 5c. 



Miss Dix, born 1794, died 1887, was a famous philanthropist, and superintend- 

 ent of hospital nurses during the Civil War. She was instrumental in founding 

 several hospitals for the insane, among them the great Government Hospital near 

 Washington. 



DUTCH IN UNITED STATES. 



Dutch element in American history, by H. T. Colenbrander ; [and] Dutch 



element in United States, by Ruth Putnam. (In American Historical 



Association Report, 1909. pages 191 to 218.) Cloth, 75c. 814.1:909 



Dutch schools of New Netherland and colonial New York; by W. H. Kil- 



patrick. 239 pages. (Education Bureau Bulletin 12, 1912.) Paper. 20c. 



I 16.3:912 ia 



A very interesting history of early New York and its customs relating to 

 schools, their masters, and their discipline. 



ECCLESIOLOGY. See Church history. 



EDWARDS, FRANCIS S. See House of Representatives. 



ELECTIONS. See Civil War Constitution Constitutional amendments, 



17th Political parties. 

 See also Price List 54, Miscellaneous. 

 ELECTORAL COMMISSION. See Registers. 



ELECTORAL VOTES. Election of President and Vice-President of United 

 States. 1882. 8 pages. (47th Cong., 1st sess., H. Rept. 1207. Bound 

 with other docs.; serial no. 2068.) Sheep, $1.65. 



This discusses the question as to whom the power to count the electoral votes 

 devolves upon by the constitution. 



EULOGIES. See Memorial addresses. See also names in main alphabet. 



