Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

5. Popular Discontent with Representative Government. Inaugural Address before the American Historical Association, December 27, 1895.

6.

7.

8.

Oration at the Two Hundred and Seventy-fifth Anniversary of the Landing of the Pilgrims, December 21, 1895.

Protection to Wool, Bi-metallism and the Republican Party. Speech
in the Senate, February 26, 1896.

Orderly and Decorous Conduct of Foreign Relations. Speech,
March 11, 1896.

9. The Senate.

An Article published in the Youth's Companion, November, 1890, and reprinted by the Senate.

VOLUME XII.

1.

2.

The Charge of Packing the Court, etc., Refuted. Letter to Boston
Herald, November, 1896.

The Life of Roger Sherman, Book-notices of.

3. McKay v. Kean. Argument for Petitioner, October, 1895.

4. Has the Senate Degenerated? Article in the Forum, April, 1897. 5. Statesmanship in England and in the United States. The Forum, August, 1897.

6. General William Cogswell, Life and Character of. Senate, February 8, 1897.

Report of Committee on Privileges and Elections,

7. Oregon Case. June 25, 1897.

VOLUME XIII.

1. William Whitney Rice. A Biographical Sketch.

2.

Francis Amasa Walker, Proceedings of a Meeting heldin Commemoration of.

3. American Antiquarian Society, Proceedings of the. October 21,

4.

1897.

Bradford Manuscript, Return of the.

5. Ashley B. Wright. Memorial Addresses in the Senate by Messrs. Hoar, Morgan, Hawley and Lodge.

7. Sound Money for the People, The United States a Government Providing, January 26, 1898.

8.

War-Justice and Humanity, Not Revenge, The Only Justfication for. In the Senate, April 14, 1898.

9. Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, April 27, 1898.

VOLUME XIV.

1. Hawaii. In the Senate, July 5, 1898.

2. Dangers of Colonial Expansion. In New York Independent, July 7, 1898.

3.

4.

Relation of the American Bar to the State. Address Delivered at the Tenth Annual Meeting of the Virginia State Bar Association, July, 1898.

Same, in Virginia Law Register, August, 1898.

5. Quality of our Honor. Speech at Opening of Clark University Summer School, July 13, 1898, and Open Letters to Prof. Norton. Rufus Putnam, Founder and Father of Ohio. Address at Rutland, September 17, 1898.

6.

7. Bradford Manuscript, Account of Part Taken by American Antiquarian Society in Return of, to America.

VOLUME XV.

1. Four National Conventions Some Political ReminiscencesDaniel Webster. Scribner's Magazine.

3. Life of Sumner by Edward L. Pierce-Wilmot Proviso-John Davis. Remarks before American Antiquarian Society in Proceedings, October, 1893.

6. Latin and Greek in our Colleges. New York Independent, March 16, 1899.

7.

8.

Speech at Banquet of the New England Society of Charleston, S. C.,
December 22, 1898.

Kettle Brook Water Cases. Argument in, January 2, 1899.

9. Philippine Islands. No Constitutional Power to Conquer Foreign Nations, etc., In Senate, January 9, 1899.

10. Philippine Islands, Letter from Hon. George F. Hoar regarding, to Hon. George S. Boutwell and others, March 29, 1899.

11. Justin Morrill, Memorial Address in the Senate.

12.

Isham G. Harris. Memorial Address in the Senate.

13. Our Duty to the Philippines. New York Independent, November 9, 1899.

1. The Philippines.

2.

VOLUME XVI.

Speech in reply to Senator Beveridge in the Senate, Jan. 9, 1900.

Our Duty to the Philippines. Letter by Senator Hoar, January 11, 1900.

3. Shall we Retain the Philippines. In Collier's Weekly, February 3, 1900.

4. The Philippines. Speech in the Senate, April 17, 1900.

5. The Conquest of the Philippines. Extracts from Speech of April 17, 1900.

6. The Lust of Empire. Speech April 17, 1900. Published by Tucker Publishing Co.

8. Vacancies in the Senate. Right of Executive to Appoint in all Cases during Recess of Legislature. In the Senate, March 2, 1900. 9 Harvard College Fifty-eight Years Ago. In Scribner's Magazine, July, 1900.

10. Alumni Dinner, Speech at. Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1900.

11.

Party Government in the United States. International Monthly,
October, 1900.

13. President McKinley or President Bryan. North American Review, October, 1900.

Bradford Manuscript. Speech, 1897.

Cushman K. Davis. Address in Senate, 1897.

Fifteenth Massachusetts Regiment, Excursion of the-and its Friends to the Battlefields of Gettysburg, Antietam, Ball's Bluff and the City of Washington, D. C., Sept. 14-20, 1900. Addresses by Hon. George F. Hoar at Gettysburg and Antietam.

Harvard Alumni Dinner. Hon. George F. Hoar, '46, President of the Association of the Alumni. Also Address at the opening of the Harvard Union, 1901.

Thomas H. Benton and Francis P. Blair, Proceedings in Congress upon the acceptance of the statues of. Address, 1900.

John Sherman. Article in New York Independent, November 1, 1900. Centennial Celebration of the Establishment of the Seat of Government at the City of Washington. Closing Address by Hon. George F. Hoar, in the Hall of the House of Representatives,December 12, 1900. Address delivered before the Senate and House of Representatives and invited guests on February 21, 1901, in response to an invitation of the General Court.

Robert Burns. An address delivered in Tremont Temple by Hon. George F. Hoar on March 28, 1901, before the Burns Memorial Association of Boston. Also reprinted in Scotland.

Oratory. Article in Scribner's Magazine, June, 1901.

Some Famous Orators I have Heard. Article in Scribner's Magazine, July, 1901.

First Parish in Concord, Dedication of the Restored Meeting House of the. Address, Thursday, October 3d, 1901.

Webster Centennial of Dartmouth College, The Proceedings of the. Speech, 1901.

Charles Allen. Address delivered before the Annual Meeting of the American Antiquarian Society, October 30, 1901.

Jonas G. Clark, Founder of Clark University, Some Considerations Relating to the Will of. Hon. George F. Hoar, February 14, 1902. Bi-Centennial of the Frst Parish in Framingham, Services at the.

dress, October 13, 1901.

Ad

Election of Senators by Direct Vote of the People. Speech, Tuesday, March 11, 1902.

An Attempt to Subjugate a People Striving for Freedom, Not the American Soldier, Responsible for Cruelties in the Philippine Islands. Speech in the Senate, May 22, 1902.

The Connecticut Compromise. Address before the American Antiquarian Society, October 21, 1902.

Banquet of the New England Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Speech, December 22, 1902,.

A Regulation of Trusts and Corporations Engaged in Interstate Commerce. Speech in the Senate, January 16, 1903.

Birthday of Washington, Exercises in Commemoration of the. Address at the Union League Club, Chicago, February 23, 1903. Also speech at the post prandial exercises in the evening.

Inauguration of President Carroll D. Wright, Clark University, Worcester, Mass. Address, October 9, 1902.

Emerson Centenary. Address at the Memorial Exercises in the Meeting House of the First Parish in Concord, Mass., on Monday afternoon, May the 25th, 1903.

Answer to Carl Schurz's Brooklyn Address of August 5, 1884. Jeremiah Evarts Greene. Address before American Antiquarian Society, February, 1903.

First Parish in Concord, Dedication of the Restored Meeting House of the. Thursday, October 3, 1901. Address.

Brig.-General Rufus Putnam. Article in Wisdom, October, 1902. Peabody Education Fund. Proceedings of the Trustees at their Fortyfirst Meeting in New York, October 1, 1902. Report of Hon. George F. Hoar for the Committee on the legal aspect of the Nashville Property.

Horace Gray, Memoir. Reprinted from the Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Second Series, Volume XVIII, pages 155-187.

Panama Canal. Speech in the United States Senate, Monday, February 22, 1904.

The First Schoolhouse in Worcester and John Adams, Schoolmaster. Address at the unveiling of the tablet upon the site of the schoolhouse, May 23, 1903.

John Bellows. Memorial Sketch in Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, October 21, 1903.

Thomas Jefferson. Address delivered at the Banquet of the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association, Hotel Barton, Washington, D. C., April 13, 1903.

American Citizenship. Address delivered at the Forty-third Annual Commencement of the State University of Iowa, June 17, 1903. Horace Gray, In Memoriam. Saturday, December 13, 1902.

-Character of Washington. His last public utterance, June 17,

1904.

Senator Hoar delivered an extended address upon Rufus Putnam at Sutton, Putnam's birthplace, in the early summer, in May or early June, repeating substantially his earlier Putnam address. A little later, before the Court, he delivered a eulogy upon his friend Col. E. B. Stoddard. Neither of these addresses were printed.

OBITUARIES.

Louis Adolphe Huguet-Latour died in Montreal, Canada, in May 1904, having been a member of this Society since 1861. He belonged to the family "De Vaslois de Valois Ville." His occupation was that of a Notary which in Canada is an important office. His interest in historical matters was shown in the publication of Annals of the conspicuous events in the History of Canada.

Some pamphlets from his pen with reference to the Catholic Church were published, and were so highly considered that the late Pope Pius X made him a Knight of the Holy Sepulchre.

No extended notice of him has come to my attention.

S. U.

James Henry Salisbury died at his summer home at Dobbs Ferry, N. Y., Aug 23, 1905.

He was born in Scott, Cortland Co., N. Y., Oct. 13, 1823; graduated at the Polytechnic Institute of Troy, N. Y., in 1846 and at the Albany Medical College in 1850. In addition to the degrees thus obtained he also received that of LL.D., from Union College and Amity College of Indiana. He became a member of many learned societies, including this Society, which he joined in 1862. Much of his work was in the line of microscopic investigation, the results of which were published in the transactions of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

The germ theory received his early attention, his discoveries therein being also published. He practised as a specialist in the causes and treatment of chronic diseases in Cleveland Ohio and in N. Y. City. He was the author of numerous books and pamphlets, including about seventy-five monographs, many of which related to his therapeutical discoveries.

A good notice of him and his work may be found in the National Cyclopædia of American Biography, Vol. 8, 469.

S. U.

« AnteriorContinuar »