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| | September, 1842 |
 | | Tabulation of Votes in Sangamon County for State Representatives 1832-1836, [9 September 1842], CW, 1:297-99. |  | | Shields' second note asks if Lincoln is author of article in "Journal" of September 2, 1842, headed "The Lost Townships" and signed "Becca." Abraham Lincoln to James Shields, 17 September 1842, CW, 1:299-300. |  | | [Third and fourth of series of letters signed Rebecca, written in backwoods dialect, and poking fun at James Shields and Democrat policies are dated today, and appear in Sangamo Journal; September 9, 1842.] |
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http://www.stg.brown.edu/projects/lincoln/month.php?date_value=1842-09-26
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| | The Avalon Project : The Webster-Ashburton Treaty 1842 and Associated Documents |
 | | Following the treaty text are printed three notes which were exchanged between the Plenipotentiaries of the two Governments on August 9, 1842, the date of the signature of the treaty. |  | | 1842 - The Text of the Treaty; August 9 |  | | The Avalon Project : The Webster-Ashburton Treaty 1842 and Associated Documents |
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http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/diplomacy/britian/br1842m.htm
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| | Search Results for "1842" |
 | | Byron R White, Associate Justice, US Supreme Court. |  | | ...NUMBER: 1842 AUTHOR: Byron R White, Associate Justice, US Supreme Court QUOTATION: The Court is most vulnerable and comes nearest to illegitimacy when it deals with... |  | | ...NUMBER: 1842 AUTHOR: William Shakespeare (15641616) QUOTATION: I took by the throat the circumcised dog, And smote him, thus. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/cgi-bin/texis/webinator/sitesearch?FILTER=&query=1842
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| | Smith History Vault: Jonathan B. Turner's 1842 book Part 1 |
 | | A man of the name of Smith was, between 1823 and 1827, frequently seen prowling round the house without any ostensible object, so suspicious were his maneuvers, that he was once or twice arrested as a common vagabond, and only escaped the penalties of the law by running away. |  | | Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1842, by |  | | In the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern District |
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http://www.olivercowdery.com/smithhome/1842TurA.htm
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| | Seasonal Summary for 1841-1842 |
 | | Raker: [Frederick?] Smithson (1 perf, 17 Mar 1842) |  | | Gashford: [Frederick?] Smithson (28 perfs, 20 Dec 1841 - 22 Jan 1842) |  | | Alexandre: [Frederick H.] Yates (1 perf, 18 Mar 1842) |
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http://www.emich.edu/public/english/adelphi_calendar/m41s.htm
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| | [No title] |
 | | DON PIERRE, David: most likely a much earlier arrival in Oregon; in 1842, he was chosen for the constitutional and law committee |  | | OUGH, Richard: On 11/6/1842 he was married in his own home to "Miss Betsy Slahuts of Columbia Cascades" PACKET, : is listed as an assistant with a person named Cook at Waiilatpu this year. |  | | FREMONT, Lt. John C.: left Missouri after the immigrant party leading a troop of 21 on an exploring expedition. |
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http://www.usgennet.org/alhnorus/ahorclak/list42.html
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| | The Inquiry Commission 1842-1844 - The treatment of Lunacy in England and Wales |
 | | Before 1842 it had been administering the Madhouse Acts in London, after 1845 it was to oversee the execution of the lunacy laws throughout England and Wales. |  | | The clause became s.7 of 1842 Inquiry Act. |  | | The decision to publish and the decision to promote a national system of visiting were possibly made at the previous Quarterly Meeting in early July 1841. |
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http://www.mdx.ac.uk/www/study/4.htm
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| | March, 1842 |
 | | Logan and Lincoln represent bankruptcy petitioners Leonard S. Sears of Boone County and Henry Smith of Macon County in In re Sears and In re Smith before the U.S. District Court. |  | | Lincoln, perhaps, will not accept the nomination, though urged by Baker, who thinks Mr. |  | | On opening day of Sangamon Circuit Court, Logan and Lincoln have three cases continued; they obtain judgment for $704.77 in Maguire v. |
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http://www.stg.brown.edu/projects/lincoln/month.php?yyyy=1842&mm=3
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| | Karl Robert Eduard Von Hartmann [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy] |
 | | He was educated at the school of artillery in Berlin (1859-1862); and held a commission (1860-65), when he was compelled to retire on account of serious knee trouble. |  | | German philosopher, born at Berlin Feb. 23, 1842, died at the same place June 5, 1906. |
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http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/h/hartmann.htm
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| | Ambrose Bierce : Keele University : American Studies |
 | | Ambrose Gwinett Bierce was born in Ohio on June 24th 1842. |  | | He fought for the Union in the Civil War, prospected for gold, worked as a journalist for William Randolph Hearst and wrote short stories before disappearing into Mexico in 1914. |
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http://www.keele.ac.uk/depts/as/Portraits/bierce.html
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| | The Hutchinson Dictionary of Scientific Biography: Dewar, James (1842-1923)@ HighBeam Research |
 | | Dewar was born in Kincardine-on-Forth on 20 September 1842. |  | | He went to local schools until he contracted rheumatic fever in 1852, which required a long convalescence at home. |  | | Dewar is also remembered for his invention of the Dewar vacuum flask, which has been adapted for everyday use as the thermos flask. |
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http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1P1:99916097&refid=ip_encyclopedia_hf
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| | Dickens's 1842 Reading Tour: Launching the Copyright Question in Tempestuous Seas |
 | | During both his North American reading tours of 1842 and 1867-68 Dickens lobbied the American Congress to recognize the copyright of British authors, but made little headway because American publishing was undercapitalized and needed to be able to plunder British and continental works in order to survive. |  | | Indeed, during his first visit Dickens's raising the controversial issue made him anathema in certain political circles and in the American press; his responses to the criticisms that appeared in American newspapers are best reflected in Martin Chuzzlewit (1842-3). |  | | Ironically, he had his sympathizers; on the first visit, his case had been seconded by fiction-writer Washington Irving (1783-1859); on his second visit, by such eminent writers as the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and the biographer James Parton, all of whom had suffered to a lesser extent from the lack of reciprocal British-American copyright legislation. |
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http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/dickens/pva/pva75.html
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| | Handbook of Texas Online: LANIER, SIDNEY |
 | | He graduated from Oglethorpe College in 1860 and at the outbreak of the Civil War |  | | Sidney Lanier, poet, critic, and musician, was born in Macon, Georgia, on February 3, 1842, the son of Robert S. and Mary Jane (Anderson) Lanier. |
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http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/LL/fla35.html
(596 words)
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| | Index of Lunatic Asylums and Mental Hospitals |
 | | Lord Robert Seymour, a Director of Poor for the Parish of Saint Marylebone was "in the practice of visiting the insane poor of that parish at |  | | 1844 Report page 87: "In the Lunatic wards of the Marylebone Workhouse there were admitted in the years 1842 and 1843, 190 paupers considered as insane. |
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http://www.mdx.ac.uk/www/study/4_13_TA.htm
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| | The Anglo-Chinese Treaty of Nanking (1842) |
 | | Whereas by the Xth Article of the Treaty between Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and His Majesty the Emperor of China, concluded and signed on board Her Britannic Majesty's ship Cornwallis, at Nanking, on the 29th day of August, 1842. |  | | This treaty between Britain and China ended the first opium war, fought between 1839 and 1842. |  | | The military post at Chinhai will also be withdrawn, but the Islands of Koolangsoo, and that of Chusan, will continue to be held by Her Majesty's forces until the money payments, and the arrangements for opening the ports to British merchants, be completed. |
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http://web.jjay.cuny.edu/~jobrien/reference/ob24.html
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| | Mount Shasta Companion: Clarence King (1842-1901) |
 | | Merriam had with him the botany report by Sereno Watson, Volume V of King's 40th Parallel Survey (Miess 1993; Freeman 1997; Dennis Freeman, personal communication, 1999). |  | | Clarence King was born at Newport, Rhode Island in 1842 to a prosperous family. |  | | For generations his family had been involved in the sea as makers of navigational tools, captains, and traders. |
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http://www.siskiyous.edu/shasta/env/king
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| | Twice-Told Tales, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, 1837, 1851 |
 | | By the author of "The Gray Champion" TT 1842 II, 123-35; 1851-52 II, 103-14. |  | | By the author of "The Gentle Boy." TT 1842 II, 163-87; 1851-53 II, 133-56. |  | | Being the Carrier's Address, to the Patrons of the |
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http://www.eldritchpress.org/nh/ttt.html
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| | Lucius Henry Holsey, 1842-1920 Autobiography, Sermons, Addresses, and Essays. |
 | | BISHOP L. I was born in Georgia, near Columbus, in 1842, and at that time was the slave of James Holsey, who was also my father. |  | | He was a gentleman of classical education, dignified in appearance and manner of life, and represented that old antebellum class of Southern aristocracy who did not know enough of manual labor to black their own shoes or saddle their own horse. |  | | Whatever is found in it that is helpful and praiseworthy attribute to the heart and mind of its author; whatever of shortcoming or imperfection, attribute to the lack of education, training and culturing development. |
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http://docsouth.unc.edu/holsey/holsey.html
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| | William James (1842-1910) |
 | | James was born in New York City on January 11, 1842. |
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http://www.connect.net/ron/james.html
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| | Camille Flammarion (1842-1925) |
 | | Nicolas Camille Flammarion was born in 1842 at Montigny-le-Roi in the department of Haute Marne, France. |  | | Nicolas Camille Flammarion (February 26, 1842 - June 3, 1925) |  | | He first studied theology, but early got interested in astronomy. |
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http://www.seds.org/messier/xtra/Bios/flammarion.html
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| | Oregon In 1842 |
 | | CROCKER, Nathaniel: at encampment of May 15, 1842, Nathaniel Crocker was elected secretary |  | | WESTON, David (1819-1875): m'd 1852 SINCLAIR, Mary; settled at Champoeg, Marion Co, OR; by 1847 had claim in Yamhill Co; 1850 was back in Marion County where he remained; served in Cayuse War; was buried on his farm. |  | | HOFSTETTER, John: [aka Hoffstutter, Hofstuter, Hofstitter] ; May 15, 1842 encampment John Hoffstutter was elected as master wagonmaker. |
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http://www.oregonpioneers.com/1842.htm
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| | Marshall, Alfred (1842-1924) |
 | | Alfred Marshall was born in Bermondsey, a London suburb, on 26 July 1842. |  | | He died at Balliol Croft, his Cambridge home of many years, on 13 July 1924 at the age of 81. |
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http://staff-www.uni-marburg.de/~multimed/theorie/economics/marshall/bio/Marshall.html
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| | James Pike Papers, 1793-1842 (with text) |
 | | Apparently he was not married when his blindness occurred, and it is inferred from material in the collection that he was cared for by his family and that he remained single until his death in 1842 at Somersworth. |  | | By October of 1812, Pike's eyesight had failed him after many years of eye trouble. |
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http://www-distance.syr.edu/jpike.html
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| | USN Ships--USS Somers (1842-1846) |
 | | The three men were executed by hanging on 1 December 1842, leading to a considerable controversy when Somers returned to the United States later in the month. |  | | Commissioned in May 1842, she made a brief shakedown cruise to the Caribbean area, then left New York in September on a training voyage to the west coast of Africa. |  | | While en route home in late November, a suspected mutiny led Somers' officers to arrest three members of the crew, including Midshipman Philip Spencer, son of the then Secretary of War. |
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http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-usn/usnsh-s/somers2.htm
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| | AIM25: Institute of Commonwealth Studies: FERGUSON, John (1842-1913) |
 | | Administrative/Biographical history: John Ferguson was born in Tain, Easter Ross in 1842. |  | | He was educated at Tain Royal Academy, then trained as a journalist in Inverness and London before going to Ceylon om 1861 to take up a position as Assistant Editor of the Columbo Observer, under his uncle, the proprietor and Editor, Alastair Mackenzie (AM) Ferguson. |
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http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cats/16/4625.htm
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| | Samuel Williams' 1842 "Mormonism Exposed" |
 | | Furthermore, an Elder in the RLDS Church who had researched the matter (perhaps drawing information from former Pittsburgh Branch President, William Small) states: "Rev. Samuel Williams, when he wrote his work in 1842 against the Mormons... |  | | Engles returned the manuscript, as I supposed at that time, after it had been some weeks in his possession with other manuscripts in the office. |  | | It is indeed likely that Rev. Williams received substantial support from his fellow Christian ministers in Pittsburgh, in combating the spread of Mormonism there in 1842-43. |
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http://www.solomonspalding.com/docs/1842Wilm.htm
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| | Ship Arrivals Canada 1842 |
 | | June 7th—In the packet ship "George Washington," sailed from New York for Liverpool, Charles Dickens, lady and servant of London, (this is author Charles Dickens, who was returning home from his first U.S. visit, with his wife Kate, and her servant, Anne Brown. |  | | In 1842 there was a big increase in emigration from the United Kingdom to North America (see the statistics). |  | | Passengers arriving at this port during the week ending this date From England 775, from Ireland 2185, from Scotland 219, from Lower Ports 11, total for the year to date 22,101. |
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http://www.theshipslist.com/ships/Arrivals/ships1842.htm
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| | South Carolina SC - John Peter Richardson - 1840-1842 |
 | | December 20, 1842 The South Carolina Military Academy was established (now the The Citadel) |  | | The Bank of South Carolina refused to recognize regulations enacted in the wake of the Panic of 1837 |
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http://www.sciway.net/hist/governors/jprichardson.html
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| | USN Ships--USS Congress (1842-1862) |
 | | Commissioned in May 1842, she made a Mediterranean cruise in that year and into 1843, then served off the South American east coast until early 1845. |  | | Nineteenth or early Twentieth Century photograph of an artwork titled "U.S. Frigate Congress 1842". |  | | After a refit, she was sent to become flagship of the Pacific Squadron, remaining there until mid-1848. |
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http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-usn/usnsh-c/congres4.htm
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| | BBC - History - Sir James Dewar (1842 - 1923) |
 | | The youngest of six boys, Dewar was born and raised in Scotland. |  | | BBC - History - Sir James Dewar (1842 - 1923) |  | | His final work, in 1921, measured solar radiation, using sensitive instruments cooled with liquid oxygen. |
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/dewar_james.shtml
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| | GIANTS OF EGYPTOLOGY |
 | | He tried his hand at a variety of careers before going to Egypt at age twenty-eight in 1870, to assist Heinrich in the operation of the School of Egyptology, which he continued doing until its closing nine years later. |  | | His brother's junior by fifteen years, Émile Charles Albert Brugsch was born in Berlin on February 24, 1842. |
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http://www.egyptology.com/kmt/fall96/giants.html
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| | United States Exploring Expedition, 1838-1842 |
 | | Estimates are that the collections amassed between April 1838 and June 1842 by the United States Exploring Expedition, under the command of Charles Wilkes, weighed nearly 40 tons. |  | | Poinsett and what became known as the National Institute offered to take charge of the rapidly expanding Exploring Expedition (often referred to as Ex Ex or Exp. Exp.) collections, arranging for them to be housed in the newly completed Patent Office building. |  | | The Ex Ex collections dwarfed all other government collections, and while they were initially curated by the National Institute, the institute’s involvement was quickly dispensed with when the Expedition returned in the summer of 1842. |
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http://www.sil.si.edu/DigitalCollections/usexex/learn/Walsh-01.htm
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| | German Spiked Helmet Evolution |
 | | From 1842 to 1844 the Preußen Artillerie (Prussian Artillery) wore a line infantry Pickelhaube with spike which was replaced in 1844 with a Kugel (ball) to represent a cannon ball. |  | | This essay is an on-line guide to the Imperial German Mannschaften (Other Ranks) Pickelhaube Evolution 1842 - 1915. |  | | In 1857 the helmet height was reduced to make the helmet less unwieldy and more practical for use and older Model 1842 helmets were cut down and re-sewn to comply with the new regulations. |
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http://www.kaisersbunker.com/pe/pe.htm
(2009 words)
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| | Legislative Assembly for the ACT: 2000 Week 6 Hansard (25 May) Page 1842 |
 | | Legislative Assembly for the ACT: 2000 Week 6 Hansard (25 May). |  | | Legislative Assembly for the ACT: 2000 Week 6 Hansard (25 May) Page 1842 |  | | Nevertheless, Mr Speaker, if Mr Moore wants to pursue those tactics, I am quite happy for him to do so. |
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http://www.hansard.act.gov.au/hansard/2000/week06/1842.htm
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| | San Francisco Genealogy - Census (1842) |
 | | It will be observed that these neophytes have no surnames, and they they all seem to have been named from Saints in the calendar of the Roman Catholic Church. |  | | Establecemiento de Dolores, 31 de Obre, de 1842. |  | | CENSUS OF SAN FRANCISCO IN 1842 [Exhibit No. 9 to Deposition of R. Hopkins] |
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http://www.sfgenealogy.com/sf/sf1842.htm
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| | Classics in the History of Psychology -- Menabrea (1842) |
 | | Luigi Menabrea--then an obscure military engineer, but later to become a general in Garibaldi's army and prime minister of Italy--published an account of Babbage's lectures in French in the Bibliothèque Universelle de Genève in October of 1842. |  | | In August of 1840 Charles Babbage gave a series of lecturs on his Analytical Engine in Turin. |  | | In early 1843 this article was translated into English by Augusta Ada Byron King, Countess of Lovelace, who then added extensive "Notes" written in close collaboration with Babbage. |
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http://psychclassics.yorku.ca/Lovelace/menabrea.htm
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| | [No title] |
 | | This memo does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. |  | | Network Working Group Y. Wei Request for Comments: 1842 AsiaInfo Services Inc. Category: Informational Y. Zhang Harvard Univ. J. Li Rice Univ. J. Ding AsiaInfo Services Inc. Y. Jiang Univ. of Maryland August 1995 ASCII Printable Characters-Based Chinese Character Encoding for Internet Messages Status of this Memo This memo provides information for the Internet community. |  | | ChPad (V1.31) by Tian Bogang -- GUO BIAO and HZ file browser for MS WINDOWS 3.1 SilkRoad (V1.0) by Antony C. Hu -- GB/HZ Viewer for MS-Windows 3.1 gnus-chinese (V1.0, Apr. 26 1994) by Ning Mosberger-Tang -- convert HZ articles to the code understandable by your terminal automatically in GNUS newsreader (for GNU EMACS). |
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http://www.imc.org/rfc1842
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| | Antarctic Explorers: Jules-Sebastien-Cesar Dumont d'Urville |
 | | In 1842, while with his wife and son, d'Urville was killed in a train accident near Versailles. |  | | Antarctica; the Extraordinary History of Man's Conquest of the Frozen Continent, by Reader's Digest. |
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http://www.south-pole.com/p0000077.htm
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Maria Alphonse Ratisbonne |
 | | On his intended tour to the Orient, he came to Rome, where on 20 January, 1842, he was miraculously converted to Catholicism in the Church of S. Andrea delle Fratte by an apparition of the Blessed Virgin. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12659a.htm
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| | provisions 1842 |
 | | Clarke's contract would expire before the year was out. |  | | Twelve individuals, principally single ones living in remote settlements among their friends (old settlers), applied to me for their whole years rations in stock cattle, which on account of the great inconvenience to them, in coming every fifteen day for their rations I consented; and made the issue, not expecting at the time, that Mr. |  | | A Statement of issues made to the Emigrant Seminole Indians by L N Clarke from the 11th June 1842 to 15th Oct. 1842. |
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http://www.seminolenation-indianterritory.org/provisions1842.htm
(87 words)
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| | Essay on To what extent was China's failure to effectively deal with the West up to 1842 a consequence of its ... |
 | | Essay on To what extent was China's failure to effectively deal with the West up to 1842 a consequence of its traditional attitude to foreign states? |  | | Title: To what extent was China's failure to effectively deal with the West up to 1842 a consequence of its traditional attitude to foreign states? |  | | China's traditional attitude towards foreign states along with, the differing Chinese and Western systems of trade, diplomacy and jurisdiction made the development of an effective relationship virtually impossible. |
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http://www.dedicatedwriters.com/paper/To_what_extent_was_Chinas_fai-143823.html
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| | Sarcina Goodsir 1842, genus |
 | | ¤ Sarcina ventriculi Goodsir 1842 (Approved Lists 1980). |  | | Number of subspecies cited in this file: 0 |
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http://www.bacterio.cict.fr/s/sarcina.html
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| | Evidence that Smith was not a True Prophet |
 | | By April 2, 1843 Smith knew God the Father had a body of flesh and bones (DandC 130:22) |  | | DandC 121:28 says, "28 A time to come in the which nothing shall be withheld, whether there be one God or many gods, they shall be manifest." By at least 1842 Smith was teaching that there were many Gods. |  | | By Smith's King Follett Discourse his teachings about God's attributes changed significantly. |
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http://www.bcmmin.org/smithevi.html
(1612 words)
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| | World Fax, Inc. - The power to communicate with anyone, anytime, anywhere! |
 | | In a commonly used facsimile scanning system (invented by Frederick Bakewell in 1848 and based on Alexander Bain's work of 1842) the subject copy is wrapped around a drum. |  | | Alexander Bain invented a machine capable of receiving signals from a telegraph wire and translating them into images on paper. |  | | The image may be illuminated as in rectilinear scanning, or a relatively large area of the image may be illuminated, the photodevice viewing the image through a lens aperture that restricts its field to a single pixel at a time. |
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http://www.worldfax.com/fax_history.shtml
(965 words)
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| | American Oriental Society |
 | | The Society was founded in 1842, preceded only by such distinguished organizations of general scope as the American Philosophical Society (1743), the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1780), and the American Antiquarian Society (1812). |  | | From the beginning its aims have been humanistic. |
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http://www.umich.edu/~aos
(266 words)
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