Documents, Including Messages and Other Communications, Del 21863 |
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200 Enfield rifle 2d Lieutenant 2d Lieutenant Captain 36th Congress Adjutant amount Annual Report April arms Assist Asylum August Board boys bushels Camp Chase Camp Dennison canal Capt Captain 1st Lieutenant carbines Cavalry cents charge Charles Cincinnati Circleville Cleveland Colonel COLUMBUS COMPANY F counties DAVID TOD Department discharged disease duty Enfield rifle muskets expenses farm February Female Flour Franklinton furnished George Governor Governor of Ohio gravel Hamilton Henry Hocking Canal hospital inmates insane Institution James January John July July 23 June Kentucky labor males months November October Officers at Organization Ohio Penitentiary Ohio Volunteer Infantry Ordnance organized at Camp paid patients percussion caps percussion muskets pistols prisoners pupils received Regiment Regiment Ohio Volunteer repairs resigned respectfully sabres salaries Sept September sick and wounded soldiers Speech stone on mile Superintendent Surgeon Thomas Total strength vice Washington William
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Side 26 - Let thy work appear unto thy servants, And thy glory unto their children. And let the beauty of the LORD our God be upon us: And establish thou the work of our hands upon us; Yea, the work of our hands establish thou it.
Side 487 - Paymaster-General of the Army to the Second Comptroller of the Treasury. The application must be accompanied by the soldier's statement, under oath, that his final statements and certificate of discharge are lost, destroyed, or have never been received by him; that he has made diligent search or application for them; that they cannot be recovered or obtained, and that he has not received pay on them, nor assigned them to any other person. All the circumstances of the case must be fully set forth...
Side 237 - Who are idiotic, or so deficient in intelligence as to be incapable of being educated at any ordinary school, and who are not epileptic, insane, or greatly deformed, may be admitted by the Superintendent.
Side 427 - SIR: I have the honor to submit a report of the operations of the Weather Bureau during the fiscal year that ended June 30, 1906.
Side 285 - They will always march in the lock step, and in such order as may be designated by the officers in charge. While in their cells and while marching, and at all other times, all unnecessary noise must be avoided. No prisoner will be suffered to sleep with his clothes on.
Side 285 - In their intercourse among themselves the officers and guards of the penitentiary are at all times to treat each other with that mutual respect and kindness that become gentlemen and friends, and are required to avoid all collisions, jealousies, separate and party views and interests among themselves, and are strictly forbidden to treat each other with disrespect or to use any ungentlemanly epithets.
Side 465 - The commander of each company or detachment will be accountable for all ordnance and ordnance stores issued to his command. The commander of each post will be accountable for all ordnance and ordnance stores at the post, not issued to the company or detachment commanders, or not in charge of an officer of ordnance or a store-keeper. Ordnance sergeants will account for ordnance property only where there is no commissioned officer of the army or storekeeper.
Side 281 - H • biii inspect the arms and equipments of the wall guards at least once a week, and report any officer who may be found deficient in the required amount of ammunition, or whose gun or equipments are not in perfect order. He shall inspect all the arms and equipments ¡\oi in use daily, as often as once in two weeks.
Side 236 - Class, and, when completed, will restore the old department to its original purpose and duties — " to furnish special means of improvement to that portion of our youth who are so deficient in mind, or have such marked peculiarities and eccentricities of intellect as to deprive them of the benefits of other educational institutions and ordinary methods of instruction.
Side 285 - ... about the prison ; nor will any prisoner be suffered to mark, injure, or in any way deface the walls, or any part of his cell, or night room ; nor is he to execute his work badly, when he has the ability to do it well.