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rooms for ministers, room for unbound files, room for bound files, filing space for future years, telephone and telegraph room, with living rooms, bedrooms, toilets and baths.

Translators

Main office and two general offices, two stenographer's rooms and file room.

THE END

BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

The chief sources are the archives, circulars, and publications of the Department of State. More particularly:

The manuscript sources in the Department of State are: Letters of Robert R. Livingston, American Letters, Washington Papers, Papers and Records of the Territories, Lands South of Tennessee, and Claiborne's Correspondence-all in the Bureau of Rolls and Library; Register of Certificates, Passport Letters, and Press Copy Letter Books in the Bureau of Citizenship; Miscellaneous Letters, Domestic Letters, Letters of Credence, Papers from the President in the Bureau of Indexes and Archives; Applications for Office, Petitions for Pardon in the Bureau of Appointments; Opinions of Solicitors in the Solicitor's Office.

Other manuscript sources are: The Archives of the U. S. Senate; the Archives of the Secretary's Office, Department of the Interior; The Papers of the Continental Congress; the Madison Papers and the Thornton Papers in the Library of Congress.

The printed sources are the following publications of the Department of State: Wharton, Diplomatic Correspondence of the American Revolution; Hunt, Callendar of Applications for Office during the Presidency of George Washington, 1901; Documentary History of the Constitution of the United States; Hunt, History of the Seal of the United States, 1909; Hunt, The American Passport, 1898; Wharton, American Digest of International Law; Moore, Digest of American International Law; Dept. Register; Moore, Extradition; bound volumes of Department circulars in the Bureau of Indexes and Archives; Descriptive Catalogue of the Collection of Portraits in the Department of State; Michael, The Story of the Declaration of Independence.

Other Government publications are: The Journals of the Continental Congress, Library of Congress edition; The Secret Journals of Congress; The Statutes at Large and Revised Statutes; American State Papers, Foreign Affairs; Annals of Congress; Patent Office Gazette, Vol. 12, No. 15; Annual Report Commissioner of Patents, 1900, VIII; Report on the Ninth Census by Garfield, 1870, 41 Cong., 2d Sess.; History and Growth of U. S. Census by Carroll D. Wright and William C. Hunt, Senate Doc. No. 194, 56 Cong., 1 Sess., 1899-1900; Messages and Papers of the Presidents; Reports of Commissioners to the Paris Universal Exposition of 1878; Reports of Commissioners to the Universal Exposition of 1889; Appropriations and Expenditures in Department of State, 1789-1877, Ex. Doc. No. 38, 44 Cong., 2 Sess. Senate; U. S. Supreme Court Reports, Monthly Catalogue Superintendent of Documents, September, 1908, introduction; Annual Report Librarian of Congress, 1903; Biennial Registers.

Periodicals having information: American Historical Review, Vol. III; American Journal of International Law, Vol. II; Political Science Quarterly, September, 1897.

Other works: Conway, Life of Thomas Paine; Austin, Life of Elbridge Gerry; Fiske, The Critical Period of American History; Scharf, Chronicles of Baltimore; Works and Writings of John Adams, John Jay, James Madison (Putnams' edition); Thomas Jefferson (Putnams' edition); J. Q. Adams' Diary; L. H. Campbell, The Patent System of the U. S., Washington, 1791; Noah Webster, Origin of Copyright Laws in U. S., New York, 1843; James E. Easby-Smith, The Department of Justice, its History and Functions, Washington, 1904; Norton, Worlds Fairs from London, 1851, to Chicago, 1893; Report of the American Historical Association for 1899; Learned, The President's Cabinet, New Haven, 1912.

INDEX

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