Congressional Serial Set, Issue 4275U.S. Government Printing Office, 1901 Reports, Documents, and Journals of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. |
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Page 20
... Amount of ammu- nition . 25 346 3,355 5 130 1,303 35 13,386 415 10 153 361 3,638 1,363 13 , 801 CAPTURES . 24 462 22 12 92 2 32 3 3,200 45 26 494 107 3,245 August 18 , General Lucban's wife , child , and mother - in - law captured in ...
... Amount of ammu- nition . 25 346 3,355 5 130 1,303 35 13,386 415 10 153 361 3,638 1,363 13 , 801 CAPTURES . 24 462 22 12 92 2 32 3 3,200 45 26 494 107 3,245 August 18 , General Lucban's wife , child , and mother - in - law captured in ...
Page 26
... amount involved . Aggregate balances . 684 562 $ 92 , 452 , 089.64 $ 14 , 192 , 991 , 94 32 , 112 , 078. 50 6,746 , 217.50 Public civil fund In only two cases were shortages reported in the inspection of money accounts , an aggregate ...
... amount involved . Aggregate balances . 684 562 $ 92 , 452 , 089.64 $ 14 , 192 , 991 , 94 32 , 112 , 078. 50 6,746 , 217.50 Public civil fund In only two cases were shortages reported in the inspection of money accounts , an aggregate ...
Page 28
... amount of oats . On this amount , 18 pounds of unthreshed palay , my horses have done remarkably well , when fed as hereafter suggested , even under hard work . When later , under a misapprehension of facts , this amount was cut down to ...
... amount of oats . On this amount , 18 pounds of unthreshed palay , my horses have done remarkably well , when fed as hereafter suggested , even under hard work . When later , under a misapprehension of facts , this amount was cut down to ...
Page 30
... amount used . 4. The effect of this native grass upon the American horses is that of a strong physic . Only enough is fed to keep their bowels in good condition , approximately one - fourth of the hay allowance being sufficient . 5. The ...
... amount used . 4. The effect of this native grass upon the American horses is that of a strong physic . Only enough is fed to keep their bowels in good condition , approximately one - fourth of the hay allowance being sufficient . 5. The ...
Page 31
... amount of native forage , as it varies so much at different points . From Solano to Cauayan plenty of rice at $ 4.50 Mexican per hundredweight ; palay , 63 cents Mexican per hundredweight . Corn is usually sold on the hull and by the ...
... amount of native forage , as it varies so much at different points . From Solano to Cauayan plenty of rice at $ 4.50 Mexican per hundredweight ; palay , 63 cents Mexican per hundredweight . Corn is usually sold on the hull and by the ...
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Common terms and phrases
ADJUTANT-GENERAL appointed Army ARTHUR MACARTHUR August authorized band of insurgents barrio Binondo board of health buildings Capt Captain captured casualties Cavalry charge chief commissary city commission city of Manila commanding detachment Company cuartels Department of Northern disbursements disease district duty fire fiscal Forty-second Infantry HEADQUARTERS PROVOST-MARSHAL-GENERAL horses hospital Ilocano Ilocos Norte Ilocos Sur Inclosure Infantry inspection insular insurgents issued July June 30 killed license Lieut Lieutenant Luzon ment miles military governor month municipal Nipa Northern Luzon Nueva Ecija offenses officers ordinance Pasig Pasig River person Philippine Islands police prisoners Private property province provost courts provost guard quartermaster ration received regiment regulate repair respectfully rifles River rounds of ammunition Sampaloc Santa scouts Spanish stations streets superintendent supply surgeon thence Thirty-fifth Infantry Thirty-fourth Infantry Thirty-second Infantry Total troops U. S. Infantry United United States Army Visayas Volunteers wounded
Popular passages
Page 78 - This city, Its Inhabitants, Its churches and religious worship, Its educational establishments and Its private property of all descriptions, are placed under the special safeguard of the faith and honor of the American army.
Page 135 - ... provide for the collection of a direct annual tax to pay, and sufficient to pay the interest on such debt as it falls due, and also to pay and discharge the principal of such debt within eighteen years from the time of the contracting thereof.
Page 171 - Secretary of the Board of Health of the Department of Health of the City of New York...
Page 142 - ... and shall have such other powers and perform such other duties as may be prescribed by the board of directors or by the bylaws.
Page 133 - President in such sum, and with such sureties, as shall be approved by the Executive Committee.
Page 78 - The government established among you by the United States is a government of military occupation; and for the present it is ordered that the municipal laws such as affect private rights of persons and property, regulate local institutions, and provide for the punishment of crime, shall be considered as continuing in force, so far as compatible with the purposes of military government, and that they be administered through the ordinary tribunals substantially as before occupation, but by officials...
Page 105 - All churches and buildings devoted to religious worship and to the arts and sciences, all schoolhouses, are, so far as possible, to be protected, and all destruction or intentional defacement of such places, of historical monuments or archives, or of works of science or art, is prohibited, save when required by urgent military necessity.
Page 121 - And be it further enacted, That it -shall be the duty of each officer, assigned as aforesaid, to protect all persons in their rights of person and property, to suppress insurrection, disorder and violence, and to punish, or cause to be punished, all disturbers of the public peace and criminals...
Page 104 - ... not to make war upon the inhabitants of Cuba, nor upon any party or faction among them, but to protect them in their homes, in their employments, and in their personal and religious rights.
Page 128 - ... to devote their attention in the first instance to the establishment of municipal governments in which the natives of the islands, both in the cities and in the rural communities, shall be afforded the opportunity to manage their own local affairs to the fullest extent of which they are capable, and subject to the least degree of supervision and control which a careful study of their capacities and observation of the workings of native control show to be consistent with the maintenance of law,...