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Test Bank for Americas History Volume 1 9th Edition

Edwards Hinderaker Self Henretta 1319060609


9781319060602
Download full test bank at : https://testbankpack.com/p/test-
bank-for-americas-history-volume-1-9th-edition-edwards-
hinderaker-self-henretta-1319060609-9781319060602/

1. Which of the following characterized the New England freehold society of the early
eighteenth century?
A) A small gentry elite that owned most of the land, which was farmed by tenants and
other workers
B) Many relatively equal landowning families whose livelihoods came from
agriculture and trade
C) Maritime cities consisting of wealthy traders, skilled artisans, and propertyless
workers
D) A relatively large elite whose economic and political power depended on
manufacturing profits

2. How did farmwives throughout the colonies in the eighteenth century contribute to their
families?
A) The women worked within the farmhouse due to traditional notions that only men
performed field work.
B) Mothers assembled manufactured goods in their homes while caring for children.
C) They exercised strict control over the family's finances and economic decisions.
D) Wives acted as helpmates to their husbands and performed both domestic and
agricultural tasks.

3. Which of the following statements describes the relationship of typical New England
women to the church in the eighteenth century?
A) Women flocked to New England churches because they were regarded as equals
there.
B) Women and men joined churches in equal numbers, but men dominated the
leadership.
C) Church attendance was obligatory for everyone, but only men could obtain church
membership.
D) Churches were filled primarily with women but led exclusively by men.

Page 1
4. Which of the following statements best describes women's property rights in the English
colonies in the eighteenth century?
A) A widow gained control over her late husband's estate and retained it even if she
remarried.
B) When they married, women passed legal ownership of all personal property to their
husbands.
C) Upon marriage, sons and daughters usually received equal shares of the family
property.
D) Any land a woman owned before her marriage reverted to her ownership at her
husband's death.

5. Which of the following statements best describes inheritance patterns in colonial New
England during the mid-1700s?
A) Typically, sons received their inheritance at age twenty-one.
B) Daughters—not sons—received a “marriage portion” when they married.
C) Fathers had a cultural duty to provide inheritances for their children.
D) Every family's eldest son inherited its entire property.

6. In eighteenth-century New England, the notion that parents would pay grown children
for their past labors in exchange for the privilege of choosing the children's spouses was
known as
A) common law.
B) the marriage portion.
C) primogeniture.
D) household production.

7. Which of the following statements describes rural life in the New England colonies
during the eighteenth century?
A) As the colonial elite consolidated its power, yeomen farmers tended to sink to the
level of impoverished European peasants.
B) Colonists' sense of personal worth and dignity in rural New England contrasted
sharply with European peasant life.
C) Farmers' grown children clung to their ancestral towns, fearful of moving westward
where they might encounter harsh living conditions.
D) Long-settled areas frequently lost much of their population as farmers continued to
migrate westward.

Page 2
8. Which of the following developments created a crisis for New England Puritan society
in the eighteenth century?
A) Changes in women's status caused a declining birthrate.
B) British domination threatened the region's economy.
C) Puritan churches could no longer attract qualified ministers.
D) Population growth made freehold land scarce.

9. Which of the following was a result of the long-practiced policy of subdividing land in
New England for inheritance by the mid-1700s?
A) The number of children conceived before marriage rose sharply.
B) Parents helped their children get established on their own prosperous farm.
C) The freehold system in the American colonies became unsustainable.
D) Speculators bought up small parcels of land, combined them, and sold them off at a
large profit.

10. Which of the following was an outcome of New England families' efforts to maintain
the freeholder ideal in the late eighteenth century?
A) Churches consolidated their power and exercised greater control over young adults'
behavior.
B) Thousands of New England families migrated to Canada, where more land was
available.
C) Farmers abandoned traditional grain crops and adopted livestock agriculture
instead.
D) Colonial legislatures reformed inheritance laws and eliminated the “marriage
portion.”

11. Which of the following statements describes the role of money and economic exchange
in eighteenth-century rural New England?
A) Generally, no money was exchanged between relatives and neighbors, but accounts
of debts were maintained and settled every few years by cash transfers.
B) As New England's exports increased, even isolated farming communities became
accustomed to monetary transactions.
C) Because they owed increasingly heavy taxes to the British, who demanded
payment in coin, farmers were forced to switch from a barter economy to a cash
economy.
D) Land banks printed and distributed paper currency for farmers to use as cash in
return for a percentage of a farm's yearly output.

Page 3
12. In New York during the first half of the eighteenth century, settlement of the Hudson
River Valley showed which of the following patterns?
A) The Dutch manorial system largely remained intact, with a few wealthy and
powerful Dutch and English landlords dominating poor tenant families.
B) German and Scots-Irish immigrants, attracted by generous terms offered by Dutch
families who did not want the land to be settled exclusively by migrating New
Englanders, poured in.
C) Continuing troubles with the French and Indians to the north kept the valley
sparsely populated until the eve of the American Revolution.
D) Migrants from overcrowded New England bid up the price of land so high that
immigrant Germans and Scots-Irish could not afford to settle there.

13. Which of the following statements characterizes the nature of colonial Pennsylvania
during the eighteenth century?
A) Despite the Quakers' ideals, rural colonial Pennsylvania was never a land of
economic equality.
B) Because the Quakers insisted on social equality and justice, few economic
inequalities developed until the 1790s.
C) The growing wheat trade in the mid-eighteenth century brought an influx of poor
families, which increased social divisions.
D) German and Scots-Irish farmers soon became the richest ethnic groups in rural
Pennsylvania.

14. Which of the following features characterized the Middle Atlantic colonies of New
York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania in the eighteenth century?
A) Religious orthodoxy
B) Cultural diversity
C) Amicable relations with Native Americans
D) A wheat-based economy

15. Which of the following eighteenth-century Pennsylvania immigrant groups quickly lost
its cultural identity by practicing intermarriage with other Protestants?
A) Scots-Irish Presbyterians
B) English Quakers
C) French Huguenots
D) Swedish Lutherans

Page 4
16. What did the German immigrants known as redemptioners do on their arrival in
Pennsylvania in the eighteenth century?
A) Found jobs as wage laborers in order to save money to bring their relatives to
America
B) Negotiated the terms for a period of servitude through which they would pay for
their trip
C) Sold valuable products they brought from Germany in order to defray their travel
expenses
D) Organized elaborate religious revivals intended to redeem the souls of fallen-away
Christians

17. The most numerous voluntary (nonslave) emigrants to British North America in the
eighteenth century came from which of the following groups?
A) Scots-Irish
B) English
C) Germans
D) Dutch

18. Which of the following statements characterizes eighteenth-century religious practice in


Pennsylvania?
A) Quaker congregations lacked the power to punish individuals who broke the moral
code.
B) Quakers increasingly married outside their faith.
C) Each religious sect enforced moral behavior among its members.
D) Most members of religious congregations faithfully observed the Sabbath.

19. The political conflicts that wracked colonial Pennsylvania in the middle of the
eighteenth century stemmed from which of the following sources?
A) Disagreements over the importance of economic opportunity
B) Rapid immigration and population growth
C) Tension between pious Quakers and those who embraced religious toleration
D) State funding for churches and public education

20. Why was the print revolution that occurred in the colonies during the early eighteenth
century significant?
A) The print revolution made the American Reformation possible.
B) It solidified distinctions between slaves and free people.
C) Printing allowed for the broad transmission of new ideas.
D) The revolution advanced the burgeoning cause of public education.

Page 5
21. The English philosopher John Locke believed which of the following ideas?
A) People had natural rights such as life, liberty, and property.
B) Education corrupted humans' natural purposes and instincts.
C) Most people were not qualified to exercise any influence over politics.
D) Human nature was fundamentally acquisitive and competitive.

22. Puritan minister Cotton Mather's response to which of the following eighteenth-century
crises demonstrated that Enlightenment ideas had begun to influence him?
A) The Salem witch trials
B) The Boston smallpox epidemic
C) Harvard University's decision to reject Puritanism
D) Andover's resolution to exempt churches from taxation

23. Influenced by Enlightenment science, which of the following religious movements


believed that God had created the world but allowed it to operate in accordance with the
laws of nature?
A) Methodism
B) Presbyterianism
C) Regulatorism
D) Deism

24. How did the Pietism movement of the eighteenth century differ from Puritanism?
A) The movement emphasized the use of reason and logic to understand the world.
B) It appealed strongly to well-educated urban populations.
C) Pietism stressed an individual's relationship with God.
D) It differed in its rejection of the notion that humans were sinful.

25. Which of these individuals would have most likely preferred Pietism to Deism in the
eighteenth century?
A) A Virginia planter
B) A Scots-Irish migrant
C) An urban artisan
D) A wealthy New York merchant

26. What made George Whitefield such a successful evangelical preacher in New England
in the 1740s?
A) A reputation for being “almost angelical” in appearance
B) Puritans' vicious denunciation of his methods
C) His claims of faith-healing abilities
D) His 1737 book, A Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God

Page 6
27. Which of the following statements describes the religious controversy that emerged
from the Great Awakening during the 1740s and 1750s?
A) The Old Lights in Massachusetts and Connecticut called for a resurgence of
emotion-based religious practices.
B) The Old Lights prohibited traveling preachers from speaking to a congregation
without its minister's permission.
C) The New Lights condemned the Old Light practice of allowing women to speak in
churches.
D) The New Lights condemned “crying out, fainting, and convulsions” as a medieval
practice akin to superstition.

28. Which of these religious denominations successfully converted many slaves in the mid-
eighteenth-century southern colonies?
A) Presbyterians
B) Methodists
C) Baptists
D) Anglicans

29. Why did the Virginia gentry fear the rise of the Baptists in the mid-eighteenth century?
A) The Baptists were notorious for indulging in activities such as horse racing,
gambling, and cockfighting.
B) They threatened to undermine the gentry's position and privilege.
C) Baptist ministers argued that they occupied a higher social and moral plane than
Anglicans and Presbyterians.
D) The radical Protestants insisted that any slaves who converted to Christianity
should be immediately freed by their masters.

30. Which of the following consequences of the eighteenth-century Great Awakening made
it historically significant?
A) The declining importance of higher education in the American colonies
B) An increasing level of admiration for the growing business community
C) Americans' new freedom to challenge authority within and outside the church
D) The consolidation of American religious fervor into a smaller number of
denominations

Page 7
31. Which of the following eighteenth-century movements posed a significant challenge to
traditional assumptions about race, gender, and class in American society?
A) The Enlightenment
B) The Regulator movement
C) The Glorious Revolution
D) The Great Awakening

32. For this question, refer to the following quotation.

“I Shall disclose several Principles of Natural Knowledge; plainly discovering the Law
of Nature; or the true sentiments of Natural Reason, with Respect to Mans Being and
Government. . . . I shall consider Man in a state of Natural Being, as a Free-Born
Subject under the Crown of Heaven, and owing Homage to none but God himself. It is
certain Civil Government in General, is . . . an Incomparable Benefit to Mankind, yet . .
. needs be acknowledged to be the Effect of Humane Free-Compacts and not of Divine
Institution; it is the Produce of Mans Reason, of Humane and Rational Combinations,
and not from any direct Orders of Infinite Wisdom. . . .

The Prime Immunity in Mans State, is that he is most properly the Subject of the Law of
Nature. He is the Favourite Animal on Earth; in that this Part of Gods Image, viz.
Reason is Congenate with his Nature, wherein by a Law Immutable, Instampt upon his
Frame, God has provided a Rule for Men in all their Actions; obliging each one to the
performance of that which is Right, not only as to Justice, but likewise as to all other
Moral Vertues, which is nothing but the Dictate of Right Reason founded in the Soul of
Man. . . .

The Second Great Immunity of Man is an Original Liberty Instampt upon his Rational
Nature. He that intrudes upon this Liberty, Violates the Law of Nature. . . .

The Third Capital Immunity belonging to Mans Nature, is an equality amongst Men;
Which is not to be denyed by the Law of Nature, till Man has Resigned himself with all
his Rights for the sake of a Civil State; and then his Personal Liberty and Equality is to
be cherished, and preserved to the highest degree.”

John Wise, A Vindication of the Government of New England Churches, 1717

The ideas expressed in the excerpt above most clearly show the influence of which of
the following?
A) Enlightenment ideas
B) The growth of ideas about race
C) The continued presence of multiple European powers in North America
D) European desires for new sources of wealth, and converts to Christianity

Page 8
33. For this question, refer to the following quotation.

“I Shall disclose several Principles of Natural Knowledge; plainly discovering the Law
of Nature; or the true sentiments of Natural Reason, with Respect to Mans Being and
Government. . . . I shall consider Man in a state of Natural Being, as a Free-Born
Subject under the Crown of Heaven, and owing Homage to none but God himself. It is
certain Civil Government in General, is . . . an Incomparable Benefit to Mankind, yet . .
. needs be acknowledged to be the Effect of Humane Free-Compacts and not of Divine
Institution; it is the Produce of Mans Reason, of Humane and Rational Combinations,
and not from any direct Orders of Infinite Wisdom. . . .

The Prime Immunity in Mans State, is that he is most properly the Subject of the Law of
Nature. He is the Favourite Animal on Earth; in that this Part of Gods Image, viz.
Reason is Congenate with his Nature, wherein by a Law Immutable, Instampt upon his
Frame, God has provided a Rule for Men in all their Actions; obliging each one to the
performance of that which is Right, not only as to Justice, but likewise as to all other
Moral Vertues, which is nothing but the Dictate of Right Reason founded in the Soul of
Man. . . .

The Second Great Immunity of Man is an Original Liberty Instampt upon his Rational
Nature. He that intrudes upon this Liberty, Violates the Law of Nature. . . .

The Third Capital Immunity belonging to Mans Nature, is an equality amongst Men;
Which is not to be denyed by the Law of Nature, till Man has Resigned himself with all
his Rights for the sake of a Civil State; and then his Personal Liberty and Equality is to
be cherished, and preserved to the highest degree.”

John Wise, A Vindication of the Government of New England Churches, 1717

The belief expressed in the excerpt above has the most in common with which of the
following?
A) Republican motherhood
B) The Second Great Awakening
C) Manifest Destiny
D) The Dred Scott decision

Page 9
34. For this question, refer to the following quotation.

“I Shall disclose several Principles of Natural Knowledge; plainly discovering the Law
of Nature; or the true sentiments of Natural Reason, with Respect to Mans Being and
Government. . . . I shall consider Man in a state of Natural Being, as a Free-Born
Subject under the Crown of Heaven, and owing Homage to none but God himself. It is
certain Civil Government in General, is . . . an Incomparable Benefit to Mankind, yet . .
. needs be acknowledged to be the Effect of Humane Free-Compacts and not of Divine
Institution; it is the Produce of Mans Reason, of Humane and Rational Combinations,
and not from any direct Orders of Infinite Wisdom. . . .

The Prime Immunity in Mans State, is that he is most properly the Subject of the Law of
Nature. He is the Favourite Animal on Earth; in that this Part of Gods Image, viz.
Reason is Congenate with his Nature, wherein by a Law Immutable, Instampt upon his
Frame, God has provided a Rule for Men in all their Actions; obliging each one to the
performance of that which is Right, not only as to Justice, but likewise as to all other
Moral Vertues, which is nothing but the Dictate of Right Reason founded in the Soul of
Man. . . .

The Second Great Immunity of Man is an Original Liberty Instampt upon his Rational
Nature. He that intrudes upon this Liberty, Violates the Law of Nature. . . .

The Third Capital Immunity belonging to Mans Nature, is an equality amongst Men;
Which is not to be denyed by the Law of Nature, till Man has Resigned himself with all
his Rights for the sake of a Civil State; and then his Personal Liberty and Equality is to
be cherished, and preserved to the highest degree.”

John Wise, A Vindication of the Government of New England Churches, 1717

Which of the following groups would most likely have supported the point of view of
the excerpt?
A) The British government
B) French-Indian fur traders
C) Indentured servants
D) Puritans

Page 10
35. For this question, refer to the following painting, George Whitefield Preaching, by John
Collet.

The painting above best serves as evidence of


A) the British government's indifference to colonial governance.
B) the political thought of the Enlightenment.
C) the colonists' belief in the superiority of republican self-government.
D) colonial religious fervor and diversity.

Page 11
Page 12
36. For this question, refer to the following painting, George Whitefield Preaching, by John
Collet.

Movements similar to those depicted in the painting above most directly led to
A) growth of a religious faith that led colonials to see themselves as a chosen people
blessed with liberty.

Page 13
B) difficulties in trade and finance within the North American colonies, leading to
British attempts to integrate the colonies into a hierarchical imperial structure.
C) debates and controversies over the morality of slavery, and increased British efforts
to limit the practice in the colonies.
D) debates about the proper role of women in society.

37. The French and Indian War started as a result of disputed land claims regarding
A) the Ohio River Valley.
B) the Mississippi River.
C) western New York.
D) Quebec.

38. Hostilities between French troops and Virginians led by Colonel George Washington
began in 1754 at which of the following locations?
A) Fort Duquesne
B) Williamsburg
C) Quebec
D) Valley Forge

39. How did the British government respond to hostilities in America in 1754?
A) William Pitt and Lord Halifax persuaded Prime Minister Pelham to start a war in
America against the French.
B) Prime Minister Henry Pelham called for a massive troop buildup to conquer French
Canada.
C) Parliament voted to adopt a Plan of Union for the colonies.
D) Parliament shifted responsibility for military defense to a colonial assembly to be
convened at Albany.

40. What made the British authorities wary of declaring war against the French in North
America in 1754?
A) Native American tribes were sure to side with the French over the British.
B) The colonists protested against the deployment of British troops in North America.
C) They believed the American colonists were incapable of cooperating in their own
defense.
D) The king insisted that the colonies were not generating enough income to support a
war.

Page 14
41. The 1754 Albany Congress was a significant event because it demonstrated that
A) the colonies were ready to unite for defense under England's authority.
B) neither the colonists nor the British found the other's plan acceptable.
C) Washington was prepared to surrender the Ohio Valley to the French.
D) throughout the colonies, there was a desire to adopt Ben Franklin's plan for union.

42. The group that came to be known as the Cajuns after the Great War for Empire were
A) Native Americans who were among the closest allies of the French.
B) British troops sent to North America after Braddock's defeat in 1755.
C) French settlers expelled by the British from Nova Scotia and deported to Louisiana.
D) Scots-Irish colonists who settled in Nova Scotia after the British expelled the
French.

43. Which of the following was part of William Pitt's strategy to mobilize the American
colonists for the Great War for Empire in 1756?
A) Threatening that a French victory would require the colonists to become Roman
Catholics
B) Promising that the colonists could gain access to land in the Ohio Valley if they
won the war
C) Committing to provide a fleet of British ships and 30,000 soldiers to North
America
D) Agreeing that Britain would pay the full cost of all the troops raised by the colonies

44. Which of the following was a provision of the Treaty of Paris of 1763?
A) England acquired all French territory in continental North America.
B) Spain acquired Louisiana and all of France's territory in Canada.
C) England received both of the French sugar islands in the West Indies.
D) France lost all of her North American territory east of the Mississippi River.

45. In the mid-1700s, which industrializing nation was the dominant commercial power in
the Atlantic Ocean?
A) Holland
B) England
C) France
D) Germany

Page 15
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Established January 1, 1843
Thos. Kent Manufacturing Co.
MANUFACTURERS OF
Woolen Goods, Blankets, Flannels, Uniform Cloths and Worsted Yarns
U. S. Standard Olive Drab Covert Cloths, Flannels and Serges a Specialty
SPECIAL BLANKETS
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RUNNYMEDE MILLS
Bell Telephone, 160 Lansdowne, Pa.
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Alpha
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Engravings for the Printer, Merchant & Manufacturer
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Army and Navy Academy
WASHINGTON, D. C.
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for the
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Candidates are thoroughly prepared, both in class and by private
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WEST POINT, Military Academy, Entrance Examination.


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REVENUE CUTTER, Cadet, Entrance Examination.

Remarkable Success in all the Service Examinations.


For Particulars Address
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Principal
1410 Harvard St.

“WE PRINT ANYTHING”


KOHN & POLLOCK, Inc.
Complete Book, Catalog
Railroad Printers
315-317 WEST GERMAN STREET
Baltimore, Maryland

AMERICAN SECURITY AND TRUST


COMPANY
WASHINGTON, D. C.
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT FROM ORGANIZATION TO DATE

DEPOSITS CAPITAL ASSETS


Surplus and
Undivided
Profits
Dec. 31, 1891— $ 588,715 $1,320,238 $ 2,159,704
1893— 809,261 1,462,097 2,905,658
1895— 1,266,201 1,533,184 3,777,185
1897— 2,627,182 1,587,455 5,149,138
1899— 3,702,594 1,738,455 5,807,569
1901— 3,943,832 1,838,108 6,012,165
1903— 4,061,215 4,606,856 8,680,468
1905— 5,555,065 4,709,706 10,311,840
1907— 5,753,260 4,904,048 10,712,722
Nov. 30, 1908— $7,450,174 Assets $12,407,298

Amount Paid to Customers in Interest $1,285,735.18


Amount Added to Capital for Protection of Customers $1,750,000.00
Amount Added to Surplus for Protection of Customers $1,967,124.47

From the foregoing it will be seen that the business of the Company has
steadily grown from year to year, and, while the shareholders have
received a fair return on the capital invested, the directors have always
borne in mind that their first duty was protection to the depositors, which
they have accomplished by adding over four million dollars, making a
guarantee fund to its clients, including shareholders’ liability, of EIGHT
MILLION DOLLARS, a record shown by few banking corporations in the
United States.
This statement does not include our Trust Department, the securities of
which, under the law, are kept entirely separate and distinct from the
assets of the Company, and our relations being of a confidential nature, no
published statements are made. The growth has, however, been much
greater than the above.
Accounts Solicited Interest Paid on all Deposits, Large
or Small
STATEMENT OF
The Commonwealth Title Insurance and
Trust Company
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS OCTOBER 31, 1908

ASSETS
Loans Secured by Collateral $2,023,470.08
Bonds and Mortgages 316,643.00
Bonds 3,000,564.74
Ground Rents 18,000.00
Accrued Interest 46,185.86
Real Estate, Furniture and Fixtures, including Safe
Deposit Vaults 1,358,679.90
Miscellaneous 87,367.33
Reserve—(Cash on hand, in Bank and Municipals) 937,865.33
Total $7,788,776.24

LIABILITIES
Capital Stock $1,000,000.00
Surplus 1,100,000.00
Undivided Profits 155,631.99
Miscellaneous 2,060.50
Dividend payable November 10th 60,000.00
Deposits 5,471,083.75
Total $7,788,776.24

Trust Funds—Invested $7,469,022.03


Trust Funds—Uninvested 57,635.91
Total $7,526,657.94

DIMNER BEEBER, President JAMES V. ELLISON, Treasurer

The Safest Investments


Are those that do not fluctuate during disturbed conditions of the money or
stock markets. First deed of trust notes (first mortgages), well secured on
real estate in the District of Columbia, constitute “gilt-edge” investments.
They do not depend upon the financial responsibility of individuals or
corporations for their stability, and are exempt from taxation as personal
property. We can supply such investments in amounts from $500 upward.
Send for booklet, “Concerning Loans and Investments.”

Swartzell, Rheem & Hensey Co.


727 15TH STREET N. W. WASHINGTON, D. C.

Huyler’s
CHOCOLATES BONBONS
FRESH DELICIOUS

Fancy Baskets, Boxes and Novelties filled with our Delicious Candies
make most acceptable gifts.
1119 F St. N.W. Washington, D.C.

Telephone, N 4372

Great Bear
Spring Water
Fifty Cents per Case of 6 glass-stoppered bottles
New Warehouse and Office
322 R Street Northeast
Washington, D. C.
NATIONAL ENGRAVING CO.
Designers, Halftone, Line
and Color Engravers
Phone, Main 1679
Office, 506-508 Fourteenth Street, Cor. Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington, D.C., U. S. A.
QUALITY DISPATCH

SAFE DEPOSIT AND


TRUST COMPANY
OF BALTIMORE
CHARTERED
EIGHTEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTY FOUR

NATIONAL HOTEL
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Pennsylvania Avenue and Sixth Street
THE NATIONAL HOTEL, situated about midway on the famous
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SCHEDULE OF RATES:
AMERICAN PLAN—$2.50 and $3.00 per day each person. For rooms with
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EUROPEAN PLAN—Rooms, $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 per day; Rooms with
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C. F. SCHUTT, Manager

KNEESSI’S SONS
MANUFACTURERS OF
TRUNKS, SUIT CASES
TRAVELING BAGS
LEATHER NOVELTIES
425 SEVENTH STREET N. W.
PHONE, M 2000
SPECIAL TRUNK FOR NURSES AND MEDICAL PURPOSES

Professional Nursing
A Powder
Very inexpensive, which, when dissolved in water, makes a pleasant,
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Columbia Theatre
The Leading Theatre of Washington, D. C.
COLUMBIA THEATRE CO., Proprietors
FRAME METZEROTT,
PRESIDENT
OLIVER METZEROTT,
TREASURER
FRED. G. BERGER,
MANAGER
Washington, D. C.

Hotel Rudolph
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.
American and European
JOEL HILLMAN,
Proprietor

Bailey, Banks & Biddle Co.


Designers and Makers of the

OFFICIAL INSIGNIA
for the
American National Red Cross
for
National and State Officers

14-K. Gold and Enamel, $10


Silver, Gilt and Enamel, $5
Issued upon receipt of permit, which can be obtained from Secretary
Charles L. Magee, War Department, Washington, D. C.
1218-20-22 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Penna.
AN ABDOMINAL SUPPORTER IN HARMONY WITH MODERN
SURGERY
The “Storm” Binder and Abdominal
Supporter
PATENTED
IS ADAPTED TO USE OF MEN, WOMEN, CHILDREN AND BABIES

No Whalebones
No Rubber Elastic
Washable as Underwear
Light
Flexible
Durable
Comfortable

The invention which took the prize offered by the Managers of the
Woman’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
The “Storm” Binder may be used as a SPECIAL support in cases of
prolapsed kidney, stomach, colon and in ventral and umbilical hernia; as a
GENERAL support in obesity and general relaxation; as a POST-
OPERATIVE Binder after operation upon the kidney, stomach, bladder,
appendix and pelvic organs, and after plastic operations and in conditions
of irritable bladder to support the weight of the viscera.
WOMAN’S BELT—Front View MAN’S BELT—Front
View
Illustrated folder, giving styles, prices and diagram for measuring, and
partial list of physicians using “Storm” Binder sent on request. A comfort to
athletes, especially horseback riders. Of marked value in the prevention
and relief of intestinal disorders.
Mail Orders Filled Within 24 Hours on Receipt of Price
KATHERINE L. STORM, M. D. 1612 DIAMOND
STREET, PHILADELPHIA

EBBITT HOUSE
AMERICAN PLAN
WASHINGTON, D. C.

ARMY AND NAVY


HEADQUARTERS
H. C. BURCH
PROPRIETOR

ARTHUR P. GREELEY
Attorney and Counsellor in Patent and Trademark Causes
Washington Loan and Trust Building
WASHINGTON, D. C.

R. Pluym
Ladies’ Tailor
Habit Maker.
1216 14TH STREET
PHONE, N. 6289 WASHINGTON, D. C.

Residence, 2018 First St. N.W. Tel., North 5749


ALEX. MILLER
Carpenter and Builder
2215 OHIO AVENUE N. W. WASHINGTON, D. C.
TEL., MAIN 1281
(Send for Nurses’ Catalog N)

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