The Encyclopaedia Britannica; ..A dictionary of arts, sciences and general literature . ust companies, and aboard of trade. In 1890, 435 manufacturing estab-lishments reported to the Census Bureau. Thesehad an aggregate capital of g 14,000,000, hired13,000 employees, and produced merchandise valuedat $21,000,000 annually. The main shops of thePhiladelphia and Reading railroad, which employ1,000 hands, are located here. Pop. 1890, 58,661;1900, 78,961. See also Reading, Vol. XX, p. , John Henninger, an American pub-lic man; born in Sevier County, Tennessee, Oct. 18, 1818. He settled in


The Encyclopaedia Britannica; ..A dictionary of arts, sciences and general literature . ust companies, and aboard of trade. In 1890, 435 manufacturing estab-lishments reported to the Census Bureau. Thesehad an aggregate capital of g 14,000,000, hired13,000 employees, and produced merchandise valuedat $21,000,000 annually. The main shops of thePhiladelphia and Reading railroad, which employ1,000 hands, are located here. Pop. 1890, 58,661;1900, 78,961. See also Reading, Vol. XX, p. , John Henninger, an American pub-lic man; born in Sevier County, Tennessee, Oct. 18, 1818. He settled in Texasin 1839; was a deputy sur-veyor of the public lands(1839-43); elected to thestate house of representa-tives for two years in 1847;elected judge of the dis-trict court for six years in1852; resigned, and wasre-elected for six years in1856; was elected, in 1857,a Representative to Con-gress, and was re-electedin 1859; was elected to thesecession convention of Texas in 1861, and was adeputy to the provincial congress of the Confed-eracy. He was appointed postmaster-general of the. J. H. REAGAN. provisional government of the Confederacy, March6, i86i; reappointed, on the permanent organiza-tion of the Confederate government, in 1862, andoccupied the position until the close of the war;was appointed acting secretary of the treasury of theConfederate government for a short time precedingthe close of the war; a member of the state consti-tutional convention of 1875; a member of Congress(1875-86); elected to the United States Senate in1886; was joint author, with Senator Cullom, of theCuUom-Reagan Interstate Commerce Act. REALGAR. See Arsenic, Vol. II, p. 635. REALISM, in philosophy. See Hamilton,Vol. XI, pp. 417, 418; Schopenhauer, Vol. XXI,p. 457; and Universals, under Scholasticism, , pp. 418 et seq. REALISM is a name for the search for the actual,especially in the domain of philosophy and art. Itmight be said, by artificial thinkers, that all scientificinvestigations a


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