. American bastile. A history of the illegal arrests and imprisonment of American citizens in the northern and border states ... during the late civil war . ntil the number of Representatives shall amount to two hundred,after which the proportion shall be so regulated by Congress, that there shallnot be less than two hundred Representatives, nor more than one Representa-tive for every fifty thousand persons. Article law, varying the compensation for the services of th«Senators and Representatives, shall take effect, until an election of Represent•tires shall have intervened. lxx A


. American bastile. A history of the illegal arrests and imprisonment of American citizens in the northern and border states ... during the late civil war . ntil the number of Representatives shall amount to two hundred,after which the proportion shall be so regulated by Congress, that there shallnot be less than two hundred Representatives, nor more than one Representa-tive for every fifty thousand persons. Article law, varying the compensation for the services of th«Senators and Representatives, shall take effect, until an election of Represent•tires shall have intervened. lxx AMENDMENTS. eleventh amendment wa8 proposed at the first session of tn«third Congress, 5 March, 1794, and was declared in a messagefrom the President of the United States to both houses of Con-gress, dated 8th January, 1798, to have been adopted by the con-stitutional number of States. The twelfth amendment was pro-posed at the first session of the eighth Congress, 12 December, 1803, and was adopted by the constitutional number of States in 1804, according to a public notice thereof by the Secretary ofState, dated 25th September, of the same AMERICAN BASTILE. COLONEL LAMBDIN P. MILLIGAN. LAMBDIN P. MILLIGAN is of Irish descent, and wasborn and raised in Belmont County, Ohio. His onlyopportunities for acquiring an education were enjoyed beforehe was eight years of age, at which time he could read seventeen he evinced a great desire to have an educationpreparatory to the study of medicine. His father, proud ofhis attainments, promised to send him to college, but wascompelled to forego so doing by the opposition of his wife,who insisted that no distinction should be made in the educa-tion of their children. Subsequently he left home, regardless of the wishes andthreats of his father, who declared that he would disinherithim if he did so. Without a dime in his pockets he beganhis career among strangers. Thrown upon his own resources,all the energies of his mind an


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