. History of the state of New York, political and governmental;. Harriet May Mills Harriet Ma\ Mills, lecturer ami retoriner; born at S\ racuse,N. v., August 9, 1857; her father, Dr. Charles DeVerard Millsand her nidther were deeply interested in the cause of abolitionand of suffrage and their home was one of the stations of tJerritSmiths underground railroad; graduated from Cornell uni-versity, 1879; organized the hrst Hrowniiig club in New Yorkstate and was widely known as a lecturer on Browning; beganlecturing on suffrage in 1892 and accompanied Susan B. Antlinnyon her campaign in 1894; was


. History of the state of New York, political and governmental;. Harriet May Mills Harriet Ma\ Mills, lecturer ami retoriner; born at S\ racuse,N. v., August 9, 1857; her father, Dr. Charles DeVerard Millsand her nidther were deeply interested in the cause of abolitionand of suffrage and their home was one of the stations of tJerritSmiths underground railroad; graduated from Cornell uni-versity, 1879; organized the hrst Hrowniiig club in New Yorkstate and was widely known as a lecturer on Browning; beganlecturing on suffrage in 1892 and accompanied Susan B. Antlinnyon her campaign in 1894; was the nominee of the democraticparty for secretary of state and a delegate at large to the demo-cratic national convention at San Francisco in Mrs. Carrie-; (haimw Catt Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt; born, Ripon, Wis.; studied lawas a girl and taught school for several years, attaining theposition of superintendent of schools; was state director andorganizer of the Iowa woman suffrage association; has heenpresident of the national woman suffrage association since 1916;has delivered lectures on suffrage in every state in the Unionand every country in Iurope. 1847] THE FREE SOIL REVOLT 353 ences. Not so with the people. If they err to-day they will correctthe error to-morrow. Various suggestions and recommendations were madeby the Governor for enactments concerning the newjudiciary system, most of which were favorably actedon by the Legislature. The Court of Appeals wasvested with power to review decisions of the SupremeCourt and Court of Chancery which might be made inthe six months interim between the going out of the oldCourt for the Correction of Errors and the establish-ment of the new courts; the State w^as divided into eight


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Keywords: ., bookauthorjohnsonw, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookyear1922