Page:A bibliography of the state of Maine from the earliest period to 1891 - Volume 1.djvu/31

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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF MAINE.
17

———Address of the carriers of the Christian Mirror, to its patrons. (Engraving of Bible.) Portland, January 1, 1827. 8vo. pp. 16. [152

———An Address delivered at a meeting of the working-men of Brunswick, July ;iO, 1831, by a mechanic. Published by request of the meeting. Press of J. Griffin. 8vo. pp. [153

———Address to the community on the necessity of legalizing the study of anatomy. By order of the Medical Society of Maine. Brunswick: Press of Joseph Griffin. 1832. [154

———(An) Address delivered before the Union Temperance Society (consisting chiefly of gentlemen of the Bar) of Oxford County, Me., in the Court House at Paris, June 10, 1834. Boston: William Pierce, 9 Cornhill. 1835. 12mo. pp. 23. [155

———(An) Address to the trafficers in intoxicating liquors in Bangor, by a committee appointed by the citizens. Bangor: Smith & Sayward, Printers, 1843. 8vo. pp. 8. [156

Eleven prominent citizens of all parties signed the address.

———Address to the Board of Managers of the Colonization Society of the State of Maine, n. p. (Portland.) n. d. (1855.) 2mo. pp. 7. [157

———Address to the people. By the State Temperance Convention. Held at Augusta, January 14tli and 15th, 1868. n. t. p. [158

———(An) Address of the Democratic members of the Legislature, to the Democratic party in Maine, n. p n. d. 8vo. pp. 8. [159

Addresses to Sabbath-school scholars. By a superintendent. Portland: Shirley & Hyde, Exchange Street. 1828. 18mo. pp. 108. [160
"A. E. W." Pseud. See Alderdice, Elizabeth W.
Agamenticus. See York.
Agassiz, Jean Louis Rudolphe, LL. D. 1807–73. Naturalist, Cambridge, Mass.

Glacial Phenomena in Maine. At. Month. 19: 211, 281. (1867.) [161

———Geological Sketches. By L. Agassiz. Second series. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 11 East Seventh Street, New York. The Riverside Press, Cambridge. 1886. 12mo. pp. 229. [162

Glacial Phenomena in Maine, pp. 90–152.

In September, 1864, Agassiz made an excursion into Maine, partly to examine the drift phenomena on the islands and coast of that state and partly to study the so-called "horse backs." The journey proved to be one of the most interesting ho had made in this country with reference to local glacial phenomena.

Compass in hand, he followed the extraordinary ridges of morainic material lying between Bangor and Katahdin, to the Ebeene Mountains, at the foot of which are the Katahdin Iron Works. Returning to Bangor, he pursued with the same minute investigations, the glacial bracks and erratic material from that place to the sea-coast and to Mount Desert. The details of this journey and its results are given in one of the papers contained in the second volume of his " Geological Sketches." Life of Agassiz, by his wife. 1885. p. 622.