xt7ghx15n565_195 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ghx15n565/data/mets.xml https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ghx15n565/data/0000ua001.dao.xml unknown 9.56 Cubic Feet 33 boxes archival material 0000ua001 English University of Kentucky Property rights reside with the University of Kentucky. The University of Kentucky holds the copyright for materials created in the course of business by University of Kentucky employees. Copyright for all other materials has not been assigned to the University of Kentucky. For information about permission to reproduce or publish, please contact the Special Collections Research Center.  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. James K. Patterson papers January 1899-March 1900 text January 1899-March 1900 2024 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ghx15n565/data/0000ua001/Box_20/Folder_3/Multipage20260.pdf section false xt7ghx15n565_195 xt7ghx15n565 . i’.’ ,v {TSP-MES]- . F

A= R. NOE'TNAGEL,
: ‘. HT.» .< '7'w1‘i’ ,, r 3—. ~~ V . . -* V; ‘3 f . ,-> ‘ '7 ' "a
«i ?\ :XLW‘fi :1 J) Ti DELQHR 13137141133; “and”

T L ‘

WALHU ~1'"E{EET7 BETWEEN SHORT ANDIV-CONSTITUTSON SWYRE

_ V '7‘
);>-;\ lmmh‘ \

.Q,‘

' - ::~~~"
‘» ""‘-*'«.-* ‘ .4

“MENU! ”QUER, ("01:77: ”1‘77- .. .‘

."4;

 

lo” ‘ Wyn/70w ’
/ I, ,,
fi’d‘ WWW/m

/ CL”. Zu/VW
/z/a % '4,
/¢a 5W

/ QM. am“,
I‘d EQMOVM

41y @mm

JV f;

/ QAA/ , 44/ (Ar/C,4_.

Z Wad/57 W5 .

Wfiv‘fi “4A4 ,\

//

-E._W,A44__§_

\.

E

/; ,1

' /

” ' / ,/
.,// M fla/[d (Legi WW
/,x
,/

 

 

 

 BANK OF LOUISVILLE.

(INCORPORATED 1833.)

LOUISVILLE, KY., January 3, 1899.
DEAR SIR:

At a meeting of the Board of Directors, held this day,
the resignation of Mr. M. C. Peter, which had previously been
tendered owing to the press of his private business, was
accepted with much regret. Mr. Peter will still remain a
director of the bank.

Mr. P. N. Clarke was elected President of the bank, to
fill the vacancy caused by Mr. Peter’s resignation.

The signatures of the officers authorized to sign drafts,
etc., will be found below.

Yours truly,

g ”<9” V‘CCASHIER.

fl-L/W PRESIDENT.

J / Vfi/(F/fitimk VICE-PRESIDENT.

 

 J/@’ .92pr .2: /:::LZ:::¢£/v /é4p 7/64” Vt Jig/7 W
A” JW/WZM ”5 ”1’0“ %9{ 4w 2;“ 6%
Lumé/ I»: 9';ch /;,,\/. $144 721 ?4 Ta:/ W4 ¢M
¢/1/p/4‘;' 7% 49,»? 4/ y, //u; /4,; 1// A //m#7 ,4 //1/Wf‘/(fl%

 

 14/1/55 7: WHITE 6. OERBY 1401/ FE.

 

“mm?" WW““ '

M255 5 521555: 15*" 51’:
BETWEEN TH’ flVEj 8’0 WWW

5* -g;—;-»Wm—r-

a. ‘ 7‘
CABLE ADDRgSS,"JGIST NEW WORK? 3:DI C-lgATE D

TELEPHONE 2369-IBT’351. - BY 6 . D w a

/NMAK/N5fiij’§/zfflg%/§Tf IHIS/VUMBf/i’. N EW YZR K Fe b . 6 the 1 9 00 19

Rev. James K. Patterson,
Lexington, Ky.

Will you kin.é1y
ng flom 8’30

umes
endorsement ana praise
in fine leaéing librari
natituti ona throughoufi thc
i151C in the big 5555 est imationm The Lcndon ”Time5“
as 5 war5 of historé cal 55d biGgraphical ' '
ané the N5w York "Esrald“ calls it
nion to the literature of the countrya“
at}? will be the bicgraphical authority of
ta come, né j 's flesirable the5efcre to
anfi ccmplete as possible
or future ref 5, as.
u see, we are _
anfi famzly ariasy and we "5 5 fl . - v '1 n. ”15
well as a f1 accou5: of -51 K"2 and work, from whi.5h 11
can prer (re a satisfactory biog1- a copy of whisk will
mitts to you before publication. There will be no charge
for this and we hope you will kindly assist us in obiaining a
sketchs for which we thank you in advance:

_, /'
s e v t u” /” "/
Your ‘7 I.“ I' ‘1‘ y 3 0% .9517? ab,

5 t
life a5 3501..t
he

6
:1
..

neat ant :i y

 

 glygflaflldfldalflwfizna) .i/fo’afivr/fi/A‘ l/é'nzyflg/vw/t/{éz $771744”)?

K

/-/;/: (27/ //////z¢///////?/ J50)?

. 3/6 / ,

,1" . ‘ ,2
a{J67ac7142777«a43972476%5;

.Q/ ,2“th e, jfcfl/fl C 7 «777711;. ',

,z) ,;//, ”J
’.¢zn“',fizéyb,w

T "‘3‘ 77+ vv 7".
lfiéx-:;.upl., -Hr.

4-: ,—

We ,re in recoiot of your favor of UL»

A

inclose horeWith a oataloouo of ngord

x, l

The urico n? Hodmkin's ltalv

l H.
Volumes > aha 2 ————————— —§12.SO
9.00

10.50

.3

gall be hagpy to allow you , discount ol
331005.

Your: verv truly.

‘
u

 

 THE

“ OXFORD INDIA PAPER.”

The Best is always imitated.

“Men do not counterfeit, counteri‘eits or imitate
that which IS unknown or worthless.”

The great success of the “ Oxford India. Paper”
has induced a number of imitators to offer so-culled
India l’uper Editions. said to be as good as the
famous Oxford Indian l’upur.

Don’t. be deceived! !

This wonderful paper is a speciulty of the Oxford
Press, and is numut‘uetured at their own paper mills.
[t was first produced in the your 1575, and has stead-
ily grown in popular t'uvor.

No other paper has yet been made that can up-
proacli it for its wonderful opacity, great toughness
and softness, and its agreeable tone.

 

 

m [.5 incurs taxman

H0LY’"1'313LE.
OLD AND NEW TESTAMENTS:

minulwvrvnlnnauncurxx L-uumluuuln
m-nmu run-Hr mum: m u. 11:.
u m mum mun :Jvnu:

The New
Cop y right
Editions

Contain " \ mrnnnmmcmncm

154 Full-Page

Plates oxrmm:
mm A? TE: uln'msrn‘ mm.
mm mmm.
cum mmm mu murmur. urn mm...
"(W VEIK: II I ILHHN AVENUE.

rF/Q/Qm/Q

18398—99;
Genuine “Oxford” Teachers’ Bibles
“Oxford ” Self-Prononnoing Bibles
“Oxford” Workers Bibles

AND

Authorized American Editions

Oxford Catalogue No. It»

TWENTY NEW i
corruionr EDITIONS. ;' m”"”m"“m“‘
__ V “I
Sunday-School Magazine: §_ HOLY BIBLE,
. February, 15177. E “"““"‘

“ In no rolunut on ' on) AND NEW WHEN“:
earth is {how Such a: mm.mmmm-iuuun-mun-mu..-
dihplrlyf, fill, :91“ I'Im' (‘Illll- 3 ”mm;:‘1:",:;:‘:;:':""”' '
puss, Q a ml is nmg- ‘ l
ntficcut in the publish‘
67"8 art and all that is
valuable in scholarship.
The binding is the Imr- V
faction of beauty and5
durability. N0 (Muller
should be without this
Bible whatever Dthm‘a
he may have."

mm to a: nun u: camrwn

“ OXFORD ’9 REFERENCE BIBLES

TEXT BIBLES, TESTAMENTS
Etc., Etc.

OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS,

American Branch,

91 and 93 Fifth Avenue, New York.

/ 1‘" , ,

 

 INDEX.

“Oxford " Self-Pronouncing Bibles. . . . . . .26, 39, 46,53,511
“Oxford” Text Bibles 33—44
“ Oxford " Pulpit Bibles, 44
“ Oxford " Reference Bibles. ........................... 43—47
“Oxford“ Family Bibles .............................. 55

“Oxford” Reference Bibles, with Index, Concordance,
and Maps ........................................... 4S)

“ Oxford“ \Vorkers’ Bible . . i . . . . . 50754
“Oxford " \Vidc Margin Bibles ................. .. 55
“ Oxford “ Interleaved Bibles. .. . .. H . . . 29, 49
"‘ Oxford" Parallel Bibles ................................ '2
“ Oxford" Testaments .................... ,. ...... 56761
“Oxford“ Book of Psalms ............................ 61
“Oxford” Apocryphas ................................. 61

Revised Bible with References .......................... 6:1

 

CHRIS TIA X :11) V0 CA Tl'].

Nashrille, Tram, llwmiber 23, 1897.

“ Of all the Toaclzers‘ Bibles- lha/ m have New" (his one strikes
us ax bring the bexl. The ‘lzelps’ are real lie/11x. Unlike
those in lining/(411119 chmp Bibles, they are not simply thrown,
loyal/127‘ in hodgepodge ,r'uxhz‘uu, 1111/ represent the fl't’N/Iea‘l
and oldest work of Illt’fbl't mos! 7110(15/71 suholru's,“

THE LIVING 011171? 011.
Chicayo, Ill, Xm‘e/nhu' '21, 18th}.
“ II'i/hout rloubl, the has! edition oft/w ”lb/w yr/ published for
Station/x, Teachers, and (Jim-gmncu.“
SFNDA ISO/[0 0L 111.1 0;! ZINE.

“ The publishers havejusl brought out an (Illlllm with revised
helps, which again puts [his work clmrly in advance of all
others. It is a great biblical library in one rolume."

 

GENUINE “ OXFORD ” TEACHERS’ Emma.

 

The BEST and MOST POPULAR
Teachers’ Bible in the World.

OVER 2,000,000 COPIES OF FORMER EDI-
TIONS HAVE BEEN SOLD.

THE PRESENT EDITION.

The present edition is an attempt to carry to a still
higher point the popularity and utility of the work.
011 the completion of the REVISED VicasmN on THE
BIBLE in 1885, it was speedily recognized that the time
had come for a yet more systematic and thorough
attempt to render the Ilelps a complete and accurate
guide to the study of the Scriptures. Public attention
had been called to the text of the Bible to an extent
before unknown, and many questions of textual crit-
icism and of interpretation had been practically settled
once [oral]. Again, the remarkable progress of arch-
aeology had necessitated a reinvestigation and con-
sequent modification of many accepted opinions as to
the history 01' the Jews and the 'arious races with
which they were associated. The work of the Palestine
Exploration Fund had caused a. revolution in long-
established views as to the topography of the Holy
Land. ' Egypt, Ass