LIBRARY CATALOGUE ■ CONTAINING PRISON RULES, GOOD TIME LAW, PAROLE LAW AND PARDON LAW. OF THE NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY AT GROVE 1911 PRINTED AT THE PENITENTIARY PRINTING PLANT, GROVE, N. D. LIBRARY CATALOGUE CONTAINING PRISON RULES, GOOD TIME LAW, PAROLE LAW AND PARDON LAW. OF THE NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY AT GROVE 1911 PRINTED AT THE PENITENTIARY PRINTING PLANT, GROVE, N. D. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2017 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Alternates https://archive.org/details/librarycatalogue00nort_0 PREFACE. This pamphlet contains the laws relating to this institution, and the inmates thereof, also the rules and regulations prescribed for the government of the institution and the inmates confined therein. It is the duty of the deputy and chief keeper to see that this pamphlet is placed in the harfds of every inmate as soon as he enters the institution and to see that he is properly instructed in regard to same, also to instruct each and every officer and employe that it is his duty to become thoroughly familiar with the laws and rules of the institution, and to see that they are properly enforced. I < IBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 1 RULES. The first duty of an inmate is obedience and it will be to his interest to obey the laws of the state and nation and all of the present existing - rules and regulations of the institution. RULE 1. All conversation, or communication in any manner between you and any officer, employe, or any other person is strickly prohibited, ex- cept when necessary in connectiou with your work, or to make known your actual wants. All your wants, except those in connection with the work at which you are employed should in all cases be made known to the deputy warden, or in his absence, to the chief keeper, or the officer on duty in the cell house. RULE 2. It is prohibited to converse, or communicate in any manner with any inmate at any time, or place without permission of the proper officer. RULE 3. It is prohibited to make any unnecessary, or unusual noise at any time. RULE 4. Always approach the officers of the prison with your hat, or cap removed and your arms folded. Stand erect in a respectful manner and be brief in your communications. Insolence in any form to an officer, or an inmate will not be tolerated. RULE 5 It is prohibited under any pretense to leave your place of work, or the work assigned you, without the permission of the proper officer. RULE 6. It is required that you labor faithfully and diligently during working hours, or until your task is completed, and not allow your attention to be taken from your work. RULE 7. It is prohibited to wilfully, or carelessly injure, mark, or de- face your work, tools, wearing apparel, bedding, or anything belonging to, or about the prison. AIL articles of clothing must be accounted for and worn out garments must be returned before new ones will be issued. RULE 8. It is prohibited to have on your person, in your cell, or other- wise in your possession, any article whatever which has not been delivered to you by 7 or under the permission of tlie warden, or deputy warden. All of your business should be transacted through the warden. Finding anything in y 7 our possession not received as above, will be considered proof that you have vio- lated this rule. RULE 9. Each cell will be furnished as follows: One bible, one libra- ry 7 catalogue, ink, pen and holder, one cup, and one piece of sheet brass for nail cleaner, one face towel, one piece soap, one broom, one fiber brush, one scrub cloth, one stand, one chair, shelf with mirror attached and one bed with necessary 7 bedding, unless otherwise ordered by the warden, or deputy 7 warden. RULE 10. It is prohibited to buy, barter, trade, exchange, give or receive from an officer, visitor, or any other person, or. any inmate, anything whatever without the consent of the warden, or his deputy. RULE 11. It is prohibited to send any letters, papers, or any other com- munications to friends, or any person outside the prison except under the in- spection of the warden. RULE 12. You are required, unless otherwise ordered, to occupy 7 the same cell every night and as you enter your cell, close the door and remain holding it until locked by the guard. RULE 13. When the gong rings three taps in quick succession, you are required, to stand at the front of your cell, facing out, until excused by 7 an officer. Tne officer will excuse you by a wave of the hand when passing the cell. RULE 14. It is required, when the bell rings in the morning, that you arise, make up your bed, clean y 7 our cell, lavatory and closet and be prepared to leave when the gong rings for breakfast. 9 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY RULE 15. It is required when the night bell rings that you go to bed im- mediately and preserve silence until the gong sounds inThe morning. RULE 16. It is required that you keep your cell and furnishings in a clean and neat order. Special attention should be given the lavatory and closet, the latter to be flushed whenever used and no waste should be placed in same that is liable to clog it. If the lavatory, or closet becomes out of order, report immedi- ately to the deputy warden, or officer in charge. RULE 17. It is prohibited to go to, or be at, any place in or about the premises other tn'an that in whicn you are engaged at work, without the per- mission of the proper officer. RULE 18. If you become sick, or are unable to work, you should report to the officer in whose charge you may be, and he will dispose of your case as it may require. RULE 19. It is prohibited to gaze, or stare at persons visiting the prison, or other persons; to nave your attention taken from \ r our work thereby, or to at- tempt to speak without permission. RULE 20. You should notdispute the directions, nor refuse obedience to the orders of the officers, nor question their authority under any circumstances. RULE 21. You are permitted to report to the warden all cases of grievance or cases of discontent, wnether from officers or other persons. RULE 22. It is prohibited to quarrel, or fight, or to use angry or pro- fane language under any circumstances. You will not be allowed to brush against another inmate in passing, to get in each other’s way, or otherwise trespass upon the rights of each other, so as to provoke ill feeling. If you have any misunderstanding with any officer or inmate, you should report to the warden, or the deputy warden. RULE 23. It is not permitted to sleep with your outer clothing on. It is your duty to preserve cleanliness in every respect. RULE 24. You will observe the following rules when the gong rings at meal time. First gong: Stand at gate. Second gong: Step in front of cell and close gate. Tnird gong: Commence marching towards dining-room. RULE 25. On entering the dining hall, take your seat promptly, position erect, arms folded with eyes to front, until the signal is given to commence eating. RULE 26, Strict silence should be observed during the meal. Staring at visitors, talking and laughing, fooling or gazing about tne room, is strictly for- bidden. RULE 27 Eating or drinking before or after the bell rings, using vinegar in your drinking water, or putting meat on the table is prohibited. RULE 28. Cigarette smoking is absolutely prohibited and any inmate who violates this rule shall forfeit not less than 15 days of his good timeallowance or such other punishment as tne warden may deem advisable for each offence. The possession of cigarette papers or nicotine stains will be taken as conclu- sive evidence that this rule has been violated. NOTICE: The officers and emplo 3 T es are charged with the enforcement and execution of the laws of the state and nation, as well as the rules of the institu- tion in a firm and c.ourteous manner. It is your duty toyeild prompt obedience to any officer or employe while in the discharge of his duties. LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 3 GRADING OF INMATES FIRST GRADE. Any inmate having - a clear record for a period of six months will be placed in the ftrst grade. SECOND GRADE, When an inmate is received at the institution he will be. placed in the sec- ond grade. Inmates in the first grade will be reduced to the second grade by having three deportment reports within six months, or b} r order of the warden. Inmates in the third grade will be advanced to the second grade by hav- ing thirt} T consecutive good marks on their industry reports, or by having no deportment report for a period of six months, or b}^ order of the warden. THIRD GRADE ' Inmates in the second grade who have had three deportment reports within a period of six months will be placed in the third grade, or by order of the warden. Any inmate who escapes or attempts to escape, speaks disrespectfully to an officer, or assaults an officer or inmate, who uses foul or indecent language, or commits or incites a riot, shall be immediately reduced to the third grade. First grade inmates may wear their hair the same as a citizen, and will be provided with a cadet gray uniform with shoulder straps and buttons to designate their grade and will enjoy all the usual privileges of the institution. Second grade inmates will be provided with a cadet gray uniform with a black stripe extending up and down the outside seam of the trousers, also two black shoulder straps, and will enjoy all the usual privileges of the institution. Other privileges may be granted as soon as it may be wise and expedient to do so. Third grade inmates shall be subjected to the following restrictions. The uniform will be a full stripe uniform, and they will forfeit all the usual privileges except permission to receive mail once each week, write one letter each month, to have a bible, one library book and one newspaper, or magazine. Inmates who escape or attempt to escape, in addition to being provided with a full stripe uniform, will have a yellow stripe, two inches wide, sewed down the center of the back of their coat and a similar stripe down the back of each trouser leg. DAILY INDUSTRY AND DEPORTMENT REPORT. At the close of each day, officers in charge of different crews will issue a report showing the industry and deportment of each inmate whether, “Good,” “Fair,” or “Bad.” Record for monthly pa3 7 -roll will be taken from these reports. If an inmate’s report is marked “Fair” no wages will be paid for that day, or if a report is marked “Bad” two days wages will be lost. Individual deportment reports will be issued in duplicate each day cover- ing the infraction of any rules of the institution. The original will be sent to office and entr3 T made „n Inmates General Deportment record, and the duplicate will be sent the inmate for his information. An3 T inmate faking sickness, will, on report of the doctor, be given two “Bad” marks on dail3 r industory report. A113’ inmate reported for talking will be given a “Bad” report for that day and, in addition, will lose two days good time. 4 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY INMATES WAGES. Chapter 228, Session Laws of 1909, reads as follows: — 1. Length of working Day. Overtime. The board of trustees of the state penitentiary may operate the twine plant during the entire twenty-four hours of the day, or so much thereof as • they may deem wise, and they shall have authority to require the inmates of the penitentiary to work ten hours during the day, or so much there- of as they may direct. The twine plant may be operated more than ten hours per day; provided, that the board of trustees of the state penitentiary may pay all inmates who work more then ten hours per day not to exceed ten cents per hour for all work done in excess of ten hours per day, said sum for excess work to be credited to his account. 2. Compensation to Inmates. The board of trusees of the state penitentiary may at their discretion pay all inmates a compensation for their labor, not to exceed the sum of six cents per day; provided, that the warden of the state pen- itentiary shall keep an inmates account with each inmate to whom any money is paid, and.that no inmates shall be permitted to use any money credited to hisacjount until there shall beto his credit not less than twenty -five dollars, which sum of twenty-five dollars shall be paid to him when he is released and dis- charged instead of the five dollar allowance for temporary aid. When ever an inmate has more than twenty-five dollars earned and to his credit, his wife or minor children, or other person depending on him for support shall be enti- tled to draw five-sixths of such excess earnings; provided, that if he has no one dependent on him, that one-half of his earnings in excess of twenty-five dollars shall be placed in a general inmates benefit fund, and one-half shall shall be placed to the inmates personal account. The warden of the state penitentiary shall keep a correct account of the inmates benefit fund, showing receipts and expenditures. 3. Rules and Regulations. The board of trustees of the state penitentiary shall have full power to formulate rules and regulations for the payment of the wages to the inmates, and to determine what portion of the maximum .wages shall be paid; provided, that no wages shall be paid except for labor performed by the inmate. First and second grade inmates will be paid 5 cents per day lor each days work, except Sundays, provided their industry report for that day is marked “Good”. No wages will be paid if industry report is marked “Fair” and two days wages will be lost if industry report is marked “Bad”. Tnird grade in- mates will not be paid for their labor. The money thus earned will be placed to your credit under heading “Tem- porary Aid” and will be paid on date of discharge. Minimum amount paid in- mates on discharge account temporary aid. will be $5.00. After ypur temporary aid account has $25.00 co its credit, one-half of your earnings will be credited to your personal account and the balance to the Gen- eral Inmates Benefit Fund; or, five-sixths of earnings will be credited to a de- pendent relative, and one sixth placed to your personal account. Whenever a dependent relative of an inmate has $5.00 to their credit, remitt- ance will be made them. TOBACCO. First and second grade inmates will be furnished either a cut of chewing to- bacco, or a package of smoking tobacco each Sunday. Corn cob pipes will be furnished to inmates by applying to the deputy warden, chief keeper, or officer in charge. Third grade inmates will rot be furnished with tobacco, nor will they be al- lowed to have pipe, tobacco, or matches in their possession, or in their cells. The use of cigaretts, or snuff in any manner is strictly prohibited. LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 5 MAIL. First and second grade inmates will be allowed to receive their mail once each day and writing privelege will be granted them each Sunday, unless other- wise provided by the warden. Third grade inmates will receive their mail once a week and will be allowed to write the first Sunday in each month. One sheet of paper will be furnished you when writing privelege is granted. Letter should be written in English, dated on the first line on right hand side of sheet, and name and address of person for whom letter is intended, should be placed on the next two or three lines on left side of sheet; in the following manner: Grove, No. Dak., July 1, 1911. Mr. John Doe, 45 Broadway, New York, N. Y. Dear Sir: In closing letter, sign your full name to the right of center of sheet. All mail received or forwarded will be examined in the office and letters of an objectionable nature, or articles not allowed in the possession of inmates will be held in the office. It is prohibited to receive or forward letters to persons serving, or having served time in any penal institution, or to request catalogues, or information from dealers from whom you are unable to purchase. PERSONAL CASH AND ORDERS FOR SUPPLIES. Personal cash in the possession of inmates when admitted, or any cash re- ceived by them, will be held in office and proper accounts kept of same. Notice will be sent to inmates whenever a remittance is received for them. First and second grade inmates, having a credit to their personal account, will receive order blanks once each month and such supplies as tobacco, con- fectionery, toilet articles and reading matter may be placed on order and same will be purchased for them. When envelope containing order blank is received, same should be filled out at once and envelope with order enclosed should be placed in gate. If no sup- plies are desired, blank order and envelope should be handled in the same manner When supplies are ordered, it is important that you sign your full name in space provided. SOCIETIES. The inmates of the institution have an Edeavor Society and a Brotherhood Society for religious, moral and literary advantages and also for education and entertainment. The secretary of both societies will issue you an invitation to attend their meetings on 3 r our admission to the institution. DEVINE SERVICE. Divine services will be held in the inmates chapel each Sunday afternoon at two o’clock, unless otherwise ordered by the warden, and unless j^our name has been placed on list in cell-house provided for those who do not wish to attend, it will be required that you take part in the services. PHYSICIAN. If you desire to consult the physician, place your name on list provided for that purpose. Medicines will be supplied by the deputy warden, or in his ab- sence, chief keeper, or officer in charge of the cell-house. 6 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY GOOD TIME LAW. DIMINUTION OF SENTENCE FOR GOOD CONDUCT. Section. 10356. Diminution Regulated. Powers of Trustees. Every person committed to the state penitentiary under sentence other than life, who shall have no infraction of the rules and regulations of the prison or laws of the state recorded against him, shall be entitled to a deduction from the termof sentence for each year, or pro rata for any part of a year, as follows: From and includ- ing* the first year up to the third year, a deduction of two months for each year; from and including the third year up to the fifth year, a deduction of sevent 3 r -five days for each year; from and including the fifth year and up to the seventh year, a deduction of three months each year; from and including the seventh year up to the eleventh year, a deduction of one hundred and five days for e 4 ,ch year; from and including the eleventh year up to the period fixed for the expir- ation of the sentence, a deduction of four months for each year; and it shall be the duty of the warden to discharge any such persons from the penitentiary when he shall have served the term of his sentence less the time he may be en- titled to have deducted therefrom for good behavior as herein-before provided, and in the same manner as if no deduction had been made; provided, that if any person committed to the penitentiary shall be guilty of the violation of any of the rules and regulations thereof , or of the laws of the state, the board of trustees or the warden may and are hereby empowered at their -discretion to deprive such person of a portion or all, according to the flagrancy of his infrac- tion of the rules and regulations, of the diminution of the term of his sentence. TERM. RATE PER YEAR. ' TOTAL. 1 year 2 years. _ 3 years . _ 4 years. . 5 years.. 6 years __ 7 years.. 8 years.. 9 years.. 10 years. 11 years. 12 years 13 years. 14 years. 15 years. 16 years. 17 years. 18 years 19 years. 20 years . 21 years. 22 years. 23 years . 24 3 T ears. 25 3 'ears. .2 months. .2 months. .75 days.. 75 days.. .3 montiis. .3 months. .105 days. .105 days. .105 days. . lo5 days. .4 months . .4 months. 4 months. .4 months. 4 months. .4 months . _ 4 months .4 months. 4 months. 4 months. 4 months. .4 months. 4 months. .4 months. 4 months 2 .4 .6 .9 .1 1 1 .1 .2 2 2 3 3 3 4 4 4 5 5 5 6 6 6 .7 months months 1-2 months months vear year 3 months yr 6 1-2 months yr 10 months yrs 1 1-2 months yrs. 5 months yrs. 9 months yrs. 1 month yrs. 5 months yrs. 9 months yrs. 1 montn yrs. 5 months yrs. 9 months yrs. 1 month yrs. 5 months yrs. 9 months yrs. 1 month yrs. 5 months yrs. 9 months yrs. 1 month yrs. 5 months LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 7 CLOTHING ETC, FURNISHED INMATES WHEN RELEASED. A new outfit of clothing consisting of suit, underwear, shirt, tie, shoes, socks, suspenders, handkerchief, hat or cap, and during the winter months, overcoat, overshoes and mittens, will be furnished inmates on date of discharge; a rail- road ticket to the county seat from which he was committed and also any cash on hand to the credit of his personal or temporary aid account. The minimum amount of temporary aid funished inmates on discharge will be $5.00. If an inmate desires to furnish his own outfit on date of discharge, or any part of it, he should notify the warden, or deputy warden, at least thirty days before date of release and proper credit will be given in lieu of any articles of clothing furnished by him. PAROLE OF INMATES. Section 4 of Chapter 175 Session Laws of 1909. Board of- Experts.] The warden of the state penitentiary, the prison physician, the chaplain of the State penitentiary, and one other person, to be chosen by the board of trustees of the state penitentiary, shall constitute a board of experts, whose duty it shall be to pass upon the application for dis- charge of the inmates of the penitentiary who may have been sentenced under the indeterminate sentence provided by law, and also to pass upon the application of the inmates of the penitentiary who may make application to be paroled, as provided by law. The board of trustees shall elect a member of the board of experts at their first meeting (held in April) after this law takes effect, and thereafter at the April meeting on each odd-numbered year. The term of this member of the board of experts shall be two years, commencing immediately after the April board meeting in an odd-numbered year. The chairman and secretary of the board of trustees of the state penitentiary shall certify to the governor and the state anditor all the names of the members of the board of ex- perts as soon as they are elected or constituted members thereof. The board of experts as above constituted shall determine and fix the date when an in- mate may be released on parole or discharged after the expiration of the mini- mum term of the sentence, and shall keep a complete record of all the findings and orders of the board. It shall be the dutj T of the board of experts to provide books of records, application blanks, and to formulate rules and regulations governing the conduct of the inmates, and the manner in which they may be- come eligible to become applicants for discharge or parole, to meet once in each month, and to keep a complete record of all inmates discharged or paroled, and to make a biennial report to the board of Trustees of all rules adopted and of inmates paroled and discharged, and of all statistics pertaining thereto. Section 10371. What Inmates May Not Be Paroled. The following described persons shall not under any circumstances be par- oled from the the penitentiary: 1 A person convicted and sentenced for the crime of murder either in the first or second degree. 2 A person finally convicted, in any jurisdiction, of a felony other than that for which he is being punished. 3 A person who has not served the minimum time of imprisonment prescribed by law for the crime of which he was convicted. 4 A person who has not maintained a good record at the penitentiary for at least six months previous to his parole. (1891, ch. 92, No. 1; R. C. 1895, No. 8557.) Section 10372. Requirements Precedent To Parole. No parole shall be granted to any person confined in the penitentiary unless: 1 The warden in writing recommends his parole to the board of trustees. 2 At least four members of the board of trustees approve and indorse said recommendation 8 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY. 4. The friends of such person have furnished satisfactory evidence to the board of trustees, in writing-, that employment has been secured for him with some re- sponsible citizen of the state and ceritfied to be such by the judge of the county court of the county where such citizen resides. 5. The board of trustees is convinced that he will conform to the rules and regulations adopted by said board. (1891, ch. 92, sec 2 and 3; R. C. 1895, sec 8558). Section 10373. Grounds F'or Recommending Pa tote. It shall not be lawful for the warden, the board of trustees or the governor, or any or either of them, in considering or recommending the parole of any per- son confined in the penitentiary to receive, hear or entertain any petition or any argument of attorneys, but the only ground for such recommendation shall be such person’s general demeanor and record of good conduct at the peniten- tiary. (1891, ch. 92, sec 3; R. C. 1895, sec 8559). Section. 10374. Breach Of Parole. Order Of Recommitment. Any person when on parole from the penitentiary shall be deemed to be in the custody, and under control of the board of trustees and subject at any time until the expiration of the term for which he was sentenced, to be taken into actual custody, and returned to the penitentiary. The board of trustees is hereby fully empowered to enforce the rules and regulations made by it for the paroling of persons committed to the penitentiary, and, at any time, when satisfactorily informed that any person out on parole has violated any of such rules and 'regulations, may order that such person be taken into actual cus- tody, and recommitted to and confined in the penitentiary as provided in his sen- tence. The board shall enter in the record of its proceedings any of such or- der and a copy of such order certified by the secretary of the board may be de- livered to any sheriff or other peace officer of the state, for service and return, and it shall be the duty of any such officer to receive the same and to apprehend and immediately return and deliver to the warden at the penitentiary any such person named in such order, and the warden shall receive and re-imprison such person as upon his original sentence. (1891, ch. 92, sec 1; R. C. 1895, sec 8560). Section 10375. Execution Of Order. Fees And Payment. The officer executing any 7 such order of the board of trustees shall indorse thereon a re- turn of tiis doings thereunder and the said certified copy and return, delivered to the warden with the person named therein, and the warden shall give to such officer, to be retained by him, a certificate acknowledging the receipt of such person, and such certified copy of the order and his return. The fees of any officer for executing any order of the board of trustees for the return of any person to the penitentiary shall be the same as provided by 7 law for the commitment of a person to the penitentiary under a sentence of the court, but in no case shall the fees exceed the sum of one hun- dred dollars. The board of trustees shall provide in its rules and regulations that any person before being paroled from the penitentiary" shall deposit with the warden a sum of money not exceeding one hundred dollars to defray the expenses of his return, and the manner of auditing and paying such expenses; provided, that any money so deposited and not so used shall be returned to the person so depositing it at the expiration of the term of sentence of the person, or upon his final discharge from the penitentiary. (1891, ch. 92, sec 1; R. C. 1895, sec 8561.) RULES GOVERNING PAROLE. Sec. 1. No inmate shall be paroled until he has served the minimum term provided by law, and has been in the first grade for a period of at least six months, and has fully 7 complied with Article No. 9 of the Revised Codes of 1905. 2. No inmate shall be released on parole until satisfactory evidence has been furnished the board of experts in writing, that employment has been se- cured for such inmate from some responsible person, certified to be such by the judge of the county" court of the county where such person resides. LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 9 The application shall embrace a certificate from the prosecuting attorney of the county from which the inmate was sent, showing that there is no other indictment against him, a certificate under oath from the publishers of one newspaper in the county from which the inmate was received, showing that notice had been given by publication of intention of the inmate to make the application for parole. 3. No inmate shall be released on parole until he shall have deposited with the warden twenty dollars, and the person furnishing employment shall re- tain twenty-five per cent of his monthly wages and deposit same with the ward- en of the penitenitary, until the total amount deposited shall reach the sum of one hundred dollars. The sum so deposited shall be returned to the depositor after the final release of the paroled inmate, providing his parole has not been previously revoked by a formal order of the board of experts. In the event that the terms of the parole are violated, and the parole revoked for cause, the en- tire amount of money deposited shall be forfeited to the institution. 4- No inmate shall be paroled unless the board of experts are satisfied that he will conform to the rules and regulations of his parole. 5. Every paroled inmate shall be liable to be retaken again, and confined within the enclosure of the North Dakota state penitentiary, for any reason that shall be satisfactory to the board of experts, and at their discretion, and shall remain there until released by law. 6. It shall require the affirmative vote of all members of the board of experts to grant a parole. 7. No argument will be allowed at the sessions of the board by attorneys or others in the interests of inmates when they have made application for pa- role, but such argument may be presented in writing so as to be filed with the application of the inmate to whom it refers. 8. Tne regular meetings of the board of experts in January, April, July and October shall be known as parole meetings, and no application for parole will be considered at any other meeetings of the board. 9. No alterations or amendments shall be made to these rules and regula- tions, unless at least three members of the board of experts have voted therefor. 10. The parole provided for in Article No. 9 R. C. 1905, shall be in the fol- lowing form, signed by the president of this board and the warden of the state penitentiary: [See Form Attached] 11. Provided, that all persons paroled under the suspended sentence act shall comply with these rules, and that a copy of these rules shall be furnish- ed to each district judge in this state. FORM OF PAROLE. Know All Men By These Presents: That the board of experts of the North Dakota state penitentiary, desiring to test the ability of an inmate in the said in- stitution, to refrain from, crime, and lead an hotcorable life, do, by virtue of the authority conferred upon them by law, hereby parole the said and allow him to go on parole outside of the buildings and enclosures of the said institution, but not outside of the state of North Da- kota, subject however to the following rules and regulations: He shall proceed at once to the place of employment provided for him, viz: and there remain, if practicable, for a period of at least months from this date. In case he finds it necessary or desirable to change his employment or resi- dence, he sliall first obtain the written consent of the board of experts. He shall, on the first day of each month, until his final release, according to law, forward by mail to the warden a report of himself, stating whether he has been constantly under pay during the last month, and if not, why not, and how much he has earned, and how much he has expended, together with a general statement of his surroundings and prospects. 0 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY He shall in all respects conduct himself honestly, avoid evil associations, obey the law, and abstain form the use of intoxicating- liquors. As soon as possible after reaching- his destination, he shall report to showing- his parole, and at once enter upon the employment provided for him. He shall while on parole remain in legal custody and undar the control of this board. He shall be liable to be retaken and again confined whthin the enclosure of the state penitentiary for any reason that shall be satisfactory to the board of experts, and at their sole discretion, and shall remain there until released by law. The field or parole officer, under the direction of the warden, ha special charge and care of persons on parole from the penitentiary. He will visit each paroled person as frequently as possible, and his counsel, advice, and order must be strictly obeyed. He will make a full written report to the management of the penitentiary of every visit, of the condition of, and friendly interest in, the subject of this parole, and he need not fear to freely communicate with the ward- en in case such paroled person shall lose his situation, or becomes unable to labor, by reason of sickness or otherwise. President, of Board Experts. Warden State Penitentiary. , GRANTING OF PAROLE. The regular meetings of the board of experts in January, April, Jul}% and October, shall be know as “Parole Meetings/’ at which meetings only will applications for parole be considered. Judgement by the board of experts as to tne worthiness of the applicants for parole will be based on the following considerations, arranged in the order of their relative importance: 1. The record of the character of the applicant, as established in the insti- tution. 2. The nature and character of the crime committed. 3. His previous record and environment. 4. Information gained from a personal interview with the applicant. 5. Probable surroundings if paroled. 6. All other facts bearing upon the advisability of parole, that this board may be able to obtain. It rnay be well to observe that while a good record in the institution is the first requisite and of prime importance, it is not the only consideration in deter- mining fitness for parole, as inmates and their friends sometimes suppose. No inmate shall be released from the penitentiary from any other than the first grade. If an inmate’s record is that of general obedience to the rules when he becomes eligible for parole, with minor act of acts or omission still charged against him, the warden may submit such charges with the circumstances to the board of ex- perts, wno may authorize him to remit the same. When an inmate is released on parole, he shall be furnished transportation to the county whence he came, or where he is promised employment, also with a suit of clothes, and five dollars in money, if he has not to exceed that amount in earnings for labor in the institution. On failure to obey the law, or the conditions of his parole, while on such conditional release, the inmate will be re-arrested and returned to the peniten- tiary, where he will enter the third grade and remain there until the expira- tion of his sentence, and his discharge b} r due process of law. LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 11 WHAT CONSTITUTES ELIGIBILITY TO PAROLE Before an inmate can come before the board of experts as an applicant for parole, he must fully comply with all of the provisions of law, and conform to the rules and regulations governing this institution. The affirmative answer to the following questions must be made in writing and signed by the appli- cant, before the application will be considered: Has the applicant served the minimum term provided by law for the punish- ment of the offense of which he was convicted? Has the applicant been in the first grade, as provided by the rules of this institution, for at least six months next preceding the time he made application? I=> his record clear for at least three months next preceding making applica- tion ? Has the prosecuting attorney certified that there is no other indictment pend- ing against him? Is his employer’s agreement on file? Has his application for parole been properly advertised? All inmates of the penitentiary who have met the conditions imposed by law, and the general rules, will be considered applicants for parole and will be given a personal hearing. ( Michael Murphy, President. F. O. Hellstrom. Dr. F. R. Smyth. Rev. Fr. Clemens. PARDON LAW Section. 10240. Board Ok Pardons. The governor shall have power in conjunction with the board of pardons, of which the governor shall be ex-officio a member, and other members of which shall consist of the attorney general of the state of North Dakota, the chief justice of the supreme court of the state ot North Dakota, and two qualified electors who shall be appointed by the govern- or, to remit fines and forfeitures, to grant reprieves, commutations and pardon after conviction for all offenses except treason and cases of impeachment in the manner and under the conditions hereinafter described, but not otherwise. Section 10241. Governor May Suspened PIxecution For Treason. Upon the conviction for treason the governor shall power to suspend the ex- ecution of sentence until the case shall be reported to the legislative assembly at its next regular session, when the legislative assembly shall either pardon or commute the sentence, direct the execution of sentence or grant further re- prieve. Section 10242. Report To Legislature: The governor shall communicate to the legislative assembly at each regular session each case of remission of fine, reprieve, commutation or pardon granted by the board of pardons, stating the name of the convict, the crime for which he is conviction, the sentence and its date and the date of remission, commuta- tion, pardon or reprieve, with the reasons for granting the same. Section 10243. Unanimous Vote Required. Quorum. Every pardon or commutation of sentence shall be in writing and shall have no force and effect unless the same be granted by unanimous vote of those pre- sent of said board convened as such, four of whom shall constitute a quorum, “Provided that at special meetings, called in case of emergency, the governor, the chief justice of the supreme court and the attorney general may constitute a quorum.’’ A reprieve in a case where capital punishment has been imposed may be granted by the governor, but for such time only as may be necessary to secure a meeting of said bqard of pardons for the consideration of an applica- tion for a reprieve pardon or commutation of the sentence so reprieved. Said board may grant an absolute or conditional pardon, and any conditional pard- 12 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY. on shall state the terms and conditions on which it was ganted. Such board of pardons may issue its warrant under the seal of said board to any proper officers to carry into effect such pardon which warrant shall be obeyed and ex- ecuted instead of the sentence which was first originally pronounced. Section 10244. Pardon, Commutation Or Reprieve. Officer To Make Return Of. Section 3. Whenever any convict is pardoned by such board, or his punish- ment is commuted or a reprieve is granted, the officer to whom the warrant for that purpose is issued, after executing the same, shall make return thereof un- der his hand with his doings thereon, to tne governor, as soon as may be, and he shall also file with tne clerk of the court in which the offender was convicted an attested copy of the warrant and return, a brief abstract of which the clerk shall subjoin to the record of his convicton. Section 10245. Board Meeting To Be Held. When. The board of pardons shall hold at lease two regular meetings in each cal- ender year, and may bold such other meeting as it shall deem expedient. Such regular meetings snail be held on the second day of June and the second day of December of each year at the executive office. All other meetings of said board shall be held in the executive chamber at the state capitol, or in such other place as may be ordered by said board provided that the board of pardons shall at each session visit the state penitentiary and hold at least one meeting there whenever the board of pardons shall be called to hold either a regular or special meeting. Section 10246. Applications. How Made. Every application for a pardon, reprieve or commution of sentence shall be in writing, addressed to the board of pardons, and shall be signed by the con- vict or some person in his behalf. It shall concisely state the grounds upon which the pardon, reprieve or commutation is sought, and in addition shall contain tne following facts: 1. The name under which the convict was indicted and every alias by which he has been known. 2. Tne date and term of sent- ence and name of offence for which it was imposed. 3. The name of the trial judge and of the state’s attorney who participated in the trial of the convict, together with that of the county in which he was tried. 4. A' succinct state- ment of the evidence addeuced at the trial, with the endorsement of the judge or the count} 7 attorney who tried the case that the same is substantially correct. If such statement and endorsement are not furnished, the reason thereof shall be stated. 5. The birthplace, age, parentage, occupation and residence dur- ing the five years immediately preceeding conviction of convict. 6. A statement of otner arrests, indictments and convictions, if any, of the convict. The board of pardons may adopt such other rules and regulations not incon- sistent with the provisions of this act as may appear to them proper and nec- essary to carry out the provisions thereof. Section 10247. Duty Of Clerk Of Board. All applications for reprieves, commutations of sentence or pardon shall be filed with the clerk of the board of pardons. The said cleark shall, immedi- ately upon receipt of such application, mail notice thereof, and of the time and place of the hearing thereof, to the judge of the court wherein the applicant was tried and sentenced, and to the state’s attorney who prosecuted the appli- cant, or his successor in office; provided, a reprieve in capital cases may be granted as provided in section 10243 without such notice; and, provided fur- ther, that pardons or commutations of sentence of personscommitted to a county jail or workhouse may be granted by said board without notice: Section 10251. Restoration Of Citizenship. When. The board of pardons is hereby empowered to restore to citizenship an} 7 per- son convicted of and offense committed against the state, upon cause being snown, either after the execution or expiratidn of sentence or at any other time. Application blanks for pardon, or commutation of sentence can be secured by making application to the secretary of the board of pardons at Bismark, N. D. It is not necessary that you have an attorney appear before the board. Any one can appear for you. LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 13 EXTRACTS FROM THE LAWS OF NORTH DAKOTA. EFFECTING INMATES OF THE PENITENTIARY. (Section numbers refer to the revised codes of 1905.) Section 10113. Imprisonment in the Penitentiary at Hard Labor. In all cases when by law a person is sentenced to imprisonment in the peni- tentiary it shall be at hard labor, whether so designated by the jury or court or not. Section 10322. Penitentiary at Bismarck. Continuation and Use. The penitentiary located at Bismarck, in the county of Burleigh, shall con- tinue to be the general penitentiary and prison of this state for the punishment and reformation of offenders against the laws thereof, and in which shall be securely confined, employed and governed in the manner provided by law, all offenders who have been or may be convicted or sentenced, according to law, to the punishment of imprisonment or confinement therein. Section 10323. Within Jurisdiction of Burleigh County. The said penitentiary, and the grounds and precincts thereof, for the pur- pose of all judicial proceeding shall be deemed to be within and a part of the coupty of Burleigh, and the courts of said county shall have jurisdiction _>f all crimes or public offences committed within the same. Section 10324. Who May Serve Process Within. All process to be served within the grounds or precincts of said penitentiary, either upon persons confined therein or committed thereto, or upon persons or officers employed within the grounds or precincts of said penitentiary, except the warden, snail be served and returned by the warden: provided, that all persons committed to the penitentiary, and all persons or officers in charge of or caring for any inmates or persons committed to said penitentiary, at any place, shall be deemed to be within the grounds and precincts thereof. All officers and employes of the penitentiary shall be exempt from serving upon juries in any of the courts of this state. Section 10350. Warden To Make Rules and Regulations. The warden shall make such rules and regulations, not inconsistent with the laws of this state, for the government of the officers, employes and inmates of the penitentiary, as he may deem necessary and proper, subject to the approv- al of the board of trustees, and he may, from time to time, with the approval of the board of trustees, make changes in said rules and regulations as he may deem necessary, and a printed copy of the rules and regulations of the penitenti- ary shall be furnished to each and every person committed to the penitentiary at the time he is received, and to each and every officer, overseer, guard and employe thereof at the time he is appointed and sworn, and ten copies to the state library for the use of the state officers and the public. Section 10355. Inmates Of Penitentiary In Custody Of Warden. All inmates of the penitentiary shall be in the charge and custody of the warden, and he shall care for, govern and employ them in the manner pre- scribed by law, the rules and regulations of the penitentiary and in conformity to the respective sentences under which they are confined. Section 10360. Employment and Discipline of Inmates of Penitentiary All persons sentenced to the punishment of imprisonment in the penitentiary and committed thereto shall be constantly employed for the benefit of the state. No communication shall be allowed between such persons and any person with- out the penitentiary except under such supervision as may be prescribed by the rules and regulations thereof. No person snail, withoutthe consent of the warden, bring into or carry out any writing or any information to or from any inmate of the penitentiary. Persons committed to the penitentiary shall be confined in sep- erate cells at night, whenever there are cells sufficient, and in the day time all intercourse between them shall be prevented as far as practicable. All commun- ications between male and female inmates shall be prevented. Section 10362. Food Of Inmates Of Penitentiary. The uaily sustanance of inmates of the penitentiary not in the hospital shall 14 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY consist of wholesome coa rSe food, with such proportions of meats and vegetables as the warden shall deem best for the health of the inmates. Section 10363. Beds and Clothing Of Inmates. The clothing and the bedding of inmates shall be of such quality and quan- as the warden may direct, regard being had to their health and comfort. Section 10364, Warden To maintain Discipline. Assistance. All necessary means shall be used, under the direction of the warden, to maintain order in the penitentiary, enforce obedience, suppress insurrections and effectually prevent escapes, even at the hazzard of life, for which purpose he may at all times command the aid of the officers of the penitentiary and of the citizens outside the precincts thereof, and any citizen refusing to obey such command shall be liable to such fines, penalties and forfeitures as apply to person^ refusing to obey a sheriff or other officer calling upon the aid of the county to assist in serving process or for quelling an insurrection. Section 10365. Refractory Inmates May Be Restrained. When ever any inmate of the.penitentiary offers violence to any officer or guard thereof or to any other person or inmate, either within the grounds or precincts of the penitentiary or at any place where said inmate may be or may employed, or attempts to do any injury to the buildings or any workshop or to any appurtenances thereof, or disobeys or resists any reasonable command of any officer or guard, such officers and guards shall use all reasonable means to defend themselves and to enforce the observance of discipline. Section 10367. discharge Of Inmates. Clothing. Every person committed to the penitentiary shall, when discharged, be pro- vided with a decent suit of clothes and a sum of money, not less than five dol- lars and not more than twenty-five dollars, and also transportation to the place where he received sentence. Section 10368. Employment Of Inmates. Escapes. If the warden shall at any time deem it for the interest of the state, he may employ the inmates of the penitentiary outside the yard thereof in cultivating and improving any ground belonging thereto or in doing any work necessary to be done in the prosecution of business of the penitentiary, or in the erection, repair or improvement of any or all the state buildings at Bismarck, including the executive mansion and the grounds of such buildings and mansion; and in all such cases the warden shall detail such force from the officers, guards and employes of the penitentiary as he shall deem necessary to watch and guard them; and in case any person committed to the penitentiary and so employed as in this section provided shall escape, he shall be deemed to have escaped from the penitentiary proper and punished accordingly; provided, however, that the warden snail be held responsible for the escape of any such person through the neglience of himself or any of his subordinates. Section 10369. Escapes Generally. Rewards. Payment. When any initiate escapes from the penitentiary the warden shall use every means at his command for the apprehension of such person, and for that purpose he may offer a reward, not to exceed one hundred dallars, and not less than twenty-five dollars; provided, that if such escape was by reason of the negli- gence of the warden or any officer under him, the reward thus offered shall be paid by the warden, and the board of trustees are hereby empowered to finally determine the liability of the warden for any such reward. The warden may adopt such otner measures as he may deem proper, with the approval of the. board of trustees, to aid in the detection and capture of persons escaping from the penitentiary. Section 10450. Escaping From Penitentiary. Punishment. Any person committed to the penitentiary who shall escape from or break said penitentiary with intent to escape therefrom, or who shall attempt by force or violence or in an} r other manner to escape from said prison, whether such escape is effected or not shall, upon conviction thereof, be punished by imprisonment in said prison for a term not exceeding double the term for which he or she was so sentenced, to commence from and after the expiration of his or her former sentence. LIBRARY BOOKS. A library card will be furnished when you are admitted to the institution. Select the books desired from catalogue, place numbers of same in space pro- vided for that purpose, and place card in cell gate. Librarian will issue you one of the books requested on card. Books will be taken up and distributed each Friday and when you have com- pleted a book, place same with card in your gate. No book can be retained longer than two weeks. If you have not finished your book, same can be renewed by placing a slip marked “Renew” together with card in book and it will be returned to you. If you desire a school book same may be had in addition to one regular libra- ry book. School books can not be kept longer than two weeks without being re- newed. It is prohibited to mark, soil or in any way mar or deface books, and you will be held accountable for any books delivered you. Do not turn corner of leaves in marking a place, but use your card as a book-mark. If you fail to comply with these rules, you will forfeit your library privilege. LIBRARY CATALOGUE NO. TITLE. 1 Sense and Sensibility 2 Pride and Prejudice 3 Ten Nights in a Barroom 4 Fairy Tales 5 Essays on Criticism 6 Light of Asia 7 Light of Asia 8 Literature and Dogma _ 9 Phra, the Phoenician 10 The Executor 11 Her Dearest Foe r 12 The Wooing O’t 13 On the Hights 14 Reign of Law 15 Unity of Nature 16 Jane Eyre 17 The Professor 18 Shirley 19 Villette 20 Princes of Thule 21 Daughter of Heth 22 Essays* 23 Charles Anchester 24 Grettier, the Outlaw 25 The Caxtons ... 26 Harold ... 1 27 Last Days of Pompeii 28 Last of the Barons 29 Rienzi 30 Correspondence 31 Armorel of L.vonesse 32 Children of Gideon 33 For Faith and Freedom _ 34 35 Cast Up by the Sea . .. .. 36 Around the World in the Yacht Sunbeam... 37 — 38 Alice Lorraine 39 Clara Vaughan 40 Craddock Nowell 41 Cripps, the Carrier 42 43 Lorna Doone 44 Maid of Sker 45 Mary Annerly 46 Springhaven 47 Auld Lycht Idylls _ 48 The Little Minister 49 Wiien a Man’s Single. 50 Window in Thrums 51 Gascoyne, the Sandalwood Trader 52 Alice in Wonderland AUTHOR. Jane Austin T. S. Arthur Hans Anderson ..Matthew Arnold Sir Edwin Arnold 4 4 44 44 4 4 4 4 4 • 44 44 44 __ Mrs. Alexander Berthold Auerbach . . Duke of Argyle ...Charlotte Bronte Wm. Black . Francis Bacon E. Berger S. Baring-Gould Edw. Bulwer-Lytton Lord Baconsfield . Walter Besant _. .Satnual Baker _ . Mrs. Brassey R.’D. Blackmore R. D. Blackmore J. M. Barrie R. M. Ballantyne Lewis Carroll NO. 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 17 TITLE Ardath Romance of Two Worlds Thelma ... Vendetta J Wormwood . _ . Armadale Man and Wife Moonstone Moonstone No Name Woman in White Aunt Diana Averil Esther Heriot’s Choice Mary St. Johu Merle’s Crusade Nellie’s Memories Not Like Other Girls Only a Governess Our Bessie Queenie’s Whim Rebecca Heathcote’s Trial _ Search for Basil Lyndhurst Uncle Max Wee Wifie Wooed and Married r _ Black Rock The Bondsman The Deemster Shadow of a Crime Son of Hagar Congo Rivers The Deerslayer The Deerslayer Last of the Mohicans Last of the Mohicans The Pathfinder The Pilot The Pilot ■ The Pioneers The Prairie The Prairie Red Rover Two Admirals The Spy Water Witch Wing and Wing Heroes and Hero Worship Heroes and Hero Worship.. Past and Present Sartor Resartus Sartor Resartus The Lamplighter AUTHOR. Marie Correlli 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 .Wilkie Collins Rose N. Carey 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 • 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Ralph Connor _ Hall Caine 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 44 H. Collingswood J. Fenimore Cooper 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 44 % 44 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 44 . 44 Thomas Carlyle 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 M. S. Cummins Prue and I Shoenberg-Cotta Family... Two Thousand Years Ago Via Crucis Letters Geo. Wm. Curtis Mrs. Andrew Charles A. J. Church Marion Crawford Lord Chesterfield NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY 18 NO. TITLE AUTHOR. 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 Barnaby Rudge Chas. Dickens Bleak House “ “ Christmas Stories “ “ David Copperfield “ “ Dombey & Son “ “ Great Expectations, “ “ Eittle Dorrit “ “ Martain Chuzzlewit “ “ Nicholas Nickelby “ “ Nicholas Nickelby “ “ Old Curiosity Shop “ “ Oliver Twist “ “ Our Mutual Friend “ “ Pickwick Papers “ “ Tale of Two Cities “ “ The Country Doctor Honore De Balzac Cousin Pons ... “ “ Pere Goriot “ ' “ The Wild Asa’s Skin The Black Tulip Chevalier de Mason Rouge Chicot, the Jester Companions of Jehu The Conspirators Countress de Charney Forty-five Guardsmen __ . Joseph Balsamo Louise de la Valliere Man in the Iron Mask Marguerite de la Valois Memoirs of a Physician Page of the Duke of Savoy The Queen’s Necklace Regent’s Daughter Taking the Bastile Ten Years Later Three Guardsmen Twent } 7 Years Later . Two Dianas Vicomte de Bragelonne Whites and Blues , The Descent of Man Firm of Girdlestone Micah Clark Study in Scarlet The White Company Molly Bawn Social Departure Three Years Before the Mast Corrinne Republic of Plato Adam Bede Daniel Deronda Felix Holt Middlemarch Mill on the Floss Romola Silas Marner Beulah Inez Alexander Dumas Chas. Darwin A. Conan Doyle _ _ The Duchess S. J. Duncan R. H. Dana Madam de Stael Davis and Vaughan Geo. Elliot Augusta J. Evans LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 19 NO. TITLE AUTHOR. 174 Marcia 175 Carolina Cavalier 176 Hoosier Schoolmaster 177 Conduct of life 178 Essays 179 Nature 180 Representative Men 181 One Thousand Miles Up the Nile 182 Bride of the Nile 183 Burgomaster’s Wife 184 Egyptian Princess . 185 Tne Emperor 186 Homo Sum 187 Joshua 188 Only a Word 189 Uarda 190 The First Violin 191 Kith and Kin 192 Mother Carey’s Chickens 193 Undine and Other Tales 194 Damnation of Theron Ware 195 Silence of Dean Maitland 196 Vicar of Wakefield 197 Redemption of David Corson 198 Household Tales 199 Popular Tales 200 Cranford 201 File No. 113 202 Lux Crusis 203 Abbe Constantine 204 Arundel Motto 205 By Order of the King 206 Hunchback of Notre Dame 207 Ninety-three 208 Toilers of the Sea. _ . 209 The History of a Crime 210 Old Myddleton’s Money. _ 211 Autocrat at the Breakfast Table.. 212 Elsie Vernier * 213 Over the Teacups 214 Professor at the Breakfast Table . 215 Ear from the Madding Crowd 216 217 Intellectual Life 218 Cousin Maud 219 Dora Deane 220 English Orphans 221 Homestead on the Hillside 222 223 Maggie Miller 224 Meadow Brook 225 Tempest and Sunshine 226 Blithedale Romance 227 Grandfather’s Chair 228 House of Seven Gables 229 Marble Faun 230 Mosses from the Old Manse 231 Scarlet Letter 232 Tanglewood Tales 233 Twice Told Tales 234 Wonder Book Augusta J. Evans Edw. Eggleston Ralph Waldo Emerson 6 6 66 66 A. B. Edwards George Ebers 6 6 6 • 6 6 (.6 .Jesse Fothergill G. M. Fenn _M. de la Fouque H. Frederick ._ .Maxwell Gray Oliver Goldsmith C. F. Goss Grimm Mrs. Gaskill - -E. Gaboriau Gardenshire L. Halevy Mary Cecil Hay Victor Hugo Mary C. Hug Oliver Wendell Holmes •6 66 66 Thomas Hardy P. G. Hammerton --Mary J. Holmes 6 k 6 6 Mary J. Holmes Nathaniel Hawthorne NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY 20 NO. TITLE AUTHOR. 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 374 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 Mississippi Bubble E. Hough Phroso Anthony Hope yuisante “ “ Tom Brown at Oxford Tom Brown’s School Days. . The Alhambra __ Conquest of Grenada ... Sketch Book Tales of a Traveler Pillar of Fire Prince of the House of David __ Throne of David All Sorts ^nd Conditions of Men Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow. Tnree Men in a Boat Reynard, the Fox.. History of Rasselas Samantha at Saratoga Alton Locke. Hereward ... Hypatia Water Babies Water Babies Westward, Ho! The Colonel’s Daughter The Garrison Tangle Ray’s Daugnter Barrack Room Ballads . . . The Light That Failed Mine Own People Phantom Rickshaw Plain Tales from the Hills Soldiers Three ... Under the Lone Star Old Margaret The Young Rajah Tales from Shakespeare Olaf the Glorious Hyperion . .. Outre Mer The Adventures of Gil Bias Chas. O’Malley Harry Lorrequer Tom Burke of Ours Donovan Hardy Norseman In the Golden Days Knight Errant We Two Won by Waiting Essays of Elia Handy Andy Rory O’More Iceland Fisherman At the Beck of the North Wind.. David Elginbrod Donal Grant Marquis of Lossie Sir Gibbie Thos. Hughes 4 4 - 9 9 Washington Irving 4 4 4 4 .Washington Irving J. H. Ingraham 4 fc Walter Besant and James Rice Jerome K. Jerome Joseph Jacobs Susan Johnson Josiah Allen’s Wife Chas. Kingsley Capt. Chas. King .Rudyard Kipling .Herbert Kayne ... H. Kingsley W. H. G. Kingston Cnas. and Mary Lamb Robert Leighton _ .Henry W. Longfellow A. R. LeSage ..Chas Lever Edna Lyall 4 4 4 4 __Chas. Lamb Samual Lover Pierre Loti Geo. MacDonald 4 4 4 4 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY 24 NO. TITLE AUTHOR. 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 Stories of Other Lands Stories of Other Lands Stories of Other Lands Stories of Olden Times Stories of Heroic Deeds History of Kentucky Under the Deodars and Other Stories Westward, Ho! Captain Horace Cousin Grace Dottie Dimple Dottie Dimple Out West Dottie Dimple At Home Dottie Dimple At Play Dottie Dimple At School Dottie Dimple At Her Grandmother’s Dottie Dimple Flyaway Doctor Papa Flaxie Grown Up Little Prudy Kittyleen Sister Susie Town Cousins History of Our Times The Old Church Door. Story of Our Country Leonard and Gertude Stories of Old Rome Myths of Old Greece My Young Master Old Ebenezer Black Beauty . Story of Our Continent Swiss Family Robinson Seven American Classics Their Canoe Trip Pictures and Stories of Animals Pictures and Stories of Animals Pictures and Stories of Animals Pictures and Stories of Animals Young Folks’ Whys and Wherefors. An Hundred Fold Golden Thorns Geography Reader of Asia True Stories from History Plant World Seaside and Wayside Seaside and Wayside Seaside and Wayside Book of Eloquence Poems Sohrab and Rustum Poems . Poems Poems __ ^ Poems Poems : Poems Poems Poems Poems _ . Jas. Jofiormot 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 J. Kinkaid Rudyard Kipling C. Kingsley Sophie May J. McCarthy Merrill . H . Mon roe _ . Pestallozzi Pratt O. Read A. Sewell N. Shaler J. R. Wyss Swinton M. P. W. Smith A. W. Tenny De Normand Vincent Wright 4 4 S. Warner Mathew Arnold Sir Edwin Arnold Elizabeth Barrett Browning Robert Browning William Cullen Bryant Robert Burns Lord Byron Alice and P hoe by Carey ..Samuel Taylor Coleridge John Dry den George Eliot LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 23 NO. 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 417 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 548 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 TITLE From Earth to Moon Michael Strogoff Mysterious Island Amiel’s Journal Aurelian Zenoba.. The Wide, Wide World East Lynne Good Luck St. Mitchael Sign of Flame AUTHOR. Jules Verne 6 A A < Mrs. Humphrey Ward William Ware --i_ Susan Warner Mrs. Henry Wood E. Werner Man in Black Stanley J. Weyman Man in Black “ “ Swiss Family Robinson J. R. Wyss Rebecca Kate Douglass Wiggin The Spenders : H. L. Wilson The Virginian Owen Wister Dove in an Eagles Nest Charlotte Younge Hier of Redcliffe “ A Case of Identit} T Anonymous Elizabeth and Her German Garden “ Letters to the Joneses <_ Anonymous Romance Anonymons Curiosities of Superstition Adams Lulu’s Library . Alcott Lulu’s Library “ Lulu’s Library “ HDsop ; s Fables yEsop Ellen Linn Jacob Abbott Caroline . “ Malleville Fairy Story and Fable J. Baldwin Old Stories of the East In Brook and Bayou C. K. Bayliss Pilgrims’ Progress John Bunyan Stories of the Old Boy State E. Brooks Story of Birds J. N. Baskett Story of Troy Clarke Story of Ulysses. “ Task Table Talk Wm. Cowper Alice’s Visit to the Hawaiian Islands -..L. Carroll Stories of the United States -R. Davis yueer Stories for Boys and Girls Edw. Eggleston Stories of Great Americans “ Stories of Great Americans "" — “ Six Stories from Arabian Nights G. Eliot Six Stories from Arabian Nights “ Story of the Romans H. A. Guerber Boy Heroes E. E .Hale Poems of Knightly Adventure The Gray Chapinon N. Hawthorne Seeking a Country H. W. Hoare Grandfather’s Stories - Jas. Johonnot Grandfather’s Stories Grandfather’s Stories Stories of Our Country - “ Stories of Our Country Stories Our of Country 22 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY. No. TITLE. AUTHOR. 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 214 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 The Antiquary Betrothed-. Black Dwarf Bride of Lammermoor Robert Count of Paris : Fair Maid of Perth ___ Fortunes of Nigel Guy Mannering Heart of Midlothian I van hoe Kenilworth The Monastery Old Mortality Peveril of the Peak The Pirate Quentin Durward Redgauntlet Rob Roy , St. Ron an ’s Well The Surgeon’s Daughter.- The Talisman Waverly Woodstock Attic Philosopher _ _ _ Kidnapped Master of Ballantrae Treasure Island The Adventures of Captain Horn Paul and Virginia Black Beauty 5 Piccola Character ... Duty Self Help Thrift Thrift Consuelo Countress of Rudolstadt Daughter of a Magnate Every Inch a Sailor How Jack McKenzie Won His Epaulettes .Sir. Walter Scott Emil Souvestre Robert L. Stevenson ... F. R. Stockton Bernardin de. St. Pierre Anna Sewell X. B. Santine . ..Samuel Smiles George Sand F. H. Spearman — _G. Stables Ishmael Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth Self Raised “ “ “ The Minister’s Wooing Harriet Beecher Stowe Uncle Tom’s Cabin “ “ “ Sentimental Journey L. Steine Tbe Story of an African Farm Olive Schreiner Salau for the Solitary Sanders Green Mountain Boys D. P. Thompson Henry Esmond W. M.. Thackery Th~ Xewcomes . . “ Pendennis “ Vanity Fair _ . “ The Virginians .... “ Catnenne “ Doubls-Barreled Detective Story . Mark Twain The Initials. . ..Baron Tautphoeus Views Afoot Bayard Taylor Walden Henry D. Thorean Dick Sand Jules Verne NO. 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 30S 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 21 TITLE What’s Mine Is Mine Annals of a Quiet Neihgborhood.. By Right of Sword Dash for a Throne Egotist The Rhoda Flemming John Hallifax, Gentleman Countess Gisela Gold Elsie In the Councellor’s House In the Shillingscourt . In the Shillingscourt The Lady with the Rubies Old Mam’selle’s Secret The Owl’s Nest Princess of the Moor The Second Wife Daughter of an Empress Queen Hortense Dream Life Reveries of a Bachelor Graustark King Arthur Essays Masterman Ready Midshipman Easy Sin of Joost Avelingh Uncle Terry Utopia. _ Sign of the Prophet The King’s Pardon Chandos Strathmore Under Two Flags Makers of Florence, . Makers of Venice Royal Edinburg Castle of Twilight Gold Bug Murder in the Rue Morgue Narrative of Arthur Gorden Pym_ Marius, the Epicurean Scottish Chiefs.. Thaddeus of Warsaw The Golden Fleece Children of the Abbey Children of the Abbey Cloister and Hearth. .. Foul Play It Is Never too Late to Mend Love Me. Little, Love Me Long Put Yourself in His Place A Terrible Temptation Crown of Wild Olives Sesame and Lilies Seven Lamps of Architecturs Jack’s Courtship Lovey Mary Mrs. Wiggsof the Cabbage Patch The Abbott Anne of Geiestein AUTHOR. . _Geo. MacDonald 4 4 ip A. W. Marchmont 4 4 i 4 Geo. Meredith 4 4 4 4 Miss Mulock E. Marlitt 4 4 .Louise Muhlbach Cl 1 1 Ik Marvel 4 4 _G, B. McCutcheon Mary McLeod T. B. Macauley Capt Marryat 4 4 4 4 Maarten Maartens C. C. Munn . . Thomas More J. B. Naylor Robt. Overton Ouida . ..Mrs. Oliphant 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 N. H. Potter Edgar Allen Poe 44 44 44 44 44 • 4 . _ .Walter Pater Jane Porter __D. G. Phillips ___R. M. Roche 4 4 Chas. Reade 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 John Ruskin W. C. Russell Alice Hegan Rice 44 44 44 ..Sir Walter Scott * ? LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 25 NO. 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 TITLE AUTHOR. Poems Ralph Waldo Emerson Faust Goethe Poems Oliver Goldsmith Poems Thomas Gray Poems Felicia Hemans Poems Oliver Wendell Holmes Poems Thomas Hood The Illiad Homer The Oddyssey “ Poems . . Jean Ingelow John Keats Henry W. Longfellow Poems Poems Courtship of Miles Standish. Evangeline. _ . “ Hiawatha *‘ Lucile Owin Neredith Poems Thomas More Lalla Rookh Thomas More Poems T. B. Macauley Poems j..* John Milton Paridise Lost “ Poems Edgar A. Poe Poems - Alexander Pope Poems Adeline Proctor Golden Treasury H. Palgrave Poems Dante Gabriel Rosetti Poems Sir Walter Scott Lady of the Lake Lady of the Lake Lady of the Lake Lady of the Lake Lady of the Lake Lay or the Last Minstrel Marin ion Poems Percy Byche Shellay Poems “ Poems Swineburne Poems Wm. Shakespeare Anthony and Cleopatra Cymbeline Hamlet Julius Caesar King Richard II King Henry IV, Part I_. King Henry IV, Part II __ King Henry VI, Part I . King Henry VI, Part II_. King Henry VI, Part III Macbeth Tragedy of Corrolanus Poems Lord Alfred Tem^son Enoch Arden “ “ “ The Princess * “ “ “ Select Poems “ “ “ Poems John Greenleaf Whittier Poems Wm. Wordsworth Days of Bruce Grace Aguilar A World Pilgrimage J. H. Burrows Erlin the Bold R. B. Ballyntine Gorilla Hunters “ 26 NO. 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 6^4 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY TITLE AUTHOR. Heart of Japan . _ C. L. Brownell On the Border with Crook J. G. Bourke Cook’s Voyages .... ... Capt. J. Cook Innermost Asia Cobbold Log of the Flying Fish . _ . Collingwood Robinson Crusoe _ _ Daniel Defoe Sixteen Years in Siberia . Deutch Our Artie Provinces H. W. Elliott Nat, the Naturalist. . G. M. Ferin Y ussef, the Guide . . _ _ _ Story of a Soldier . _ . G. A. Forsythe The Story of the Indian C. B. Grinell Story of the Cowboy E. Hough Story of the Trapper ... A. C. Laid Among the Cannibals Carl Lumlioltz The Golden Galleon _ . . . . . R. Leighton Wre;k of the Golden Flee;e Our National Parks ... . ... J. Muir John Boyd’s Adventures. .. _T. W. Nox California and Oregon Trails Francis Parkman Stones of Venice ... ------ J. Ruskin In Darkest Africa, Part l H. M. Stanley In Darkest Africa, Part II . “ “ Story of the Mine C. H. Shinn To Greenland and the Alps G. Stables Wild Animals I Have Known . Ernest Seton -Thompson Gulliver’s Travels. . ...... Dean Swift Tour of Alaska and t ie Yellowstone C. M. Taylor Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon Jules Verne Tour of the World in Eighty Days.. Two Thousand Leagues Under tiie Sea __ ... “ Boris, the Bear Hunter Fred Wishen Travel Among the Great Andes.. ...E Whymper My Winter on the Nile _ . S. Warner Story of the Railroad. . . _ . . C. Wyman x\rabian Nights Diary of the Besiege of Paris Mountains of Californa. To Greenland and tiie Alps. Loenzo de Medici E. Armstrong Life of Lincoln . I. N. Arnold Pericles and the Golden Age of Atuens Evelyn Abbott Abraham Lincoln N. Brooks Charles XII and the Collapse of the Swedish Empire R. Nisit Brine Famous American Statesmen S. K. Bolton Famous Amarican Authors Famous Leaders Among men ... Famous men of Science . William Gladstone ... Jas. Bryce Owen Glyndwr or Struggle for Welsh Independence A. G. Bradley Prince Henry, the Navigator.. C. P. Beazlej’ Sir Philip Sidney. . . H. S. FoxBourne Essay on Robert Burns . . Thos. Carljde The Cid Campeador .. W. B. Clark U. S. Grant W. C. Church Cicero and the Fall of the Roman Empire. ... S. Davidson Charlemagne ... .H. C. W. Davis Daniel O’Connell Robt. Dunlop NO. 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. TITLE AUTHOR. Souls of Black Folk T DuBois Southey _E. Duoden Autobiography . _ __ __ Benj. Franklin Benjamin Franklin “ “ Gustavus Adolphus ..C. P. L. Fletcher Julius Caesar W. W. Fowler Oliver Cromwell. .Chas. Firth Augristus Caesar -------- J. R. Firth Thomas Carlyle Froude Julian, the Philosopher Alice Gardner William Pitt W. D. Green Bismarck J. W. Headlam Life and Deeds of Gen. Grant J. T. Headly Napoleon and His Marshals “ Washington and His Generals ...... “ Life of Cromwell Herbert Louis XIV A. Hassell Spanish Life in Town and Country T. W. Higgins Theodoric, the Goth ._ Thomas Hodgins Christopher Columbus _ Washington Irving Christopher Columbus “ Edward Plantagenet E. Jenks Greek Heroes Chas. Kingsley Henry V C. L. Kingsford Story of My Life Helen Kellar Roosevelt, a Portrait Sketch •_ . . Lupp Saladin and the Fignt for the Holy Land ... Stanley Lane-Poole Webster. . . H. Cabot Lodge Frederick the Great Louise Muhlbach Goethe and Schiller . “ Hannibal, Soldier, Statesman, Patriot W. O’Connon Morris Napoleon, Warrior and Ruler John Adams J. F. Morse Thomas Jefferson Jane Austin Malden Portraits from the ’60s ... J. McCarty Earl of Chatham T. B. Macauley Robert, tne Bruce, and Struggle for Scottish Independence. Sir H. Maxwell Jean d’Arc Mrs. Olliphant Robert Cavalier Orcutt Rimelieu ... J. B. -Perkin Saint Louis, Louis IX of France Frederick Perrj^ Nelson and the Naval Supremacy of England Clark W. Russell Roosevelt, the Man 1 Jacob Ri is Tne Citizen , Shaler The Neighbor “ Historic Buildings E. Singleton Wyclif and the Reformation in England... Lewis Sergeant Persbnai Memoirs Phil. Sheridan Personal Memoirs “ “ Tolstoi, tne Man Steiner The American People Thorpe Home Life of Great Authors and Personal Sketches of Recent Authors . _ . ... ...... H. Tyng John C. Calhoun H. Von Holst Kings ana Queens I Have Known Vaceresco Alexander the Great Benjamin Ide Wheeler Robert E. Lee... H. A. White Spencer C. B. Waite Washington Woodrow Wilson Henry of Navarre P. F. Willert 28 No. 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735 736 737 738 729 740 741 742 743 744 745 746 747 748 749 750 751 752 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764 765 766 767 768 769 770 771 772 773 774 775 776 777 778 779 780 781 782 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY. TITLE. AUTHOR. Lives of Illustrious Shoemakers A. W. Ward Life of Joseph Bates “ Life of William Roscoe “ Life of Isaac Newton “ Short Life of Abraham Lincoln “ The Crusades Steps in the Expansion of Our Territory. . . Tne Goths Canada Facts I Ought To Know About My Country Germany The Holy Roman Empire History of the United States Norway Persia The Papal Monarchy _ Stories of Pennsylvania __ Boys of ’76 Building the Nation Drum Beat of tne Nation Freedom Triumphant Marching to Victory Old Times in the Colonies Redeeming the Republic Carthage. Early Britains . . The French Revolution Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World. Ciiina Childs History of England . _ . South American Republics, Part I South American Republics. Part II Tuscan Republics Wales American Revolution Historical and Literary Essays Mississippi Valley in the Civil War . . . . West Indies Washington and His Country School History of the United States.. . British Rule in India Sicily History of Civilization in Europe T. A. Archer O. P. Austin Henry Bradley J. G. Bourinot Bartlett __S. Barring-Gould Jas. Bryce Barnes H. H. Boyesen S. W. G. Benjamin Wm. Bariy Brumbaugh C. C. Coffin ... A. J. Church ..Thos. Carlyle --.E. S. Creasj' R. K. Douglass ,-Chas. Dickens -_T. C. Dawson .'.’..Isabel Duffy O. M. Edwards Fiske __R. W. Frazer E. A. Freeman Guizot History of England, Part I . Green History of England, Part II “ History of England, Part III “ History of England, Part IV “ Rome . A. Gilman Saracens ... “ , Reminiscences of the Civil War ......... General Gordon Battle for Independence Holmes Greece J. A. Harrison History of the Louisiana Purchase J. K. Hosmer The Jews . . . — NO. 783 784 785 786 787 788 789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810 811 812 813 814 815 816 817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 29 TITLE Mexico Spain Modern Spain Switzerland Knickerbocker’s History of New York The Normans Ten Great Events in History Ten Great Events in History. Parliamentary England Russian Empire AUTHOR. Susan Hale E. E. and Susan Hale M. A. S. Hume Mrs. A. Hug Washington Irving Sarah O. Jewett ..Johonnot 4 4 E. Jenks Knox Modern Spain Lane-Pooles Mediaeval India “ “ Turkey “ England in the Nineteenth Century Latimer History of the Civil War Lee Ireland E. Lawless Modern France Andre Lebon Tbe New American Navy, Part I T. Long The New American Navy, Part II “ War With Spain Henry Cabot Lodge Alexander’s Empire J. P. Mahaffy Bohemia C. E. Maurice Balkan States. ... Wm. Miller Mediaeval Rome.. “ History of Puerto Rico Middeldyk Jews Under Rome... W. Morrison Japan David Murry Mediaeval France G. Mason Ohio and Her Western Reserve Matthews Poland W. K. Morfill Russia “ People of England in the 19th Century, Part I Justin McCarthey People of England in the 19th Century, Part II “ “ Scotland Jas. Mackintosh All the Russias . Norman Byzantine Empire C. W. C. Oman Modern Italy Pietro Orsi Historic Towns of New England Historic Towns of Southern States Historic Towns of the Western States Historic Towns of the Mississippi Valley Tbe Conspiracy of Pontiac Tne Naval War of 1812 Holland. __ Ancient Egypt Partliia, Phoenica Pnoenica Assyria and Chaldea Chaldea Media, Babylon and Persia Vedic India .. Buddhist India The Building of the British Empire, Part I. The Building of the British Empire, Part II The Franks Our Country Portugal The Thirteen Colonies, Part I The Thirteen Colonies, Part II ..Powell * 4 F. Parkman Theodore Roosevelt ..Therold Rodgers G. Rawlinson 4 4 Z. A. Ragozin 4 4 4 4 T. W. Rhys-Davis A. T. Story 4 4 Lewis Sergeant Strong — H. M. Stephens Helen Smith 4 4 4 4 30 No. 844 845 846 847 848 849 850 851 852 853 854 855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862 863 864 865 866 867 868 869 870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880 881 882 883 884 885 886 887 888 889 890 891 892 893 894 895 896 897 898 899 900 901 902 903 904 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY. TITLE. AUTHOR. The Thirty Years’ War F. Schiller The Story of New Jersey F. R. Stockton Australasia G. Tregarthen How George R. Clarke Won the Northwest . _.R. G. Thwaites Rocky Mountain Explorations “ South Africa __.G. M. Theal Story of the Anglo-Saxon Institutions Tapp FrancO-German War H. G. Von Moltke Hungary A. Vambery Austria Sidney Whitman Christian Reclamation of Spain H. E. Watts History of the American People, Part I Woodrow Wilson History of the American People, Part II “ “ Venice .. ... Althea Wiel The Hansa Towns H. Zimmer History of the United States, Vol. I ‘ History of the United States, Vol. II History of the United States, Vol. Ill Periods of European History, Vol. I r Chas. Oman Periods of European History, Vol. II ... T. F. Tout Periods of European History, Vol. Ill H. C. Lodge Periods of European History, Vol. IV A. H. Johnson Periods of European History, Vol. V H. O. Wakeman Periods of European History, Vol. VI... A. Hassall Periods of European History, Vol. VII H. M. Stephens Periods of European History, Vol. VIII W. A, Phillips The Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol. I J. G. Nicolay The Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol. II __M. F. Force The Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol. Ill A. S Webb The Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol. IV J. C. Ropes The Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol. V F. W. Palfrey Tne Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol. VI A. Doubleday The Campaigns of tne Civil War, Vol. VII H. M. Cist Tile Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol. VIII F. V. Green The Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol. IX. J. D. Cox The Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol. X J. D. Cox Tne Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol. XI G. A. Pond The Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol. XII A. A. Humphreys The Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol. XIII F. Phisterer Trail of Lewis and Clarke, Vol. I Trail of Lewis and Clarke, Vol. II Boys in Blue Electricty Atkinson Story of the Atmosphere Archibald E'airy Land of Science A. M. Bucklep Progress of Invention in the Nineteenth Century ... Burne Story of the Stars Chambers The Solar System Among the Stars Gibberne Science Sketches .Jordan The Story of Eleetriciiy ..Munro Other Worlds Than Ours Richard Proctor Other Worlds Than Ours Fragments of Science .John Tyqdall Industrial Evolution of the United States Carol D Wright Uncle Sam’s Secrets O. P. Austin Uncle Sa;u’s Soldiers ... The Book Lover Jas. Baldwin Psycholog3 r Applied to Education Compayre About the Weather M. W. Harrington NO. 905 906 907 908 909 910 911 912 913 914 915 916 917 918 919 920 921 922 923 924 925 926 927 928 929 930 931 932 933 934 935 936 937 938 939 940 941 942 943 944 945 946 947 948 949 950 951 952 953 954 955 956 957 958 959 960 961 962 963 964 965 LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 31 TITLE AUTHOR. Our Country’s Flag Pedagogy Pedagogy School Interest and Duties Discourses of Epictetus Our Navy in the Time of War Educational Reformers School Management - Data of Ethics Education First Principles History and Science of Education Physical Deterioration. . School Management Dictionary Imitation of Christ Divine Healing. Divine Healing . Divine Healing Divine Healing Divine Healing. Divine Healing Divine Healing The Great Pnysician The Great Physician The Great Physjciau The Great Physician Secret of Salvation Secret of Salvation Secret of Salvation Secret of Salvation The Grace of Healing The Grace of Healing The Grace of Healing The Influence of Jesus Lectures on Preaching Social Unrest The Kingdom of God The Kingdom of God . The Kingdom of God The Kingdom of God The Kingdom of God .. The Kingdom of God The Kingdom of God The Kingdom of God Pilgrims’ Progress Pilgrims’ Progress Story of the Red Cross Side Lights on the Letters to the Ephesians Natural Law in the Spiritual World The Divine Comedy. The Origin of Species Science and Health Book of Martyrs Book of Martyrs Book of Martyrs E. S. Holden E. C. Hewett J. H. Hyslop Robert M. King Geo. Long F. Matthews R. H. Quick A. N. Raub Herbert Spencer 4 4 4 • Wm. J. Shoup Smyfhe White N. Webster Thomas a’Kempis E. E. By rum J. W. Beers Phillips Brooks << « < 4 4 4 4 A. B. Bruce John Bunyun 4 4 4 4 Clara Barton E. Baskerville .Henry Drummond Dante Chas. Darwin Mary Baker Eddy , Fox The Destiny of Man John Fiske Through Nature to God “ “ The Idea of God Early days of Christianit 3 r F. W. Farrar 32 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY NO. TITLE AUTHOR. 966 967 968 969 970 971 972 973 974 975 976 977 978 979 980 981 982 983 984 985 986 987 988 989 990 991 992 993 994 995 996 997 998 999 100Q 1001 1002 1003 1004 1005 1006 1007 1008 1009 1010 1011 1012 1013 1014 1015 1016 1017 1018 1019 1020 1021 1022 1023 1024 1025 1026 Life of Christ Seeking- After God • The Divine Pedigree of Man Scientific Demonstration of the Future Life Man’s Value to Society The Investment of Influence Twenty Years of Revival Effort India’s Millions India’s Millions India’s Millions Life of Jesus Meditations of Marcus Aurelius Pleasures of Life The Gospel Day Plutarch’s Lifes Life of John G. Patton Translation of the Koran John Plowman’s Pictures The Gospel for an Age of Doubt The Gospel for a World of Sin Little Rivers By the Fireside * Simple Life '. The Better Way Book of Golden Deeds Bringing in the Sheaves The Better Testament The Better Testament The Better Testament The Better Testament Christian Progress. Christ of the Apostles’ Creed Christian Library . Christian Library Christian Library Christianity Triumphant Grace and Truth Life and Labor Life of John Wesley Matthew and His Work. . . . . _ . _ . Out of Egypt Into Canaan Out of Egypt Into Canaan People vs. The Liquor Traffic Primitive Piety Revived Precious Sayings of St. Peter. Revival Tornadoes Salvation Salvation ... Salvation Sabbath Reading The Sermon Bible The Confession of Faith Taylor’s Sermons Chambers’ Encyclopedia, Vol. I . Chambers’ Encyclopedia, Vol. II. Chambers’ Encyclopedia, Vol. Ill Chambers’ Encyclopedia, Vol. IV Chambers’ Encyclopedia, Vol. V. F. W. Farrar ... T. J. Hudson Newell Dwight Hillis 4 4 6 4 4 4 G. B. Howard ..... A. D. Kahn 4 6 ...Earnest Kenan George Long Sir John Lubbock C. E. Orr Plutarch ..Rev. Jas. Patton Geo. Sale ___C. H. Spurgeon H. Van Dyke 6 6 Chas. Wagner Charlotte M. Young NO. 1027 1028 1029 1030 1031 1032 1033 1034 1035 1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041 1042 1043 1044 1045 1046 1047 1048 1057 1058 1059 1061 1062 1063 1064 1065 1067 1110 1111 1112 1116 1118 1119 1120 1121 1122 1123 1124 1125 1126 1127 1128 1129 1130 1131 1133 1134 1135 1136 1137 1138 1151 1152 1153 1154 1155 1156 1157 LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 33 TITLE Encyclopedia, Vol. VI Encyclopedia, Vol. VII Encyclopedia. Vol. VIII French Method French-English Dictionary . French Grammar German Grama r German Method German-English Dictionary Spanish Method - . Spanish-English Dictionary Common School Literature Fifth Reader Franklin Lessons in Language - New Language Exercises, Part I Long New Language Exercises, Part II. . _ Long New Language Exercises* Part III Long New Mental Arithmetic Our Language, Its Use and Structure, Part II ....... Studies in American Literature Arithmetics, Common Sense ... . ... French to 1056, Arithmetics, (9 copies). Fish Arithmetic, Analysis Felter Arithmetic, New Greenleaf and 1060, Arithmetic, First Book (2 copies) Harper Arithmetic, Oral Kirk Arithmetics, Key to . . Adams Arithmetic Standard. ..... ... . ... Milne Arithmetic,. Elements ------ Milne and 1066 Arithmetics, Practical (2 copies) Quakenbos to 1109 Arithmetics, Practical (43 copies) Ra\' Arithmetic, Mental .Ray Key to Higher Arithmetic, Ray to 1115 Arithmetics, Rudiments (4 copies) Robinson and 1117 Arithmetics, Progressive (2 copies). Robinson Arithmetic, New Higher Robinson Arithmetic, Scottish Practical Arithmetic, Primary White Algebra, Davis Algebra. Robinson Bookkeeping, Practical Mayhew Geometry, Wentworth Geometry, 1 ..Robinson Grammar, Bullen’s _ . . Grammar, Lessons Franklin Grammar, Introductory — . Green Grammar. Analysis -------- _ Green Grammar, Hyde’s . . and 1132 Grammar, (2 copies) _ Kerl Grammar, Introductory Maxwell Grammar, Primary _ . - Penio Grammar, Teachers Penio Grammar, Secondary . Powell Grammar, . ... - -Quackenbos to 1150 Grammar, Illustrated Lessons (13 copies) Quackenbros Grammar, Elementary _- ----- Reed Grammer, New Sw inton Grammar, Language Primer. Swinton Grammar, Lessons . Tarbell Grammar, Vicroy author. Chambers Chambers Chambers 34 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY NO. TITLE AUTHOR. 1158 Grammar, _ . Well 1159 to 1172 Dictionary, High School (14 copies) Webster 1173 to 1189 Dictionary, Hatyly (17 copies) “ 1190 Histor} 7 of U. S., Swinton 1191 to 1208 History of U. S., (18 copies) Ouakenbos 1209 History of U. S., ..... Willard 1210 to 1237 Geography, (28 copies) Appleton 1238 Geography, Colton 1239 Geography, _ . . , Cornell 1240 Geography, _ Guyot 1241 Geograph} 7 , ...... Monteith 1242 Geography, ... Mitchell 1243 Physiology, Eclectic 1244 Physiology and Hygiene, Kellog 1245 Ph} 7 siology and Hygiene, Smith 1246 Pyilosophv Natural, Loomis 1247 1258 First Readers, (12 copies).. ... Appleton 1259 First Reader, Swinton 1260 to 1269 Second Readers (10 copies) ....... .Appleton 1270 to 1274 Second Reader , (5 copies) ....... Franklin 1275 Second Reader , .... Harper 1276 to 1297 Third Readers, (22 copies) ... Appleton 1298 to 1328 Fourth Readers, (31 copies). __ Appleton 1329 Fourth Reader,. . _ ..McGuffy 1330 Fourth Reader, National 1331 Fourtli Reader, . _ . Sargeant 1332 Fourth Reader, Town 1333 to 1357 Fifth Readers, (25 copies) _ . . .. Appleton 1358 . _ . . 1359 : . ..... 1360 . .... 1861 Fifth Reader,. National 1362 Fifth Reader, _ .. . . Wilson 1363 Sixth Reader, ....... ........ McGuffy 1364 Sixth Reader, Literary Reader, _ Cathcart 1365 to 1370 Sixth Readers, Geographical Readers (6 copies) ..Guyot’ 1371 Speller, ....... Bulter 1372 Speller, . .. ....... Analytical 1373 Speller, . Monroe 1374 to 1378 S sellers, (5 copies) . . . Patterson 1379 Speller, Tests, ...Raul) 1380 Speller, . .... .Swinton 1381 to 1382 Spellers,. (2 copies). _ _ , . .Sanders 1383 to 1385 Spellers, (3 copiers) Webster 1386 to 1387 Spellers, (2 copies) _ . . . .Worcester 1388 Speller, . . Watson 1389 French Language Reader,. . - Bocher 1390 Latin Grammar, . . 1391 Latin Prose Com postion .. ..Arnold 1392 Latin, Caesar, ... .Schmitz and Zumpt 1393 Latin, Cicero. ... Schmitz and Zumpt 1394 Latin, Sallust. Schmitz ami Zumpt 1395 Latin, Cicero . ... Johnson 1396 Greek Prose Camposition. . ... Arnold 1397 Greek, Grammar. 1 . ..Hadley 1398 German, Heilung. ._ Gottliche 1400 Psychology ... 1401 Governmental Class Book, 1402 Civil Government, . Townsend 1403 Chemistry Primer, , . . — Roscoe LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND *RULES. 35 NO. TITLE AUTHOR. 1404 Practical Carpentry _ 1405 A Study for Young - Man 1406 1407 Arne 1408 Bently 1409 Ingersollism 1410 John Vine Hall 1411 Complete Angler _ _ . 1412 1413 Letters of Love and Counsel to Our Girls 1414 Letters of Love and Counsel to Our Girls 1415 Letters of Love and Counsel to O.ur Girls 1416 1417 Mothers’ Counsel to Boys 1418 Mothers’ Counsel to Boys. 1419 Mothers’ Counsel to Boys . A 1420 Mothers’ Counsel to Boys_ _ . 1421 Mistakes of Ingersoll 1422 Memoirs of Josegh Curtis . _ 1423 The Mahdi 1424 Nantucket Scraps, 1425 ■_ , ’ 1426 Our Life in the Highlands „ _ _ 1427 Past and Present 1428 The Repubioan Party 1429 Resources of North Dakota _ . . _ ^ _ 1430 Resources of North Dakota _ _ . . . 1431 Sketch Book of G. Crayon 1432 Seven Studies for Young Men 1433 . 1434 Two Million 1435 Trisias 1436 1437 Voice of a Shell 1438 _ . . _ 1439 Webster’s Speeches ........ 1440 Young Folks Centennial Rhymes ...... 1441 Zwei Enadenwerte (German) 1442 to 1489 The Alantic Monthly, Vol. I to XL VIII. 1490 to 1494 Century Magazine, Vol. I to V 1495 to 1551 Harper’s Magazine, Vol. I to LVII 1552 Lippincott’s Magazine, Vol. 1 . _ .... 1553 Ladies’ Repository, Vol. I 1554 Ladies’ Repository, Vol. II 1555 Outing Magazine, Vol. I 1556 Outing Magazine, Vol. II . 1557 Journal of Agriculture, Vol. I . _ 1558 Journal of Agriculture, Vol. II 1559 to 1563 Daily Tribune, Vol. I to V __ 1564 Breeders’ Journal, Vol. I __ 1565 Nebraska Farmer, Vol. I 1566 North American Review, Vol. I 1567 Church Press, Vol. I ___ . 1568 Church Press, Vol. II 1569 American Field, Vol. I 1570 American Inventor, Vol. I _ 1571 American Inventor, Vol. II.. i. 1572 American Engineer, Vol. I 1573 American Engineer, Vol. II 1574 Scientific American, Vol. I _ 1575 Catholic American, Vol. I . 36 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY. No. TITLE. AUTHOR. 1576 Catholic American. Vol. II 1577 Catholic American, Vol. Ill 1578 Catholic American, Vol. IV . _ 1579 Carpenter and Builder . 1580 Building. .. 1581 Kansas Farmer _ 1582 Spirit of the Times 1583 The Aldine 1584 Debates of the Constitutional Convention, Vol. I 1585 Debates of the Constitutional Convention, Vol. II _ 1586 Debates of the Constitutional Convention, Vol. Ill 1587 Debates of the Constitutional Convention, Vol. IV 1588 Debates of the Constitutional Convention, Vol. V 1589 Journal of the Constitution Convention, Vol. I 1590 House Journal, 1889 and 1900, Vol.. I 1591 Senate Journal, 1889 and 1890 Voi. I 1592 House Journal, 1891 Vol. I . _ _ 1593 Senate Journal 1891 Vol. I 1600 Cyclopedia of Applied Electricity, Vol. 1, Part I (Currents, measure- ment, wiring, telegraph) 1601 Cyclopedia of Applied Electricity, Vol. 2, Part II (Dynamos, motdrs, storage batteries . _ . 1602 Cyclopedia of Applied Electricit} 7 , Vol. 3, Part III (Lighting, railways, power stations) .. 1603 Cyclopedia of Applied Electrify, Vol. Part 4, IV (Alernating currents, power transmission) -- 1604 Cyclopedia of Applied Electicity, Vol. 5, Part V (Telephony, Index) — 1605 World’s Best Histories, U. S. Vol. I .Julian Hawthorne 1606 World's Best Histories, U. S. Vol. II. 1607 World’s Best Histories, U. S. Vol III ..... “ 1608 World’s Best Histories, U. S. Vol. IV “ 1609 World’s Best Histories, U. S. Vol. V “ 1610 World’s Best Histories, U. S. Vol. VI “ 1611 World's Best Histories, U. S. Vol. VII 1612 World’s Best Histories, U. S. Vol. VIII 1613 World’s Best Histories, U. S. Vol. IX 1614 World’s Best Histories, France Vol. I M. Guizot & Mail. Guizot De Witt 1615 World’s Best Histories, France Vol. II 1616 World’s Best Histories, France Vol. Ill “ 1617 World’s Best Histories, France Vol. IV “ 1618 World’s Best Histories, France Vol. V 1619 World’s Best Histories, France Vol. VI “ 1620 World’s Best Histories, France Vol. VII “ 1621 World’s Best Histories, France Vol. VIII “ 1622 World’s Best Histories, England Vol. I J. R- Green 1623 World's Best Histories, England Vol. II 1624 World’s Best Histories. England Vol. Ill 1625 World’s Best Histories, England, Vol. VI 1626 World’s Best Histories, Germaay, I. Wolfgang Menzel 1627 World’s Best Histories, Germany, II. “ 1628 World’s Best Histories. Germany, III. 1629 World’s Best Histories, Germany, VI . “ 1630 World’s Best Histories, Ireland, Vol. I J. F. Finerty 1631 World’s Best Histories, Ireland, Vol. II 1632 World’s Best Histories, Russia, Vol. I... - A. Rambaud 1633 World’s Best Histories, Russia, Vol. II 1634 World’s Best Histories, Canada, Vol. I- J- Hopkins 1635 World's Best Histories, Japan, Vol. I W. Dickson 1636 World’s Best Histories, China, Vol. I D. C. Boulger 1637 Report of the National Prison Association, 1887 1638 “ “ 1888. NO. 1639 1640 1641 1642 1643 1644 1645 1646 1647 1648 1649 1650 1651 1652 1653 1654 1655 1656 1657 1658 1659 1660 1661 1662 1663 1664 1665 1666 1667 1668 1669 167( 1671 1672 1673 1674 1675 1676 1677 1678 1679 1680 1681 1682 1683 1684 1685 1686 1687 1688 1689 1690 1691 1692 1693 1694 1695 1696 1697 1698 1699 1700 LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. TITLE AUTHOR. Report of the National Prison Association, 1889__ 1890 _ . 1891 __ 1896 _ _ 1897^ - 1898 _ . 1900 . _ 1901. . 1902- - 1903. - 1904. _ 1905- _ History of the American People Vol. Ill History of the American People Vol. IV History of the American People Vol. V The Winter Tale The Two Noble Kinsmen Two Gentlemen of Verona Twelfth Night Troilus and Cressida Titus Amdrunicus Alls Well That Ends Well A Midsummer Night’s Dream The Comedy of Errors King Henry the Eighth _ . ♦. King Henry the Fifth King John - King Lear Much Ado about Nothing The Taming of the Shrew T imon of Athens . _ _ _ . - The Tempest Sonnets ' Romeo and Juliet Pericles, Prince of Tyre Merry Wives of Windsor Measure for Measure As You like it The Merchant of Venice _ _ _ _ Vol. II Vol. Ill Vol. IV Vol. V Vol. VI Vol. VIII Vol. IX Vol. X Vol. II _ voi . iii : Play House and Half Holidays- Tim - Sara Crewe - For L ilias Willie Reilley * . A Young Macedonian Paul Travers’ Adventures Man and Wife The Moonstone Manhoods Morning Room at the Top The Strange Friend of Tito Bil T rue Stones Woodrow Wilson Shakespeare J. Fenimore Cooper William Carleton . Rev J. C. Atkinson - - _ _ Geo. P. Brett Frances Burnett Rose N. Carey William Carleton .Rev. Alfred Church - . Sam Clover Wilkie Collins 1. A. Con well A. Craig -Mrs Frances Darr -Hugh De Normand A NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY. 34 No. TITLE. 1701 Donald and Dorothy _ 1702 The Sign of the Four 1703 Striking- for the Rig-ht 1704 The Signal Boys 1705 The Wreck of the Red Bird 1706 Among- the Esquimaux . 1707 Tales of the Pathfinders 1708 In the Heart of the Storm 1709 Who was Paul Grayson 1710 Life of Georg-e Washington j. __ 1711 The Return of the Natvie 1712 Living Creatures 1713 Mingo 1714 Evening Tales- 1715 American Explorers . _ 1716 Tom Brown at Rugby 1717 Ashcliffe Hall_ ___ 1718 Mildred 1719 Millbank 1720 Ethelyn’s Mistake 1721 With Wolfe in Canada 1722 A Young Carthamain 1723 Orange and Green 1724 Jack Archer 1725 The Cat of Bubastes- - 1726 Tlie Crest of the Continent 1727 Prince of Abyssinia 1728 The Boy Travellers in theRussian Empire 1729 A Quaker Girl of Nantucket 1730 In The Cheering-up Business 1731 Seneca’s Morals 1732 Pecks Compendium of Fun 1733 Natures Serial Story . 1734 A Story of the South 1735 Driven Back to Eden 1736 Miss Lou 1737 What Can She Do_ - ------ 1738 A Young Girl’s Wooing 1739 The Crown of Wild Olive 1740 The Wreck of the Grosvenor 1741 The Daj T s of Old 1742 Arthur Schopenhure __ 1743 The King of Honey Island 1744 Wild Life and Scenes 1745 MacDermots of Ballycloran 1746 His Own Fault . 1747 The Boys of Wild Lake School 1748 Fragments of Science 1749 Hitherto, A Story of Yesterdays 1750 Life in the Open Air 1751 Black Bird Hill 1752 American Wars 1753 HCsop’s Fables . „ 1754 Old Blazer’s Hero 1755 Poems_ 1756 The Early Poems- 1757 The HDneid of Virgil [Translated] 1759 Essays 1758 History of Rome gl7/»0- The Divine Life of the Virgin Mary. ... -11761 *BndinPfc Millions biuan io VL oil rignH- AUTHOR. Mary Mapes Dodge A. Conan Do 3 de Julia A. Eastman . Edw. Eggleston ..Edward Ellis Arthur Gilman .Maxwell Gray -_J. Habberton _ Edward Hale Thos Hard} r -John Monteith Joel Harris Thomas Higginson . ..Thomas Hughes -.Sarah Emily Holt . -Mary J. Holmes 4 4 4 4 G. A. Henty Ernest Ingersoll Sam Johnson -Thos W. Knox Mar} T Lee Roger L. Estrange -George H. Peck E. P. Roe John Rusk in W. C. Russell 4 4 4 4 Bailey Saunders Maurice Thompson J. Thompson -Anthony Trollope J. T. Trowbridge J. Preston True John T 3 r ndall Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney Theodore Winthrop George Elliott J. R. Lowell John Conington . Joseph Addison Theodore Mommsen J. A. Boullan A. D. Khan NO. 1762 1763 1764 1765 1766 1767 1768 1769 1770 1771 1772 1773 1774 1774 1775 1776 1777 1778 1779 1780 1781 1782 1783 1784 1785 1786 1787 1788 1789 1790 1791 1792 1793 1794 1795 1796 1797 1798 1799 1800 1801 1802 1803 1804 1805 1806 1807 1808 1809 1810 1811 1812 1813 1814 1815 1816 1817 1818 1819 1820 LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 35 TITLE Catholic Religion Protestant Principles ... . In the School of Prayer The Better Testament The Christian’s Secret of a Happy Life Evils of the Cities His Life and Work Warfare and Work. Standard Arithmetic Rays Arithmetic. _ Practical Arithmetic Elementary Algebra Non-English-Speaking People(a) (b) AUTHOR. Rev. P. N. Lynch H McKim _A. Murray Wm. G. Schell Mrs. Smith Rev. DeWitt Talmage W. J. Milne yuackenbos H. N. Robinson W" L. Harrington History of the United States. Dictionary Madame Therese The Conscript Poetical Works of Robert Burns Sir Richard Whittington . Hans of Iceland. . Darkness and Daylight The Rape of the Lock Hard Cash Edith Lyle’s Secret... The Oath Keeper of Forano Behind the Prison Bars Barnes Webster M. G. Adam .Rice & Besant Victor Hugo M. J. Holmes Alexander Pope Chas. Reade M. J. Holmes Julia Wright E. E. By rum The Boys Companion The Secret of Salvation Divine Healing of the Soul and Body The Key to Theosophy The Grace of Healing Moody in Chicago Free Masonry Exposed The Kingdom of God Letters of Love and Counsel for our Girls Barriers Burned Away Opening a Chestnut Burr _ Cruel as the Grave. . _ Rose Mather Lion Ben . . St. George for England Beryl ... 1 . A Wasted Love The Crossing Forest and Jungle Bryant and Stratton’s Commercial Law.. Robinson Crusoe French Revolution Adam Bede Arithmetic Arithmetic, Practical High School Arithmetic . The New Model Arithmetic The New Model Arithmetic The Warner Mental Arithmetic E. E. By rum Blavalsky Byers . H. B. Hartzler Husted H. M. Riggle Jennie C. Rutty E. P. Roe Mary J. Holmes Rev. Kellogg G. A. Henty Mrs. Aken Douglass Chas. Garvice ...Winston Churchill P. T. Barnum Amos Dean LLD Daniel Defoe Thomas Carlyle George Elliot Sheldon G. P. Quackenbos G. A. Wenthworth H. H. Belfield A. N. Raub 9 40 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY NO. 1821 1822 1823 1824 1825 1826 1827 1828 1829 1830 1831 1832 1833 1834 £835 1836 1837 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 1863 1864 1865 1866 1867 1868 1869 1870 1871 1872 1873 1874 1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 TITLE AUTHOR. A Mental Arithmetic : .Geo W. Hull Elementary Arithmetic “ A Complete Arithmetic . . “ “ XXtli Century Arithmetic Francis M. Woods Intellectual Arithmetic John F. Stoddard Arithmetic W. E. Chancellor An Arithmetic for Upper Grades John H. Walsh Grammar School Arithmetic . _ “ “ Grammar School Arithmetic “ Graded Work Arithmetic ... .„ S. W Baird New Intellectual Arithmetic Mental Arithmetic.. Elementary Arithmetic Arithmetic Arithmetic Elementary Arithmetic ... American Mental Arithmetic Stories of Mother Goose Village Baldwin Primer Stories of the United States Six Nursery Classics Story Reader. . School Reading by Grades Stories of the United Staies AtCsop’s Fables Animal Life Sight Reader Primary Language Lessons. ... Readers by Grades Leaves and Flowers Language Reader Second R eader ...... Second Reader _ Readers by Grades. Readers by Grades . HOw to See How to Write How to Talk The New Century Reader In Latinum Third Reader Third Book Book Three. Third Reader Third Reader Language Reader New Century Reader Fourth Book _ . _ Robinson I. C. McNeill _.G. A. Wentworth D. W. Fish . Sheldon M. A. Bailey _ .M. A. Bigham May Kirk Anna Chase Davis Ernest Fosbery Logie and Uecker James Baldwin Anna Davis Mara L. Pratt _ _ Florence Bass Sheldon L. H. Jones Mary J. Spear F. T. Baker F. E. Blodgett H. A. Perdue . _H. L. Jones W. B. Powell __H. S. Tibbits J. D. S. Riggs G. I. Aldrich H. L. Jones Jones . F. E. Blodgett _.F. T. Baker _G. I. Aldrich Book Four H. L. Jones Health Reader Language Reader F. T. Baker Fifth Book ' : G. I. Aldrich The New Century Reader F. T. Baker Language Reader LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 41 NO. TITLE AUTHOR. 1883 Fifth Reader. .... Jones 1884 Fifth Reader “ 1885 Sixth Health Reader 1 “ 1886 New Centuary Reader 1887 Language Reader F. T. Bakes 1888 Reader by Grades, Book Six L. H. Jones 1889 Reader by Grades, Book Seven 1890 Reader by Garces, Book Seven “ 1891 New Century Reader “ 1892 New Century Reader 1893 Home Geography R. S. Tarr 1894 Home Geography “ “ 1895 Geographical Nature Studies F. O. Payne 1896 Pnysical Education R. A. Morris 1897 Geographical Nature Studies F. O. Payne 1898 Geographical Nature Studies . . 1899 Geographical Nature Studies 1900 Geographical Nature Studies 1901 Geogtaphical Reader (Asia) Carpenter 1902 Geographical Studies . ... F. O. Payne 1903 Geographical Reader (South America) F. G. Carpenter 1904 Geographical Reader (Europe) “ 1905 Geographical Reader (Asia) “ 1906 Geographical Reader “ 1907 Geographical yuestions “ 1908 Higii School Geography Cornell’s 1909 Geography (New Zealand).. McDonald 1910 Geography Holbrook 1911 Geography ... Dodge 1912 Common Words to Spell Penniman 1913 Common School Speller Patterson 1914 School Studies Gilbert 1915 Modern Speller Hunt & Gourley 1916 Algebra Ray 1917 Algebra : Hull 1918 Algebra . .. Wentworth 1919 Text Book of Algebra Fisher 1920 Physical Science Avery 1921 English Grammar Longwell 1922 Modern English Grammar Emerson 1923 Advanced Language Lessons Sheldon 1924 Elementary English Grammar Kittredge 1925 Grammar Andrews & Stoddard 1926 Grammar School History .- Anderson 1927 Grammar Swinton 1928 The American Word Book 1929 Living Creatures Monteith 1930 Flyers, Creepers and Swimmers Johonnot 1931 How Plants Grow Gray 1932 Elementary Lessons in English Emerson 1933 Introduction to Botany Stevens 1934 Physiology and Hygiene Smith 1935 Polical Economy . Chapin 1936 Physiology and Health 1937 Physiology and Health _ 1938 Physiology and Health 1939 Civil Government of N. Dak Woods 1940 Civil Government of N. Dak “ 1941 Civil Government of N. Dak. ... ... “ 1942 Civil Government of N. Dak. “ 1943 Catholic Religion . NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY 42 NO. TITLE AUTHOR. 1944 Choice Literature . Williams 1945 Agriculture Goff 1946 World Studies Sheldon 1947 Gallic War ..Caesar 1948 The ^Eneid Virgil 1949 Elementary Physics Avery 1950 School Physics . “ 1651 Elements of Geometry Hull 1952 Heart of Oak Books 1953 Heart of Oak Books : 1954 Elements of Chemistry Shepards 1955 Elementary Chemistry ". Linebarger 1956 Descriptive Newell 1957 Sixth Music Reader Whiting 1958 Fourth Music Reader “ 1959 First Music Reader “ 1960 Second Music Reader ... “ 1961 Music Reader _ Gantvoort 1962 Music Reader 1963 Dictionary Greek & English 1964 Bookkeeping Crittenden 1965 Dictionary ... 1966 Puysiology Anatomy Lamberts 1967 Primary History of U. S Ellis 1968 High School Dictionary. Webster 1969 Poems Burns 1970 A Chistmas Carol Dickens 1971 Poems Tennyson 1972 The Bunker Hill Monument Webster 1973 Tales of a Wayside Inn Longfellow 1974 The Golden Legend “ 1975 Paul Revere’s Ride 1976 Flight of a Tartar Tribe De Quince} r 1977 The Judgement of Socrates More 1978 Ode on a Grecian Urn . . .. . . . Keats 1979 Palamon and Arcite . . Dryden 1980 Sohrab & Rustum Arnold 1981 A Dramatization of Longfellow Holbrook 1982 Life and Writings of Addison Macaulaj^ 1983 Selected Poems . .. - Holmes 1984 Silas Marner . Eliot 1985 A-Hunting of the Deer .. Warner 1986 Rules of Conduct ... Washington 1987 Nature and Compensation . Emerson 1988 Superlative and Other Essays 1989 The Fortune of the Republic ' “ 1990 Tales from Shakespeare Chas. & Mary Lamb 1991 Baby Bell, The little Violinist .Aldrich 1992 The Succession of Forest Trees Thoreau 1993 Old Testament Stories 1 .. 1994 Rip Van Winkle Irving 1995 The Voyage ... “ 1996 Tanglewood Tales Hawthorne 1997 The Old Manse and a few Mosses 1998 Tales of the White Hills 1999 Grandfather’s Chair 2000 Biographical Stories ... 2001 George Washington Scudder 2. Tne Biography of a Grizzly “ Girls of History . . ... Brooks Mary Antoinette Tyler The Cat of Bubastes — __^_a f . lT ..Henty - The Deerslayer A- A Cooper Stories of the old Bay State , Brooks Stories of the Romans :... — ..Guerber ■»» Our Shy Neighbors .... .1... A Kelly >;** German Book . . _ a y, _ _ ...— .A- . - - ... . _ . _ . American History Stories . . Prall Av* ‘ Queen Little People ..* .... i* Stowe The Thirteen Colonies , Guerber Poe’s Works Edgar A. Poe Remarkable Answer to P rayer , .. .... ..Shaw Clem, the Truant Boy Who Become a .Rough Rider Geo. B. Newcomb Clem, the Truant Boy Who Become a Rough Rider “ “ Pickwick Papers .. . . Dickens Five Thousand A Year and How I Made It ^ Flip Wing the Spy .... . _ _ Wesselhoeft - Stories of Heroic Deeds _ Johnnot The Grofton Boys Martineau ^ to 2418 Black Rock a Tale of The Selkirks Ralph Connor Works of Edgar Allan Poe .AC ... . .Becher Short Stories Classics Patten Short Stories Classics _ Patton Short Stories Classics __A- a “ Short Stories Classics • . “ Short Stories Classics “ The Spirit of Nature Study Bigelow Thornycroft Hall . Worboise The Southerners i _ ... Brady Winston of the Prairie. ... 1 : Bindeloss The Ruler of the Kingdom. Keon Slow and Sure . n .Alger, Jr. Tom the Boot Black . . . “ Strong aud Steady “ Minnesota Manual “ Light in Darkness .-...vcL “ History of Our Country . . Richardson The Boy Travelers in the Far East . . A. Knox The Afro-American League - ...Ashley The Ave Marie. . . . :: “ Stories of the Prairies Willard .so NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY. No. TITLE AUTHOR. 2440 Transactions of the State Board of Agriculture Willard 2441 Western Literary Institute . “ 2442 Crooked Trails — . — . . Remington 2443 International Sunday-school Lessons . Vincent 2444 Minnesota State Horticultural Society 2445 American Church Review 2446 Lexicon Manuale . . . 2447 Entertaining and Amusing Ancedotes. 2448 Iowa State Horticultural Society 2449 Minnesota Horticultural Society Year, 1873 2450 Minnesota State Horticultural Society, “ 1879.. . . 2451 Minnesota State Horticultural Society, “ 1881 2452 State Hoticultural Society. 1883. _. . . . 2453 “ “ “ 1884 , 2454 “ “ “ 1885 _ 2455 “ “ 1886 2456 Early Empire Builders of Great West . . _ Armstrong 2457 Commissioner of Labor 1886 . 2458 *■ “ 1888 ...... 2459 “ Agriculture 1874 2460 Secretary “ 1892.. . _ ... 2461 Tiie General School Laws of North Dakota 1896 2462 Superintendent of Public Instrcution 1902. ... 2f63 Joint Committee on Reconstruction. _ 2464 Fifth Annual Report of State Treasurer 1907 2465 An Introduction to Astronomy . .... 2466 State Geological Survey North Dakota ... 2467 Report of the Librarian of Congress . . 2468 Annual Report of the Superintendent of State Prisons . 2469 Tiie Introductory Discourse and Lectures Delivered in Boston 2470 Atlantic Monthly . . _ . 2471 Ave Maria . 2472 to 2490 Great Prisoners 2491 Dictionary .... 2492 Higher Arithmetic Robinson 2493 Tne Rede. option of David Carson _ C. F. Goss 2494 Black Rock . Ralph Connor 2495 A Pasteboard Crown.. ...... ... Clara Morris 2496 The Fighting Chance .. . R. W. Chambers 2497 Tne Spoilers . _ . ........ _ . Rex E. Beach 2498 Tiie House of a Tnousand Candles. . .Meredith Nicholson 2499 Princess Maritza ...... Percy Brebner 2500 Practical Aritnmetic _ Robinson 2501 to 2550 Handy Dictionary Webster 2551 Common-sense Didactics . Henry Sabin 2552 The Freshwater Aquarium . . . Otto Eggling 2553 Stor} 7 of the Greek People. Eva M. Tappan 2554 Fridtjof Nansen ...... . Jacob B. Bull 2555 Good Health Bertha M. Brown 2556 Around the World 3d. and 4th. Reader.. . Stella M. Carroll 2557 Famous Presidents Hellen M. Campbell 2558 History of American Literature Walter M. Bronson 2559 American Indians ._ Frederick Starr 2560 Second Reader Clarance F. Carroll 2561 Fifth Reader. . . . . Heath 2562 Teaching a District School --------- John W. Dissmore 2563 A Primary History , . . . .Win H. Mace 2564 Around the World Geography First Reader Stella C. Carroll 2565 Third Reader Clarence F. Carroll 2566 Moral Training in Public Schools Ciias E. Rugh 2567 King Arthur Lillian N. Stevens NOb 256ft 2569 2570 2571 2572 2573 2574 2575 2576 2577 2578 2579 2580 2581 2582 2583 2584 2585 2586 2587 2588 2589 2590 2591 2592 2593 2594 2595 2596 2597 2598 2599 2600 2601 2602 2603 2604 2605 2606 2607 2608 2609 2610 2611 2612 2613 2614 2615 2616 2617 2618 2619 2620 2621 2622 2623 2624 2625 2626 2627 2628 LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 51 TIT LE Strange People The Evolution of Dodd The Life of Abraham Lincoln, . The Western United States The Teacher at Work Around the World Third Reader Fourth Reader The Frozen North Northland Heroes.,. First Reader . . . Art and Life Primer _ . . , , Brownie Primer Jerry McAuley Walsh Grammar Arithmetic What a Young Man Ought to Know What a Young Woman Ought to Know . . , The Secret of Salvation ...... Bob Son of Battle New Catechism of the Steam Engine Mechanical Dictionary Practical Methods to Insure Success New Catechism of Electricity A. B. C. of the Telephone Erecting and Operating Drawing and Design Self Help Mechanical Drawing. . . . ...... Electic Physology or Guide to Health Puvsical Geography ...... Leading Facts of American History Food for the Lambs The Spy ........ . . . Speeches Speeches The Story of Japan Percy Wynn Pigs is Pigs Elements of Arithmetic English Dictionary Smooth Stones Ivanhoe. _ The Kingdom Come. Fruit Growing. . Behind the Prison Bars . 9009 The Turn of the Balance Preacher and the King.. Language Reader The Jungle Book Two Thousand Years Ago The Cricket on the Hearth Biography of a Grizzly Sermons History of the United States of America. . The Pathway of life Healing Currents From the Battery of life Travels and Experience in Other Lands. . Twice Born Men The Prairie ......... Wing and Wing Water Witch ....... . The Bravo author. Frederick Starr Win H. Smith Chas W. Moores H. W. Fairbanks ... Wilber A. Bender . C. F. Carroll ... Heath Edith Horton . . . Florence Hoi brook ......... .C. F. Carroll Nellie C. Jacobs . . _N. M. Banta R. M. Offord L. L. D Sylvanus Stall D. D . E. E. Byrum . Alfred Ollivant ... _N. Hawkins, M. E. 4 4 4 4 7 H. E. Butler N. Hawkins, M. E. James E. Homans, A. M. William Rogers Rogers N. Hawkins, M. E. Ralph S. Tarr D. H. Montgomery Chas. E. Orr J. F. Cooper William J. Bryan Van Bergen F. J. Finn E. P. Butler W. J. Milne . . . . .Pears . .C. H. Spurgeon ..Sir Walter Scott A. Manow E. E. By rum James Hopper Brand Whitlock Rev. George Potts F. T. Baker Rudyard Kipling A. J. Chuch .Charles Dickens F. S. Thompson . E. A. Washburn J. C. Ridpath . Talmage .Walter De. Voe - E. E. By rum Harold Begbie J. F. Cooper 1 52 NO. 2629 2630 2631 2632 2633 2634 2635 2636 2637 2638 2639 2640 2641 2642 2643 2644 2645 2646 2647 2648 2649 2650 2651 2652 2653 2654 2655 2656 2657 2658 2659 2660 2661 2662 2663 2664 2665 2666 2667 2668 2669 2670 2671 2672 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677 2678 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY TITLE Oak Openings The Last of the Mohicans The Deerslayer The Pilot The Chain Lionel Lincoln Homeward Bound Precaution . . _ _ _ The Heidemnaurer _ _ The Sea-Lions The Cratei Daniel Deronda Adam Bede Romola . . . Felix Holt the Radical Mill on the Floss Silas Marner Middlemarch . . Impressions of Theophrastus Such American Ideals The Rough Riders ... Hunting the Grizzly Hunting JVips The Strenuous Life The Wilderness Hunter The Winning of the West, Vol. AUTHOR. J. F. Cooper George Eliot Theodore Roosevelt I II III IV I. V r:, “ “ II. Presidential Addresses and State Papers, Vol. The Naval War of 1812, Vol. I._ II. . III. . IV. . Waverly Novels; Guy Mannering. Vol. I. .Sir Walter Scott The Antiquary, Old Mortal it}' . . Vol. II. “ “ Black Dwarf, Ivanhoe. Heart of Mid-Lothian, Vol. III. “ “ “ Rob .Roy; A Legend of Montrose, The Bride of Lam- lnermppr, The Monastry Vol. IV. _ “ “ “ The Abbott, Kenilworth, The Pirate _ . .. .Vol. V. _ “ “ “ The Fortunes of Nigel, Quentin Durward, St. Ronan’s Weil....... .. ...'. ,. Vol. VI. “ The Rair Maid of Perth, Anne of Geirstine, The Sur- g.ephjS Jiaughter, Castle Dangerous ..... Vol. VII. _ “ “ The Talisman., The Two Drovers, My Aunt Margaret’s Mirror, Death of the Laird’s Jock, Woodstock, Count Robert of Paris . . Vol. VIII ., “ “ “ Bpyeril of the Peak, Red Gauntlet, Betrothed. Vol. IX. “ “ “ The Rast Days of Pompeii, Harold, The Last of -the Saxon Kings, The Caxton’s. Vol. I. .Edward Bui wer^Lytton Kenelm Chillingly, Devereux, The Disowned, The Coming Race. Vol. II. “ “ My Novel, Zicci, Pilgrims of the Rhine, Vol. III. “ “ ' The’Parisians, What will He do with It, Vol. IV. “ “ Nigijt and Morning, Godol >hin, Eugene Arakiii, ' T'he Siege of Granada, Calderon, The Cour- tier. ‘ ...... Vol. V. “ “ Ernest Maltravers, Alice; or the Mysteries, Pausanias the Spartan, The Children of Night . Vol. VI. NO. 2679 2680 2681 2682 2683 2684 2685 2686 2687 2688 2689 2690 2691 2692 2693 ' 2694 2695 2696 2697 2698 2699 2700 2701 2702 2703 2704 2705 2706 2707 2708 2709 2710 2711 2712 2713 2714 2715 2716 2717 2718 2719 2720 2721 2722 2723 2724 2725 2726 2727 2728 2729 2730 2731 2732 2733 2734 2735 LIBRARY CATALOGUE, LAWS AND RULES. 53 TIT LE AUTHOR. A Strange Story, The Haunted and the Haunt- ers, The Last of the Barons, Rienzl. Vol. VII. Edward Bulwer Lytton Pelham, Paul Clifford, Zanoni, Falkland. VIII. “ The Duchess De La Vallierer, The Lady of Lyons, Richelieu, Not so bad as we seem, Money, The Rightful Heir, Walepole, Darn- ley Vol. IX. Donald Ross of Heimra .- William Black Princess of Thule “ The Strange Adventure of a Phearon “ That Beautiful Wretch ... - “ Lorna Doone - - R. D. Blackmore The Little Minister J. M. Barrie A Romance of Two Worlds Marie Corelli Thelma “ Wormwood “ Ardath. . . . “ “ Vendetta “ “ The Bondman . Hall Caine Black Rock Ralph Connor The Moonstone . . Wilkie Collins Mohicans . . - J. Fenimore Cooper A Scandal in Bohemia A. Conan Doyle The Sign of the Four “ Beyond the City “ “ A Study in Scarlet - “ “ The White Company “ “ Nicholas Nickleby. Vol. I. . . . Chas. Dickens “ “ “ II “ “ The Picwick Club. Vol. I. . .. “ “ “ “ “ “ II- “ Little Dorrit. Vol. I “ “ “ “ “ II. “ David Copperfield the Younger. Vol. I. . . “ “ “ “ “ “ “ II. “ Dombey & Son _ “ The First Violin Jessie Fothergill Allen Quatermain , H. Rider Haggard Jess ** “ The Witch’s Head _ _ “ “ Dawn . . “ Cleopatra . “ “ A Hardy Norseman * Edna Layall Donovan ... _ “ “ Won by Waiting “ “ In the Golden Days . . “ We Two . . . “ “ Moths — _ Ouida Othmar “ Tricotrin*. .. . “ Wanda “ Treasure Island Robert Louis Stevenson Vanity Fair. Vol. I. ... ... W. M. Thackery “ “ “ II. ... ... “ Little Journeys to the homes of great Lovers. Vol. I. . _ Elbert Hubbard “ “ “ “ “ “ “ II.. “ Little Journeys to the homes of great Scientists. Vol. I... “ “ “ “ “ “ *’ II. “ Little Journeys to the homes of great Reformer* . “ Young Folk’s History of the War of the Union John D. Champlain Morning Thoughts to Cheer the Day Maria H. Le Rjw 54 No. 2736 2737 2738 2739 2740 2741 2742 2743 2744 2745 2746 2747 2748 2749 2750 2751 2752 2753 2754 2755 2756 2757 2758 2759 2760 2761 2762 2763 2764 2765 2766 2767 2768 2769 NORTH DAKOTA PENITENTIARY. TITLE The Crisis. _ . . New Grammar School Arithmetic The Philosophy of Life Innocents Abroad. Vol. I. “ “ “ II A Tramp Abroad AUTHOR. Winston Churchill . John H. Walsh Charles Gilbert Davis, M. D. i__Mark Twain 4 4 it Following" the Equator. Vol. I. “ “ “ “ II. Roughing It. Vol. I. “ “ II. Life on the Mississippi The Gilded Age. Vol. I “ “ “ “ II Tom Sawyer Huckleberry Finn Pudd’nhead Wilson The Prince and the Pauper A Connecticut Yankee Joan of Arc. Vol. I •“ •• “ “ II Sketches New and Old Tom Sawyer Abroad The American Claimant Literary Essays. ._ The Man that Corrupted Hadleysburg. The $90,000 Bequest Christian Science The Beast ... Northern Lights The Philistine 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 .Ben B. Lindsey ..Gilbert Parker . Elbert Hubbard 4 4 4 4 Little Journeys to the homes Great Philosophers “ Dombey & Son Charles Dickens