A TABLE OF THE PRESIDENTS 1 The pupil should remember that these Democratic Republicans are not the Republicans who elected Lincoln and have controlled the government most of the time since the Civil War. 1 The number of representatives if fixed by Congress every ten years. August 8, 1911, 2 To find the number of electors, add two to the number of representatives (See Constitu- 3 Report of the Department of the Interior, 1912, Commissioner of Education, Vol. II. Webster's International Dictionary has been used as the authority for Cabral (kä-bral') Calhoun (kal-hoon') Canaries, or Canary Islands (ka-nā rēz) Cartier (kar' tyâ') Caspian (kas' pĬ-an) Cerro Gordo (ser' rð gôr'dō) Champlain (shăm-plan') Chatham (chat' am) Chautauqua (sha-ta' kwa) Cherbourg (sher' bûrg) Chesapeake (ches' a-pēk) Chickamauga (chik' a-mä' ğa) Choate (chot), Rufus Churubusco (choo-roo-boos' kō) Claiborne (klā' børn) Connecticut (kŎn-nět' I-kut) Constantinople (kõn-stăn ́ tI-nō′pl) Contreras (kon-trā' räs) Corinth (kor' Inth) Coronado (ko-ro-nä' Do) Da Gama (då gä' mä) Dahlgren (dal' gren) Dias (dē' is), Bartholomeu Dow (dow), Neal Duplessis (du' plà' se') Duquesne (dü' kân') Durand (du-rănd'), Asher Durham (dur' ŭm) (lxxv) Eaton, Theophilus (the-of'Y-lus ee'ton) El Caney (el kä' nā) Ericson, Leif (lef ĕr' Ïk-son) Estaing d (děs tăn) Euphrates (ū-frā' tēz) European (a' rō-pē' an) Eutaw (a' ta) Faneuil (fan' el) Genet (zheh-na') Jamaica (ja-ma' ka) Jerusalem (je-ry' sa-lem) Kaskaskia (kas-kǎs' ki-a) Kearney (kar' nn) Kearsarge (ker' särj) Kieft (keft) Kuklux (kü' klŭks') Ladrones (la-drōnz') Lisbon (liz' bon) Louisburg (100' Is-burg) Louisiana (100′ ê-zê-ä′ na) Lyceum (l1-se' um) Macedonian (măs' e-dō' nl-an) Magellan, Fernando (fer-nän' dō ma-jěl' an) Manassas (ma-nas' as) Mann (măn), Horace Marco Polo (mar' ko po' lo) Marquette (mär′ kět ́) Massasoit (mas' sa-soit') Maumee (ma-mē') Mediterranean (měd'I-ter-ra' ne-an) Memphis (měm' fis) Menendez (ma-nĕn' deth) Guiana, or Guyana (ğē-ä' nä) Minuit (min' u-it) Gustavus Adolphus (gus-tā' vus a- Mobile (mo-bel') dŏl' fus) Modoc (mō' dok) Hawaii (hä-wi' e) Hennepin (hen' e-pin) Hesse (hess) Holyoke (hol' yōk) Honesdale (hōnz' dāl) Iroquois (Ir-d-kwoi') Monterey (mon-te-ra') Monticello (mon-tē-sello) Moultrie (mol' tri) Murfreesboro (mûr' fres-bur-ro) Narragansett (năr a-găn’set) Nottinghamshire (not Ing-am-shir) Nueces (nwa' sĕs) Oglethorpe (o'g'l-thorp) Orinoco (ō-ri-nō' kō) Palo Alto (pä' lō äl' tō) Pequot (pe' kwŎt) Philippine (f' Ip-In) Pizarro (pē-zăr' ro) ́Plymouth (plim' uth) Ponce de Leon (pīn' thà dà là ổn) Pontiac (pon' tĭ-ǎk) Raleigh (raw' II) Resaca de la Palma (rā-sä' kā dā lä päl' mä) Rio Grande (re' o gränd') Roberval (ro' bĕr' väl′) · Rochambeau (ro' shon' bō') Roosevelt (rō' zě-vělt) Rosecrans (rō' ze-kranss) Saco (sa' kō) St. Augustine (sant aw' gus-tin) St. Louis (sant loo' Is) Schley (sl) Schofield (skō' field) Seward (su' ard) Seymour (see' mur) Sioux (soo) Steuben (stu' ben), Friedrich Wilhelm Stuyvesant (sti' ve-sant) Syria (sir' I-a) Tecumseh (tē-kum' se) Thames (thamz) Ticonderoga (ti-kŏn' der-ō′ ğa) Tippecanoe (tip' e-ka-noo') Toombs (toomz) Toscanelli (tos-kä-nel' lē) Tuscaroras (tus' ka-rō' ras) Utah (u' tä, or ū' tą) Utrecht (a' trěkt) Vandyke (văn-dik) Van Rensselaer (văn rens' se-ler) Venezuela (věn' e-zwē' la) Venice (věn' Is) Vera Cruz (va' rä krōos) Verplanck (ver-plănk') Verrazano (věr-rä-tsä' no) Vincennes (vin-senz') Vineland (vin' land) Wampanoag (wam-pa-nō' ag) Wesley (wěss' lĭ) Weyler (wi'ler) Whalley (hwŏl' I) Wilkes (wilks) Winckelman (wink' el-män) Zipangu (zi-păn goo) Zuccaro (dzook' kä-ro) Zuñi (zö' nyē) |