12 books found
by Alfred Cole, Charles Foster Whitman
1915
The story recounts the author's recollections of his adventures with fellow Paris Hill Academy students Henry Scott Whitman and Fred Bartlett during the American Civil War. The students travel over the St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railroad and then walk to Lake Umbagog where Bartlett's friend, Charles Henry Farr, has a boat they row to Parmachenee Lake. There the four teen-agers camp in the woods catching trout, trapping furs and gathering spruce gum to sell earning money for tuition, board and room while attending school.
Thomas Page was living at Lunenburg, Massachusetts, in 1755, when he was admitted to full communion in the Lunenberg Congregational Church. He was perhaps the son of Samuel Page (1672-1747?) of Lunenburg, and a descendant of Sir Hugh Page, who lived at Ebor, Yorkshire, England, in 1257. Thomas Page married Dorothy Houghton (d. 1758) in December 1755 and they moved to Leomister, Massachusetts. They had two children, 1756-1758. He married 2) Mary Knight in 1759. They had seven children, 1760-1764. Thomas served in the Revolutionary War from Massachusetts. They family migrated to Walpole, New Hampshire, in 1788, to Westminster, Vermont, in 1788, and to Rockingham, Vermont, ca. 1790. Descendants listed lived in Vermont, New York, Ohio, Ontario, and elsewhere.
by Charles Greenstreet Addison
1847
Harmonic analysis and probability have long enjoyed a mutually beneficial relationship that has been rich and fruitful. This monograph, aimed at researchers and students in these fields, explores several aspects of this relationship. The primary focus of the text is the nontangential maximal function and the area function of a harmonic function and their probabilistic analogues in martingale theory. The text first gives the requisite background material from harmonic analysis and discusses known results concerning the nontangential maximal function and area function, as well as the central and essential role these have played in the development of the field.The book next discusses further refinements of traditional results: among these are sharp good-lambda inequalities and laws of the iterated logarithm involving nontangential maximal functions and area functions. Many applications of these results are given. Throughout, the constant interplay between probability and harmonic analysis is emphasized and explained. The text contains some new and many recent results combined in a coherent presentation.