Mr. Smith's Review of the "letter of Leonard Jarvis, to His Constituents of the Hancock And Washington District, in Maine."
The book Mr. Smith's Review of the "letter of Leonard Jarvis, to His Constituents of the Hancock And Washington District, in Maine." was written by author Francis O J Francis Ormond Jonathan Smith Here you can read free online of Mr. Smith's Review of the "letter of Leonard Jarvis, to His Constituents of the Hancock And Washington District, in Maine." book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Mr. Smith's Review of the "letter of Leonard Jarvis, to His Constituents of the Hancock And Washington District, in Maine." a good or bad book?
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Dunlap's letter was made public on being lodged in the P. O. Department — aj)d that "a letter ceases to be coniidential when printed, or otherwise made public, and he certainly would have been justi- fied in taking either* or both of the courses to which he had al- luded." Now does not every reader li^re convict Mr. Jarvis again of dishonesty, in tepresenting the letter as made public at the time he saw it? Made ^u6/ic, while it was enveloped by a wrapper, marked upon the outside ^^ Confidentia...l,''^ by the Assistant Post- master General himself! and marked inside '-pnyaie ?" Made ^iihlic, wiien the outside of the letter itself was in the same manner marked by the Assistant Post Master General, '■^Con- /idenlial,'" and on the insitte marked again ^'■ConfidmlialV^ — Mr. Jarvis has not had the effrontery to deny that they were t'hus strongly marked, for he knows the originals all still exist as described. But, notwithstanding all these precautions, and notwithstanding Mr. Jarvis himself describes the letter as "a htttr of the most coujidential character,''^ and notwithstandiug he was prohibited j'rom taking a copy of it by the known rules of the Department, he attempts to justify his examination of the letter, and his promwlgatio^i of its contents, by considermg it as made public from its being, (he affects not to know how) in the possession of the P.
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