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2. The American Tract Society's almanac for the year of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ 1861: being the first after bissextile, and until the fourth of July, the eighty-fifth year of the independence of the United States : calculated for Boston, New York, Washington, and Charleston, and four parallels of latitude, adapted for use througout the country

5. Devotional somnium, or, A collection of prayers and exhortations, uttered by Miss Rachel Baker: in the city of New-York, in the winter of 1815, during her abstracted and unconscious state : to which pious and unprecedented exercises are prefixed, an account of her life, with the manner in which she became powerful in praise to God, and addresses to man ; together with a view of that faculty of the human mind which is intermediate between sleeping and waking : the facts attested by the most respectable divines, physicians, and literary gentlemen : and the discourses correctly taken by clerical stenographers

6. The millenial door thrown open or, The mysteries of the latter day glory unfolded: in a discourse, delivered at East-Windsor, state of Connecticut, July Fourth, 1799 ; the twenty-third year of the declaration of the independence of the United States : in which event was laid the corner stone of the national temple, under whose auspices all worshippers of God are allowed full indulgence : and from which springs the temple of the living God, into whose bosom the nations of the earth are to bring their glory and their honor

10. Devotional somnium, or, A collection of prayers and exhortations, uttered by Miss Rachel Baker: in the city of New-York, in the winter of 1815, during her abstracted and unconscious state ; to which pious and unprecedented exercises is prefixed, an account of her life, with the manner in which she became powerful in praise to God and addresses to man ; together with a view of that faculty of the human mind which is intermediate between sleeping and waking ; the facts, attested by the most respectable divines, physicians, and literary gentlemen ; and the discourses, correctly noted by clerical stenographers