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LATEST NOVELTIES IN EA«TER HATS. DESIGNED BY HENRY W. BENDEL, OF BENDEL'S, IMPORTER, NO. 67 EAST NINTH-BT., NEW-YORK. FOR SEASIDE AND MOUNTAIN. Popularity Great This Year — Now Is Renovation Time. The "fur season," it teems, has numerous phases. important one now dawning is that of storage especial care, which warm weather makes absolutely necessary for the of fine furs. BECOMING STYLE OF COIFFURE. plaids and homespuns. For day dress the house has many orders for the three button cutaway coat, cut rather long and having pockets with flaps on the hips. These coats, as well as the sacks, have longer collars than were worn last season. White waistcoats will be worn more In the coming season than for several years iwst. but the fan<-y waistcoat Is also in demand and is being made botn BtnKle and double breasted. The short overcoat, cut loose, seems to have the preference over all others. For day dress black coat and waistcoat and fancy trousers or black co;it. fancy trousers and light waistcoat, will be worn again, but there will be many long frock suits seen, made of Oxford gray, and the double breasted three button sack suit will
3/29/1903 New-York tribune.
LATEST NOVELTIES IN EA«TER HATS. DESIGNED BY HENRY W. BENDEL, OF BENDEL'S, IMPORTER, NO. 67 EAST NINTH-BT., NEW-YORK. FOR SEASIDE AND MOUNTAIN. Popularity Great This Year — Now Is Renovation Time. The "fur season," it teems, has numerous phases. important one now dawning is that of storage especial care, which warm weather makes absolutely necessary for the of fine furs. BECOMING STYLE OF COIFFURE. plaids and homespuns. For day dress the house has many orders for the three button cutaway coat, cut rather long and having pockets with flaps on the hips. These coats, as well as the sacks, have longer collars than were worn last season. White waistcoats will be worn more In the coming season than for several years iwst. but the fan<-y waistcoat Is also in demand and is being made botn BtnKle and double breasted. The short overcoat, cut loose, seems to have the preference over all others. For day dress black coat and waistcoat and fancy trousers or black co;it. fancy trousers and light waistcoat, will be worn again, but there will be many long frock suits seen, made of Oxford gray, and the double breasted three button sack suit will
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' 7::-:- : ; :-.N :. j- . - x ! ' :"" ' fu ' . ;" i v 7-4 I " 1 I I . ' - i j , j J: " - . tY' ' - : . j. ' ' -.. - ... I t - . "j'"J" t f . , - i 'v ! V -w r - ' : -i . . ' .- : 1 ,V:-V - i 'V 1 "J r , - .? -v it t . , -. - V , . , v f 1 A " i . TO"- ? Si 1 " A CLUSTER OF EASTERN MILLINERY. HATS SHOWN AT THE VARIOUS MILLINERY OPENINGS OF THE PAST WEEK AS POSED ANDP1CTURED BY DAVEY. ..jn nfj i ;-- v: '
4/5/1903 The Pacific commercial advertiser.
' 7::-:- : ; :-.N :. j- . - x ! ' :"" ' fu ' . ;" i v 7-4 I " 1 I I . ' - i j , j J: " - . tY' ' - : . j. ' ' -.. - ... I t - . "j'"J" t f . , - i 'v ! V -w r - ' : -i . . ' .- : 1 ,V:-V - i 'V 1 "J r , - .? -v it t . , -. - V , . , v f 1 A " i . TO"- ? Si 1 " A CLUSTER OF EASTERN MILLINERY. HATS SHOWN AT THE VARIOUS MILLINERY OPENINGS OF THE PAST WEEK AS POSED ANDP1CTURED BY DAVEY. ..jn nfj i ;-- v: '
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I I I I I Paines Pane Celery Clcr Compound Compud Is more mor talked talkeditelleotual te talkedof of In the thl springtime In eah each Ittct state city tow town nd and vlae village fprnglme titan any oter other mhdioln mhdiolnclaw now befor before t tltq publo pubiio It ba hats a mlo pl place I lit the home homes or tho e welthy wealthy Infuonta Influentipi and atitttntellectual ItleUJ itelleotual It In I tho disease dlleM banlaheY bal Mr that thatan tht ththi thathas hi has an the entire entre confidence confdenc of our men and E C M J SUTTON SUTTONwomen SU SUWomen StrrrOtewomen women who toll dally dy In n workshope worbboP stores storesoffices storesoffloes tor offices oMO and homes home When Wen the first frat warn warningsymptoms W WIng warning ¬ ingsymptoms Ing aptom symptoms of physical phyIOI weakness wene and anddisease andd1 anddisease d1 disease are ae experienced esporienO wise w and prudent prudentmen prudentmen prudentmen men and nd d women invariably Ivably seek k new vl vlJ vitlty ritality J tlty tality ifi ifiheaLth1nl heaLth1nl beaLh health And strength Itrengb In natured naturedhealth natu naturehealth health builder Painos helth buider Pano Celery Qler Compound CompoundIf CompoundI If I the reader of this thi article artice finds fnd It difficult difficultto dlcut dlcutto to obtain obti rfr restful retfu sleep If I nervousness neroUO and andweaknees andWeO andweakness weakness WeO ore a causing caUlg alarm aan If tho blood bloodis blo is I impure Imp and sluggish If I rheumatism rheumatismneuralgia rhewtlar rheumatismneursAgia neuralgia dyspepsia dYBppla Bluggh kidney kidey or liver liverthe lyr lyrtrouble livertroubles neurga trouble troubles or are commencng commencing to aol follow loUowthe followthe the safe and ad wise w example exple of ExMayor ExMayorButton EMyor EMyorButtn haMayorSutton Button Buttn of Burlington Bullgnt Vt use U Palneathe Palnea Paes PaesCler PainesCelery Cler Celery Compound aa an prmpty promptly bh bhthe banish banishthe the lttle little i ills do not wot wait Wru till you a are aresick eck sick One btte bottle as a rule will br brao braothe the nerves ner correct oor Impaired ipaired digestion digestionand digestioncleanse ce cleanse the blo blood ad and mo make you youand dgn dgnce robU and ing ad ln testimony tUrny strong etn Read R Senator 8tr Buttons cheer cheering cel cheerln ¬ I People Peple hvl nave often asked Med mo how I Imanaged Im Imanaged managed to keep so well for although althoughout klr 1 wel out m In nearly nerly all al kinds kind of ot weather weter athous and andtravelling andtrvlng andtravelling travelling trvlng considerably clderably I have bay no ache acheorsickness aoheaor olckn orsickness or elokncss t My one answer ler has b a been beenthat bn bnt beenthat that t Instead lte of waiting wating until utU I am a alok aok In Inbed inbed bed b and forced 10 to stop tp work ork for a while whilewhenever whenever enevr I feel rel outofort outro the least le bit bitI bl I take tke Palnns Colory ClD Compound ComPud Compoundkeeps which whichkeeps I keeps kp me well wel and strong It Is I a great greatdeal greatdeai deal de better In my opinion opin to take te a medl1 medl1dne me mod modnine I I Io nine that keeps one well wel rather than towait to towait towt o tt kep rer t wait wt for sickness liclme and ad then hunt hut around aroundfor aroundfor for a medicine meolne or a doctor I have haf au been beena b I a hearty hM advocate avot of Palnea Pae Celery CI Com Compound Cm Cornpound ¬ poud pound since Ilc It was W first fr made me a great manyyears many manyyears m years ago O and have yet to tobeer near g of a aoas aoasInwhichfthaafailodtofulflhltspmmjse case casein ¬
4/18/1903 The sun.
I I I I I Paines Pane Celery Clcr Compound Compud Is more mor talked talkeditelleotual te talkedof of In the thl springtime In eah each Ittct state city tow town nd and vlae village fprnglme titan any oter other mhdioln mhdiolnclaw now befor before t tltq publo pubiio It ba hats a mlo pl place I lit the home homes or tho e welthy wealthy Infuonta Influentipi and atitttntellectual ItleUJ itelleotual It In I tho disease dlleM banlaheY bal Mr that thatan tht ththi thathas hi has an the entire entre confidence confdenc of our men and E C M J SUTTON SUTTONwomen SU SUWomen StrrrOtewomen women who toll dally dy In n workshope worbboP stores storesoffices storesoffloes tor offices oMO and homes home When Wen the first frat warn warningsymptoms W WIng warning ¬ ingsymptoms Ing aptom symptoms of physical phyIOI weakness wene and anddisease andd1 anddisease d1 disease are ae experienced esporienO wise w and prudent prudentmen prudentmen prudentmen men and nd d women invariably Ivably seek k new vl vlJ vitlty ritality J tlty tality ifi ifiheaLth1nl heaLth1nl beaLh health And strength Itrengb In natured naturedhealth natu naturehealth health builder Painos helth buider Pano Celery Qler Compound CompoundIf CompoundI If I the reader of this thi article artice finds fnd It difficult difficultto dlcut dlcutto to obtain obti rfr restful retfu sleep If I nervousness neroUO and andweaknees andWeO andweakness weakness WeO ore a causing caUlg alarm aan If tho blood bloodis blo is I impure Imp and sluggish If I rheumatism rheumatismneuralgia rhewtlar rheumatismneursAgia neuralgia dyspepsia dYBppla Bluggh kidney kidey or liver liverthe lyr lyrtrouble livertroubles neurga trouble troubles or are commencng commencing to aol follow loUowthe followthe the safe and ad wise w example exple of ExMayor ExMayorButton EMyor EMyorButtn haMayorSutton Button Buttn of Burlington Bullgnt Vt use U Palneathe Palnea Paes PaesCler PainesCelery Cler Celery Compound aa an prmpty promptly bh bhthe banish banishthe the lttle little i ills do not wot wait Wru till you a are aresick eck sick One btte bottle as a rule will br brao braothe the nerves ner correct oor Impaired ipaired digestion digestionand digestioncleanse ce cleanse the blo blood ad and mo make you youand dgn dgnce robU and ing ad ln testimony tUrny strong etn Read R Senator 8tr Buttons cheer cheering cel cheerln ¬ I People Peple hvl nave often asked Med mo how I Imanaged Im Imanaged managed to keep so well for although althoughout klr 1 wel out m In nearly nerly all al kinds kind of ot weather weter athous and andtravelling andtrvlng andtravelling travelling trvlng considerably clderably I have bay no ache acheorsickness aoheaor olckn orsickness or elokncss t My one answer ler has b a been beenthat bn bnt beenthat that t Instead lte of waiting wating until utU I am a alok aok In Inbed inbed bed b and forced 10 to stop tp work ork for a while whilewhenever whenever enevr I feel rel outofort outro the least le bit bitI bl I take tke Palnns Colory ClD Compound ComPud Compoundkeeps which whichkeeps I keeps kp me well wel and strong It Is I a great greatdeal greatdeai deal de better In my opinion opin to take te a medl1 medl1dne me mod modnine I I Io nine that keeps one well wel rather than towait to towait towt o tt kep rer t wait wt for sickness liclme and ad then hunt hut around aroundfor aroundfor for a medicine meolne or a doctor I have haf au been beena b I a hearty hM advocate avot of Palnea Pae Celery CI Com Compound Cm Cornpound ¬ poud pound since Ilc It was W first fr made me a great manyyears many manyyears m years ago O and have yet to tobeer near g of a aoas aoasInwhichfthaafailodtofulflhltspmmjse case casein ¬
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" " ! $mm .W.li . N i -e. -v COMPANY OF V..' " -rZ -v Kut,. T", Ett f ESSbVsTi JA. -- filttl l.ilCKs'. - . V SK XM . v A .aVsnsnsV mmMumsmrmm v.-sk -a s 4 i" im.ikm-n eTMfc. TWENTY - SECOND INFAXTRY IS KHAKI FIELD UNIFORMS AND PLAINSMEN'S HATS.
4/29/1903 The St. Louis Republic.
" " ! $mm .W.li . N i -e. -v COMPANY OF V..' " -rZ -v Kut,. T", Ett f ESSbVsTi JA. -- filttl l.ilCKs'. - . V SK XM . v A .aVsnsnsV mmMumsmrmm v.-sk -a s 4 i" im.ikm-n eTMfc. TWENTY - SECOND INFAXTRY IS KHAKI FIELD UNIFORMS AND PLAINSMEN'S HATS.
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I IiJ I Io I Iwnfur 1 rendezvous rendezoUI Theres a top and a I bottom bttm plot plotthlts plotthats thats Merciilio trcfti was but a bit Shakespeare saw sawquickly law lawquickly sawquickly quickly that if I he loft him Shakespare on the stage alge he EDWARD HARRIGAN AS HE IS NOW the architecture archtectre of my plays playaad playsand and a couple coupleof cuplo cuploof of small auxiliary plots plotsFor plot8For plotsFor would quickly overshadow overhadow both Romeo Rm one oneJuliet and andJulet andJuliet Juliet JulietJcruiowasa Julet JuletI JulietJ1crutiowasabigswaehbuckIer
5/3/1903 The sun.
I IiJ I Io I Iwnfur 1 rendezvous rendezoUI Theres a top and a I bottom bttm plot plotthlts plotthats thats Merciilio trcfti was but a bit Shakespeare saw sawquickly law lawquickly sawquickly quickly that if I he loft him Shakespare on the stage alge he EDWARD HARRIGAN AS HE IS NOW the architecture archtectre of my plays playaad playsand and a couple coupleof cuplo cuploof of small auxiliary plots plotsFor plot8For plotsFor would quickly overshadow overhadow both Romeo Rm one oneJuliet and andJulet andJuliet Juliet JulietJcruiowasa Julet JuletI JulietJ1crutiowasabigswaehbuckIer
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ETMMEL HAT THE ABOVE SKETCH SHOWS ARTISTIC CREATIONS OF MIDSFMMER READY-TO-WEAR HATS. HUMMEL HAT IS SHOWN BY ALL THE LEADING DEPARTMENT STORES IN THE UNITED STATES. HENRY
5/3/1903 New-York tribune.
ETMMEL HAT THE ABOVE SKETCH SHOWS ARTISTIC CREATIONS OF MIDSFMMER READY-TO-WEAR HATS. HUMMEL HAT IS SHOWN BY ALL THE LEADING DEPARTMENT STORES IN THE UNITED STATES. HENRY
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Trying TryingDuties TryingDuties TryingDuties Army Armyof Who WhoAre WhoAre WhoCharged the theWork theWork theWork the theGoods theGoods theGoods of the thecity thej familiar familiarwith familiarwith familiarwith which their theirpurchases thei1rurchases theirpurchases homes homesby homesbo homesby many de departments derartments ¬ in the thebasement thebasEment thebasement could not notsolve notsolve notsolve not if she shecould shdcould sh shcould purchases purchasesare and the thesalesmen th2salesmen thesalesmen should shouldhappen shouldhappon shouldhappen in a adelay adrla adelay that thatshe thatshe thatshe that in inevery inver inevery 1 I i At the Busy Corner Eighth and Pennsylvania Avenue 1 + Four oClock at Eleventh andG Streets i A as wagons tho We e time many chases out on they their It the portant He has minutes and to are In be the ci cIty city y
5/10/1903 The Washington times.
Trying TryingDuties TryingDuties TryingDuties Army Armyof Who WhoAre WhoAre WhoCharged the theWork theWork theWork the theGoods theGoods theGoods of the thecity thej familiar familiarwith familiarwith familiarwith which their theirpurchases thei1rurchases theirpurchases homes homesby homesbo homesby many de departments derartments ¬ in the thebasement thebasEment thebasement could not notsolve notsolve notsolve not if she shecould shdcould sh shcould purchases purchasesare and the thesalesmen th2salesmen thesalesmen should shouldhappen shouldhappon shouldhappen in a adelay adrla adelay that thatshe thatshe thatshe that in inevery inver inevery 1 I i At the Busy Corner Eighth and Pennsylvania Avenue 1 + Four oClock at Eleventh andG Streets i A as wagons tho We e time many chases out on they their It the portant He has minutes and to are In be the ci cIty city y
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1.2,3, 4,5,6.7, lowndes terrace, knightsbridge. MILLINERY DEPARTMENT. _^ An original shap-s. in wftit* «tmw. trimmed •with nrfcea of natnral wood A White Fancy Tedda. trimnwl wtth. shaded ptrk. and ceri»» tulipa and chin* ribbon caU ght at Intervals with bright green ribbon, or can b« had la any other to tone, brim lined with pleated tulle. Price 3Vi GUINEAS. or 31^ GUINEAS. .-..-« PRETTY HATS FOR RACE MEETINGS-A VARIETY OF EXCLUSIVE NOVELTIES IN MOTOR CAPS AND HATS ESPECIALLY DESIGNED ALL OCCASIONS.
5/13/1903 New-York tribune.
1.2,3, 4,5,6.7, lowndes terrace, knightsbridge. MILLINERY DEPARTMENT. _^ An original shap-s. in wftit* «tmw. trimmed •with nrfcea of natnral wood A White Fancy Tedda. trimnwl wtth. shaded ptrk. and ceri»» tulipa and chin* ribbon caU ght at Intervals with bright green ribbon, or can b« had la any other to tone, brim lined with pleated tulle. Price 3Vi GUINEAS. or 31^ GUINEAS. .-..-« PRETTY HATS FOR RACE MEETINGS-A VARIETY OF EXCLUSIVE NOVELTIES IN MOTOR CAPS AND HATS ESPECIALLY DESIGNED ALL OCCASIONS.
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I S His Managerial Ability Executive Power and Cleverness Gave New York a Team Worth Rooting For tiara IB the man who Is rcoponalble for the Giants success He has taught the team to play the game In a snappy businesslike way such as has not been seen at the Polo Grounds for years lie Is a good II III executive knows how to get the best rosults out ot a set of ballplay ers and still has the good wllr and confidence of all his men As a player he ranks with the best of thorn and tho Giants showing proves his worth as a manager from tho bench Ho has Introduced a brand new article of ball here There Is none of the slipshod whatstheuse playing on the Polo Grounds nowa days Instead we have that variety of ball that made the BaJtlmoros champions during the days wfoon Manager Hanlon McGraw Robison and Kelly wore the stars of the Mon umental City aggregation McGraw oscrvca a lot of credit INVADERS DUE FOR BIG BRACE With Tannehill Williams and Maybe Fultz Back in Game Things Look Dark for Cleve land Btandillar of he Club AMitRICAN LEAOUB Club W L lC I Club W L PC Chteig 13 7 tiO St Loili S V 471 hlladolphl013 9 rei iaw Yurk 9 11 450 Dlon 11 10 54 CloolonI 7 10 12 Dtroll 10 10 tOO lIhlneton 7 12 3C8 Result of Yestenlnjs Games Detroit 9 Mew Tork 6 Waihlntton 4 st txiuli 3 Chicago 9 Philadelphia 3 Ecitoo 10 Cleveland 14 Games Scheduled for ToDny New York at Xevelind 1 p In of at be on
5/15/1903 The evening world.
I S His Managerial Ability Executive Power and Cleverness Gave New York a Team Worth Rooting For tiara IB the man who Is rcoponalble for the Giants success He has taught the team to play the game In a snappy businesslike way such as has not been seen at the Polo Grounds for years lie Is a good II III executive knows how to get the best rosults out ot a set of ballplay ers and still has the good wllr and confidence of all his men As a player he ranks with the best of thorn and tho Giants showing proves his worth as a manager from tho bench Ho has Introduced a brand new article of ball here There Is none of the slipshod whatstheuse playing on the Polo Grounds nowa days Instead we have that variety of ball that made the BaJtlmoros champions during the days wfoon Manager Hanlon McGraw Robison and Kelly wore the stars of the Mon umental City aggregation McGraw oscrvca a lot of credit INVADERS DUE FOR BIG BRACE With Tannehill Williams and Maybe Fultz Back in Game Things Look Dark for Cleve land Btandillar of he Club AMitRICAN LEAOUB Club W L lC I Club W L PC Chteig 13 7 tiO St Loili S V 471 hlladolphl013 9 rei iaw Yurk 9 11 450 Dlon 11 10 54 CloolonI 7 10 12 Dtroll 10 10 tOO lIhlneton 7 12 3C8 Result of Yestenlnjs Games Detroit 9 Mew Tork 6 Waihlntton 4 st txiuli 3 Chicago 9 Philadelphia 3 Ecitoo 10 Cleveland 14 Games Scheduled for ToDny New York at Xevelind 1 p In of at be on
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Lace and OhifTon. Ir rmrmiwnnnn n iihfcinalii iiiiiVmiii iia ! iiiMiaaiaiaiaaaasMaisBsswiBlaSmiaasiaiaiaassiaaMa.a i ruio or sLM.ii.i; oir.i.H The departure from past fa-hion. and the new fad for the moment in b-lts, ltecs. embroidery the new stole colHr, the embroidered linen shirt waist, with Its bU buttons, and the new- lace mitts and flower-garlanded hats, give the new story in
5/16/1903 The St. Louis Republic.
Lace and OhifTon. Ir rmrmiwnnnn n iihfcinalii iiiiiVmiii iia ! iiiMiaaiaiaiaaaasMaisBsswiBlaSmiaasiaiaiaassiaaMa.a i ruio or sLM.ii.i; oir.i.H The departure from past fa-hion. and the new fad for the moment in b-lts, ltecs. embroidery the new stole colHr, the embroidered linen shirt waist, with Its bU buttons, and the new- lace mitts and flower-garlanded hats, give the new story in
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will usher In prominence, and. al not so far appvar to be season, society will have war of buying presents, ceremonies and wishing and Dan Hill will marriage cards being They will have a at the big Llndell Boule with an array of groomsmen that might be large acquaintance of young'people. The orig to have this wedding In Mr. Hill Is obliged to trip to the West. Includ June, and for this reason to hurry matters. And trousseau does not be time for preparation Bell and Mr. Alexander Tork will be married on at the Bell residence, a large reception. The this wedding will not be Mrs. Hall of Little Rock, Miss Emily Roots and of the bride elect, and for Mr. O'Gorman's best Is the wedding of Miss of Mr. and Mrs. "Duncan, on Thurs close after on Sat by that of Miss Barbara O'Neil. The last two to spend the summer wedding which has also a will be that of Miss Olive of Mr. Joel Bowman of to Mr. Robert Schercr. St. Louis. This will take June 1, and will be a with no attendants. The followed by a reception, trip, the bride and take up their residence In Miss Ida Mae Whltsett will take place about the exact date not yet affair will be large and residence. No. 6235 Simp bride will have her sister. who will graduate In June, for maid or Lyle will be assisted by as best man. Since Miss she has been en pleasant manner. Last Mary Emily Pulllam of gave her a pretty sweet covers laid for ten girls, the, Misses Rltchey of entertained in similar the Mercantile Club pri the table and apartment with spring flowers a dozen young women light frocks antThats. Richardson and Mr. Eton Mo., have settled on date, the ceremony at the Carondelct Pres The bridal party Is quite Lillian Richardson, sister p the maid of honor, Miss Marie Greffet, Miss Ella Gilbert. Doc- will serve the brlde- while Will Davis. Will Candler will do the usher- Is to follow the ceremony of tne bride's parents, Mr. No. 6205 Virginia predominated at the Janet Lee wore a hand-embroidered In floral designs, the a deep 1830 collar falling Mrs Henry Boeckeler Inserted with "Val." spot, and worn over While this style Is not It Is always effective the Mrs. Rolla Wells wore covered with white mull embroidery. Mary pale-blue chiffon, a per came with her fiance, and Claude Kennerly Collins and Mrs. Clin Pfll soon of of 47 at on his ins
5/24/1903 The St. Louis Republic.
will usher In prominence, and. al not so far appvar to be season, society will have war of buying presents, ceremonies and wishing and Dan Hill will marriage cards being They will have a at the big Llndell Boule with an array of groomsmen that might be large acquaintance of young'people. The orig to have this wedding In Mr. Hill Is obliged to trip to the West. Includ June, and for this reason to hurry matters. And trousseau does not be time for preparation Bell and Mr. Alexander Tork will be married on at the Bell residence, a large reception. The this wedding will not be Mrs. Hall of Little Rock, Miss Emily Roots and of the bride elect, and for Mr. O'Gorman's best Is the wedding of Miss of Mr. and Mrs. "Duncan, on Thurs close after on Sat by that of Miss Barbara O'Neil. The last two to spend the summer wedding which has also a will be that of Miss Olive of Mr. Joel Bowman of to Mr. Robert Schercr. St. Louis. This will take June 1, and will be a with no attendants. The followed by a reception, trip, the bride and take up their residence In Miss Ida Mae Whltsett will take place about the exact date not yet affair will be large and residence. No. 6235 Simp bride will have her sister. who will graduate In June, for maid or Lyle will be assisted by as best man. Since Miss she has been en pleasant manner. Last Mary Emily Pulllam of gave her a pretty sweet covers laid for ten girls, the, Misses Rltchey of entertained in similar the Mercantile Club pri the table and apartment with spring flowers a dozen young women light frocks antThats. Richardson and Mr. Eton Mo., have settled on date, the ceremony at the Carondelct Pres The bridal party Is quite Lillian Richardson, sister p the maid of honor, Miss Marie Greffet, Miss Ella Gilbert. Doc- will serve the brlde- while Will Davis. Will Candler will do the usher- Is to follow the ceremony of tne bride's parents, Mr. No. 6205 Virginia predominated at the Janet Lee wore a hand-embroidered In floral designs, the a deep 1830 collar falling Mrs Henry Boeckeler Inserted with "Val." spot, and worn over While this style Is not It Is always effective the Mrs. Rolla Wells wore covered with white mull embroidery. Mary pale-blue chiffon, a per came with her fiance, and Claude Kennerly Collins and Mrs. Clin Pfll soon of of 47 at on his ins
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I The Ra Railway Way Stationl StationThats Station StationThats StatiOaThais
6/7/1903 The Washington times.
I The Ra Railway Way Stationl StationThats Station StationThats StatiOaThais
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Qualities of Head and Heart Revealed in Their Faces nI JWGAR C HIALL M D TIlE FAMOUS PHRENOLOGIST From swat SVO photograph nhmlttml by Kvetilns WorM readers I have srlecied the four hero reprnJneM ni the possible types of fuecofful and dci > lribl Jiiinhnnd Thor ficcs reveal In a pronounced and unmlstikaliie way Iou salon a qualities which n wnmnn could most desire In a husband = > l E S 8 Eighth avenue Decided versatility superior talents P 13 Harlem Handsome wide forehead and for law medicine Insurance or general business ambitious mouth denote artistic tastes and delicacy In affection to be uptodato In everything an ardent persistent lover music tho drama Ac and appreciate a high type of woman If wedded to a congenial woman would aid her In every way hood havo a fertile mind are witty bright and quick to make a model hom should choose a mate who appre learn need a careful business training otheribo may be dis elates good living travel the theatre c and who could appointed in financial matters are not a shrewd trader entertain your friends for you cannot be tied down to any are clever In acquiring knowledge and making friends corner however cozy arc liberal In ideas and methods those who are In the swim should marry one who would be a generous provider not only of victuals but of prize your devotion and a pretty cottage more than a gowns hats and Jewels though fond of pleasure have mansion or social prestige would want jour wife to
6/25/1903 The evening world.
Qualities of Head and Heart Revealed in Their Faces nI JWGAR C HIALL M D TIlE FAMOUS PHRENOLOGIST From swat SVO photograph nhmlttml by Kvetilns WorM readers I have srlecied the four hero reprnJneM ni the possible types of fuecofful and dci > lribl Jiiinhnnd Thor ficcs reveal In a pronounced and unmlstikaliie way Iou salon a qualities which n wnmnn could most desire In a husband = > l E S 8 Eighth avenue Decided versatility superior talents P 13 Harlem Handsome wide forehead and for law medicine Insurance or general business ambitious mouth denote artistic tastes and delicacy In affection to be uptodato In everything an ardent persistent lover music tho drama Ac and appreciate a high type of woman If wedded to a congenial woman would aid her In every way hood havo a fertile mind are witty bright and quick to make a model hom should choose a mate who appre learn need a careful business training otheribo may be dis elates good living travel the theatre c and who could appointed in financial matters are not a shrewd trader entertain your friends for you cannot be tied down to any are clever In acquiring knowledge and making friends corner however cozy arc liberal In ideas and methods those who are In the swim should marry one who would be a generous provider not only of victuals but of prize your devotion and a pretty cottage more than a gowns hats and Jewels though fond of pleasure have mansion or social prestige would want jour wife to
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AN OLD FASHION REVIVED. J j i I j j I j, ( 1 j: ' ' k I : . As the fashion of going 'iround m the rnuntrv or at the shore without hats gaining among voting ladies, they ev "n driving and boating hatless the old me hair let has reappeared, made of netted chenille, or silk cord, some ing of gold or silver thread. All invisible net of ones own hair is also worn
6/27/1903 The Topeka state journal.
AN OLD FASHION REVIVED. J j i I j j I j, ( 1 j: ' ' k I : . As the fashion of going 'iround m the rnuntrv or at the shore without hats gaining among voting ladies, they ev "n driving and boating hatless the old me hair let has reappeared, made of netted chenille, or silk cord, some ing of gold or silver thread. All invisible net of ones own hair is also worn
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STAGE BEAUTIES WRITE ROMANCES FOR THE EVENING WORLD Three of The Runaways Beauties ToDays ContributorsThe Stories of the Other Three CAIflfO IV7Hl nUIV4w4YS NII5EL THE MAID AND THE RUNABOAT By Mabel Carrier ltINOUS sounds emanated from the body of tho runabout OMINOUS girl clutched at her hat pretending to feel for an unsteady pin Do you know that little pas seul you do In tho second act Is awfully good 1 can always spot you oven when the colored lights are on The machine gave another groan and the girl clutched the arm rail Oh can you she gasped You mustnt mln1 my being afraid of noises WhY do you know Ive been on the stage three seasons and yet I always Jump when the thunder machine Is worked and squirm at the stage lightning I The young man straightened the angle of his blithe straw bat and thenwith t buzz the machine stopped He crawled under the runabout leaving the girl poised birdlike on the leather eat The anxious look on her taco was not lessened by his appearance rc1 faced and duet a few mlnutei later 1 cant make out whats wrong Would you mind getting out for a bit They climbed up the daisycrowned embankment the man In his light flannels looking almost picturesque In the high grass Tht view of the Palisades Was charming but conversation languished This may have been because the girl knew that just one brief hour lay between her and the theatrecoll wIth dinner to bo snatched somehow Or perhaps It wall because the youth was young and TOMS TRAGIC LOVE Aff y Josephine it X the Alien family GIEN that Tom hnd appeared there was itcrnaiMon There han always tea hat one of such lender in amply proed for In worldly would fall the victim of some ate love affair The will had tinctly that Tom was to bo S3 long ns ho lived by Interest from certain Government had been poor Uncle David pot As tho family nit around the fast tablo each one recalled some tom or trifling Incident which have foretold the dlsastor several moonlight strolls that remembered and for three mornings cool hal en him the house before the family ran and disappear In the dewy Very gravely they dlscuEsed visability of communicating Police Department But one does notoriety I Then suddenly the wall relieved George Davis two houses beyond stopped on home from the postoffice I just sivw your Tom sitting Dean applo orchard I Ah so It was Bessie Dean signing mlnxl The family sallied forth with Cook bringing up the rear Over tlio dewy fields they through Jlr Deans strawberry and then stealthily they crept orchard Yes there was Tom happily
7/1/1903 The evening world.
STAGE BEAUTIES WRITE ROMANCES FOR THE EVENING WORLD Three of The Runaways Beauties ToDays ContributorsThe Stories of the Other Three CAIflfO IV7Hl nUIV4w4YS NII5EL THE MAID AND THE RUNABOAT By Mabel Carrier ltINOUS sounds emanated from the body of tho runabout OMINOUS girl clutched at her hat pretending to feel for an unsteady pin Do you know that little pas seul you do In tho second act Is awfully good 1 can always spot you oven when the colored lights are on The machine gave another groan and the girl clutched the arm rail Oh can you she gasped You mustnt mln1 my being afraid of noises WhY do you know Ive been on the stage three seasons and yet I always Jump when the thunder machine Is worked and squirm at the stage lightning I The young man straightened the angle of his blithe straw bat and thenwith t buzz the machine stopped He crawled under the runabout leaving the girl poised birdlike on the leather eat The anxious look on her taco was not lessened by his appearance rc1 faced and duet a few mlnutei later 1 cant make out whats wrong Would you mind getting out for a bit They climbed up the daisycrowned embankment the man In his light flannels looking almost picturesque In the high grass Tht view of the Palisades Was charming but conversation languished This may have been because the girl knew that just one brief hour lay between her and the theatrecoll wIth dinner to bo snatched somehow Or perhaps It wall because the youth was young and TOMS TRAGIC LOVE Aff y Josephine it X the Alien family GIEN that Tom hnd appeared there was itcrnaiMon There han always tea hat one of such lender in amply proed for In worldly would fall the victim of some ate love affair The will had tinctly that Tom was to bo S3 long ns ho lived by Interest from certain Government had been poor Uncle David pot As tho family nit around the fast tablo each one recalled some tom or trifling Incident which have foretold the dlsastor several moonlight strolls that remembered and for three mornings cool hal en him the house before the family ran and disappear In the dewy Very gravely they dlscuEsed visability of communicating Police Department But one does notoriety I Then suddenly the wall relieved George Davis two houses beyond stopped on home from the postoffice I just sivw your Tom sitting Dean applo orchard I Ah so It was Bessie Dean signing mlnxl The family sallied forth with Cook bringing up the rear Over tlio dewy fields they through Jlr Deans strawberry and then stealthily they crept orchard Yes there was Tom happily
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MILLIONAIRE FOR Sirs. Katherine Poillon, Who Brings the Suit for Bicnch of Promise, Claims That. W. the Defendant, Offerefl Her .yituino to Settle It Was Lonj; Ei''figed to Dim, clares, but Money and Family Piide Came Between Them Two Hundred Fifty Love Letters Said to Bark Her As.-vrticns. k ibbwbbIbbL W7f&$t4l bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbSbbW' rv2BlBt2C M fii Bk UB'7tfVuVfaHa, 4?9BBBwt''Vfl4se i W GOFI.l) Who Is ucd for Smith of Trov, I but 3) and I lived The Judge gave nv mv maiden name fact that mv s'ster the s-ime mme "Mv trouse.au is and to think I cm that fact, alone, nnv woman's heart 'Show It to jou said In a more prettv " '"ovlv. and blushing beautiful little after govn. vvitli hats the smothered shrieks ciation of her callers could resist "You see mv crepe de ('hire she explained The the graj ml-t of the nss. its filrm qualltv its construction But the white chiffon and ' Now this is mv , bringing forth a I mak a poet of a did so she ha'arcd to go with th" chiffon of a C't wheel and iseopcntnn braid As It surmounted the the little widow, she stepped out of lis of the olden time of roses where So potent was the
7/5/1903 The St. Louis Republic.
MILLIONAIRE FOR Sirs. Katherine Poillon, Who Brings the Suit for Bicnch of Promise, Claims That. W. the Defendant, Offerefl Her .yituino to Settle It Was Lonj; Ei''figed to Dim, clares, but Money and Family Piide Came Between Them Two Hundred Fifty Love Letters Said to Bark Her As.-vrticns. k ibbwbbIbbL W7f&$t4l bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbSbbW' rv2BlBt2C M fii Bk UB'7tfVuVfaHa, 4?9BBBwt''Vfl4se i W GOFI.l) Who Is ucd for Smith of Trov, I but 3) and I lived The Judge gave nv mv maiden name fact that mv s'ster the s-ime mme "Mv trouse.au is and to think I cm that fact, alone, nnv woman's heart 'Show It to jou said In a more prettv " '"ovlv. and blushing beautiful little after govn. vvitli hats the smothered shrieks ciation of her callers could resist "You see mv crepe de ('hire she explained The the graj ml-t of the nss. its filrm qualltv its construction But the white chiffon and ' Now this is mv , bringing forth a I mak a poet of a did so she ha'arcd to go with th" chiffon of a C't wheel and iseopcntnn braid As It surmounted the the little widow, she stepped out of lis of the olden time of roses where So potent was the
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goods, clothlng, hats and caps, boots, ho also graduated from the medlcal O. II, FAULKNER & CO S STOUE. J-
7/16/1903 Bennington banner and reformer.
goods, clothlng, hats and caps, boots, ho also graduated from the medlcal O. II, FAULKNER & CO S STOUE. J-
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n i tk fvrnThTh f IP dPfflrk flJ z Uu II ru UILIlIlIlII urlK D ils fCCostumes orrPersonalrPecuIiari ties Which Individualize Some Variety ArtistsThe Girl in the Diamond Dress Press Eld ridges Shirt Waist andAnkle Cuffs Hats and Shoes That Are Known the World Over In much tho mane way William Clifford looks to Ms exaggerated bps et I Jilglh hat to keep him freshla public mind Clifford was the first comedian to recognize the comedy value of the oldfaehloned hat with its broad brim Mid enlarged crown He caused a block to be made and for several yean enjoyed sole of this idea hi several others to bars hat 1n jongS character of which the tray dress and tho homespun stockings are invariable features During the regular eeooon she plays dramatic engagements devoting btnself to vaudeville in the early fall and the lato spring Jenny Fields who uses the prefix Happy original offered a specialty In which she employed a dozen different costumes Now her familiar Dutch drew with its whit stockings and blue skirt has virtually become a trade mark She went abroad some time ago and her dialect so pleased the London ers that she has remained there for a long time r to he found Subsequently he explained that ho was overcome by nn uncontnfl able nt of fear and going to the dressingroom secured his hat and went home hurriedly The odd part of his performance lies In the fact that there were fifteen hun dred hats In the dressingroom none df which was Identified by numlber or other vlsf In some unexplained fashion Case went directly to his hat on a pile with out having to stop to search Case announces that he Is the man who talks about ir his father and some of the best vaudeville Jokes arc told nbout tho fictitious Mr Case Public Wont Believe It llalIrUp > f Foe awhile Artie Hall enjoyed fame as being the one woman who cleverly made up as a negress as ito deceive her audience For several years Miss Hall was accustomed to remove a little cape from her shoulders to show the white flesh beneiith and It is characteristic of the vaudeville audience that they re garded the white flesh as artifice and the painted surface as real Until Miss Hall changed her style of dressing there were hundreds of persons who wero firmly convinced that Miss Hall was a negress who painted her should era white prior to each performance Before Miss Halls advent a mixture ol y burnt cork with red was supposed to yield the proper negro tint She attained more natural appearance by powdering with violet which elves the peculiar blue Urh tinge common to some negroes fi Blwln Latch has a whlto garment which is a cross between a shirtwaist and a
7/25/1903 The evening world.
n i tk fvrnThTh f IP dPfflrk flJ z Uu II ru UILIlIlIlII urlK D ils fCCostumes orrPersonalrPecuIiari ties Which Individualize Some Variety ArtistsThe Girl in the Diamond Dress Press Eld ridges Shirt Waist andAnkle Cuffs Hats and Shoes That Are Known the World Over In much tho mane way William Clifford looks to Ms exaggerated bps et I Jilglh hat to keep him freshla public mind Clifford was the first comedian to recognize the comedy value of the oldfaehloned hat with its broad brim Mid enlarged crown He caused a block to be made and for several yean enjoyed sole of this idea hi several others to bars hat 1n jongS character of which the tray dress and tho homespun stockings are invariable features During the regular eeooon she plays dramatic engagements devoting btnself to vaudeville in the early fall and the lato spring Jenny Fields who uses the prefix Happy original offered a specialty In which she employed a dozen different costumes Now her familiar Dutch drew with its whit stockings and blue skirt has virtually become a trade mark She went abroad some time ago and her dialect so pleased the London ers that she has remained there for a long time r to he found Subsequently he explained that ho was overcome by nn uncontnfl able nt of fear and going to the dressingroom secured his hat and went home hurriedly The odd part of his performance lies In the fact that there were fifteen hun dred hats In the dressingroom none df which was Identified by numlber or other vlsf In some unexplained fashion Case went directly to his hat on a pile with out having to stop to search Case announces that he Is the man who talks about ir his father and some of the best vaudeville Jokes arc told nbout tho fictitious Mr Case Public Wont Believe It llalIrUp > f Foe awhile Artie Hall enjoyed fame as being the one woman who cleverly made up as a negress as ito deceive her audience For several years Miss Hall was accustomed to remove a little cape from her shoulders to show the white flesh beneiith and It is characteristic of the vaudeville audience that they re garded the white flesh as artifice and the painted surface as real Until Miss Hall changed her style of dressing there were hundreds of persons who wero firmly convinced that Miss Hall was a negress who painted her should era white prior to each performance Before Miss Halls advent a mixture ol y burnt cork with red was supposed to yield the proper negro tint She attained more natural appearance by powdering with violet which elves the peculiar blue Urh tinge common to some negroes fi Blwln Latch has a whlto garment which is a cross between a shirtwaist and a
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SOME STYLISH SUMMER HATS
7/26/1903 The Washington times.
SOME STYLISH SUMMER HATS
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I NEWS SPECIALLY REPORTED FOR THE EVENING WORLD SCENES IN AND AROUND THF SARATOGA VACI MACK CAUGHT BY AN EVENING WORLD CAMERA mm BATTLE WITH INV AOfR Chesbro and OConnor Furnish the Music for Visitors Oppos ing Townsend and Drill the Crack Washington Battery THE BATTING ORDER fOW York Vamhliiston Sonioy 3b Mnran NF K Hr rf Ilau f rlberfehl s nih th tVIHUm 2b Kl woh If Full rf lo BEN JORDAN COMING TO FIGHT YOUNG CORBETT I BEN JORDAN MI litiMfl mil baltli fo t 10 Mther > English Featherweight Will Sail for This Country Within Ten Days to Make the M a t Cli ihit oi r is iHilwl ts I iniM Vilion IIIMO hi > foto he K ntiiii 1 I t if ad iiinri ID lIla moI a inannni 11I1 ilyi lliroiiKh hIs Kioit liiulc ullh Uoor4 < > Ilxoii from Mlmin nv etiiiel tin 1 ulan In 1 Iwtlll > roiiml liout in tie lonox A C it fov > onrH iigii MIII uu toturiiril to IJilKlHd Jordn ln au ill Ills battiec and portliiK men bv llevo he tandi nil otoollont rhanc of 1J l1 f JY iI w rrl TYDv IWIAII > j I I PAIT 1 I = t 4r Pl1r rrov f n r Wj I I IL fVt U Lr t I ll r i ii wnn 4 I VGCcO A J 4nd L1ThAAi OY u WILL BACK HUNTER RAINE I IN RACE WITH WATERBOY I Owner Shields Will Bet j 5000 if Match Can Be Made with Sarato ga Handicap Winner T I1lnk < t Cleat dnil of < i a I tIe horo Iliintei Itrtin xxblrli till o id IM Wnelbox In this Hiriloga Hani ip on Mniidiv In fill bn thinks x < I1 o him that no Is xxlllinK to o 15 1111 that bo cain beat tho KroT 11 of WIrer In a raee at i imlo I and i half Tho only eondltion ho n im In that each nor mrtx 110 poundj The noertlon made In SaratoRi rttno u HUNTER RAINE neiear In the rice and I GRANE ViONT TALK ON FIGHT RULES We All Understand the Queens J berry Rules so Whats the Use Discussing Them the i Referee Asks Corbett I SAX rilX > I < > iO AUK < Hddl lirrnev Iho xxelknown referee of Call tt firnln who has been selected to Jud s 11 Jotfrleiforlieit fIght has called on forbott itt hi training iiunrtors and watched the Dip fellow In his workout Hraney thinks Corbett Is bigger and r thai ever
8/5/1903 The evening world.
I NEWS SPECIALLY REPORTED FOR THE EVENING WORLD SCENES IN AND AROUND THF SARATOGA VACI MACK CAUGHT BY AN EVENING WORLD CAMERA mm BATTLE WITH INV AOfR Chesbro and OConnor Furnish the Music for Visitors Oppos ing Townsend and Drill the Crack Washington Battery THE BATTING ORDER fOW York Vamhliiston Sonioy 3b Mnran NF K Hr rf Ilau f rlberfehl s nih th tVIHUm 2b Kl woh If Full rf lo BEN JORDAN COMING TO FIGHT YOUNG CORBETT I BEN JORDAN MI litiMfl mil baltli fo t 10 Mther > English Featherweight Will Sail for This Country Within Ten Days to Make the M a t Cli ihit oi r is iHilwl ts I iniM Vilion IIIMO hi > foto he K ntiiii 1 I t if ad iiinri ID lIla moI a inannni 11I1 ilyi lliroiiKh hIs Kioit liiulc ullh Uoor4 < > Ilxoii from Mlmin nv etiiiel tin 1 ulan In 1 Iwtlll > roiiml liout in tie lonox A C it fov > onrH iigii MIII uu toturiiril to IJilKlHd Jordn ln au ill Ills battiec and portliiK men bv llevo he tandi nil otoollont rhanc of 1J l1 f JY iI w rrl TYDv IWIAII > j I I PAIT 1 I = t 4r Pl1r rrov f n r Wj I I IL fVt U Lr t I ll r i ii wnn 4 I VGCcO A J 4nd L1ThAAi OY u WILL BACK HUNTER RAINE I IN RACE WITH WATERBOY I Owner Shields Will Bet j 5000 if Match Can Be Made with Sarato ga Handicap Winner T I1lnk < t Cleat dnil of < i a I tIe horo Iliintei Itrtin xxblrli till o id IM Wnelbox In this Hiriloga Hani ip on Mniidiv In fill bn thinks x < I1 o him that no Is xxlllinK to o 15 1111 that bo cain beat tho KroT 11 of WIrer In a raee at i imlo I and i half Tho only eondltion ho n im In that each nor mrtx 110 poundj The noertlon made In SaratoRi rttno u HUNTER RAINE neiear In the rice and I GRANE ViONT TALK ON FIGHT RULES We All Understand the Queens J berry Rules so Whats the Use Discussing Them the i Referee Asks Corbett I SAX rilX > I < > iO AUK < Hddl lirrnev Iho xxelknown referee of Call tt firnln who has been selected to Jud s 11 Jotfrleiforlieit fIght has called on forbott itt hi training iiunrtors and watched the Dip fellow In his workout Hraney thinks Corbett Is bigger and r thai ever
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RED CLOUD CHIEF OF THE SIOUX WHO IS SLOWLY PASSING AWAY AT PINE RIDGE AGENCY S D I yl 9 rbI F I I t C ll R a < The above portraits of Chief J nOd Cloud his wife and duigh rl ter are from the latest photo I si 3 > hs taken of this most Inter eating family The career of lied flivtd has been a most notable one He rose from obscurity to the command of all the Sioux na tions a position won by his per I vni II bravery As the most no table abirlglnlc of this continent lily passing of IM Cloud should I be considered nn historic nnd ep ochal event t 1 Ive got a new boy at my house 3 did the barber proudly as he began J operation on the face before him Thats my fourth All little shavers eh aid the lathered customer Baltimore Ameri can So young Smith Is ready for his trip a abroad Yep lies got trunk tags and ship labels from every country on the globe and has enged board At Podunkvllle N J for six month Ualtimore News A I I r I LfJ t f M I IF c 7 1 I IJ V ifi J 3 1 l f K 11 on 111 rlt r 1 > I r h e 7 i A 0 1 Ir 1 < IHi1fll I r 1 s r ej1 r I s h Iqe + + i 1 Iv rl I ri 4 J Ii illr i Tn k 1 i 1rJ J Jllt j C t l9rl IJ m y7 F r 4k + K r 1 J s III t i4 r s + 11 I c 5 S a I j d 1I 1 1 I1 1 l
8/22/1903 Deseret evening news.
RED CLOUD CHIEF OF THE SIOUX WHO IS SLOWLY PASSING AWAY AT PINE RIDGE AGENCY S D I yl 9 rbI F I I t C ll R a < The above portraits of Chief J nOd Cloud his wife and duigh rl ter are from the latest photo I si 3 > hs taken of this most Inter eating family The career of lied flivtd has been a most notable one He rose from obscurity to the command of all the Sioux na tions a position won by his per I vni II bravery As the most no table abirlglnlc of this continent lily passing of IM Cloud should I be considered nn historic nnd ep ochal event t 1 Ive got a new boy at my house 3 did the barber proudly as he began J operation on the face before him Thats my fourth All little shavers eh aid the lathered customer Baltimore Ameri can So young Smith Is ready for his trip a abroad Yep lies got trunk tags and ship labels from every country on the globe and has enged board At Podunkvllle N J for six month Ualtimore News A I I r I LfJ t f M I IF c 7 1 I IJ V ifi J 3 1 l f K 11 on 111 rlt r 1 > I r h e 7 i A 0 1 Ir 1 < IHi1fll I r 1 s r ej1 r I s h Iqe + + i 1 Iv rl I ri 4 J Ii illr i Tn k 1 i 1rJ J Jllt j C t l9rl IJ m y7 F r 4k + K r 1 J s III t i4 r s + 11 I c 5 S a I j d 1I 1 1 I1 1 l
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ONE OF THE NEW SOMBBERO HATS TRIMMED WITH STITCHED SILK ?
8/22/1903 Evening star.
ONE OF THE NEW SOMBBERO HATS TRIMMED WITH STITCHED SILK ?
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1 A t HARRIGAN WILL TRY TO RECONQUER NEW YORK t I I G us n i Miinv Mfittlwrw nf IHn OUI Crtrfipnn WHI vniwflr In HIM Nmv Piny If Undar Cover HARRIGftN I INTERVIEWeD 5V NIXOLfl GREELEYSHITH of Horace Greoloy m ILVHiRIOAN sat on the deserted of the Murray Hill Theatre a straw hat tilted back on his forehead a ipotleu handkerchief about his throat a large package In his eager Later a rehearsal of the new play Under Cover which Is to reconquer York for him was to be hold but 7 oclock he sat alone looking out the chalrless amphitheatre and the few atrtoks of twilight which adventurous JohnnIe had forced way put the wings met and with asingle gas jets yellow he told me about tho new play Hart em If you cant or merely would rather not look so far Into tie dead past a comparatively modern mem ory will take you to 8 len the move uptown to Harrlgan Harts new theatre near Eighth street was made or to 67 when the playhouso burned down and the Herald Square Theatre at Thirtyfifth street and Broadway then owned by Hyde Behman woe leased During the lease of the Her aid Snunre Harrlgan bought what Is now tt slteof the Garrlrk and built Hanigans Theatre and there I wee that his greatest success Rcllly and the Four Hundred 0 pleasing comedy based on Ward MoAlllsters then re cent classification of society was produced lie also made revivals of the Mulligan series which were received with their oldtlma favor But A years went on tbe popularity of the Harrlgnn play waned the re ceipts grew leis Up ran the muslcnl comedy and Clyde Fitch and In 1393 Ned HarrIgan cave up for a time s iLQnIE I were I was bor Many In my new I ploy but I will show you the new play And pausing In b eager exposition of his pet theme of character Mr Harrlgnn led the monllawrapped package o the table and began to I untie the string whloh bound It I had wondered at the manila package for It wa of the size and not unlike a weekend laundry and from the time Mr Harrlgan entered the theatre tt i hud never left hishands But now I dtd not marvel n the care of Ittor was It not the play the woven fabrlo I of days and nights the stored laughter and hoarded pathos of ten years that U to win back New Yorkt Thats something to frighten a man ager exclaimed Mr Harrlgan taking throe heavy typewritten books from L r tnts ut the diversity of the stage tettln Act I Morryall Roadhouse Act IL Scene I Interior Nancy Delaneys fat U house Scene J exterior Gllmartln > Coapoolroom Scene III New WnldO lodginghouse Act III parlor of the Merryall Roadhouse Jtt3i MerrY41 Thats the new Waldorf said llarrlgan pointing to th Teproductlfl of what looked like a tencent Doer lodging at the rear of the ttage Thifs 71 Ioozl Lusle the character played Mrs Yoamaiu Is met with Contra lag with her squalid misfortune 1 1 Dixie Merryall owner of the Olm poolrouia beautiful well gowntfl horsey a sort of Gussle McKee Fortfbi Under Cover touches Just tOuchee41 the race trade It does not so into ej discussion moral or polllcal or It t
8/27/1903 The evening world.
1 A t HARRIGAN WILL TRY TO RECONQUER NEW YORK t I I G us n i Miinv Mfittlwrw nf IHn OUI Crtrfipnn WHI vniwflr In HIM Nmv Piny If Undar Cover HARRIGftN I INTERVIEWeD 5V NIXOLfl GREELEYSHITH of Horace Greoloy m ILVHiRIOAN sat on the deserted of the Murray Hill Theatre a straw hat tilted back on his forehead a ipotleu handkerchief about his throat a large package In his eager Later a rehearsal of the new play Under Cover which Is to reconquer York for him was to be hold but 7 oclock he sat alone looking out the chalrless amphitheatre and the few atrtoks of twilight which adventurous JohnnIe had forced way put the wings met and with asingle gas jets yellow he told me about tho new play Hart em If you cant or merely would rather not look so far Into tie dead past a comparatively modern mem ory will take you to 8 len the move uptown to Harrlgan Harts new theatre near Eighth street was made or to 67 when the playhouso burned down and the Herald Square Theatre at Thirtyfifth street and Broadway then owned by Hyde Behman woe leased During the lease of the Her aid Snunre Harrlgan bought what Is now tt slteof the Garrlrk and built Hanigans Theatre and there I wee that his greatest success Rcllly and the Four Hundred 0 pleasing comedy based on Ward MoAlllsters then re cent classification of society was produced lie also made revivals of the Mulligan series which were received with their oldtlma favor But A years went on tbe popularity of the Harrlgnn play waned the re ceipts grew leis Up ran the muslcnl comedy and Clyde Fitch and In 1393 Ned HarrIgan cave up for a time s iLQnIE I were I was bor Many In my new I ploy but I will show you the new play And pausing In b eager exposition of his pet theme of character Mr Harrlgnn led the monllawrapped package o the table and began to I untie the string whloh bound It I had wondered at the manila package for It wa of the size and not unlike a weekend laundry and from the time Mr Harrlgan entered the theatre tt i hud never left hishands But now I dtd not marvel n the care of Ittor was It not the play the woven fabrlo I of days and nights the stored laughter and hoarded pathos of ten years that U to win back New Yorkt Thats something to frighten a man ager exclaimed Mr Harrlgan taking throe heavy typewritten books from L r tnts ut the diversity of the stage tettln Act I Morryall Roadhouse Act IL Scene I Interior Nancy Delaneys fat U house Scene J exterior Gllmartln > Coapoolroom Scene III New WnldO lodginghouse Act III parlor of the Merryall Roadhouse Jtt3i MerrY41 Thats the new Waldorf said llarrlgan pointing to th Teproductlfl of what looked like a tencent Doer lodging at the rear of the ttage Thifs 71 Ioozl Lusle the character played Mrs Yoamaiu Is met with Contra lag with her squalid misfortune 1 1 Dixie Merryall owner of the Olm poolrouia beautiful well gowntfl horsey a sort of Gussle McKee Fortfbi Under Cover touches Just tOuchee41 the race trade It does not so into ej discussion moral or polllcal or It t
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I I i I i I j i I j i I I J I I I I I I I t j J I J I 11 I t TONIGHT will meet In a sixround bout In of the New Polo A A and a finish some jilnuo In Now Jersey made on the result KLUMPPS TOURNEY j i I II 1 i l BOB FITZSIMMONS AS HE LOOKS TODAY WHILE IN ACTIVE TRAINING fair Tho dates and other details will l > e announced tonight The games will ie rolled 01 ilu excellent Hnrlem Circle ilaco nlleyf Orent improvements havo lieon mall In the allvmmo a lIons for inlookcri In addition Klumpps plice will be the ieadiiirtiir this j ear for the following I I Posed specially for The Evening I World n nO > n I These Are Busy in Bensonhiirst Where Fitz Is Put ting in All His Time Getting in Shape Con Coughlin II The Irish Kangaroo These are busy days down Benson hurst way No cause to ask why Bob Fltzslmmoiis is training there Fltz has an engagement ou for next Wednesday night with one I ton CoiiKhlln who liecauso of his leiiKth and breadth has been referred I to as tho Irish Kangaroo Fltz Is to meet this soc lled Kangaroo In Philadelphia and Fltz always likes to be physically fit when he meets any one who doubts his pugi listic superiority Hence the busy times nl Bensonhurst Fltz Is In great shape Look at the accompanying picture tho latest by the way that Fltz has had taken and then wonder why they call him the grand old man of the prize ring Nothing old about that expression and pose All Ire and action eh Fitz expects to demonstrate next Wednesday the power of the punch the punch that has toppled them all over except Jeffries Will he do It in this particular case caseThats Thats tho question for this Cough lin Con Is touted as tho real thing He Is big and liusky and as Sam Fitz patrick says Can punch a bit hlm relf Just watch for the result next Thursday morning or It you can arrange It run over to Philadelphia and see for yourself Looks lIke the trip will be worth while MANY BIDS fOR LITTLE MENS BOUT a Bids for the Young Corbett and Tim Callahan bout which is to be decided in Philadelphia next month will be opened In the Record office in Phila delphia tonight It Is known that every club In the Quaker City Is anxious to secure tho mill which promises to be the greatest In the his tory of tho game since boxing was in order In No v York The club which makes the best offer will secure the match which according to experts will draw very close to 110000 In the city of Father Penn WINNERS AT ST LOUIS SpecIal to nie Kvcnlnsr World rEUMAH PARK RACE TRACK ST IXHIS Sept 3S FoltowlnR ore the ret suits of the races scheduled to b run hero tilth afternoon First Raco Thrcoquarters of a mile Won toy Dr ScharfT 7 to 2 and 7 to 5 M > Wurprisp 7 to 2 wax perond Sweet Charity wan third time 115 Fwjond Riice43evenclghth of a mile Won hv Sid Silver S to 1 and 3 to lj Pepper Dlak 0 to 5 was sCJnd Ma ghonl wwa third Time 128 3J Third I IIllhr e1tarter of a mile Won by Old Stone 8 to 1 and 3 to 1 Pnrehiud out was second and iMendoii third Tlme115 I MEMPHIS WINS PENNANT Memphis won the Southern League pennant by one game from Little Rock
9/25/1903 The evening world.
I I i I i I j i I j i I I J I I I I I I I t j J I J I 11 I t TONIGHT will meet In a sixround bout In of the New Polo A A and a finish some jilnuo In Now Jersey made on the result KLUMPPS TOURNEY j i I II 1 i l BOB FITZSIMMONS AS HE LOOKS TODAY WHILE IN ACTIVE TRAINING fair Tho dates and other details will l > e announced tonight The games will ie rolled 01 ilu excellent Hnrlem Circle ilaco nlleyf Orent improvements havo lieon mall In the allvmmo a lIons for inlookcri In addition Klumpps plice will be the ieadiiirtiir this j ear for the following I I Posed specially for The Evening I World n nO > n I These Are Busy in Bensonhiirst Where Fitz Is Put ting in All His Time Getting in Shape Con Coughlin II The Irish Kangaroo These are busy days down Benson hurst way No cause to ask why Bob Fltzslmmoiis is training there Fltz has an engagement ou for next Wednesday night with one I ton CoiiKhlln who liecauso of his leiiKth and breadth has been referred I to as tho Irish Kangaroo Fltz Is to meet this soc lled Kangaroo In Philadelphia and Fltz always likes to be physically fit when he meets any one who doubts his pugi listic superiority Hence the busy times nl Bensonhurst Fltz Is In great shape Look at the accompanying picture tho latest by the way that Fltz has had taken and then wonder why they call him the grand old man of the prize ring Nothing old about that expression and pose All Ire and action eh Fitz expects to demonstrate next Wednesday the power of the punch the punch that has toppled them all over except Jeffries Will he do It in this particular case caseThats Thats tho question for this Cough lin Con Is touted as tho real thing He Is big and liusky and as Sam Fitz patrick says Can punch a bit hlm relf Just watch for the result next Thursday morning or It you can arrange It run over to Philadelphia and see for yourself Looks lIke the trip will be worth while MANY BIDS fOR LITTLE MENS BOUT a Bids for the Young Corbett and Tim Callahan bout which is to be decided in Philadelphia next month will be opened In the Record office in Phila delphia tonight It Is known that every club In the Quaker City Is anxious to secure tho mill which promises to be the greatest In the his tory of tho game since boxing was in order In No v York The club which makes the best offer will secure the match which according to experts will draw very close to 110000 In the city of Father Penn WINNERS AT ST LOUIS SpecIal to nie Kvcnlnsr World rEUMAH PARK RACE TRACK ST IXHIS Sept 3S FoltowlnR ore the ret suits of the races scheduled to b run hero tilth afternoon First Raco Thrcoquarters of a mile Won toy Dr ScharfT 7 to 2 and 7 to 5 M > Wurprisp 7 to 2 wax perond Sweet Charity wan third time 115 Fwjond Riice43evenclghth of a mile Won hv Sid Silver S to 1 and 3 to lj Pepper Dlak 0 to 5 was sCJnd Ma ghonl wwa third Time 128 3J Third I IIllhr e1tarter of a mile Won by Old Stone 8 to 1 and 3 to 1 Pnrehiud out was second and iMendoii third Tlme115 I MEMPHIS WINS PENNANT Memphis won the Southern League pennant by one game from Little Rock
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THREE PRETTY AUTUMN HATS White th* brim* •' w.H forward In .■. advan« in 1. '■■ of. hala fof autumn wear. "i fl*r« «h»rtly from III* fae«. Th* lhr.» pi«ut*» her* show tbl» rh«r*ct»Tl»tle Tart onuly r-tclunNl. «'«anwi rlr« «tr»w. rhnntllly lac» and row* with raQSC* m natural tln«» ar* «»«■<> In «»'• whiw> t»w» third l« In «hlrr»4 iroua •*llti» with manjr lull* «lr»ch lit* dtafu**^ nmtiTHl tb# ffi«n «n«l n lor.« piumg «!mrri''« "^ '"» >">>r« BIG FEED OF .
9/28/1903 The Seattle star.
THREE PRETTY AUTUMN HATS White th* brim* •' w.H forward In .■. advan« in 1. '■■ of. hala fof autumn wear. "i fl*r« «h»rtly from III* fae«. Th* lhr.» pi«ut*» her* show tbl» rh«r*ct»Tl»tle Tart onuly r-tclunNl. «'«anwi rlr« «tr»w. rhnntllly lac» and row* with raQSC* m natural tln«» ar* «»«■<> In «»'• whiw> t»w» third l« In «hlrr»4 iroua •*llti» with manjr lull* «lr»ch lit* dtafu**^ nmtiTHl tb# ffi«n «n«l n lor.« piumg «!mrri''« "^ '"» >">>r« BIG FEED OF .
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• peau woman. theatre hat PRETTY WIXTER HATS. - r ri * tr ' the t*o pretty hata shown, vr atefe were made for two N"w-Tork womer -
10/14/1903 New-York tribune.
• peau woman. theatre hat PRETTY WIXTER HATS. - r ri * tr ' the t*o pretty hata shown, vr atefe were made for two N"w-Tork womer -
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I I Whats All A the Fuss About Anyhow Any M
10/25/1903 The Washington times.
I I Whats All A the Fuss About Anyhow Any M
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SCEXB FROM "WHATS TIIE MATTER WITH SrSAN?*
12/6/1903 New-York tribune.
SCEXB FROM "WHATS TIIE MATTER WITH SrSAN?*
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Alice Fischer in Whats What the Matter With Wi h Susan Susmt
12/13/1903 The Washington times.
Alice Fischer in Whats What the Matter With Wi h Susan Susmt
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I 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I l l i I f J I f I I I I I 1 1 f 1 I I I I I 1 I f 1 I I I I I 1 I f 1 tLJJ r I l I I J I I 1 I I I I I f f I I I I I 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 BItj1u A 1r 510b 510bSifVILIE5 I SifVILIE5 SifVILIE5I Jricfl JricflI I U J Jw W8NTEK w W8T I rlE G3 MIILLUJf MOtLlLO i GG3r lK < f F I1LOCTY r + 1SL 4 C1Off 1 is something with llifur fur and d velvet ftt lare are essentially wlut and yet there Is a In the very white roses roses yellow fashion f u > hlbn and a lot of pecially those with not perhaps to be 1 > 0 catalogue taloSUe but none On the purple and flowers fl wers aro most with most exquisite Beaver hats feathers to match Ing and a d are worn costumes There are smart shapes In In with ostrich ered suitable s suitablto ltablto to ate cloth or velvet smartest are faced ced One such hat ifts o ming instead Cf t feather around th the white whl e rosesNo roses rosesNo rosesNo No wellbalanced w llbalancC i from being dress and this more than usually count unt of the very have received the faithful followers there known such display of gorgeous mings m 1gs indo at the have JI1 th there re been oen so simple slmpleand and dainty dain y from White raiffon 1laon sole white siPz sU and white materials in n in the th daintiest and Ing Ing froeks riQ ks that ilT plicity D licifY bear die hai I Lace ace 5s s just as and the the more fashionable fashlona le is Jg1t It there are gowns made up upwlthout without a or even of embroide extremely effective elegance of the and finish of the For young Oung girls better style tle to fashions fashions but ut there tho older women who models In their These are with made up In these as a n rule the low wear are the more
12/13/1903 The Washington times.
I 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I l l i I f J I f I I I I I 1 1 f 1 I I I I I 1 I f 1 I I I I I 1 I f 1 tLJJ r I l I I J I I 1 I I I I I f f I I I I I 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 BItj1u A 1r 510b 510bSifVILIE5 I SifVILIE5 SifVILIE5I Jricfl JricflI I U J Jw W8NTEK w W8T I rlE G3 MIILLUJf MOtLlLO i GG3r lK < f F I1LOCTY r + 1SL 4 C1Off 1 is something with llifur fur and d velvet ftt lare are essentially wlut and yet there Is a In the very white roses roses yellow fashion f u > hlbn and a lot of pecially those with not perhaps to be 1 > 0 catalogue taloSUe but none On the purple and flowers fl wers aro most with most exquisite Beaver hats feathers to match Ing and a d are worn costumes There are smart shapes In In with ostrich ered suitable s suitablto ltablto to ate cloth or velvet smartest are faced ced One such hat ifts o ming instead Cf t feather around th the white whl e rosesNo roses rosesNo rosesNo No wellbalanced w llbalancC i from being dress and this more than usually count unt of the very have received the faithful followers there known such display of gorgeous mings m 1gs indo at the have JI1 th there re been oen so simple slmpleand and dainty dain y from White raiffon 1laon sole white siPz sU and white materials in n in the th daintiest and Ing Ing froeks riQ ks that ilT plicity D licifY bear die hai I Lace ace 5s s just as and the the more fashionable fashlona le is Jg1t It there are gowns made up upwlthout without a or even of embroide extremely effective elegance of the and finish of the For young Oung girls better style tle to fashions fashions but ut there tho older women who models In their These are with made up In these as a n rule the low wear are the more
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u TWO VIEWS OF THE CAYUSE TWINS courage being a good thing in war They say 1Y you youknow youkno youknow know kno that an Indian baby bab never cries Now when whenHnyVody whentui7 whenyldy tui7 HnyVody bdy tells you this just say back to him that the theIndian theIndian theIndian Indian baby does sometimes howl The disease di Is not notso notso notso so prevalent as among amon white babies nor does d t s it exist existin existIn existin in individual cases in such an aggravated a form but butit butIt it has a being One day I saw a apoIP croup of flve ftve1 flvesquaws flvesquawsktoking squawl squawlking sqoaws sqoawslooking looking king at a circus paraTSe parne in a western JrM sstern tern town They Theyturned Theyd Theytiarnd turned d their five papooses around to see the gilded gildedxwp gUd gildedWGn d dDlt80 xwp WGn < gone Dlt80 go ° by The bores cotMMteeed e med to bray put as asthe 8jt asthe the band wagon passed the squaws squ r and five AveID41aA AveID41aAbel fivepe India IndiahKptes hKptes pe ocean n to towI towIT bawl bawlTtw bawlrbp of maternal comparison I met an Indian girl one day daywhom daywhom daywhom whom I knew She had become a mother I said to toher tober toher her Ruth how is your baby babyHeap babyHeap babyHeap Heap good was her reply He born bor same time timeRosles timeRosie timeRodes Rosles papoose Rosies papoose got g no tooth See Seemy Seemy Seemy my papoose got two tooth toothRufh toothRuth toothRuth Ruth was a Catholic girl having gone e tothe to the Kate KateDrexel KateDrexel Drexel school The sisters gave her h a Christian name nameSbe nameShe Sbe had named her papoose e after like ti late latePQDe pope I Igave IBave Igave gave Ruth a bright sUk ii necktie and sip4 sn gt once tied tiedIt tiedIt tiedIt It around head of orLeo Leo A boy every time Thats That what both Indian mother motherand motherand motherand and father want the papoose to be Then he can be bea berior a wrrior rrior rior The mother does not want her child to toenure toen toenire enure en ture < the drudgery which a squaw must bear and andthe andthefather andthefather th thfather father is taunted if he is only the father of squaws squawsThe squawsThe The papoose never gets a name until after he can canwalk canwalk walk alk When it leaves the board If it is a boy he is iscalled Iscalled iscalled called merely hatswol which means boy if it is a agirl girl gi I8be l sbe ane goes by the name of Petelis They are thus thusdesignated thusdesignated designated ed as are the uochins of the streets of Cairo Cairoffheife caiMheISe Cairothe ffheife the boy is only wetted and the girl is I simply simplybint simply1rint simplyblat I J I I
12/20/1903 The Salt Lake herald.
u TWO VIEWS OF THE CAYUSE TWINS courage being a good thing in war They say 1Y you youknow youkno youknow know kno that an Indian baby bab never cries Now when whenHnyVody whentui7 whenyldy tui7 HnyVody bdy tells you this just say back to him that the theIndian theIndian theIndian Indian baby does sometimes howl The disease di Is not notso notso notso so prevalent as among amon white babies nor does d t s it exist existin existIn existin in individual cases in such an aggravated a form but butit butIt it has a being One day I saw a apoIP croup of flve ftve1 flvesquaws flvesquawsktoking squawl squawlking sqoaws sqoawslooking looking king at a circus paraTSe parne in a western JrM sstern tern town They Theyturned Theyd Theytiarnd turned d their five papooses around to see the gilded gildedxwp gUd gildedWGn d dDlt80 xwp WGn < gone Dlt80 go ° by The bores cotMMteeed e med to bray put as asthe 8jt asthe the band wagon passed the squaws squ r and five AveID41aA AveID41aAbel fivepe India IndiahKptes hKptes pe ocean n to towI towIT bawl bawlTtw bawlrbp of maternal comparison I met an Indian girl one day daywhom daywhom daywhom whom I knew She had become a mother I said to toher tober toher her Ruth how is your baby babyHeap babyHeap babyHeap Heap good was her reply He born bor same time timeRosles timeRosie timeRodes Rosles papoose Rosies papoose got g no tooth See Seemy Seemy Seemy my papoose got two tooth toothRufh toothRuth toothRuth Ruth was a Catholic girl having gone e tothe to the Kate KateDrexel KateDrexel Drexel school The sisters gave her h a Christian name nameSbe nameShe Sbe had named her papoose e after like ti late latePQDe pope I Igave IBave Igave gave Ruth a bright sUk ii necktie and sip4 sn gt once tied tiedIt tiedIt tiedIt It around head of orLeo Leo A boy every time Thats That what both Indian mother motherand motherand motherand and father want the papoose to be Then he can be bea berior a wrrior rrior rior The mother does not want her child to toenure toen toenire enure en ture < the drudgery which a squaw must bear and andthe andthefather andthefather th thfather father is taunted if he is only the father of squaws squawsThe squawsThe The papoose never gets a name until after he can canwalk canwalk walk alk When it leaves the board If it is a boy he is iscalled Iscalled iscalled called merely hatswol which means boy if it is a agirl girl gi I8be l sbe ane goes by the name of Petelis They are thus thusdesignated thusdesignated designated ed as are the uochins of the streets of Cairo Cairoffheife caiMheISe Cairothe ffheife the boy is only wetted and the girl is I simply simplybint simply1rint simplyblat I J I I
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THE REPUBLIC: SUNDAY. -J-UAJfcY 24. 1904. THE SPRING HATS ANQ SLEEVES WILL BE LIKE Straws Are Interwoven With Gold Braid, Long and Short Ostrich Plumes Are Spangled With It and" Toques Show Gilt Quills 'Thrust Carelessly - but Through the Brim Eton Jackets Partake "of Military Style, With Plain Lines and Braided Seams - Dainty Wrist Ruffle Ado's Appreciably -to Smart Effect. " wi ron the scaday.e.:fu1jlic. oft the social leaders scat tho Amcricaii'r'lvlcra. as tlic ot 'Florida lias come to Tic others sojourning in tlic Sky. as the mountain resorts and Georgia aro'tcrmed. still others touring through JIcxIco, not to mention the the Bahamas and West and nil of them Journeying the spring," as our cou phrase it-no wondcr..that styles and fashions arc antici -necks. . , theirfirst private iow. so the snows of winter are ground and the gold winds tho leafless trees. the leadlnc shops arc al out In tho sheer and which rightfully belong time. arc gay with the or&an Swisses and other" semi materials, not to rrention the summer silks, the carliest,Im which have now been on immediately after the holiday season and balmier South very different gowns w raps rac needed girl who rocs to the Southern not bo hopelessly out of tho last season's clothe', for all tailors and drcs&makcis and already settled on the will prevail there it, and. iery ones which will be hi the spring manifesta OF LONG .COAT FEATURE. most striking feature of is the ab lohg-fltted coat, that of halt which made such lUclfimioiig the fashionable ' prldeif herself on keeping (place In 'the fashionable pro cast ItVout utterly. .and has lis placejthe'llttle Utted jack just over the cure of else ontf'bf the new Etons .fitted coat-is ery apt to the military lines which are part of the new styles its smart bi aiding, showing toutih of gold, theio is a about it which is eminent thee little Jackets however, with the "enilfUthig, shiglc large carved carl a cute little belt fashioned and bound with braid or around the wain and a marked dip in fiont. too, characterizes this style, is likely to be more to partake less of the se characterizes the military girl who Is observant of whim lias taken due heed the large patt which cuffs and and garnlshings are to comlns "mode. or undeco'ated "cuff as not being absolute with the 1atr mandates 01 who rules the styles.. cuffs themselves, there is a -variety to chooe fiom. is an emphatic but they be trimmed, and that as the design and character will-permit. TAKE PL-CE. upon. which during.the win some of out best idc-is. iecofcd p'ace for the norce, come to the fore. smart Utile Eton jackets, has Testored to a -very of favor.ilhe matter of trimralnss is quite an "Im of these ia partake of the with its severely plain seam3. and fronts fasten 'pendants and frogs and the elaborate cuff and the ruffle would be decidedly and the smart girl will be this, omission. , dressier Etons. even upon accompany a round or there !p no reason why graceful wrist ruffle should appearance and add appre smart and stylish effect, new materials in,, which these there is a marked pre for the oft, French, serges for tho smooth-faced cloths, purposesTthe mohairs are-In .high, favor, since dust so perfectly and arc to wrinkle. latter take all of tho fashion well in addition to to tucks and shining, is hardly a feature of the or to come, to w hich they f44fl'fMm. Aj&jEffijmilSZ'f at NJHb. 4 --fH-HMfe, -ffn fJj&L'jf-'' r x " " iCa tsLJl. iS l55"'"'"'''P i ttBt-z f'&xp xSSBti&i i&!'Q?t'Ryil"'tbyf ? lB rS" ' ' rr jfc H""Uvk'!E 't-h(fc,'-EP . itf f TT tl Jv v D-v!Pkr i ir"'!'S mWlS WSt5w j?&' . &?'i''iS. uwiiuahmi'i'M fc i ?5C4 S'jLWKE-''- ''i: JKct34PIRIImI1 '1 ':.'1--. s. .-v jBper. - v -& " mnufe&aoiAgi a mmmmmmmm - m :mmg z&-k..wir.ifs a i . ....5Niv stmb. rmm&l -.Mmmmm-' ,- - -::. --mmmx x.tv n.-f 6f r ; t 'ii--. vm. sr .a MH--in IEl if I 4J l vfW sssmsSKSmllK , X. 4mZ&'im mi rCl, ' Sri - - t -mjm1maS.m. . llt;C 1 1 ftum-'mmmmtmms ..,,-. .ata 'Sm,WW M . -- ,J i I salilllllllllKlllmsM. llftB- V : l I l W7 r U BBKSKInmWSBKlvx?TK'' .lM:XrFm r rCXi-' f i L3KRBm&mSXmfk im; I Krtf s mmSmmmmBBBBm . . 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' Pt- ? c-&4 bi 9PHMHIBmHbH S '& v i.:-' lv?"jvs-fcv & & F j srv' ffBPIPiBrff'TB ..l. - ", "-?i; 1XW' .; .-.-- ffMll iiitiMii--i---i-diaiaM b ".: Bt; ;rEI ''1Plu : " -hB5.j?311 f3U vEx.y-rfisz W i, ' 9Hfci! ?f IMP .-." H ; w'n:! S;? R?" jXiIpk -, BfHtIfe ,"- HMPn 1IP,(' ' JH-&.-Bi1 X'Ai A Picture .rock in blue 5 Ai -'- 'H- ' , j SBL ' "1- f 'kAT: 'A' ('A -l'" Is a beautiful restart '70 f:- bbbbPOBI iK'. its-S r"A tonet. i ,-'" FTm'lBBBB BBBBBBBBBBBBl' BBMyMPSP3 "Si J, , BBBlBBSr ', KIr - -"BFSlPi8?&tt I S Very rcaettes of contrasUng fV A , "BB-" Hli .v "'-' Y irV'BVjr ,r K 'fSK" SlSf- V chiffon are a fa-wed trimmlnB idea V : iil " ?- Tf )lHrrl: ft - r aawa A a ,--- B't : -,-; :a; ir r--r. B1 "?-.:.KiN Av- tVA "'-.:"" .; ,.t, iiViU. kVBBBBr'-iV-. BBBBBBBBBBr l V!.ild OtTI V - "iHK 'BBBBBBBbMA;, AftAA? ; lBBHM i1' : . BfvAAlS1 f A:, :BBBBB ' . IBBl . :;i A ' - BBr 'H ' A - ' l4fg;-f:$'lt lHr ; ,.:Iir?'SAlS ' sav BBBBBBv j?iSSit9 KHr'-t'-ft-BBBBBBIS ,ylt.4g?" wBM i'v itwli vHl f klTf.TloP i -w!!HI is vv f$ii BBBf rHRttBHiL,,'JLlS ! : ' -- , sJ-bbwK ' : ; :' A SlliHFMlW: 1sT '1lmmmmmmmmP'S) ";Ssb'.ia-itv.4x?s rs m mmr r m iimi - -, .ifxasipi 'Bi,11WM' '" " !? T11 """""- ' ' ' ' " ' WL ! aiJtC"IIIIWIlllWtSIWWWWWWMtMWWWiWyWMiywWWWWMMwMMMw, CU27 .Sur-ZjTPf'- JTfTSrff'VVOAr $ujrrort- jTF'rsrjjvi CJ?Z.Z.iS. &:&ILf?72n$r FE&Sf&FfTEUWE?,. riain waUts of dyed lace arc well i buy to wear with skirts of .i matching- color. 'Hie most, stujimng-, ornament for wavy tresses i3. a, twist Of tulle to match one's hair. "Mantle effects play an Important par,tin tho styW Xor the comlns J car, cspec'lallyin wraps. Ribbon rosettes, which are so pop ultr on hats, are being employed with quite as mjch success on dressy gowns. Tailors and dressmakers are turn ing out more' black cloth costumes than ever. andthey are for roth old and j"ounr-w:onn. The fashion of draping the hat brim with fringe is a pretty one and a fashion which will be taken up lato this winter. Very dressy lace and crepe waists re trimmed with the narrowest
1/24/1904 The St. Louis Republic.
THE REPUBLIC: SUNDAY. -J-UAJfcY 24. 1904. THE SPRING HATS ANQ SLEEVES WILL BE LIKE Straws Are Interwoven With Gold Braid, Long and Short Ostrich Plumes Are Spangled With It and" Toques Show Gilt Quills 'Thrust Carelessly - but Through the Brim Eton Jackets Partake "of Military Style, With Plain Lines and Braided Seams - Dainty Wrist Ruffle Ado's Appreciably -to Smart Effect. " wi ron the scaday.e.:fu1jlic. oft the social leaders scat tho Amcricaii'r'lvlcra. as tlic ot 'Florida lias come to Tic others sojourning in tlic Sky. as the mountain resorts and Georgia aro'tcrmed. still others touring through JIcxIco, not to mention the the Bahamas and West and nil of them Journeying the spring," as our cou phrase it-no wondcr..that styles and fashions arc antici -necks. . , theirfirst private iow. so the snows of winter are ground and the gold winds tho leafless trees. the leadlnc shops arc al out In tho sheer and which rightfully belong time. arc gay with the or&an Swisses and other" semi materials, not to rrention the summer silks, the carliest,Im which have now been on immediately after the holiday season and balmier South very different gowns w raps rac needed girl who rocs to the Southern not bo hopelessly out of tho last season's clothe', for all tailors and drcs&makcis and already settled on the will prevail there it, and. iery ones which will be hi the spring manifesta OF LONG .COAT FEATURE. most striking feature of is the ab lohg-fltted coat, that of halt which made such lUclfimioiig the fashionable ' prldeif herself on keeping (place In 'the fashionable pro cast ItVout utterly. .and has lis placejthe'llttle Utted jack just over the cure of else ontf'bf the new Etons .fitted coat-is ery apt to the military lines which are part of the new styles its smart bi aiding, showing toutih of gold, theio is a about it which is eminent thee little Jackets however, with the "enilfUthig, shiglc large carved carl a cute little belt fashioned and bound with braid or around the wain and a marked dip in fiont. too, characterizes this style, is likely to be more to partake less of the se characterizes the military girl who Is observant of whim lias taken due heed the large patt which cuffs and and garnlshings are to comlns "mode. or undeco'ated "cuff as not being absolute with the 1atr mandates 01 who rules the styles.. cuffs themselves, there is a -variety to chooe fiom. is an emphatic but they be trimmed, and that as the design and character will-permit. TAKE PL-CE. upon. which during.the win some of out best idc-is. iecofcd p'ace for the norce, come to the fore. smart Utile Eton jackets, has Testored to a -very of favor.ilhe matter of trimralnss is quite an "Im of these ia partake of the with its severely plain seam3. and fronts fasten 'pendants and frogs and the elaborate cuff and the ruffle would be decidedly and the smart girl will be this, omission. , dressier Etons. even upon accompany a round or there !p no reason why graceful wrist ruffle should appearance and add appre smart and stylish effect, new materials in,, which these there is a marked pre for the oft, French, serges for tho smooth-faced cloths, purposesTthe mohairs are-In .high, favor, since dust so perfectly and arc to wrinkle. latter take all of tho fashion well in addition to to tucks and shining, is hardly a feature of the or to come, to w hich they f44fl'fMm. Aj&jEffijmilSZ'f at NJHb. 4 --fH-HMfe, -ffn fJj&L'jf-'' r x " " iCa tsLJl. iS l55"'"'"'''P i ttBt-z f'&xp xSSBti&i i&!'Q?t'Ryil"'tbyf ? lB rS" ' ' rr jfc H""Uvk'!E 't-h(fc,'-EP . itf f TT tl Jv v D-v!Pkr i ir"'!'S mWlS WSt5w j?&' . &?'i''iS. uwiiuahmi'i'M fc i ?5C4 S'jLWKE-''- ''i: JKct34PIRIImI1 '1 ':.'1--. s. .-v jBper. - v -& " mnufe&aoiAgi a mmmmmmmm - m :mmg z&-k..wir.ifs a i . ....5Niv stmb. rmm&l -.Mmmmm-' ,- - -::. --mmmx x.tv n.-f 6f r ; t 'ii--. vm. sr .a MH--in IEl if I 4J l vfW sssmsSKSmllK , X. 4mZ&'im mi rCl, ' Sri - - t -mjm1maS.m. . llt;C 1 1 ftum-'mmmmtmms ..,,-. .ata 'Sm,WW M . -- ,J i I salilllllllllKlllmsM. llftB- V : l I l W7 r U BBKSKInmWSBKlvx?TK'' .lM:XrFm r rCXi-' f i L3KRBm&mSXmfk im; I Krtf s mmSmmmmBBBBm . . " &bJZ2mMr m -s-i?.,ti-v- ' 7 i4HHi'''''''''''''HiHH, b iw I I I 1 n l i II r- m-mmmsEmtHKmMssmSBMK'Saw SnM?t,'?jr r rL?vsrtSS&J7mKmiMm i i m 4J- liHnraBHHHi v :mw. hi' AHkJ:!4. i ll B " m I - m m-S? t .rr !r - Bl;-vlKi - I'Kfc -I s-.M ' m m9 tMr l HLfvB WL -&gMRmJZrs' v,v. .. xv, -- BH Hln&H I h -A ls"i- B Bam t wBkBJK He '-'W S L- bbbbbbbbbbbH ! mIlP ' -- . ST : isJXr ' zm$K&fy'!& 4 AttilHBBBBBV1 ' aa3J j vvv r S3& f- ibHv "BPIPBBP " Z-- VAAl. " tSi V bbbbbbbbbIVj 2 - - - z." r i"BBLfcii!j ' ij .1 v rTi- "iBii1lB Bi ' sBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBsh -Mvik- -otv pi?,s,wpg'BaMi':"'iiiiiM .amm'imv. -iseMp JIJV ,WI -" BBBBBBBBBb l ? . "vw q ".JitV -A4-' ' SSS--' ' Rk8r v JA";'ttAAxAAj ik - " SjSbBBBf ' i a ittHlkki'Bf.H V ,:v - 'vlc' ' 1cV5Sj4Atsc , T' ivlLi i3riiv'c - '-bbI f" vN 0 ' HHbbbI ; ".'C'-; i-g": - ,-.',, M"; jih If Wr tMt'.? ' Pt- ? c-&4 bi 9PHMHIBmHbH S '& v i.:-' lv?"jvs-fcv & & F j srv' ffBPIPiBrff'TB ..l. - ", "-?i; 1XW' .; .-.-- ffMll iiitiMii--i---i-diaiaM b ".: Bt; ;rEI ''1Plu : " -hB5.j?311 f3U vEx.y-rfisz W i, ' 9Hfci! ?f IMP .-." H ; w'n:! S;? R?" jXiIpk -, BfHtIfe ,"- HMPn 1IP,(' ' JH-&.-Bi1 X'Ai A Picture .rock in blue 5 Ai -'- 'H- ' , j SBL ' "1- f 'kAT: 'A' ('A -l'" Is a beautiful restart '70 f:- bbbbPOBI iK'. its-S r"A tonet. i ,-'" FTm'lBBBB BBBBBBBBBBBBl' BBMyMPSP3 "Si J, , BBBlBBSr ', KIr - -"BFSlPi8?&tt I S Very rcaettes of contrasUng fV A , "BB-" Hli .v "'-' Y irV'BVjr ,r K 'fSK" SlSf- V chiffon are a fa-wed trimmlnB idea V : iil " ?- Tf )lHrrl: ft - r aawa A a ,--- B't : -,-; :a; ir r--r. B1 "?-.:.KiN Av- tVA "'-.:"" .; ,.t, iiViU. kVBBBBr'-iV-. BBBBBBBBBBr l V!.ild OtTI V - "iHK 'BBBBBBBbMA;, AftAA? ; lBBHM i1' : . BfvAAlS1 f A:, :BBBBB ' . IBBl . :;i A ' - BBr 'H ' A - ' l4fg;-f:$'lt lHr ; ,.:Iir?'SAlS ' sav BBBBBBv j?iSSit9 KHr'-t'-ft-BBBBBBIS ,ylt.4g?" wBM i'v itwli vHl f klTf.TloP i -w!!HI is vv f$ii BBBf rHRttBHiL,,'JLlS ! : ' -- , sJ-bbwK ' : ; :' A SlliHFMlW: 1sT '1lmmmmmmmmP'S) ";Ssb'.ia-itv.4x?s rs m mmr r m iimi - -, .ifxasipi 'Bi,11WM' '" " !? T11 """""- ' ' ' ' " ' WL ! aiJtC"IIIIWIlllWtSIWWWWWWMtMWWWiWyWMiywWWWWMMwMMMw, CU27 .Sur-ZjTPf'- JTfTSrff'VVOAr $ujrrort- jTF'rsrjjvi CJ?Z.Z.iS. &:&ILf?72n$r FE&Sf&FfTEUWE?,. riain waUts of dyed lace arc well i buy to wear with skirts of .i matching- color. 'Hie most, stujimng-, ornament for wavy tresses i3. a, twist Of tulle to match one's hair. "Mantle effects play an Important par,tin tho styW Xor the comlns J car, cspec'lallyin wraps. Ribbon rosettes, which are so pop ultr on hats, are being employed with quite as mjch success on dressy gowns. Tailors and dressmakers are turn ing out more' black cloth costumes than ever. andthey are for roth old and j"ounr-w:onn. The fashion of draping the hat brim with fringe is a pretty one and a fashion which will be taken up lato this winter. Very dressy lace and crepe waists re trimmed with the narrowest
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MIKADO PLACES MUCH FAITH FIIJST-CLASS JAPANKSK BATTLESHIP ASAHI IX FULL FIGHTING TRIM. The Asalii is one of the largest i n the Japanese X:ivy. the MIkasn, Hatsuse anil Sliikislilma being in the class anil having almost the sa me tonnage 15.4 115. The ship was launclietl three years ago anil carries four IN THE ASAHI.
2/19/1904 The St. Louis Republic.
MIKADO PLACES MUCH FAITH FIIJST-CLASS JAPANKSK BATTLESHIP ASAHI IX FULL FIGHTING TRIM. The Asalii is one of the largest i n the Japanese X:ivy. the MIkasn, Hatsuse anil Sliikislilma being in the class anil having almost the sa me tonnage 15.4 115. The ship was launclietl three years ago anil carries four IN THE ASAHI.
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U J II IIIT 1 1T 1 1J der de deserves deJC fever feveri ravage ravageof ravagof gov government govcrr ¬ con conit coti of oft r rIi fevertr fever fevertor e11 e11l account accountof Dietrich Dietricha Dletrklt1 Dletrklt1a the Job JobAl jobAl he isPting is ispoking I Ihim I of esbyes es esjpijr easy eas if i1ht ifhi itbl j a goodjnie good goods but butne b butwu think it1 it1vv It did tohi tn tnhi 1 1hi at atit atbee I IH it at 1 1PM t tpt Ii Iip not notion long longrif Iona Ionaa I IeJ peculir1tp pecu pecai i iHi to that thatI j jtri follows followstlvra foHQ s i ithfD there thereh i ihd deaths deathsin com comforting comforting om omfortm ¬ the thevifeeb0JW4 thevi i Uon for fori fortF warm warmiv gnat quaSCM I It died diedTh diedTL I ITh < k I Iwa h his hiscoat a acont j jcoot his Blip stlpi Bliphers U i I that thatfiguratively thatflg1lrativeay thatftgirattret to take takea grue gruesome cr crOIUi gruesorne ¬ I him him It Itis Itis Itis rah rahup raniup consul consuldraws consuldrtsws I18UI I18UIclnws II salary salarywhen salarywhen I If awl awlwvith au amiwith j that thatSautter thatpawner I Iiter te totaut t ttal tetal benfw wans wanso wad wadocii ticket ticketto t tit titto kift kiftTO the th jobs Job Jobjust J II IIjUllit poet poethats JHeth poethas how howuie ho hoWate I Iute outTbe out outThe out outThe with withtlw withtht I h ht H R Dietrich Consul General Generarat at Guayaquil J Melon Peddle in Guayaquil Guayaquilsuffers Guayaquillsuffera i iin suffers by cos comparison compar parison isOIl A young man manin in the European l consular consularservic service first firstserves f firstserves t con serves as office clerk then vice ice con n nand I 1801 and nnaHy final v cofesul cor l Before tore he hej heCOQ1e8 hecomes j comes to the hllnv bt he will have served servedon on several IJeveralstatioA atRtioits atatioasand and nd know several severallanguages eral erallId languages augee4and and lId will b be familiar with alt altshipping alllppln altshipping I shipping lppln laws Ia W8 aiWthf aJit th the books of the theconsulate tbecenlate thecenariate consulate Our representatives Jtpres Jtatine ar are giventhirty giv gi I Ien 1 1en enthirty en thirty tJatrt days jr instruction In rUctiob in th the state statedepartmeft I 1 department at Washington and dispatched dis dispatched dl dlpatclled ¬ patched to tot their eir post without with ut ever haw having haxIn hawlug ¬ lug In < < looked inside of the books they arc arcto I Street Corner in Guayaquil Guayaquilc ause c they are ambitious for the stand standing staJIdIng standing ¬ ing and effectiveness of their orgjlniiia orgjlniiiatton o nllJQ nllJQtlon tton It in i s to be b hoped that this bill billwill billw1l1 billwill will become a lawEetador law lawEcuador 1awECldQr Ecuador is a great cocoa 0 < 0 producing producingcountryand prociuci producingointryand countryand cO lntry an Guayaquil is it the center centerif I if < the industry In the businesp bu ine8li ine8litrin dte dtetrict disstrkL trict ail 11 talk centers upon the impor important important ttnrportant ¬ tant staple of commerce < The buyers Mersstand buyersstand ieti ers ersstand stand around in groups whittling thebeans the thebeans theb beans b > ans with pocket knives and chew chewing chewing chewing ¬ ing them like as many children eating eatingrandy eatingandy eatingt an authority au authority ¬ grow i tsj pods about the coanatthere LOanut tbe being ng ibQnt as La targe1 rest aS fe t filbert iritt I1 t in Each Lafree free only of 3ytelds yields one on merchantable mreb ltable cocoa a in A does not begin to bear u years ears of age But once o < e it bear it never wears ont of age it fields a better fruit than at first and tb on plantations here h < < np which yielding for to oil 1M IW years quire very eJ3 little care the tion neededbeing needed being to remove remo and undergrowth front The laborers l trs who ho work tations ar arpal artt paid 40 cents they board b them jbemselves les eight ei ht mintghaires mlnt ln6 and it nificant ni t fast faJlatbat that all of ers of cocoa plantations are natives of the country foreigner toreI has not been them in ill 3y businessSerpents business bU S8 S8SerpeIits Serpents and an The crop cropof of sna snakhs snate e never in Ecuador The almost as disturbing 4 < C peace pe of flfmlnd mind as the stories The resident re td nt likes in the press p aee of the thafew new to see e the tenderfoot from the yarns y ms the is enough to 0 make the easy Not JOltS ago a was was i a guest guet u ilC tit atfbe t the best1 aquil was dosing in her It < < when she ivas was horrified to thing thin c cRiing > < awling v lng beneath bene th She screamed scre med and sprang rang but not iv i time to save was a little house serpent rpent as she moved It buried its flesh of her thigh Her e came terribly swollen her life was saved ved she had row escape from death deathThese deathThese These little house numerous In some parts p rts America In many mart of the be where tHfere t1 re are adobe breed In th the dirt roofs and to be dropping into the he at any time A that frequently he had as six or eight on his weeks time The little
2/21/1904 The Salt Lake herald.
U J II IIIT 1 1T 1 1J der de deserves deJC fever feveri ravage ravageof ravagof gov government govcrr ¬ con conit coti of oft r rIi fevertr fever fevertor e11 e11l account accountof Dietrich Dietricha Dletrklt1 Dletrklt1a the Job JobAl jobAl he isPting is ispoking I Ihim I of esbyes es esjpijr easy eas if i1ht ifhi itbl j a goodjnie good goods but butne b butwu think it1 it1vv It did tohi tn tnhi 1 1hi at atit atbee I IH it at 1 1PM t tpt Ii Iip not notion long longrif Iona Ionaa I IeJ peculir1tp pecu pecai i iHi to that thatI j jtri follows followstlvra foHQ s i ithfD there thereh i ihd deaths deathsin com comforting comforting om omfortm ¬ the thevifeeb0JW4 thevi i Uon for fori fortF warm warmiv gnat quaSCM I It died diedTh diedTL I ITh < k I Iwa h his hiscoat a acont j jcoot his Blip stlpi Bliphers U i I that thatfiguratively thatflg1lrativeay thatftgirattret to take takea grue gruesome cr crOIUi gruesorne ¬ I him him It Itis Itis Itis rah rahup raniup consul consuldraws consuldrtsws I18UI I18UIclnws II salary salarywhen salarywhen I If awl awlwvith au amiwith j that thatSautter thatpawner I Iiter te totaut t ttal tetal benfw wans wanso wad wadocii ticket ticketto t tit titto kift kiftTO the th jobs Job Jobjust J II IIjUllit poet poethats JHeth poethas how howuie ho hoWate I Iute outTbe out outThe out outThe with withtlw withtht I h ht H R Dietrich Consul General Generarat at Guayaquil J Melon Peddle in Guayaquil Guayaquilsuffers Guayaquillsuffera i iin suffers by cos comparison compar parison isOIl A young man manin in the European l consular consularservic service first firstserves f firstserves t con serves as office clerk then vice ice con n nand I 1801 and nnaHy final v cofesul cor l Before tore he hej heCOQ1e8 hecomes j comes to the hllnv bt he will have served servedon on several IJeveralstatioA atRtioits atatioasand and nd know several severallanguages eral erallId languages augee4and and lId will b be familiar with alt altshipping alllppln altshipping I shipping lppln laws Ia W8 aiWthf aJit th the books of the theconsulate tbecenlate thecenariate consulate Our representatives Jtpres Jtatine ar are giventhirty giv gi I Ien 1 1en enthirty en thirty tJatrt days jr instruction In rUctiob in th the state statedepartmeft I 1 department at Washington and dispatched dis dispatched dl dlpatclled ¬ patched to tot their eir post without with ut ever haw having haxIn hawlug ¬ lug In < < looked inside of the books they arc arcto I Street Corner in Guayaquil Guayaquilc ause c they are ambitious for the stand standing staJIdIng standing ¬ ing and effectiveness of their orgjlniiia orgjlniiiatton o nllJQ nllJQtlon tton It in i s to be b hoped that this bill billwill billw1l1 billwill will become a lawEetador law lawEcuador 1awECldQr Ecuador is a great cocoa 0 < 0 producing producingcountryand prociuci producingointryand countryand cO lntry an Guayaquil is it the center centerif I if < the industry In the businesp bu ine8li ine8litrin dte dtetrict disstrkL trict ail 11 talk centers upon the impor important important ttnrportant ¬ tant staple of commerce < The buyers Mersstand buyersstand ieti ers ersstand stand around in groups whittling thebeans the thebeans theb beans b > ans with pocket knives and chew chewing chewing chewing ¬ ing them like as many children eating eatingrandy eatingandy eatingt an authority au authority ¬ grow i tsj pods about the coanatthere LOanut tbe being ng ibQnt as La targe1 rest aS fe t filbert iritt I1 t in Each Lafree free only of 3ytelds yields one on merchantable mreb ltable cocoa a in A does not begin to bear u years ears of age But once o < e it bear it never wears ont of age it fields a better fruit than at first and tb on plantations here h < < np which yielding for to oil 1M IW years quire very eJ3 little care the tion neededbeing needed being to remove remo and undergrowth front The laborers l trs who ho work tations ar arpal artt paid 40 cents they board b them jbemselves les eight ei ht mintghaires mlnt ln6 and it nificant ni t fast faJlatbat that all of ers of cocoa plantations are natives of the country foreigner toreI has not been them in ill 3y businessSerpents business bU S8 S8SerpeIits Serpents and an The crop cropof of sna snakhs snate e never in Ecuador The almost as disturbing 4 < C peace pe of flfmlnd mind as the stories The resident re td nt likes in the press p aee of the thafew new to see e the tenderfoot from the yarns y ms the is enough to 0 make the easy Not JOltS ago a was was i a guest guet u ilC tit atfbe t the best1 aquil was dosing in her It < < when she ivas was horrified to thing thin c cRiing > < awling v lng beneath bene th She screamed scre med and sprang rang but not iv i time to save was a little house serpent rpent as she moved It buried its flesh of her thigh Her e came terribly swollen her life was saved ved she had row escape from death deathThese deathThese These little house numerous In some parts p rts America In many mart of the be where tHfere t1 re are adobe breed In th the dirt roofs and to be dropping into the he at any time A that frequently he had as six or eight on his weeks time The little
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OUR POLITICIANS AS THEY APPEAR TO THE HATTER IF you want to know what are the "bumps" that make our "politi cians successful, don't go to a phrenologist. Just ask your hat ter. Ten chances to one the phrenologist hasn't a record of the "bumps." The hatter has. And while you are about it, Just have your hatter make a copy of your own. You'd be surprised at the shape of your cranium, which you'll V discover has dips and angles where you least suspect. Incidentally the : record thus obtained will furnish you much- food for thought when compared with -.•••..■.-;, % - • delicate tracery of pin prick* and from this map of your "bumps" your hat Is made and the map filed away for future reference. This is the up " to-date way of buying your hats." * . Hatter Dillon has hundreds of these little pin perforated maps, and among them . are the most prominent politi cians of the last two decades, though for the purpose of best ; illustrating this article only the men who are'now, filling. the public eye are used herewith. First on the list is Mayor Schmitz. "Would you ever suspect /from looking at his face how thebirdseye view of his head looks to Hatter "Dillon? As recorded by the head measuring j ma chine it is almost a 'perfect egg shape, with only, aj, slight deflection from the' even curving line on .the left side. As shown In the pictures, the lower end of the dotted line is the forehead and the, upper the back of the head. To the right of Mayor Schmitz is Franklin K. Lane and to the left Henry. J. Crocker, who were" the rival candidates for Mr. Schmitz's office during, the; last cam paign. Just note the great dissimilar* ity in the shape of all these three* heads. Mayor Schmitz's is widest at a point directly above the* ears, ,Mr. Crocker's rfust behind the ears,, while Mr Lane's, strangest of all, is widest directly in front of the ears and almost above the temples, sloping off abruptly Into a very pointed forehead. It is the most curiously shaped head of all the politicians in Hatter Dillon's big col lection, full of dips and angles and un expected contusions. Hatter Dillon explains these sudden little dips from the even curve of. the head with the very ingenious theory that they are caused by sleeping more* on that 'side of the liead than on the other. The expert phrenologist would have quite another theory and would proceed to demonstrate it thus:, That the width of the head behind' the ears denotes the driving force, the grit," the determination, tlje bulldog tenacity that brings success," while the width in front of the ears shows the intellectual development. Those who are fond of delving into the sciences, therefore, can make a comparison between these three records of the head-measuring machine Henry H. Lynch is the 'only politician with a head anywhere apprbachlng it in curvature. . In the line of similarity of political, success and also of contour of cranium a dance at these • pictures will show you that -Supervisor "W. "W. Sanderson and Public Administrator "Billy" Hynes : have much in common, though to look at the faces of these two gentle men is to find absolutely no resem blance whatever. However, that Is not where the hatter looks for his points of resemblance. Supervisors Oscar Hocks and
2/21/1904 The San Francisco call.
OUR POLITICIANS AS THEY APPEAR TO THE HATTER IF you want to know what are the "bumps" that make our "politi cians successful, don't go to a phrenologist. Just ask your hat ter. Ten chances to one the phrenologist hasn't a record of the "bumps." The hatter has. And while you are about it, Just have your hatter make a copy of your own. You'd be surprised at the shape of your cranium, which you'll V discover has dips and angles where you least suspect. Incidentally the : record thus obtained will furnish you much- food for thought when compared with -.•••..■.-;, % - • delicate tracery of pin prick* and from this map of your "bumps" your hat Is made and the map filed away for future reference. This is the up " to-date way of buying your hats." * . Hatter Dillon has hundreds of these little pin perforated maps, and among them . are the most prominent politi cians of the last two decades, though for the purpose of best ; illustrating this article only the men who are'now, filling. the public eye are used herewith. First on the list is Mayor Schmitz. "Would you ever suspect /from looking at his face how thebirdseye view of his head looks to Hatter "Dillon? As recorded by the head measuring j ma chine it is almost a 'perfect egg shape, with only, aj, slight deflection from the' even curving line on .the left side. As shown In the pictures, the lower end of the dotted line is the forehead and the, upper the back of the head. To the right of Mayor Schmitz is Franklin K. Lane and to the left Henry. J. Crocker, who were" the rival candidates for Mr. Schmitz's office during, the; last cam paign. Just note the great dissimilar* ity in the shape of all these three* heads. Mayor Schmitz's is widest at a point directly above the* ears, ,Mr. Crocker's rfust behind the ears,, while Mr Lane's, strangest of all, is widest directly in front of the ears and almost above the temples, sloping off abruptly Into a very pointed forehead. It is the most curiously shaped head of all the politicians in Hatter Dillon's big col lection, full of dips and angles and un expected contusions. Hatter Dillon explains these sudden little dips from the even curve of. the head with the very ingenious theory that they are caused by sleeping more* on that 'side of the liead than on the other. The expert phrenologist would have quite another theory and would proceed to demonstrate it thus:, That the width of the head behind' the ears denotes the driving force, the grit," the determination, tlje bulldog tenacity that brings success," while the width in front of the ears shows the intellectual development. Those who are fond of delving into the sciences, therefore, can make a comparison between these three records of the head-measuring machine Henry H. Lynch is the 'only politician with a head anywhere apprbachlng it in curvature. . In the line of similarity of political, success and also of contour of cranium a dance at these • pictures will show you that -Supervisor "W. "W. Sanderson and Public Administrator "Billy" Hynes : have much in common, though to look at the faces of these two gentle men is to find absolutely no resem blance whatever. However, that Is not where the hatter looks for his points of resemblance. Supervisors Oscar Hocks and
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I i i I WHO CREATED THE YANKEE CONSUL NOW zzL henry M IIlnuoI Alfred J nol > rn i unqueiitlonubl the giujIii7 WIItl chance iron any morn story against a ton one little opera If I may even dig nify It by that name and have had music punk I looked at him a mo ment nnd then alted Whats the
2/26/1904 The evening world.
I i i I WHO CREATED THE YANKEE CONSUL NOW zzL henry M IIlnuoI Alfred J nol > rn i unqueiitlonubl the giujIii7 WIItl chance iron any morn story against a ton one little opera If I may even dig nify It by that name and have had music punk I looked at him a mo ment nnd then alted Whats the
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CHAMPAGmC SILK YOILE SCATTERED SCATTEREDWITH WITH TINY POMPONS OF WHITE CHENILLE A snowflake now ake gown for warm weather wear weartbat thats one of offashions ofEabJooa offeahioaa fashions newest caprices capricesIts capr1ceIta capriceits This Thl graceful ctful sleeve IK an exaggerated Bishop design designChenille deAlgnChenille designChenille Chenille snowballs are Wiled on many of the new Him fab fabric fabrlca fabrics
3/9/1904 The Washington times.
CHAMPAGmC SILK YOILE SCATTERED SCATTEREDWITH WITH TINY POMPONS OF WHITE CHENILLE A snowflake now ake gown for warm weather wear weartbat thats one of offashions ofEabJooa offeahioaa fashions newest caprices capricesIts capr1ceIta capriceits This Thl graceful ctful sleeve IK an exaggerated Bishop design designChenille deAlgnChenille designChenille Chenille snowballs are Wiled on many of the new Him fab fabric fabrlca fabrics
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HB sun > > aft never n yer er sinks alft upon UPO uponthe n the e fair fairdaughters tabdaughter fairdsughter daughters of America ftor for ar whep whepthe wh cuhe p pthe t tthe f the twillghtrta tvtTh htJ1s drop dr upon pan the thefarthest thetarthe thefarthest farthest tarthe t corner conav of t the PHUft PHUftnlnea IJtWPpin Ihltlitpines pines pin or the AleattI AlMitUuiIflajtda AlMl IfI l4is it itis Itis itIx is is Just peeping through thr ug t tliobfItoreata tliobfItoreataof the b eh chHIor ItVy forests torusCt forestsof of Eastern Maine MainAnd MaineAnd MaineAnd And it te I to also aJ o true truetr fitiiat t ta ttke the JMIII tw never nevershine nevetshines never neverehtnesupon shine ehtnesupon upon II RJRore more boajitifar b boMuttitarwome1an boMuttitarwome1anthou atf tir tvdmea m mth08IQtO tfcan tfcanthoe thou thoe th08IQtO Sfcho 7ko are are proud to t claim thrfStw tbeStrand t1 thrfStwand Stat Statand and StriMe SUi ag their national emblem emblemTheTfaUecl emblemThe emblemThe TheTfaUecl The tJnlt nlted d State StatEIJ hao always s beer 4 j < < y J r ti tiinrnosa inrnosa t n S trJ f r beauttfat tltui ° v wQ n1en on and norr norranee 1 w I Inee since nee te1ght18 the fl flag haspUJihcd has pu puatiodits h d its atarrywaar atarrywaarinto starry tarry way wayinto i ifote into ad many m y outopthbfway 01ttort out ofhlrway IJY corners cornersoL cornersoLtho ot otthe ott > the t c earth rt the typesvof tyP type o of fairs tar hgrls girls are arereafer aregreafer Jr fA fAFeafer Feafer reafer otin ijpni n ever < From the serious seriousstately r t rr rrtately stately grad ufr of orthe the New N w England ngll1 1dyounC youncr young LV101 LV101wppron VIOrQ a wppron w P uton Ui th 1 liolr Cfr lentnfi J nJ forlt or U aturg Jtur j 17 Tt dUtI dUtIn d 1fL 1fLa a n a aT k o oi e t talc lJat1 of wl Wlu some m 1liufh au h hth th a aC OUl out wJtH tliolr G r L ti l tea 1tS Qt hA l uny ny tljolr Ii 1 ot C JI TIfI h ad adf ntu nturelLrCnU ttre allthe allthehUi the theL L hUi l i f Cjf e fo 1fJ11 in SSthot SSthotP ss that thatStu J P Stu cbarjna c o JI1 116 o rtw Iw1 sJCle s eove + ot c2rg < < 1r9 s l q qw 0 1 1J 1If w r J r J t l J t t1i > fhn54r h1jd 1i 4rl 4rlve v dullvmopotony dull ptOJ1otOQy from the home homeThoro homeThorois homeThere There Thorois is is u vast difference between the therounded therQ therpuhdcd rounded rQ hd < < d plump pl m arid tid shiiiy shh fnce nce of the theAlaskan thoAlaskan theAta Ata Alaskan sknn belle and the languid loneliness lonelinessof IOlellnessof of of ° the Spanrsh Spanfsh type iype to tobo bo found in the thePHllippines tholUpplnes thePhilippines Philippines lUpplnes and isnbfJdaVrapd Ftoffdn lofJda r apd pd yet they theyarc thoyarc theyr theyare arc nl either masters masters mrs s Ho1 oC j UniJlP l e varaS varaSEnglish ap apEnglish Pf English or arc stcti stcu St1ugg1fm iellng lAg to be so The Thefascinating Theri1cln Tlieftsclnating ri1cln fascinating tln Gtibajv C cubspnorita bn1k spnorifa 5Cnorlfri calls her herAjnorican herMnorican 1Cr 1CrJmorlcnn Ajnorican frreds frrerids fgoiiaiins i t Ii lS and amons nmonghor amonshpr nmon nmonhor hpr hor flncp finery f 1pr pr n a 1 QU hp day i hJ ala alwayK alwayKto I + nya nyato ys ysto to b found to o nd d an an American flag nC to be bet beC r > j t f rt rto > orossed crossed o Cd upon upon her breHSVjbJtii br brnast4 1tihtl4 tUejflnlnty tUejflnlntynatty t f1intY f1intYnott atntynatty natty nott natty fiac fla flag of Free Cuba CubaWhen CubaWhen CubaWhen When her Portflt Portc Porthtlcan Rfcan aister et t last histcamo 1a lastcame t tcamo camo in out off op fJ the he rain of ofSpqnfsb Spanish in injustlccr InjusUc injustieiragprorastination justieiragprorastination justlccr jusUc aijqijirfccrastinaUon n q r tsUn8Uon she retained rotalnedall rotnlnednil retainedalll all the tho th tlro ifiroand lirb and romance romance of hor race racenndVlftere racennhfhere nndVlftere 1 f11 re is not one among among the colonies coloniesOf coloniesOf eoloniesof of Of the United States that is to more patri patriotic patriotic patriotic ¬ otic than th rl Is little 1Il It e Porto Rico n afptlins afptlinsampngr l1t1Insampng tfnn tfnnnmpng ampngr the Ulosunny sunny southern seas s and andkissed nmIkl andkiesed I kissed kl sed by bythO tho rippling bluethat bluothatWa3hc bluothatWa3hcthe waahcsi waahcsithe wsshcsithe the West Indies1 Indl s jI jIi < t
3/13/1904 The Washington times.
HB sun > > aft never n yer er sinks alft upon UPO uponthe n the e fair fairdaughters tabdaughter fairdsughter daughters of America ftor for ar whep whepthe wh cuhe p pthe t tthe f the twillghtrta tvtTh htJ1s drop dr upon pan the thefarthest thetarthe thefarthest farthest tarthe t corner conav of t the PHUft PHUftnlnea IJtWPpin Ihltlitpines pines pin or the AleattI AlMitUuiIflajtda AlMl IfI l4is it itis Itis itIx is is Just peeping through thr ug t tliobfItoreata tliobfItoreataof the b eh chHIor ItVy forests torusCt forestsof of Eastern Maine MainAnd MaineAnd MaineAnd And it te I to also aJ o true truetr fitiiat t ta ttke the JMIII tw never nevershine nevetshines never neverehtnesupon shine ehtnesupon upon II RJRore more boajitifar b boMuttitarwome1an boMuttitarwome1anthou atf tir tvdmea m mth08IQtO tfcan tfcanthoe thou thoe th08IQtO Sfcho 7ko are are proud to t claim thrfStw tbeStrand t1 thrfStwand Stat Statand and StriMe SUi ag their national emblem emblemTheTfaUecl emblemThe emblemThe TheTfaUecl The tJnlt nlted d State StatEIJ hao always s beer 4 j < < y J r ti tiinrnosa inrnosa t n S trJ f r beauttfat tltui ° v wQ n1en on and norr norranee 1 w I Inee since nee te1ght18 the fl flag haspUJihcd has pu puatiodits h d its atarrywaar atarrywaarinto starry tarry way wayinto i ifote into ad many m y outopthbfway 01ttort out ofhlrway IJY corners cornersoL cornersoLtho ot otthe ott > the t c earth rt the typesvof tyP type o of fairs tar hgrls girls are arereafer aregreafer Jr fA fAFeafer Feafer reafer otin ijpni n ever < From the serious seriousstately r t rr rrtately stately grad ufr of orthe the New N w England ngll1 1dyounC youncr young LV101 LV101wppron VIOrQ a wppron w P uton Ui th 1 liolr Cfr lentnfi J nJ forlt or U aturg Jtur j 17 Tt dUtI dUtIn d 1fL 1fLa a n a aT k o oi e t talc lJat1 of wl Wlu some m 1liufh au h hth th a aC OUl out wJtH tliolr G r L ti l tea 1tS Qt hA l uny ny tljolr Ii 1 ot C JI TIfI h ad adf ntu nturelLrCnU ttre allthe allthehUi the theL L hUi l i f Cjf e fo 1fJ11 in SSthot SSthotP ss that thatStu J P Stu cbarjna c o JI1 116 o rtw Iw1 sJCle s eove + ot c2rg < < 1r9 s l q qw 0 1 1J 1If w r J r J t l J t t1i > fhn54r h1jd 1i 4rl 4rlve v dullvmopotony dull ptOJ1otOQy from the home homeThoro homeThorois homeThere There Thorois is is u vast difference between the therounded therQ therpuhdcd rounded rQ hd < < d plump pl m arid tid shiiiy shh fnce nce of the theAlaskan thoAlaskan theAta Ata Alaskan sknn belle and the languid loneliness lonelinessof IOlellnessof of of ° the Spanrsh Spanfsh type iype to tobo bo found in the thePHllippines tholUpplnes thePhilippines Philippines lUpplnes and isnbfJdaVrapd Ftoffdn lofJda r apd pd yet they theyarc thoyarc theyr theyare arc nl either masters masters mrs s Ho1 oC j UniJlP l e varaS varaSEnglish ap apEnglish Pf English or arc stcti stcu St1ugg1fm iellng lAg to be so The Thefascinating Theri1cln Tlieftsclnating ri1cln fascinating tln Gtibajv C cubspnorita bn1k spnorifa 5Cnorlfri calls her herAjnorican herMnorican 1Cr 1CrJmorlcnn Ajnorican frreds frrerids fgoiiaiins i t Ii lS and amons nmonghor amonshpr nmon nmonhor hpr hor flncp finery f 1pr pr n a 1 QU hp day i hJ ala alwayK alwayKto I + nya nyato ys ysto to b found to o nd d an an American flag nC to be bet beC r > j t f rt rto > orossed crossed o Cd upon upon her breHSVjbJtii br brnast4 1tihtl4 tUejflnlnty tUejflnlntynatty t f1intY f1intYnott atntynatty natty nott natty fiac fla flag of Free Cuba CubaWhen CubaWhen CubaWhen When her Portflt Portc Porthtlcan Rfcan aister et t last histcamo 1a lastcame t tcamo camo in out off op fJ the he rain of ofSpqnfsb Spanish in injustlccr InjusUc injustieiragprorastination justieiragprorastination justlccr jusUc aijqijirfccrastinaUon n q r tsUn8Uon she retained rotalnedall rotnlnednil retainedalll all the tho th tlro ifiroand lirb and romance romance of hor race racenndVlftere racennhfhere nndVlftere 1 f11 re is not one among among the colonies coloniesOf coloniesOf eoloniesof of Of the United States that is to more patri patriotic patriotic patriotic ¬ otic than th rl Is little 1Il It e Porto Rico n afptlins afptlinsampngr l1t1Insampng tfnn tfnnnmpng ampngr the Ulosunny sunny southern seas s and andkissed nmIkl andkiesed I kissed kl sed by bythO tho rippling bluethat bluothatWa3hc bluothatWa3hcthe waahcsi waahcsithe wsshcsithe the West Indies1 Indl s jI jIi < t
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HHuBHatsBHB3nHBHES ' 1 ' t .1. . .... I. fr GENERAL L. VICTOR BAUGHMAN. of the Maryland World's Fair Commission, who closed the contract for the State building yesterday says that there will be one chosen as as ho returns to Baltimore. In re to the hostess question, he said that would avoid the complications arose In Missouri "When we cot readv to make the se
3/23/1904 The St. Louis Republic.
HHuBHatsBHB3nHBHES ' 1 ' t .1. . .... I. fr GENERAL L. VICTOR BAUGHMAN. of the Maryland World's Fair Commission, who closed the contract for the State building yesterday says that there will be one chosen as as ho returns to Baltimore. In re to the hostess question, he said that would avoid the complications arose In Missouri "When we cot readv to make the se
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Hackett, Walther, Gates Hardware Co. GROCERS. HATS, CAPS, GLOVES AND FURS. GORDON & FERGUSON Established 1871. Hats, Gaps, Gloves and Furs GORDON SQUARE One of the Northwest's Oldest Wholesale Establishments. LAW BOOKS.
4/5/1904 The Saint Paul globe.
Hackett, Walther, Gates Hardware Co. GROCERS. HATS, CAPS, GLOVES AND FURS. GORDON & FERGUSON Established 1871. Hats, Gaps, Gloves and Furs GORDON SQUARE One of the Northwest's Oldest Wholesale Establishments. LAW BOOKS.
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GEORGE WASHINGTON ROCK. , I,,,.....—mv ■■■ - . Tliis natural wonder :s located about thirty-five miles northwest of Loa Angeles, in the Santa Susnna Mountains, just outside of Chatsworth Park. A chiseled monument could scarcely bear a truer resemblance to Geo. Wash ington than this chance picture cut or worn on the ragged contour of a gi&ijt boulder. * “
4/8/1904 Greene County herald.
GEORGE WASHINGTON ROCK. , I,,,.....—mv ■■■ - . Tliis natural wonder :s located about thirty-five miles northwest of Loa Angeles, in the Santa Susnna Mountains, just outside of Chatsworth Park. A chiseled monument could scarcely bear a truer resemblance to Geo. Wash ington than this chance picture cut or worn on the ragged contour of a gi&ijt boulder. * “
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HE daintiest woman wo woman womiln ¬ I man miln in inEngland inEnglandthafs iIiEngandthats ° England Englandthats thats C Eady EadyVictoria L t uc y yVictoria yA yVictoria Victoria MarjorieJianners Marjorie MarjorieManners Marjorieranners A Manners and a aJA asweeter asweeter blindly worships wherp wher royalty ven ventures ven ventures v6ntures ¬ tures to declare itself itselfChis itselfEhis itselfThis This lovely bit of girlhood girlhoodis is the thegoddaughter thegoddaughter thegoddaughter goddaughter of the late Queen QueenVictoria QueenVictoria QueenVictoria Victoria and twenty years ago was waschristened waschristened waschristened pusly Q ly then as now 1 for r this th e eb beauty b au has < writteEt W t sjbriesv Ii faries rtes nd naes naessays udessays es essays says for the magazines since sinc she fourteen and it matters not kings and princes princcspraisc praise her beautyShe beauty beautyShe beautyShe
4/17/1904 The Washington times.
HE daintiest woman wo woman womiln ¬ I man miln in inEngland inEnglandthafs iIiEngandthats ° England Englandthats thats C Eady EadyVictoria L t uc y yVictoria yA yVictoria Victoria MarjorieJianners Marjorie MarjorieManners Marjorieranners A Manners and a aJA asweeter asweeter blindly worships wherp wher royalty ven ventures ven ventures v6ntures ¬ tures to declare itself itselfChis itselfEhis itselfThis This lovely bit of girlhood girlhoodis is the thegoddaughter thegoddaughter thegoddaughter goddaughter of the late Queen QueenVictoria QueenVictoria QueenVictoria Victoria and twenty years ago was waschristened waschristened waschristened pusly Q ly then as now 1 for r this th e eb beauty b au has < writteEt W t sjbriesv Ii faries rtes nd naes naessays udessays es essays says for the magazines since sinc she fourteen and it matters not kings and princes princcspraisc praise her beautyShe beauty beautyShe beautyShe
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congregate snow is not usually usuat1 so deep but that thatsome jsome scant grazing can bo had by paw pawIng pawing j it away awa awaThe awayThe supply suppl of food IE It Insuffcient for forthe I Ithe i ithe herds however because Jacksons JacksonsHole JacksonsHole has been discovered by haymakers haymakerswho ha haymakerswho makers makerswho cut the grass in Summer and un uni unless unless the boundaries of Yellowstone Park Parkarc Parkarc Parkare extended to take in the basin and so sopreserve sopreserve sopreserve the Winter Inter range for the wild wildanimals wildanimals the great hands of elk will dis disappear disappear disappear ¬ like the th btifIalo from the face of v wwnavv wlr Vw rv 0 0J 0r rvdlfEliSDoz g lJAIi dlfEliSDoz JrS OZBN n = Jlil iE CRJ CXILTI7 l2HE T a uj 1fK J RBNOf1ldS tDrONH 7aBH rIAHNI 1frNo IlYDa LUibE if AYiFL47 s z ff JT vZa ZD D
4/17/1904 The Washington times.
congregate snow is not usually usuat1 so deep but that thatsome jsome scant grazing can bo had by paw pawIng pawing j it away awa awaThe awayThe supply suppl of food IE It Insuffcient for forthe I Ithe i ithe herds however because Jacksons JacksonsHole JacksonsHole has been discovered by haymakers haymakerswho ha haymakerswho makers makerswho cut the grass in Summer and un uni unless unless the boundaries of Yellowstone Park Parkarc Parkarc Parkare extended to take in the basin and so sopreserve sopreserve sopreserve the Winter Inter range for the wild wildanimals wildanimals the great hands of elk will dis disappear disappear disappear ¬ like the th btifIalo from the face of v wwnavv wlr Vw rv 0 0J 0r rvdlfEliSDoz g lJAIi dlfEliSDoz JrS OZBN n = Jlil iE CRJ CXILTI7 l2HE T a uj 1fK J RBNOf1ldS tDrONH 7aBH rIAHNI 1frNo IlYDa LUibE if AYiFL47 s z ff JT vZa ZD D
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Our Sketch Shows Two TwoGood TwoGood TwoGood Good Models Modelsin in the RoundFlat Round RoundFlat RoundFl Flat Fl t Shp3 Shp Sh p So Popular PopularJust PopularJust PopularJust Just Now While flowerwreathed hats do I comport with falling snowflakes they are in the shop windows and some ome womens heads already alreadyOur alreadyOur alreadyOur Our sketch shows two pretty in the round shapes so popular at ent The upper one has Its crown tirely covered with rose leaves the being encircled with wJthpale pale yellow and there is no other trimming save cachepelgne of pale yellow ribbon ribbonThe ribbonThesecond ribbonThe The Thesecond second hat Is sot of tuscan Treathed eathed with pink roses and hair fern fernThe fornThe fernThe The flower hats arc remarkably ro arkabY ant bewitching this season si s < ron and women find it possible to resist ing in one at least if 1 not for for wear wear the daytime to don In the evening
4/28/1904 The Washington times.
Our Sketch Shows Two TwoGood TwoGood TwoGood Good Models Modelsin in the RoundFlat Round RoundFlat RoundFl Flat Fl t Shp3 Shp Sh p So Popular PopularJust PopularJust PopularJust Just Now While flowerwreathed hats do I comport with falling snowflakes they are in the shop windows and some ome womens heads already alreadyOur alreadyOur alreadyOur Our sketch shows two pretty in the round shapes so popular at ent The upper one has Its crown tirely covered with rose leaves the being encircled with wJthpale pale yellow and there is no other trimming save cachepelgne of pale yellow ribbon ribbonThe ribbonThesecond ribbonThe The Thesecond second hat Is sot of tuscan Treathed eathed with pink roses and hair fern fernThe fornThe fernThe The flower hats arc remarkably ro arkabY ant bewitching this season si s < ron and women find it possible to resist ing in one at least if 1 not for for wear wear the daytime to don In the evening
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Derby Day Mat TVhen th# c*lpbratM We« End hatter trlio enjoy* tie rare distinction of ymisjaa; to His Majesty jrav^ Tross & Co.. manufacturers, the order for Kin? Edward's and summer hats, all fashionable London was on the gui vlre as to what style and shade tils Majesty had selected to wear on Derby day. After the modal been formulated, and received the royal approval, the secret was out. and the ha: found to be a thin? of beauty in the shape of a drab or pearl-colored derby, one of most becoming and attractive hats even the Kin? has ever worn. Directly orders models of the hat poured In from ail parts of England and the Continent, and at
5/10/1904 New-York tribune.
Derby Day Mat TVhen th# c*lpbratM We« End hatter trlio enjoy* tie rare distinction of ymisjaa; to His Majesty jrav^ Tross & Co.. manufacturers, the order for Kin? Edward's and summer hats, all fashionable London was on the gui vlre as to what style and shade tils Majesty had selected to wear on Derby day. After the modal been formulated, and received the royal approval, the secret was out. and the ha: found to be a thin? of beauty in the shape of a drab or pearl-colored derby, one of most becoming and attractive hats even the Kin? has ever worn. Directly orders models of the hat poured In from ail parts of England and the Continent, and at
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I LIKE CITY SPORTS to any lengths to keep out the ob noxious sports Jit replied Tho laws titer law thats all ther Is to it Aint no gcttln round thet Is therT Them as does try to got around It nil KIt hurt thcts all Chirr Sulllxan keeps a roadhouse and It undoubtedly wouldnt send cus tomors flecking to his place to hear that there was n boxlnc exhibition a short distance away His place stands I at what was once the entrance to the Gutlenliurg track The mouldering archUfture of the grandstand linrts a Inncholv ritgnttv to Chief Sulli vans caravansary anti tho Chief him self a Imtehetfaeed keeneved Yankee sits whittling on his porch all day llkn nn embodiment of thn spirit of destruction at work all about him Minister 11 In Arms By tar the inott powerful adversary 8f Tim hurst proposal however Is I nIl > Rev Isaac W rtowen of the Uroo Reform Church of OuttenmirK Mr I Gotten told The Cxenlrig World ro I porl r that he would brow himself i heart and soul Into the fight against I what Jic termed the moat nerlom evil that linn metmcort our community alnce I the days of the Guttcnburg track Already the Law nnd Order tiocloty of Guttenhnrg nn organlratlon whoso I memb r hlp Is kept a Mrlct secret has held a meeting nnd plans are on foot to hold n grand massmeeting of pro test some time next week Mr Gnnnii hili not yet seen Dl trlct
5/12/1904 The evening world.
I LIKE CITY SPORTS to any lengths to keep out the ob noxious sports Jit replied Tho laws titer law thats all ther Is to it Aint no gcttln round thet Is therT Them as does try to got around It nil KIt hurt thcts all Chirr Sulllxan keeps a roadhouse and It undoubtedly wouldnt send cus tomors flecking to his place to hear that there was n boxlnc exhibition a short distance away His place stands I at what was once the entrance to the Gutlenliurg track The mouldering archUfture of the grandstand linrts a Inncholv ritgnttv to Chief Sulli vans caravansary anti tho Chief him self a Imtehetfaeed keeneved Yankee sits whittling on his porch all day llkn nn embodiment of thn spirit of destruction at work all about him Minister 11 In Arms By tar the inott powerful adversary 8f Tim hurst proposal however Is I nIl > Rev Isaac W rtowen of the Uroo Reform Church of OuttenmirK Mr I Gotten told The Cxenlrig World ro I porl r that he would brow himself i heart and soul Into the fight against I what Jic termed the moat nerlom evil that linn metmcort our community alnce I the days of the Guttcnburg track Already the Law nnd Order tiocloty of Guttenhnrg nn organlratlon whoso I memb r hlp Is kept a Mrlct secret has held a meeting nnd plans are on foot to hold n grand massmeeting of pro test some time next week Mr Gnnnii hili not yet seen Dl trlct
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1 a rw 144a f fr1 W Q t gT A i ic q Xi Iss bits eisL i a k graduate of ofon wla w weird d Hall llt It i ute t t hf wti wtidire wlaniatt wlaniattit = dire for W on o tb the stag atsde 1 1n it the ttl past t winter J1 ter Mu has been with withPsak wfthd 1Ib Psak Moore Hi Hiplay iddleesah d ft ttd d tt is IBr IBt to L hve feUcia iele UJufri UJe in n that thatof tigttpbt pbt play that t11M s its above ttt > 3 e pert pert4w ale r r N t tt 4w 4wale j t of e t Helot 1 1work aa hats itbe left fend fend4d n4 n4Z = rM 4d 1 idI1t > ee work irk 8hei 8heibut Sh She wQt be lltuli 4IJ t dS dais 4 pia t m IBW Z vrr but b t bre friends who ho k know of heir IC
5/15/1904 The Salt Lake herald.
1 a rw 144a f fr1 W Q t gT A i ic q Xi Iss bits eisL i a k graduate of ofon wla w weird d Hall llt It i ute t t hf wti wtidire wlaniatt wlaniattit = dire for W on o tb the stag atsde 1 1n it the ttl past t winter J1 ter Mu has been with withPsak wfthd 1Ib Psak Moore Hi Hiplay iddleesah d ft ttd d tt is IBr IBt to L hve feUcia iele UJufri UJe in n that thatof tigttpbt pbt play that t11M s its above ttt > 3 e pert pert4w ale r r N t tt 4w 4wale j t of e t Helot 1 1work aa hats itbe left fend fend4d n4 n4Z = rM 4d 1 idI1t > ee work irk 8hei 8heibut Sh She wQt be lltuli 4IJ t dS dais 4 pia t m IBW Z vrr but b t bre friends who ho k know of heir IC
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JAPANESE HASTENING THEIR SHARP FIGHT NEAR KAI-CHOW CAUSES 2,000 - jkl'-iflUdKitiiBalaialE 'itt--,41B&WHaaaailaMaflalaM . MM Miiillllllllllll t . TTTlmTv7mTTTmrTmTTmTTm' . . ..'., BATTLESHIP HATSUSE. WHICH WAS DESTROYED BT RUSSIAN JUNES. The Hatsuse Is a sbter ship of the Shiklshima. ami It was thought by the Russians that It was the latter vessel which was lost. The Hatsnso was one of the largest and most modern flghtlng machines In the world. OPERATIONS AGAINST Advanced Within RAILROAD IS Chinese Iireak tbe Are KOREA Formally- cessions mediate Xow London, May
5/20/1904 The St. Louis Republic.
JAPANESE HASTENING THEIR SHARP FIGHT NEAR KAI-CHOW CAUSES 2,000 - jkl'-iflUdKitiiBalaialE 'itt--,41B&WHaaaailaMaflalaM . MM Miiillllllllllll t . TTTlmTv7mTTTmrTmTTmTTm' . . ..'., BATTLESHIP HATSUSE. WHICH WAS DESTROYED BT RUSSIAN JUNES. The Hatsuse Is a sbter ship of the Shiklshima. ami It was thought by the Russians that It was the latter vessel which was lost. The Hatsnso was one of the largest and most modern flghtlng machines In the world. OPERATIONS AGAINST Advanced Within RAILROAD IS Chinese Iireak tbe Are KOREA Formally- cessions mediate Xow London, May
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Japanese Battleship Hatsuse, Sunk by a Russian Mine
5/20/1904 The Savannah morning news.
Japanese Battleship Hatsuse, Sunk by a Russian Mine
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Even the Filmy Wedding Frock is Now Made Up to be Used After the Ceremony, Cus tom of Saving This Garment Being Quite Out of Vogue. L a ""tf&r ECySfyf" KK?Mr &2r''?f5T i 1 rA H BECOMING tiRT hJT '-WT VJ WW Tv&sar-t jriapc gnd 11 r ( J 'o rn'"'Ps WW "Hue t - tir-ir wm re. I I i j r- i Mil VLLE 0?jWD xrrTM II I " T tl WW LR(ZtZ.- TttC PMTTErPIV , vy V I or- TSHICH -- ssSr - V , RniDAL LINGERIE. jf x ,.aiK T M -v No one tvf is The moilf. ? X IScromfcip: linos niv of jnin :is much importance this summer of 1!!0J :is ariis- tic ftihrics snifl elaborate trimmings. The summer fashions wore never more tempt in?, nnrt J it's haril to resist sill the "X l:iintv fripperies. tc say mtthinj: of ihe nowns ami .-, hats. Her ealHn? rostume must also he considered, as well as ; ;, her more simple moriim? dresses. ?!ie must have shirt waisT suits of linen and taffeta silk, as well as skirts and coat costumes. Then there are the lace coats, which are so osenlir.l . I his stimmer to the fashion- ahle woman's wardrobe. One or two of thee at least must ; he included. Of cour.-e. an evening 'X pown plays an important ?. parr. X The prettiest of these frocks this years have a quaint touch to them, and are made with many shir- " rinps held in place with X featherhoii" cordinps and ilnintv livle dd fashioned
5/22/1904 The St. Louis Republic.
Even the Filmy Wedding Frock is Now Made Up to be Used After the Ceremony, Cus tom of Saving This Garment Being Quite Out of Vogue. L a ""tf&r ECySfyf" KK?Mr &2r''?f5T i 1 rA H BECOMING tiRT hJT '-WT VJ WW Tv&sar-t jriapc gnd 11 r ( J 'o rn'"'Ps WW "Hue t - tir-ir wm re. I I i j r- i Mil VLLE 0?jWD xrrTM II I " T tl WW LR(ZtZ.- TttC PMTTErPIV , vy V I or- TSHICH -- ssSr - V , RniDAL LINGERIE. jf x ,.aiK T M -v No one tvf is The moilf. ? X IScromfcip: linos niv of jnin :is much importance this summer of 1!!0J :is ariis- tic ftihrics snifl elaborate trimmings. The summer fashions wore never more tempt in?, nnrt J it's haril to resist sill the "X l:iintv fripperies. tc say mtthinj: of ihe nowns ami .-, hats. Her ealHn? rostume must also he considered, as well as ; ;, her more simple moriim? dresses. ?!ie must have shirt waisT suits of linen and taffeta silk, as well as skirts and coat costumes. Then there are the lace coats, which are so osenlir.l . I his stimmer to the fashion- ahle woman's wardrobe. One or two of thee at least must ; he included. Of cour.-e. an evening 'X pown plays an important ?. parr. X The prettiest of these frocks this years have a quaint touch to them, and are made with many shir- " rinps held in place with X featherhoii" cordinps and ilnintv livle dd fashioned
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THE JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSUSE.
5/26/1904 Valentine Democrat.
THE JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSUSE.
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THE JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSUSE.
5/31/1904 Wausau pilot.
THE JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSUSE.
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1 ' ' ' ' J JAPANESE GUN MANUFACTORY. LONDON", May 30. A photo of lhf lnteiioi of the great gun machine shop at Elswick. taken Avhlle the big guns for the Japanese battleship Hatsuse Thousands of Acres Plooded. OKLAHOMA CITY. Oklu.. June
6/4/1904 The Salt Lake tribune.
1 ' ' ' ' J JAPANESE GUN MANUFACTORY. LONDON", May 30. A photo of lhf lnteiioi of the great gun machine shop at Elswick. taken Avhlle the big guns for the Japanese battleship Hatsuse Thousands of Acres Plooded. OKLAHOMA CITY. Oklu.. June
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JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSESL .* ‘ i l'x * o;; . . , *4 ■ | - a<*r*rjr SwnA by Russian Mine Off Port Arthur, with Great Loss of Liie.
6/8/1904 Watertown republican.
JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSESL .* ‘ i l'x * o;; . . , *4 ■ | - a<*r*rjr SwnA by Russian Mine Off Port Arthur, with Great Loss of Liie.
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A YER Warns Summer Girls e be < find Tells of ihBesi KnoWn Means of Fighting SUnbUrn COUPLE of summers ago aome n very foolish persona to whom tanned skin wan becoming set lhe fashion to go about bareheaded In the glaring sunshine They awoko to tho folly of their ways however when they found that neither time npr care could quite restore the former whiteness of the complexion Bo this summer sunbonnets lingerie hats and veils will be the order of the day and a very good order too for It Is about ono woman In a thousand who looks well with her face brown and sun Ma ic t A compress of warm water fhould applied to the Inllamtid pjellds or of wItch hazel When the Is somewhat allayed the upper part the lid should be massaged very using n rood cold cream If tho Is easily Irritated by the nun a little of the following cream may well rubbed on the face nnd over with n llttlt powder before out of doors Strawberry Cream Put six of sweet nlniond oil Into tlis ride jeceptaclo nt n custard Put ns much water Into the Ide boiler ax though you were about make a eustnid Hot the two one
6/9/1904 The evening world.
A YER Warns Summer Girls e be < find Tells of ihBesi KnoWn Means of Fighting SUnbUrn COUPLE of summers ago aome n very foolish persona to whom tanned skin wan becoming set lhe fashion to go about bareheaded In the glaring sunshine They awoko to tho folly of their ways however when they found that neither time npr care could quite restore the former whiteness of the complexion Bo this summer sunbonnets lingerie hats and veils will be the order of the day and a very good order too for It Is about ono woman In a thousand who looks well with her face brown and sun Ma ic t A compress of warm water fhould applied to the Inllamtid pjellds or of wItch hazel When the Is somewhat allayed the upper part the lid should be massaged very using n rood cold cream If tho Is easily Irritated by the nun a little of the following cream may well rubbed on the face nnd over with n llttlt powder before out of doors Strawberry Cream Put six of sweet nlniond oil Into tlis ride jeceptaclo nt n custard Put ns much water Into the Ide boiler ax though you were about make a eustnid Hot the two one
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JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSUSE. WaafT ftff1Hffi' ,aWaaaaatltaiaaaPbPBaaWnfy'ft TtPtht!WBBwE Su.iA Ay Russian Mine Oft Port Arthur, with Great Loss of Lite,
6/18/1904 Chicago eagle.
JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSUSE. WaafT ftff1Hffi' ,aWaaaaatltaiaaaPbPBaaWnfy'ft TtPtht!WBBwE Su.iA Ay Russian Mine Oft Port Arthur, with Great Loss of Lite,
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JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSUSE. ■ Sunk by Russian Mine Off Port Arthur, with Great Loss of Lite.
6/21/1904 Wausau pilot.
JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSUSE. ■ Sunk by Russian Mine Off Port Arthur, with Great Loss of Lite.
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SNAPSHOTS WITH CAMERA AND PEN AT CHICAGO CONVENTION + J ExGovernor Black of New York Talking to a Friend Representative Littlefield of Maine With Hands in Pockets Chats ChatsInformally ChatsInformally I Informally with Governor Carter of Hawaii v < V H 11 11Senator Senator Spooner and ExSecretary Bliss Discussing a a Matter of Mo Moment Moment Momeat ¬ ment A Characteristic Attitude of Sereno C Payne the Republican Repu Ucan House HouseLeader HouseLeader Leader I
6/26/1904 The Washington times.
SNAPSHOTS WITH CAMERA AND PEN AT CHICAGO CONVENTION + J ExGovernor Black of New York Talking to a Friend Representative Littlefield of Maine With Hands in Pockets Chats ChatsInformally ChatsInformally I Informally with Governor Carter of Hawaii v < V H 11 11Senator Senator Spooner and ExSecretary Bliss Discussing a a Matter of Mo Moment Moment Momeat ¬ ment A Characteristic Attitude of Sereno C Payne the Republican Repu Ucan House HouseLeader HouseLeader Leader I
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Representative Littlefield of Maine With Hands in Pockets Chats ChatsInformally ChatsInformally with Governor Carter of
6/26/1904 The Washington times.
Representative Littlefield of Maine With Hands in Pockets Chats ChatsInformally ChatsInformally with Governor Carter of
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STEAMER STANLEY DOLLAR. Carefully picking her way through the mine-fields sown by the Russians in the straits of Korea, the Stanley Dollar, which arrived yesterday from Hakodate, steamed through the outer circles of the storm that is now whirl ing over the Orient. It was on her passage from Weihaiwei, China, across the body of water that washes Eastern Japan that she took to slipping along under s!ow-bell. • There is no speeding of a steamer now in the waters of war- Ftriekc-n Korea, When the pilot sees certain dark red, buoy-like objects coated with rust and seaweed floating quietly by he knows they are filled ivith wreck and death. Over goes his •uheel and the ship curves like a start led thing away from the LMPQUA RIVER— Arrived July 2— Lily, hence June 12 July 3 — Stmr San from San Pedro. ASTORIA— Sailed July 6— Stmr Redondo, Han Pedro ASTOiUA— Arrived July 6— Ger ship from Port Los Angeles. TATOOSH— Passed in July 6— Stmr from Nome; Br stmr Aorangl, from for Vancouver. Passed out July (? — Brig Geneva, from Blakelry for San Francisco. PORT TOWXSEXD- Sailed July C— John G North, for Honolpu. EUREKA— Arrived July 6 — Stmr from Coos Bay. Sailed July C — Stmr Pomona, for San cisco EUREKA— Arrived July 6— Schr Ida hence June 23; stmr South Bay hence July • REDONDO— Sailed July 6— Stmr Lakme. San Francisco GRAYS HARBOR— Arrived July C— Rival hence July 2. GHATS HARBOR— Sailed July 6— North Bend, for Pan Francisco. EVERETT— Sailed July &— Stmr Robert lar, for San Francisco.
7/7/1904 The San Francisco call.
STEAMER STANLEY DOLLAR. Carefully picking her way through the mine-fields sown by the Russians in the straits of Korea, the Stanley Dollar, which arrived yesterday from Hakodate, steamed through the outer circles of the storm that is now whirl ing over the Orient. It was on her passage from Weihaiwei, China, across the body of water that washes Eastern Japan that she took to slipping along under s!ow-bell. • There is no speeding of a steamer now in the waters of war- Ftriekc-n Korea, When the pilot sees certain dark red, buoy-like objects coated with rust and seaweed floating quietly by he knows they are filled ivith wreck and death. Over goes his •uheel and the ship curves like a start led thing away from the LMPQUA RIVER— Arrived July 2— Lily, hence June 12 July 3 — Stmr San from San Pedro. ASTORIA— Sailed July 6— Stmr Redondo, Han Pedro ASTOiUA— Arrived July 6— Ger ship from Port Los Angeles. TATOOSH— Passed in July 6— Stmr from Nome; Br stmr Aorangl, from for Vancouver. Passed out July (? — Brig Geneva, from Blakelry for San Francisco. PORT TOWXSEXD- Sailed July C— John G North, for Honolpu. EUREKA— Arrived July 6 — Stmr from Coos Bay. Sailed July C — Stmr Pomona, for San cisco EUREKA— Arrived July 6— Schr Ida hence June 23; stmr South Bay hence July • REDONDO— Sailed July 6— Stmr Lakme. San Francisco GRAYS HARBOR— Arrived July C— Rival hence July 2. GHATS HARBOR— Sailed July 6— North Bend, for Pan Francisco. EVERETT— Sailed July &— Stmr Robert lar, for San Francisco.
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JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSliSE. m-j Soak by Hesstea gist Oft Fur* Arthur, with Great toss of Lite.
7/9/1904 The Coeur d'Alene press.
JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSliSE. m-j Soak by Hesstea gist Oft Fur* Arthur, with Great toss of Lite.
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PAKRER IN HIS HISHOME HISHOME HISROME HOME AT ESOPUS Ksortra July tPllgrlms Pilgrims to Esopua Esopuaho E op 1s 1sIh ho homo of Chief Judge Jklton tton Brook BrookInrker BrooklInrklr will find It unmoved by its own ownsudden ownIIlIldln d dsudden fame fameTim ClmeTho famoflip Tim station stands In a clearing clearln an acre acreIn acreIn acrea nro1 It is il a little blggor than a hat hatanil hatRlill hatSd covered with Ivy Tho freight house hou houseis e eIII nn Ironclad box car A water tank tankand tankRnd tankn n wiiwphorocomplete lIIl1phoro complete the things netcea netceanary neceKIIr neceescary for tlio rnllroad norvlco norvlcoOn J On ono side Ihl two houses hou eR are visible vii lble among amongtho amongthl amonglip trees and on tho other as 8 far as 8 visionranches vision visionrenrhpH visionrllIlhI theroaro but five A farmer rides ridesTut ridesa Cut horse across the bridge of Richs RichsPond RiohsPond RlohePond and the hoof beats send the pickerel pickereljsurrylng plokerelurrlnl pickerelanirrytng urrlnl out of their shady lurking places placeslooking plaocJc placesyooking looking Jc > okln In the direction of the Hudsonthere Hudson Hudsonthem Hud on onIIlro ID II nothing but a vista of trees ex except exNpt excrpt ¬ where the mud road breaks the green greenFrom greenFrom greenFrom this wood come the songs of many manybird manyhi reiI find now no and then the heavy heaT flop flopflap lioN flopVflop lioNflop of a rising crow crowSo crowSo crowNo So noise of modern things breaks in inupon inIIpon Inupon nn almost perfect silence except exceptwhen exceptwhpn exceptwhen the operator In the little station opens openshis openshll opensi key to send to the waiting world the thenews theneWs that ihat Judge Parker has taken his hismorning hismorning hismorning swim swimYoiir swimYour swimSoar Your pilgrim crosses the bridge be between ¬ the lines of willows and andtakesto takes takbetothe takbetotheroad to the theroad theroad Soon the village 11age hotel appears at a abend abend abend Its host Patrick Quinn Quinnno no Dutchman Dutobmanheis Dutohmanhpis Dutchmanho is a conservative man His place is isfull Is Isfull lefull of guests but he makes no move to tobuild tobuild tobuild nn annex or provide an an extra meal mealIve mealIve mealIve Ive been like this a good many yearsx years yearshe yearshe says to those who urge enterprise andits and andIts andWII too lato to begin anything new newCJulnn newQuinn newQuinn Quinn has seven eons two grandsons and andfour andfour andfour sonsinlaw 110M Inlaw who vote They and andhp andS will all vote for Judge Parker or they theyare theyare theyare no longer Qulnns He ha baa other descendantafifty de descendants de8CPndant8fift ¬ fifty in all allWhen allWhen allWhen When you pass pa from the house of Quinn Quinnand Quinnand Quinnand face the road once more you go forward forwardto nothing but tranquillity The lane laneleads laneleacl laneleads up hill and down dale Ita sidesre sidesretained sidesreI aides re reY ¬ by mortarless s stone fences Along Alongthese Alongthee Alongthese the chipmunk ohlpmunksprintaunpaced sprints unpaced The Thewoodpecker Thewoodpecker Thewoodpecker beats his hl tattoo tat < < > on the tre trees treesthat treesthat a athat stand guard behind the fence and andalmoa andalmoe andalmos arch it with a verdure now In its itsmoot itsmOAt itsmost perfect season seasonThe seasonThe seasonis The road winds right and left dodgingenough dodging dodgingenough dodgingfOno gh hUls to make possible thoroughfare thoroughfarefor carriages Half a mile from the station stationthere lltatlonthere stationthere comes a sudden bend In the road roadand roadnnd roadand from a little eminence through the thotrees thetrppII ther the Hudson appears appearsA A glance to the loft and one sees ce flutter fluttering ftutterin flutterIng ¬ between and beyond the pyramid tops topsof topsof topsof two great pines an American flag It Itflir Itf1iI Iti > n from the staff on Rosemount Hill Hillthe HUltho Hillt home of Judge Parker ParkerIt It is not a big house as the pilgrim ob observes obOi ohkrves ¬ rell when he has passed pas ed through the thegateway theJ thegateway and up the hilly gravel path It Is Issquare Issquaro bsquaro and white with blinds of very dark darkgreen darkgTlCn darkgreen and a great veranda verandaThe verandaThe verandaThe main part of the house hou e is I of stone stoneand lltoneand stoneand was built o M 0 P nn vB ALT ONtB PARKER 4 rA f t1iE osE PIIfffi AARXL R dV L L 181l iBR I a email in ll place then theubutwfnp but wing have made macielt macielthOlM it ita ita a house house of comfortable comlortAblulze size but not a man manikm mans manOne mansloe sloe s ikmOno One of the reasons why Judge Parkerwould Parkerwould Parker Parkerwould would not have a telegraph tel graph operator o ator in inthe Inthe inthe the house during the convention was W 8 that thatthere thatthere thatthere there was ho room for him A statesman statesmanmore statesmianmore statesmanmore more concerned probably would have havemade havomade havemade made room roomThOjflno roOmThollno roomThe1jlno ThOjflno lawn Is studded with small IImal1shrub IImal1shruband shrubs shrubsand shrubsand and plants In bloom This lawn affords affordsa a view possibly po lblY unsurpassed In point of ofrestful orreetJui ofrestful restful beauty and jordant grandeur by byany byany byany any other home in the world worldTrees worldTreo worldTrees Trees arc plentiful on the slope between betweenthe betweenthe betweenthe the house hou e and the river but they are not BO BOclosely 110closely soclosely closely set that an Inch of tho magnificent magnificentpanorama magnificentpanorama magnificentpanorama panorama is spoiled Two miles of the thoHudson theHudson theHudson Hudson lies before the visitor visitorSteamers v18ltbrStsamers vieitbrSteamers Steamers come silently along disappear disappearing ¬ ing for a time behind the woods of Esopua EsopuaIsland EeopUIIbland EsopusIsland Island which lies so close to the east shore shorethat Ihorethat shorethat that it appears from Rosemount to be a apart apart apart part of the foot of the Catskills Cat lkllls A gasolene gasolenelaunch gMOlenelaunch gasolenelaunch launch hurries by noiselessly nolselee ly Now and andthen andtben andthen then a pair of canoeists canoel ts bared to the waist waistpaddle wallltpaddle waistpaddle paddle up the stream streamBut 0 0But I IBut But no sound comes to Rosemount as asit sait asit it lilts onits on Its lonelyihill and surveys a picture apicturethat picturethat picturethat that is all greena green that is almost JUD6E PRRKERS DAU6HTER a
7/10/1904 The sun.
PAKRER IN HIS HISHOME HISHOME HISROME HOME AT ESOPUS Ksortra July tPllgrlms Pilgrims to Esopua Esopuaho E op 1s 1sIh ho homo of Chief Judge Jklton tton Brook BrookInrker BrooklInrklr will find It unmoved by its own ownsudden ownIIlIldln d dsudden fame fameTim ClmeTho famoflip Tim station stands In a clearing clearln an acre acreIn acreIn acrea nro1 It is il a little blggor than a hat hatanil hatRlill hatSd covered with Ivy Tho freight house hou houseis e eIII nn Ironclad box car A water tank tankand tankRnd tankn n wiiwphorocomplete lIIl1phoro complete the things netcea netceanary neceKIIr neceescary for tlio rnllroad norvlco norvlcoOn J On ono side Ihl two houses hou eR are visible vii lble among amongtho amongthl amonglip trees and on tho other as 8 far as 8 visionranches vision visionrenrhpH visionrllIlhI theroaro but five A farmer rides ridesTut ridesa Cut horse across the bridge of Richs RichsPond RiohsPond RlohePond and the hoof beats send the pickerel pickereljsurrylng plokerelurrlnl pickerelanirrytng urrlnl out of their shady lurking places placeslooking plaocJc placesyooking looking Jc > okln In the direction of the Hudsonthere Hudson Hudsonthem Hud on onIIlro ID II nothing but a vista of trees ex except exNpt excrpt ¬ where the mud road breaks the green greenFrom greenFrom greenFrom this wood come the songs of many manybird manyhi reiI find now no and then the heavy heaT flop flopflap lioN flopVflop lioNflop of a rising crow crowSo crowSo crowNo So noise of modern things breaks in inupon inIIpon Inupon nn almost perfect silence except exceptwhen exceptwhpn exceptwhen the operator In the little station opens openshis openshll opensi key to send to the waiting world the thenews theneWs that ihat Judge Parker has taken his hismorning hismorning hismorning swim swimYoiir swimYour swimSoar Your pilgrim crosses the bridge be between ¬ the lines of willows and andtakesto takes takbetothe takbetotheroad to the theroad theroad Soon the village 11age hotel appears at a abend abend abend Its host Patrick Quinn Quinnno no Dutchman Dutobmanheis Dutohmanhpis Dutchmanho is a conservative man His place is isfull Is Isfull lefull of guests but he makes no move to tobuild tobuild tobuild nn annex or provide an an extra meal mealIve mealIve mealIve Ive been like this a good many yearsx years yearshe yearshe says to those who urge enterprise andits and andIts andWII too lato to begin anything new newCJulnn newQuinn newQuinn Quinn has seven eons two grandsons and andfour andfour andfour sonsinlaw 110M Inlaw who vote They and andhp andS will all vote for Judge Parker or they theyare theyare theyare no longer Qulnns He ha baa other descendantafifty de descendants de8CPndant8fift ¬ fifty in all allWhen allWhen allWhen When you pass pa from the house of Quinn Quinnand Quinnand Quinnand face the road once more you go forward forwardto nothing but tranquillity The lane laneleads laneleacl laneleads up hill and down dale Ita sidesre sidesretained sidesreI aides re reY ¬ by mortarless s stone fences Along Alongthese Alongthee Alongthese the chipmunk ohlpmunksprintaunpaced sprints unpaced The Thewoodpecker Thewoodpecker Thewoodpecker beats his hl tattoo tat < < > on the tre trees treesthat treesthat a athat stand guard behind the fence and andalmoa andalmoe andalmos arch it with a verdure now In its itsmoot itsmOAt itsmost perfect season seasonThe seasonThe seasonis The road winds right and left dodgingenough dodging dodgingenough dodgingfOno gh hUls to make possible thoroughfare thoroughfarefor carriages Half a mile from the station stationthere lltatlonthere stationthere comes a sudden bend In the road roadand roadnnd roadand from a little eminence through the thotrees thetrppII ther the Hudson appears appearsA A glance to the loft and one sees ce flutter fluttering ftutterin flutterIng ¬ between and beyond the pyramid tops topsof topsof topsof two great pines an American flag It Itflir Itf1iI Iti > n from the staff on Rosemount Hill Hillthe HUltho Hillt home of Judge Parker ParkerIt It is not a big house as the pilgrim ob observes obOi ohkrves ¬ rell when he has passed pas ed through the thegateway theJ thegateway and up the hilly gravel path It Is Issquare Issquaro bsquaro and white with blinds of very dark darkgreen darkgTlCn darkgreen and a great veranda verandaThe verandaThe verandaThe main part of the house hou e is I of stone stoneand lltoneand stoneand was built o M 0 P nn vB ALT ONtB PARKER 4 rA f t1iE osE PIIfffi AARXL R dV L L 181l iBR I a email in ll place then theubutwfnp but wing have made macielt macielthOlM it ita ita a house house of comfortable comlortAblulze size but not a man manikm mans manOne mansloe sloe s ikmOno One of the reasons why Judge Parkerwould Parkerwould Parker Parkerwould would not have a telegraph tel graph operator o ator in inthe Inthe inthe the house during the convention was W 8 that thatthere thatthere thatthere there was ho room for him A statesman statesmanmore statesmianmore statesmanmore more concerned probably would have havemade havomade havemade made room roomThOjflno roOmThollno roomThe1jlno ThOjflno lawn Is studded with small IImal1shrub IImal1shruband shrubs shrubsand shrubsand and plants In bloom This lawn affords affordsa a view possibly po lblY unsurpassed In point of ofrestful orreetJui ofrestful restful beauty and jordant grandeur by byany byany byany any other home in the world worldTrees worldTreo worldTrees Trees arc plentiful on the slope between betweenthe betweenthe betweenthe the house hou e and the river but they are not BO BOclosely 110closely soclosely closely set that an Inch of tho magnificent magnificentpanorama magnificentpanorama magnificentpanorama panorama is spoiled Two miles of the thoHudson theHudson theHudson Hudson lies before the visitor visitorSteamers v18ltbrStsamers vieitbrSteamers Steamers come silently along disappear disappearing ¬ ing for a time behind the woods of Esopua EsopuaIsland EeopUIIbland EsopusIsland Island which lies so close to the east shore shorethat Ihorethat shorethat that it appears from Rosemount to be a apart apart apart part of the foot of the Catskills Cat lkllls A gasolene gasolenelaunch gMOlenelaunch gasolenelaunch launch hurries by noiselessly nolselee ly Now and andthen andtben andthen then a pair of canoeists canoel ts bared to the waist waistpaddle wallltpaddle waistpaddle paddle up the stream streamBut 0 0But I IBut But no sound comes to Rosemount as asit sait asit it lilts onits on Its lonelyihill and surveys a picture apicturethat picturethat picturethat that is all greena green that is almost JUD6E PRRKERS DAU6HTER a
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QrABTET OF PRETTY HATS. I ■
7/13/1904 New-York tribune.
QrABTET OF PRETTY HATS. I ■
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JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSDSE. T wr • • V £ ! ». r- - f >... . ■ .*■ Samt by Ha »slam Hlat Off Port Artbar, w lib Orrai Less of LII»,
7/21/1904 The Nezperce herald.
JAPANESE BATTLESHIP HATSDSE. T wr • • V £ ! ». r- - f >... . ■ .*■ Samt by Ha »slam Hlat Off Port Artbar, w lib Orrai Less of LII»,
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TSflJii i5- flV .. . . . -r. Laca r e"A ?jh?Js &s y Jv5V5B ssssssviSSSffKsESZjMiSj rpSL?? -, - 1 V ? 1 1 " r . if - .-,- jM f Mr '"' - ft "m rill- - TWO JAP DISASTERS IN TA-U EX-WAN BAY. NEAR DALXY. When Admiral Togo determined to clear the port of Dalny as a naval base for the Japanese fleets, he did not fall to realize the great risks to be run bcfJM i be numerous marine mines plac-;l by the Russians could be moved. Duri ng this apparently peaceful opera tion the battle-ship Hatsuse wa3 sunk, the armored cruiser Yoshino rammed, and two torpedo boat des Uoyers blown Into smithereens by contact mines. The group lllust ration gives the appearance of the two principal vessels lost by Admlr al Togo, and the men who com manded them.
7/27/1904 Bisbee daily review.
TSflJii i5- flV .. . . . -r. Laca r e"A ?jh?Js &s y Jv5V5B ssssssviSSSffKsESZjMiSj rpSL?? -, - 1 V ? 1 1 " r . if - .-,- jM f Mr '"' - ft "m rill- - TWO JAP DISASTERS IN TA-U EX-WAN BAY. NEAR DALXY. When Admiral Togo determined to clear the port of Dalny as a naval base for the Japanese fleets, he did not fall to realize the great risks to be run bcfJM i be numerous marine mines plac-;l by the Russians could be moved. Duri ng this apparently peaceful opera tion the battle-ship Hatsuse wa3 sunk, the armored cruiser Yoshino rammed, and two torpedo boat des Uoyers blown Into smithereens by contact mines. The group lllust ration gives the appearance of the two principal vessels lost by Admlr al Togo, and the men who com manded them.
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A CRAFT CRAFTTHATSAmSONSHORE THAT SAILS S ON SHORE h L an d B oatUeWj > orJ orJE
8/14/1904 The Washington times.
A CRAFT CRAFTTHATSAmSONSHORE THAT SAILS S ON SHORE h L an d B oatUeWj > orJ orJE
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S ILLUSTRATED WITH PHOTOGRAPHS OF SCENES SCENES7lTENDING ATTENDING TII THE STRIKE STIiIKGGIRL STRIKEGIRL STRlI1LI STRlI1LGIRL I GIRL STRIKERS WALKING OUT POLICE ARRESTING A DRIVER DRIVERThe DRIVERThe DRIVERThe The Teamsters by Their Active Sympathy With the Strikers Have Causedthe Caused Causedthe Causeathe the Officers a Great Deal of Trouble TroubleMarvelous TroubleMarveous TroubleMarvelous Marvelous Rapidity and an Thoroughness With WithWhich WithWhich it itWhich Which the Animal is is Disposed of o or Where WhereThey WhereThey ere ereThey They < < Can an Everything Except Exceptthe Exceptthe Exceptthe the Squeal C SS sir we can1 can < 3n everything everythingand cverythlngand everythingV Y V and find a n use for everything everythingexcept everythingexcept everythingexcept except the squealThat squeal squealThat squealTbRt That Is what the man whoshovs whoshows who whoshows shows visitors around In the great greatpacking greatpacking greatpacking packing houses of Chicago says sa s a a adozen adozenJrI dozen dozenor dozenor or more times each day He has been beensaying beensa1ng beensaying saying it over since he first got his hisJob hisjob hisjob Job and he says sa s It nowadays as though thoughhe thoughhe thoughhe he had thought of It this morning while whileat whileat whileat at breakfast breakfastThe breaktastThe breakfastThe The witticism is usually ue u uall lly rewarded with witha witha a laugh laughat at tout with a a smlletor smile for there thereis thereis theres is s truth 16 i 4t what the guide tells you youHave youHave ou ouHave Have you ou ever watched scientific pig pigsticking plgstJcklng pigsticking ¬ sticking and bullockfelling or looked lookedupon lookedupon lookedupon upon an old fat decoy deeo sheep leading leadingother leadingther other ther sheep into the killing pen Have Haveyou Havoou Haveyou not heard or seen them you ou may have haveyour bnoyour haveyour your curiosity gratified by b visiting the thegreat thegroot thegreat great stock yards In Chicago ChicagoThe ChicagoThe ChicagoThe The work is gruesome uesome but tt Is s dex dexterous dexterous dexterous ¬ terous neat and done as humanely as assuch ossuch assuch such things can be Ions on A splendid splendidpiece slJendldpiece splendidpiece piece of machinery machfnerthe the whole thing thingseems tblngseems thingseems seems to move by b clock work workThe workThe workThe The Chicago stock yards They The lie inthe In Inthe Inthe the ugly suburbs of that hat city citya a network networkof n twlrk twlrkot twurkof of whitewashed pens where here are huddled huddledcattle huddledcattle huddledcattle cattle and sheep and bogs brought In Infrom Introm infrom from the West On a big board the thesale thesale thesale sale numbers are marked up uJ upcattle > cattle 20 009 hogs 30000 sheep 30000 O000 ooo The air airis airIs airis is thick with the smell of byres In the theadjoining thtadjoining theadjoining adjoining saloons lounge loun e longlegged longleggeddrovers 10ngI longleggeddrovers gtd gtddrovers drovers in broadbrlmm J hats chew chewIng chewIng chewing Ing tobacco and smoking cigars In tho thobackground thobackground thebackground background are the works of Messr3 MessrsArmour Messr3Armour Messr3Armour Armour of Messrs Swift of Messrs MessrsLlbby MusrsLlbb Meesrs Libby Llbb McNeil Mc ell Co of Nelson Mor Morris Mor Morris Morris ¬ STRIKE STRIKE BREAKERS ESCORTEII ESCORTED ESCORTEDDY BY 3Y POLICE POLICEThe POLICEThe POLICEThe The Shows Them on the to the Swift Plant and Illustrates the th Constant Protection That the Men MenAre 1IenAre MenAre TAKING A RIOTER TO THE STATION STATIONhe If IfThe The he Police Have Been Especially Quick in This Strike in Quelling Disturbances Disturbancesat at Their T eir BeginningI Beginning BeginningIn I In n Spite of o the Magnitude of o the t e Wbr WbrPart Wbtli or fu r t tPart o ot y oy oart Part art t of o the Animal Is s So o Small mall No NoDetail NoDetail r rDetail Detail e So o Insignificant as to toBe toBe Be Overlooked chains raise the body A A chopper divides di divides divides ¬ vides the pelvis hone Seven men skin skinthe skinthe skinthe the hind quarters quartersSkin quartersSkin quartersSkin Skin Even the Tail TailTwo TailTwo TailTwo Two men skin the tail two cut It off offand oftand offand and a boy throws it into a box Six men menfinish menfinish menfinish finish the skinning on the flanks and six sixon sfxon sixon on the back Seven sawyers cut through throughthe throughthe j the bone six clean out the intestines intestineseight IntestinesEflht Intestineseight eight split the backbone four trimmers trimmerstrim trimmerstrim trimmerstrim trim off of tissues from the flanks four fourtrim tourtrim fourtrim trim the inside four spread the hide on onthe onthe onthe the floor and there is inspection In Uon for forcuts torcuts forcuts cuts and a a man loses his job 1C hq is isguilty Isguilt Isguilt guilty guilt of more than two cuts a day Four Fourwheel Fourwheel Fourwheel wheel away aIl the hide two men pump pumpblood pumpblood pumpblood blood from the shoulders six run over overthe oerthe overthe the half carcass to trim again eight men menwork menwork menwork work the two wo halves five work the in inside fnsle inshe ¬ side others work the neck and andshoulders andshoulders andshoulders shoulders saw the backbone scrape serape the theinside theInside theinside the jar look nice Once that layer laycrs laycrsarranged Is Isarranged isarranged arranged th tbe they y seize handfuls of meat meatand meatand meatand and jam j m it with fingers fiag rs and thumbs thumbsuntil thUmbsuntil thumbsuntil until the pot is filled Others Others girls at afilx atl1x atIx ilx Ix s a cover others put on labels others otherswipe othrrsWIpe otherswipe wipe the jars others wrap then ther up upMaking upM upMaking Making M < 11 ng Beef Tea TeaBeef TeaBeel TeaBeef Beef tea Is prepared at Chicago with withthree wIththree withthree three tons of meat and blood at a a time timeIn timeIn timeIn In a a huge boiler and through little trap trapdoors trapdoonJ trapdoors doors of oCgJss glass the dull fluid Is shown on onthe onthe onthe the bubble The extract is run Into little littlepots lIttlcpots littlepots pots takes on consistency as it cools coolsand coolsaud coolsand and Is then aa ox in a a teacup or orsomething orsometltlng orsomething something equally eq dly interesting interestingIn interestingIn In the kitchen a string of cans crawls crawlspast crawlspast crawlspast past a crowd of girls They put a a fluid fluidcalled fluidcaIled fluidcalled called soup into each throw In a a hand handful haooful handful ¬ ful of collops and let the tin pass en anSomebody enSomebody enSomebody Somebody places IkU lid loosely loo ely on each eachThe eachrhe eachThe The slap of a machine fastens the lids lidsThe lidsThe lidsThe The can runs along fate ta 1s on its sW sWand sidand side sideand
8/14/1904 The Washington times.
S ILLUSTRATED WITH PHOTOGRAPHS OF SCENES SCENES7lTENDING ATTENDING TII THE STRIKE STIiIKGGIRL STRIKEGIRL STRlI1LI STRlI1LGIRL I GIRL STRIKERS WALKING OUT POLICE ARRESTING A DRIVER DRIVERThe DRIVERThe DRIVERThe The Teamsters by Their Active Sympathy With the Strikers Have Causedthe Caused Causedthe Causeathe the Officers a Great Deal of Trouble TroubleMarvelous TroubleMarveous TroubleMarvelous Marvelous Rapidity and an Thoroughness With WithWhich WithWhich it itWhich Which the Animal is is Disposed of o or Where WhereThey WhereThey ere ereThey They < < Can an Everything Except Exceptthe Exceptthe Exceptthe the Squeal C SS sir we can1 can < 3n everything everythingand cverythlngand everythingV Y V and find a n use for everything everythingexcept everythingexcept everythingexcept except the squealThat squeal squealThat squealTbRt That Is what the man whoshovs whoshows who whoshows shows visitors around In the great greatpacking greatpacking greatpacking packing houses of Chicago says sa s a a adozen adozenJrI dozen dozenor dozenor or more times each day He has been beensaying beensa1ng beensaying saying it over since he first got his hisJob hisjob hisjob Job and he says sa s It nowadays as though thoughhe thoughhe thoughhe he had thought of It this morning while whileat whileat whileat at breakfast breakfastThe breaktastThe breakfastThe The witticism is usually ue u uall lly rewarded with witha witha a laugh laughat at tout with a a smlletor smile for there thereis thereis theres is s truth 16 i 4t what the guide tells you youHave youHave ou ouHave Have you ou ever watched scientific pig pigsticking plgstJcklng pigsticking ¬ sticking and bullockfelling or looked lookedupon lookedupon lookedupon upon an old fat decoy deeo sheep leading leadingother leadingther other ther sheep into the killing pen Have Haveyou Havoou Haveyou not heard or seen them you ou may have haveyour bnoyour haveyour your curiosity gratified by b visiting the thegreat thegroot thegreat great stock yards In Chicago ChicagoThe ChicagoThe ChicagoThe The work is gruesome uesome but tt Is s dex dexterous dexterous dexterous ¬ terous neat and done as humanely as assuch ossuch assuch such things can be Ions on A splendid splendidpiece slJendldpiece splendidpiece piece of machinery machfnerthe the whole thing thingseems tblngseems thingseems seems to move by b clock work workThe workThe workThe The Chicago stock yards They The lie inthe In Inthe Inthe the ugly suburbs of that hat city citya a network networkof n twlrk twlrkot twurkof of whitewashed pens where here are huddled huddledcattle huddledcattle huddledcattle cattle and sheep and bogs brought In Infrom Introm infrom from the West On a big board the thesale thesale thesale sale numbers are marked up uJ upcattle > cattle 20 009 hogs 30000 sheep 30000 O000 ooo The air airis airIs airis is thick with the smell of byres In the theadjoining thtadjoining theadjoining adjoining saloons lounge loun e longlegged longleggeddrovers 10ngI longleggeddrovers gtd gtddrovers drovers in broadbrlmm J hats chew chewIng chewIng chewing Ing tobacco and smoking cigars In tho thobackground thobackground thebackground background are the works of Messr3 MessrsArmour Messr3Armour Messr3Armour Armour of Messrs Swift of Messrs MessrsLlbby MusrsLlbb Meesrs Libby Llbb McNeil Mc ell Co of Nelson Mor Morris Mor Morris Morris ¬ STRIKE STRIKE BREAKERS ESCORTEII ESCORTED ESCORTEDDY BY 3Y POLICE POLICEThe POLICEThe POLICEThe The Shows Them on the to the Swift Plant and Illustrates the th Constant Protection That the Men MenAre 1IenAre MenAre TAKING A RIOTER TO THE STATION STATIONhe If IfThe The he Police Have Been Especially Quick in This Strike in Quelling Disturbances Disturbancesat at Their T eir BeginningI Beginning BeginningIn I In n Spite of o the Magnitude of o the t e Wbr WbrPart Wbtli or fu r t tPart o ot y oy oart Part art t of o the Animal Is s So o Small mall No NoDetail NoDetail r rDetail Detail e So o Insignificant as to toBe toBe Be Overlooked chains raise the body A A chopper divides di divides divides ¬ vides the pelvis hone Seven men skin skinthe skinthe skinthe the hind quarters quartersSkin quartersSkin quartersSkin Skin Even the Tail TailTwo TailTwo TailTwo Two men skin the tail two cut It off offand oftand offand and a boy throws it into a box Six men menfinish menfinish menfinish finish the skinning on the flanks and six sixon sfxon sixon on the back Seven sawyers cut through throughthe throughthe j the bone six clean out the intestines intestineseight IntestinesEflht Intestineseight eight split the backbone four trimmers trimmerstrim trimmerstrim trimmerstrim trim off of tissues from the flanks four fourtrim tourtrim fourtrim trim the inside four spread the hide on onthe onthe onthe the floor and there is inspection In Uon for forcuts torcuts forcuts cuts and a a man loses his job 1C hq is isguilty Isguilt Isguilt guilty guilt of more than two cuts a day Four Fourwheel Fourwheel Fourwheel wheel away aIl the hide two men pump pumpblood pumpblood pumpblood blood from the shoulders six run over overthe oerthe overthe the half carcass to trim again eight men menwork menwork menwork work the two wo halves five work the in inside fnsle inshe ¬ side others work the neck and andshoulders andshoulders andshoulders shoulders saw the backbone scrape serape the theinside theInside theinside the jar look nice Once that layer laycrs laycrsarranged Is Isarranged isarranged arranged th tbe they y seize handfuls of meat meatand meatand meatand and jam j m it with fingers fiag rs and thumbs thumbsuntil thUmbsuntil thumbsuntil until the pot is filled Others Others girls at afilx atl1x atIx ilx Ix s a cover others put on labels others otherswipe othrrsWIpe otherswipe wipe the jars others wrap then ther up upMaking upM upMaking Making M < 11 ng Beef Tea TeaBeef TeaBeel TeaBeef Beef tea Is prepared at Chicago with withthree wIththree withthree three tons of meat and blood at a a time timeIn timeIn timeIn In a a huge boiler and through little trap trapdoors trapdoonJ trapdoors doors of oCgJss glass the dull fluid Is shown on onthe onthe onthe the bubble The extract is run Into little littlepots lIttlcpots littlepots pots takes on consistency as it cools coolsand coolsaud coolsand and Is then aa ox in a a teacup or orsomething orsometltlng orsomething something equally eq dly interesting interestingIn interestingIn In the kitchen a string of cans crawls crawlspast crawlspast crawlspast past a crowd of girls They put a a fluid fluidcalled fluidcaIled fluidcalled called soup into each throw In a a hand handful haooful handful ¬ ful of collops and let the tin pass en anSomebody enSomebody enSomebody Somebody places IkU lid loosely loo ely on each eachThe eachrhe eachThe The slap of a machine fastens the lids lidsThe lidsThe lidsThe The can runs along fate ta 1s on its sW sWand sidand side sideand
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i offer of M0 dosen Men's Sample Hats, worth up to $3.00. Tour choice QC Saturday, am lonn as they last, at ' HATS have proven equal to those sold in other store st X0O they are unquestionably the best medium priced hats made all the new fall style O Sf) have arrived and will be placed on sale Saturday, at
8/20/1904 Omaha daily bee.
i offer of M0 dosen Men's Sample Hats, worth up to $3.00. Tour choice QC Saturday, am lonn as they last, at ' HATS have proven equal to those sold in other store st X0O they are unquestionably the best medium priced hats made all the new fall style O Sf) have arrived and will be placed on sale Saturday, at
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QUALITIES TYPIFIED BY BEARDS AND UUSTACHES ■ .."- ' *. ."'.-..-.---~-"~-."--..*- -- . ' ' -- -\ - - . • ,--* -—~. - '•- - ;-**-: --- ---""- • .< - ' . WHAT proportion of men wear mustaches nowadays? If you put this question to a St. Paul barber he will prob fcbly answer: |i "Most of 'em." 1 And "most of 'em" is a correct an swer, an answer mathematically ac fcurate, yet not too precise—an answer that just escapes being wrong and is not dangerously positive in either di rection. After a rigid estimate, taking into iconsideration the beards of several hundred prominent men, the conjec ture may be made that a trifle more Ithan half of the best known male re'si- Iflents of St. Paul display mustaches. /[The proportion is about 55 per cent. This does not include the men that Cultivate not only a mustache, but also more or less beard. Such foes of the barber are a small minority. .They number about 15 per cent. And then, as one may divine upon meditation, there is left 80 per cent of leading citizens who wear their lips and chins and cheeks "au naturel"— .Without any decoration whatsoever. "Most of- 'em" stroke mustaches be fcause it's the no that WILLIAM LOUIS KELLY of such conservative monarchs as Czar Nicholas, King Edward and Mayor Smith. MOSES E. CLAPP tate agent constitutes 40 per cent of his tribe, a proportion that rises to 46 : per cent in the St. Paul board of alder RICHARD T. O'CONNOR Among the officers of Ramsey county five out of seven commissioners culti vate mustaches. So, do County KNUTE NELSON cial club, feel impelled to keep their upper lips attractively arranged. Indicates ROBERT A. SMITH is decorously shaven, as are President M. Doran Jr., of the assembly; Presi dent Reuben Warner Jr., of the fire the Burnside, the Vandyke, the square beard, the long beard, et cetera —va- rieties that bespeak differences of taste rather than of character. This full beardedness, without which several great nations have esteemed a man no man at all, is honored abroad in many high places, and here at home its pres tige is confirmed by the extraordinary popularity and official success of Mayor Robert A. Smith. The same general type of beard, through the medium of Judges Kelly and Orr exalts the dis trict bench. And then, in unofficial circles this beard is signally vindicated by the achievements of James J. Hill, as well as by the rank attained among the wholesale merchants of St. Paul by John W. Cooper and William B. Dean. The mustache—that's "Get there:" the smooth face, "Let's think." or "I'll explain;" the full beard, "Be sure you're right, then go ahead." Verily, by their beards ye shall know them. SOLEMN WORDS OF WISDOM Men love goodness, but marry beau ty, which accounts for the present mat rimonial tangle. There is a common error among men and women that conventional sin is virtuous. After a girl is married her college education is remembered as merely one fads.
8/21/1904 The Saint Paul globe.
QUALITIES TYPIFIED BY BEARDS AND UUSTACHES ■ .."- ' *. ."'.-..-.---~-"~-."--..*- -- . ' ' -- -\ - - . • ,--* -—~. - '•- - ;-**-: --- ---""- • .< - ' . WHAT proportion of men wear mustaches nowadays? If you put this question to a St. Paul barber he will prob fcbly answer: |i "Most of 'em." 1 And "most of 'em" is a correct an swer, an answer mathematically ac fcurate, yet not too precise—an answer that just escapes being wrong and is not dangerously positive in either di rection. After a rigid estimate, taking into iconsideration the beards of several hundred prominent men, the conjec ture may be made that a trifle more Ithan half of the best known male re'si- Iflents of St. Paul display mustaches. /[The proportion is about 55 per cent. This does not include the men that Cultivate not only a mustache, but also more or less beard. Such foes of the barber are a small minority. .They number about 15 per cent. And then, as one may divine upon meditation, there is left 80 per cent of leading citizens who wear their lips and chins and cheeks "au naturel"— .Without any decoration whatsoever. "Most of- 'em" stroke mustaches be fcause it's the no that WILLIAM LOUIS KELLY of such conservative monarchs as Czar Nicholas, King Edward and Mayor Smith. MOSES E. CLAPP tate agent constitutes 40 per cent of his tribe, a proportion that rises to 46 : per cent in the St. Paul board of alder RICHARD T. O'CONNOR Among the officers of Ramsey county five out of seven commissioners culti vate mustaches. So, do County KNUTE NELSON cial club, feel impelled to keep their upper lips attractively arranged. Indicates ROBERT A. SMITH is decorously shaven, as are President M. Doran Jr., of the assembly; Presi dent Reuben Warner Jr., of the fire the Burnside, the Vandyke, the square beard, the long beard, et cetera —va- rieties that bespeak differences of taste rather than of character. This full beardedness, without which several great nations have esteemed a man no man at all, is honored abroad in many high places, and here at home its pres tige is confirmed by the extraordinary popularity and official success of Mayor Robert A. Smith. The same general type of beard, through the medium of Judges Kelly and Orr exalts the dis trict bench. And then, in unofficial circles this beard is signally vindicated by the achievements of James J. Hill, as well as by the rank attained among the wholesale merchants of St. Paul by John W. Cooper and William B. Dean. The mustache—that's "Get there:" the smooth face, "Let's think." or "I'll explain;" the full beard, "Be sure you're right, then go ahead." Verily, by their beards ye shall know them. SOLEMN WORDS OF WISDOM Men love goodness, but marry beau ty, which accounts for the present mat rimonial tangle. There is a common error among men and women that conventional sin is virtuous. After a girl is married her college education is remembered as merely one fads.
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THE ART OF LOOKING LOOKING PLEASEDThis PLEASED PLEASEDThis PLEASEDThis This Girl Cultivates Ezpr Expression ssion ana and Kno Knows How to Give the Impression That ThatShe
8/28/1904 The Washington times.
THE ART OF LOOKING LOOKING PLEASEDThis PLEASED PLEASEDThis PLEASEDThis This Girl Cultivates Ezpr Expression ssion ana and Kno Knows How to Give the Impression That ThatShe
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THE OFFICE Frank Daniels Chats About His Funny Character Olympic. WflffSr -, wr??' r'' ' ' a. a '-a! iifi33 Lpvwksnpp1 Wmtm - e. .. ,.,..- . .. .. . -w . ' - ' " - ' - ..s.- - . ., ,f i... BOY BEHIND THE SCENES. in the Play Now at Hl , ,. . yO--
8/28/1904 The St. Louis Republic.
THE OFFICE Frank Daniels Chats About His Funny Character Olympic. WflffSr -, wr??' r'' ' ' a. a '-a! iifi33 Lpvwksnpp1 Wmtm - e. .. ,.,..- . .. .. . -w . ' - ' " - ' - ..s.- - . ., ,f i... BOY BEHIND THE SCENES. in the Play Now at Hl , ,. . yO--
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Druggists. Get Cook Book and Treatise on Fenner, M. D., Fredonia, N. Y. "No more aches or pujns, no fear of Bright's Disease or Rheumatism, both of which have troubled me for years, and 1 can give all llie praise to Dr. Fenner. Jas. P. Smith." MISS KEYES WISHES'TO Announce Her 5 Ladies :>and Children's ancLTarIored Hats, ? ? y Nfiss Suitien ?f edlutnbtf-f, Ohiy, *w!io has been fesi&Rer for gnepf tlie lareest aad most exclusive millinery bowses rri New York city has atcefited^a ppsi'tSifl ivitfii jVfissijKaye& Xor Fall artd uifitfer^season and will ti^jlad to : mcit the. JLjcIi'-?/'n| CfcrJisbarg. . : " ? i- ;;ill V r ? 1 .-I? I Si <?> IV
9/16/1904 The Clarksburg telegram.
Druggists. Get Cook Book and Treatise on Fenner, M. D., Fredonia, N. Y. "No more aches or pujns, no fear of Bright's Disease or Rheumatism, both of which have troubled me for years, and 1 can give all llie praise to Dr. Fenner. Jas. P. Smith." MISS KEYES WISHES'TO Announce Her 5 Ladies :>and Children's ancLTarIored Hats, ? ? y Nfiss Suitien ?f edlutnbtf-f, Ohiy, *w!io has been fesi&Rer for gnepf tlie lareest aad most exclusive millinery bowses rri New York city has atcefited^a ppsi'tSifl ivitfii jVfissijKaye& Xor Fall artd uifitfer^season and will ti^jlad to : mcit the. JLjcIi'-?/'n| CfcrJisbarg. . : " ? i- ;;ill V r ? 1 .-I? I Si <?> IV
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Both Small anil Large Skins Um.mI Appear Also on "oat.s Feath ers Are Popular Picture Hats Decked With Ostrich l'luincs The Xew Tuques. 1aa-tl-. .. -. ..,.,.. a,. ., ai , i 1 " aBBeBBBBBaaBaKMatB-s. .iaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaaBMBBBBBBBBBBBBB&J. E aBBBBBBBBBBaBSSSSRBBPBBBBBBBBBBtk' XTaT'aTaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa1rvaawPJaaaaWa!ray'?' " v I
9/17/1904 The St. Louis Republic.
Both Small anil Large Skins Um.mI Appear Also on "oat.s Feath ers Are Popular Picture Hats Decked With Ostrich l'luincs The Xew Tuques. 1aa-tl-. .. -. ..,.,.. a,. ., ai , i 1 " aBBeBBBBBaaBaKMatB-s. .iaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaaBMBBBBBBBBBBBBB&J. E aBBBBBBBBBBaBSSSSRBBPBBBBBBBBBBtk' XTaT'aTaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa1rvaawPJaaaaWa!ray'?' " v I
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YUfl > hiL DU Dflo1OTIN n C fltI II C l1iO v J JiNr 0 TIN G ON LONG t N i in ISLAND ISLANDOUTLOOH I ISLANDc s LA ND iNr tilt rfr ft Ie c cc Ij1 II Ir 1 f fc c 11 iO 11 11J J 4 Jo IA5 J JrI I It1OUTLOOK rI OUTLOOH 1 1I OTO OK FOR A RECORD RECORDBREAKING RECORDt I > t f1 t I 1 1i I 1 BREAKING BR KING SEASON SEASONOF OF SPORT 1 > f W < V v 1 1L1 1L1Jt4 Jttej Jt4 < Krj fle ept d tMt tt tha Iuo uolt u shooting shootingthlcfall BbootfngthliThIJ bocIttngtbta1an thlcfall op tlj t iiwat r rs surrounding Long LongIslandwill LongwU1 LongI Islandwill wU1 be bbtt b ettpr If1rthaneylr tian thanevpr eygr betpro This ThisresultJfas Thisresultp resultJfas T8Ukt prediotod p klted when UteUiw UleJawpro UleJawproh1b1tm811Prinl pro prohibiUpg proi hibiUpg h1b1tm811Prinl spring shooting IIbo tiD went 1Ientitto into effect effectand etlectADd effoctazd and the signs 81gnaare are that the p redlctlon will willbe Willbeftad be beftad beftadc1j voriflsd voriflsdCareful veriblC Careful C investigation At TalloupolntA TalloupolntAIn rariou point pointin pointhI in Long Lo si Island I8i Sound Sindon on the north aideof aideofIcncVlslancjl sldeoflnrt eldeotLog IcncVlslancjl Log lnrt an4 andin and In Great O at South Bay BayEaatBnj BayBaT BayEaBay EaatBnj BaT Shinneoock 8 eoock1Baya Bay Meoook eooak Bay BayPeoppio BayPeo9 BayPeoo Peoppio Peo9 Bay and anJjJardlners an Gardiners Bayon flay on tho thooutb tholOutbeldeand thoI outb lOutbeldeand side and cast end of Long LonsIaland LonsIalandJuuj Island Islandhas lalandhas has shown XDany JIWlylaT any55largo oIar ro e flocks at an tho thovarious thoTarlOu8 theI various rarloiieeod1nggroundofthoducke rarloiieeod1nggroundofthoduckeThO feeding grounds of the ducks ducksThe duckLTh The Th birds haveusually bav have uauaUy arrived on the thefeedln0 thefeedl theteedlpa feedln0 feedl 1I and a shotting grounds after the themlddla thernJdQo theV mlddla rnlcl4i9 of October being sometime as ulate late latoM lates5 M tito U early part of November The new newlawgave newlaw newV newlawgave lawgave law gave the ducks a protebtlon from moles molestation moleefatJpn rnoleettn ¬ tation throughout t tbq th < sj l rng < that they theynndfrstood theytmdtrstood theyS nndfrstood > rThe result r ulL hat been that thatthousands thatIb thatI thousands Ib d8 of birds birdsiMf instead d of flying north northmado northmadliothe northt mado madliothe their usual s1ai IaI winter halints h ntI their sum summer mini tnmimer minimeTin ¬ mer meTin meTinThfa mer nome nomeThis OJU OJU1hfi This JnfprmaUon nfoaUonwna was gleaned from guides guidesbay gutdeebay guIdeebayEenand bay bayEenand men eD and others otherewho who have noticed ducks ducksflyingabout ducksabout flyingabout ytngabou about the Sound and bays through throughout throUghout ¬ out the t summer Il NWliTnEr Irimer Not having h V 1g triad the thoIpi theI theipringliw Ipi ipringliw read ad to o them ther thenorthern theqorthern ducko duckoarei duckoare duckuare arei are not t expected to toarrive arrive before the first firstor tlzetor flx flxI or tbfrmiddleof thltlm1dcUcofocklOOror ofiOckberior flctebert or possibly pol lblylater lblylaterbu later laterbut laterbuat but bu buat that at UieroiwiU bgoodshotthgabthe bgoodshotthgabtheop bfr good Bh6bttagat h otlt gattbe gattbeop the theopenlnj op openlnj n of tho tbo io season ilt ee ao ne n soems ri s beyond b jo thd Id ques questiori quaeUon iueo iueoton > ton tioriID UonIp tonI3 ID aUvwaten aU W1I teri rI urrouodjng 1U1TO g LongIsland LongIslandthe Long 1 J1and J1andtheopeneeaeon 1and 1andtheopenetuoD the theopenetuoD > open iManon for ebootlng duoks duoksbegine duoksbegineSatiwdiy begins beginsSaturday beginsSaturday Saturday Oct 1 at sunrise The pro provision provillJdb provWiotthe vision vWiotthe aotthtJ of1 the 4law law wwith with referenoeto rfrev erenci to what whatsportsmen ha haeporlimeri hat hatepoflaine sportsmen may in y yandniay and a d may not notdowhlleb do dowhUo while a1I shoot shooting oing o olng ¬ ing duoka differ widely with relation to todifferent todUferftlt todiffeTet different Long Inland waters wateren i irorlmtarioej IFor rorlmtarioej For Forlxiatanoe atAtioerlt1s ItIs Wlstllowabl allowably llowab to sail sailducks saUducD ducks ducksha tha that iSjto It shoot from fm a sailboat a1Ibo at un unequipped uneq iinequJpdwfthpowerbLoigIelandBound ¬ eq equJpdwfthpowerbLoigIelandBound equJpdwfthpowerbLoigIelandBoundGardinre equipped WiillP with power werin in Loq Lo g Wand I iai d Bound BoundGardinera BoUnd BoUndOardJners Gardinera Bay and andleooalo Eeoonlo Bay butin butinno no other waters Sailing ducks is ex exoellent exoeJent e eoelenteport oellent oelenteport oelenteportFor sport sportFor sportor For or the 1e Information of the mexperienoed mexperienoedsportsmen In bexperfenoedsportmien rienoed rienoedaport sportsmen aport nen it may be explained erplalnedtbbty pla1nedtib tfattwo ° tir or oi oimore ormore 1 1more more usually participate one handling l dlliig the theboat theboat thebot boat while the others lie low until within withinahobttsidktatMsaofflockteat withinlIh WithinIhcibc13tane ahobttsidktatMsaofflockteat lIh Ihcibc13tane i Of f a ockidstfnLupon ilie i rise suddenly but they theyhave theyban theybye have to shoot at flying birds for the duoka duokarisa duokariM duoksne riM ne with Incredible awiftnesa at a the first firstmovement ftretm firetrn6enientpithe m rn6enientpithe movement rem iit ofthe purSuersBaWzjg puretiereafl1g pursuers pursuersBailing Bailing ducks can be enjoyed only In Ina In11gbto Ina a light Ughbrs bnta b J1e aeuduring > a > aaduring udurln8ah oheavier vler breeze breezetheTS6a bl1teZeth breezethei th thei theTS6a 1i af Jhialiaeito biak llt O touch mu li1 h potherfrighten potherfrightening Pother othlll frighten frightenirJsitl frightening ¬ irJsitl ing the e birds The boat b at soils down the thewindoft thewiM thetie windoft wiM the t o tluolcaithGhe1 iu4ca duokBthehelmemana heirniznane e head headonly bNldonl heedonI onl only appearirig abovethe abovotbeoamblngs abovotbeoamblngsBiootArig aboytheonnbjngoot < ombings ombingsShooting Shooting oot g from ftomftoatlng floating devices boata or orbotterta orbatteries orbLedee batteries la 8nioEed halloweditth nllowod in the waters of Long LongW Lo LoligThIaXV8o 1K ThIaXV8o W i dSoin fI11fAA4Sh1riIi wid < f i diShinrieoook ShInneoock Oardlnera Oardlneraand G ln re rePeoo e eaia and Peooniobays Peoo Peoonio o b ye at all times tlmeedur1ng during the theop theopea theoertoeeonwh1ch rsfiBjonwhich opea op a rII II8GD whlcb Uata la8t laetefrom i from Oat 1 to toDe6 toDe toDbothIfldue1 De6 De DbothIfldue1 DbothIfldue1frn l Sliboth b th Indnsrvo Indnsrvo1g lnd1ustvoa 1g < a 1 Cl qnjpjr t p t 20 brd u may may1rC be ahot ahotfrom from 1rC float ft oatng ng ngdevl devjoq untilthe until n 1 the end of the theopea theopea theGreat I opea Beaaoaiin ninGreat Great South Bay west of ofSmiths ofemtths ofnithe Smiths Point P Int which iihl h Is at the extreme extremeeasterly exbemeN extremeeaatly easterly N Jy end pt 0Ore4t ottheat8uth Great South S uthBay Bay jus jueaouth jueaouthTIe south southof 80Uthot of BrppljBiiiYBn Q y nT1eaJ Tie aIobUngln aooUxginEeBay aooUxginEeBayand otlDJn Bait E t Bay Bayand Bayand GAMI GAMIPROTECTOR AMCROTECTOR PROTECTOR PROTECTOROVERTON ROTECTOROVERTQN OVERTON OVERTQNDSoa DSoa mains good during the season notwith notwithstanding notwthsUndlng notwtthstnd1ng ¬ standing the fact that many flocks of birds birdsare blrdeore birdsare are frightened away by the sportsmens sportsmensguns sportsmegune guns for there are plenty of ducks and the thebayls thebayls thebayte bayls large largeFor largeFor largeFor For the old and well informed sportsman sportsmanwho sport sportsmanwho man manwho who regards regardllduck duck shooting as one of the thebest thebest thebest best forms of sport afforded I this region regionenough regionenougb regionenough enough has been said when he is told tho thoactual thoactual theactual actual existing conditions that thousands thousandsof of ducks await the crack of his gun when whenthe whenthe whenthe the law allows him to shoot But there thereare theroore thereare are many man sportsmen who while expert experienced experlenood expertenoed ¬ enced in other Unos know nothing of the thnflnesportof thofine thefine fine flnesportof sport of duck shooting To these a afew atew afew few words may not be amiss amissGuides amissOuldes amissGuides Guides should be engaged in advance advanceThey advanooThe advanceThey They The receive about U a day for point pointshooting pointehbpUng I shooting and S8 8 a day where a battery U Ufurnished LsfurDJahed isfurnished furnished The guide furnishes furni hes decoys decoysand decoyeand decoysand and thatched shooting boats taking ta lng the thesportsman thesportsman thesportsman sportsman to tho grounds in his sailboat sailboatIt 1 1should should be taken If possible the sportsman sportsmanshould sportsmanshould should be equipped with hip boots bootsTha bootTho bootsThe The sportsman sp rtsman can scarcely make a mis mistake milltake mistake ¬ take in the selection of a starting point pointIf Amityville to Brookhaven for Great South SouthBay SouthBay SouthBay Bay shooting and from Mastic I16UO to Speonk Speonkfor for hooting In East Bay If one wishes w hes to toshoot toIIboot toshoot shoot In Shlnnecock which is said by old oldsportsmen oldsportsmcn oldsportsmen Bay shooting one may go to Southampton Southamptonon on the southern line lI e of the railroad orto ortoIliverhead orw1t1verhead ortoItlverhead Iliverhead or Jamesport by btoooentral bytbe the central line lineFor lineFor lineFor For shooting in Gardiners Bay go to Green Greenport Oreenport Greenport port by the central line lineThe UneThe lineThe The ducks may be bedivided divided into lntothreo three classes classesfor olasselor olassesfor for tho purposes of the shooter In the thefirst theflr thefirst first flr t class let him include those that are arere arerelarded rer rergarded re regarded garded as at plenty such as redhead black blackducks bl blackducks ic icducks ducks widgeon springtalla broadblll and andruddy andmddy andruddy ruddy ducks In the second clam cJlI dnas birds that thatare thAtare thatare are rather scarce are canvasbackRwhistlers canvasbackRwhistlersdippers canvasbackwhlstJel8dlpper canvasbacknwhistlensdippers dippers vholldrakes swamp ewam shelldrakee shelldrakeemallards Rhelldrakeemallards shelldrakeemallards mallards and wood ducus called inmnntner inmnntnerblue InRUmti1erblue ineurutnerblue blue winged teal The third class olMslnoludes olMslnoludesbirds ohiu s Includes Includesbirds IncludesbIrds birds that are valueless for food such as assea 118sea ausea sea crows coots hell divers loons and andcormorants alldoorm andcormras oorm cormrasThe cormorants cormorantsThe rantL I IToo The law against spring shooting of ducks ducksand duckeand ducksand and goose makes it probable that sports sportsmen llpo llpomen sportmen ¬ men will bag many geese this fall and winter winterfor winterfor wintertoe for some geese remained in Long Island Islandwaters I Islandwaters land landwaters waters through the summer and ahdthea ahdtheanot these thesenot thesenot along the shorter leg of the frog after leav leaving leavIng Ieavlug ¬ ing Riverhead RiverheadOn On the Sound the shooting usually en enJoyed enjoyed enjoyed Joyed is of two kinds sailing which has hasalready h hasalready 18 18alr already alr adyboon been described and stringing stringingout stringingout out This latter method requires the co cooperation coo ccoperation ¬ operation o rnUon of a number of parties partieeThey partle6They partiesThey They go early to a point past which ducks are known to fly at daybreak and andliterally andentering andentering entering small rowboats or ducking boats boats literally string out outfrom from the point anchor anchoreach lag th their lr boats a little out of ofgunsiot guMnot from fromeach fromeach each other As the flockH flockHM thy past the thosportsmen theeportamen sportsmen obtain obtalnvery Very excellent shots shotsThe The onlydrawbllCk only drawback M jk to that character characterof of shootingis shooting ia that it lasts only during dur durthe the early flight of the birds But if the theself thOthoughtful thethoughtful thoughtful sportsman has provided him himself himself self with a sailboat he may enjoy sail ¬ Jnator ing for the remainder of the day State Game Protector John R Over ton who resides at Port Jefferson spends spendsmuch spendsmuch spendsmuch much time with his assistants In prevent ¬ ing enthusiastic hunters whose zeal out outstrips outIItrlps outstrips ¬ strips thou regard r g gitrci rdfor for law aW from shoot shootfor Ingoutof lngout of 8 season I180n and so poUlngthe sport sportfor sportfor
9/25/1904 The sun.
YUfl > hiL DU Dflo1OTIN n C fltI II C l1iO v J JiNr 0 TIN G ON LONG t N i in ISLAND ISLANDOUTLOOH I ISLANDc s LA ND iNr tilt rfr ft Ie c cc Ij1 II Ir 1 f fc c 11 iO 11 11J J 4 Jo IA5 J JrI I It1OUTLOOK rI OUTLOOH 1 1I OTO OK FOR A RECORD RECORDBREAKING RECORDt I > t f1 t I 1 1i I 1 BREAKING BR KING SEASON SEASONOF OF SPORT 1 > f W < V v 1 1L1 1L1Jt4 Jttej Jt4 < Krj fle ept d tMt tt tha Iuo uolt u shooting shootingthlcfall BbootfngthliThIJ bocIttngtbta1an thlcfall op tlj t iiwat r rs surrounding Long LongIslandwill LongwU1 LongI Islandwill wU1 be bbtt b ettpr If1rthaneylr tian thanevpr eygr betpro This ThisresultJfas Thisresultp resultJfas T8Ukt prediotod p klted when UteUiw UleJawpro UleJawproh1b1tm811Prinl pro prohibiUpg proi hibiUpg h1b1tm811Prinl spring shooting IIbo tiD went 1Ientitto into effect effectand etlectADd effoctazd and the signs 81gnaare are that the p redlctlon will willbe Willbeftad be beftad beftadc1j voriflsd voriflsdCareful veriblC Careful C investigation At TalloupolntA TalloupolntAIn rariou point pointin pointhI in Long Lo si Island I8i Sound Sindon on the north aideof aideofIcncVlslancjl sldeoflnrt eldeotLog IcncVlslancjl Log lnrt an4 andin and In Great O at South Bay BayEaatBnj BayBaT BayEaBay EaatBnj BaT Shinneoock 8 eoock1Baya Bay Meoook eooak Bay BayPeoppio BayPeo9 BayPeoo Peoppio Peo9 Bay and anJjJardlners an Gardiners Bayon flay on tho thooutb tholOutbeldeand thoI outb lOutbeldeand side and cast end of Long LonsIaland LonsIalandJuuj Island Islandhas lalandhas has shown XDany JIWlylaT any55largo oIar ro e flocks at an tho thovarious thoTarlOu8 theI various rarloiieeod1nggroundofthoducke rarloiieeod1nggroundofthoduckeThO feeding grounds of the ducks ducksThe duckLTh The Th birds haveusually bav have uauaUy arrived on the thefeedln0 thefeedl theteedlpa feedln0 feedl 1I and a shotting grounds after the themlddla thernJdQo theV mlddla rnlcl4i9 of October being sometime as ulate late latoM lates5 M tito U early part of November The new newlawgave newlaw newV newlawgave lawgave law gave the ducks a protebtlon from moles molestation moleefatJpn rnoleettn ¬ tation throughout t tbq th < sj l rng < that they theynndfrstood theytmdtrstood theyS nndfrstood > rThe result r ulL hat been that thatthousands thatIb thatI thousands Ib d8 of birds birdsiMf instead d of flying north northmado northmadliothe northt mado madliothe their usual s1ai IaI winter halints h ntI their sum summer mini tnmimer minimeTin ¬ mer meTin meTinThfa mer nome nomeThis OJU OJU1hfi This JnfprmaUon nfoaUonwna was gleaned from guides guidesbay gutdeebay guIdeebayEenand bay bayEenand men eD and others otherewho who have noticed ducks ducksflyingabout ducksabout flyingabout ytngabou about the Sound and bays through throughout throUghout ¬ out the t summer Il NWliTnEr Irimer Not having h V 1g triad the thoIpi theI theipringliw Ipi ipringliw read ad to o them ther thenorthern theqorthern ducko duckoarei duckoare duckuare arei are not t expected to toarrive arrive before the first firstor tlzetor flx flxI or tbfrmiddleof thltlm1dcUcofocklOOror ofiOckberior flctebert or possibly pol lblylater lblylaterbu later laterbut laterbuat but bu buat that at UieroiwiU bgoodshotthgabthe bgoodshotthgabtheop bfr good Bh6bttagat h otlt gattbe gattbeop the theopenlnj op openlnj n of tho tbo io season ilt ee ao ne n soems ri s beyond b jo thd Id ques questiori quaeUon iueo iueoton > ton tioriID UonIp tonI3 ID aUvwaten aU W1I teri rI urrouodjng 1U1TO g LongIsland LongIslandthe Long 1 J1and J1andtheopeneeaeon 1and 1andtheopenetuoD the theopenetuoD > open iManon for ebootlng duoks duoksbegine duoksbegineSatiwdiy begins beginsSaturday beginsSaturday Saturday Oct 1 at sunrise The pro provision provillJdb provWiotthe vision vWiotthe aotthtJ of1 the 4law law wwith with referenoeto rfrev erenci to what whatsportsmen ha haeporlimeri hat hatepoflaine sportsmen may in y yandniay and a d may not notdowhlleb do dowhUo while a1I shoot shooting oing o olng ¬ ing duoka differ widely with relation to todifferent todUferftlt todiffeTet different Long Inland waters wateren i irorlmtarioej IFor rorlmtarioej For Forlxiatanoe atAtioerlt1s ItIs Wlstllowabl allowably llowab to sail sailducks saUducD ducks ducksha tha that iSjto It shoot from fm a sailboat a1Ibo at un unequipped uneq iinequJpdwfthpowerbLoigIelandBound ¬ eq equJpdwfthpowerbLoigIelandBound equJpdwfthpowerbLoigIelandBoundGardinre equipped WiillP with power werin in Loq Lo g Wand I iai d Bound BoundGardinera BoUnd BoUndOardJners Gardinera Bay and andleooalo Eeoonlo Bay butin butinno no other waters Sailing ducks is ex exoellent exoeJent e eoelenteport oellent oelenteport oelenteportFor sport sportFor sportor For or the 1e Information of the mexperienoed mexperienoedsportsmen In bexperfenoedsportmien rienoed rienoedaport sportsmen aport nen it may be explained erplalnedtbbty pla1nedtib tfattwo ° tir or oi oimore ormore 1 1more more usually participate one handling l dlliig the theboat theboat thebot boat while the others lie low until within withinahobttsidktatMsaofflockteat withinlIh WithinIhcibc13tane ahobttsidktatMsaofflockteat lIh Ihcibc13tane i Of f a ockidstfnLupon ilie i rise suddenly but they theyhave theyban theybye have to shoot at flying birds for the duoka duokarisa duokariM duoksne riM ne with Incredible awiftnesa at a the first firstmovement ftretm firetrn6enientpithe m rn6enientpithe movement rem iit ofthe purSuersBaWzjg puretiereafl1g pursuers pursuersBailing Bailing ducks can be enjoyed only In Ina In11gbto Ina a light Ughbrs bnta b J1e aeuduring > a > aaduring udurln8ah oheavier vler breeze breezetheTS6a bl1teZeth breezethei th thei theTS6a 1i af Jhialiaeito biak llt O touch mu li1 h potherfrighten potherfrightening Pother othlll frighten frightenirJsitl frightening ¬ irJsitl ing the e birds The boat b at soils down the thewindoft thewiM thetie windoft wiM the t o tluolcaithGhe1 iu4ca duokBthehelmemana heirniznane e head headonly bNldonl heedonI onl only appearirig abovethe abovotbeoamblngs abovotbeoamblngsBiootArig aboytheonnbjngoot < ombings ombingsShooting Shooting oot g from ftomftoatlng floating devices boata or orbotterta orbatteries orbLedee batteries la 8nioEed halloweditth nllowod in the waters of Long LongW Lo LoligThIaXV8o 1K ThIaXV8o W i dSoin fI11fAA4Sh1riIi wid < f i diShinrieoook ShInneoock Oardlnera Oardlneraand G ln re rePeoo e eaia and Peooniobays Peoo Peoonio o b ye at all times tlmeedur1ng during the theop theopea theoertoeeonwh1ch rsfiBjonwhich opea op a rII II8GD whlcb Uata la8t laetefrom i from Oat 1 to toDe6 toDe toDbothIfldue1 De6 De DbothIfldue1 DbothIfldue1frn l Sliboth b th Indnsrvo Indnsrvo1g lnd1ustvoa 1g < a 1 Cl qnjpjr t p t 20 brd u may may1rC be ahot ahotfrom from 1rC float ft oatng ng ngdevl devjoq untilthe until n 1 the end of the theopea theopea theGreat I opea Beaaoaiin ninGreat Great South Bay west of ofSmiths ofemtths ofnithe Smiths Point P Int which iihl h Is at the extreme extremeeasterly exbemeN extremeeaatly easterly N Jy end pt 0Ore4t ottheat8uth Great South S uthBay Bay jus jueaouth jueaouthTIe south southof 80Uthot of BrppljBiiiYBn Q y nT1eaJ Tie aIobUngln aooUxginEeBay aooUxginEeBayand otlDJn Bait E t Bay Bayand Bayand GAMI GAMIPROTECTOR AMCROTECTOR PROTECTOR PROTECTOROVERTON ROTECTOROVERTQN OVERTON OVERTQNDSoa DSoa mains good during the season notwith notwithstanding notwthsUndlng notwtthstnd1ng ¬ standing the fact that many flocks of birds birdsare blrdeore birdsare are frightened away by the sportsmens sportsmensguns sportsmegune guns for there are plenty of ducks and the thebayls thebayls thebayte bayls large largeFor largeFor largeFor For the old and well informed sportsman sportsmanwho sport sportsmanwho man manwho who regards regardllduck duck shooting as one of the thebest thebest thebest best forms of sport afforded I this region regionenough regionenougb regionenough enough has been said when he is told tho thoactual thoactual theactual actual existing conditions that thousands thousandsof of ducks await the crack of his gun when whenthe whenthe whenthe the law allows him to shoot But there thereare theroore thereare are many man sportsmen who while expert experienced experlenood expertenoed ¬ enced in other Unos know nothing of the thnflnesportof thofine thefine fine flnesportof sport of duck shooting To these a afew atew afew few words may not be amiss amissGuides amissOuldes amissGuides Guides should be engaged in advance advanceThey advanooThe advanceThey They The receive about U a day for point pointshooting pointehbpUng I shooting and S8 8 a day where a battery U Ufurnished LsfurDJahed isfurnished furnished The guide furnishes furni hes decoys decoysand decoyeand decoysand and thatched shooting boats taking ta lng the thesportsman thesportsman thesportsman sportsman to tho grounds in his sailboat sailboatIt 1 1should should be taken If possible the sportsman sportsmanshould sportsmanshould should be equipped with hip boots bootsTha bootTho bootsThe The sportsman sp rtsman can scarcely make a mis mistake milltake mistake ¬ take in the selection of a starting point pointIf Amityville to Brookhaven for Great South SouthBay SouthBay SouthBay Bay shooting and from Mastic I16UO to Speonk Speonkfor for hooting In East Bay If one wishes w hes to toshoot toIIboot toshoot shoot In Shlnnecock which is said by old oldsportsmen oldsportsmcn oldsportsmen Bay shooting one may go to Southampton Southamptonon on the southern line lI e of the railroad orto ortoIliverhead orw1t1verhead ortoItlverhead Iliverhead or Jamesport by btoooentral bytbe the central line lineFor lineFor lineFor For shooting in Gardiners Bay go to Green Greenport Oreenport Greenport port by the central line lineThe UneThe lineThe The ducks may be bedivided divided into lntothreo three classes classesfor olasselor olassesfor for tho purposes of the shooter In the thefirst theflr thefirst first flr t class let him include those that are arere arerelarded rer rergarded re regarded garded as at plenty such as redhead black blackducks bl blackducks ic icducks ducks widgeon springtalla broadblll and andruddy andmddy andruddy ruddy ducks In the second clam cJlI dnas birds that thatare thAtare thatare are rather scarce are canvasbackRwhistlers canvasbackRwhistlersdippers canvasbackwhlstJel8dlpper canvasbacknwhistlensdippers dippers vholldrakes swamp ewam shelldrakee shelldrakeemallards Rhelldrakeemallards shelldrakeemallards mallards and wood ducus called inmnntner inmnntnerblue InRUmti1erblue ineurutnerblue blue winged teal The third class olMslnoludes olMslnoludesbirds ohiu s Includes Includesbirds IncludesbIrds birds that are valueless for food such as assea 118sea ausea sea crows coots hell divers loons and andcormorants alldoorm andcormras oorm cormrasThe cormorants cormorantsThe rantL I IToo The law against spring shooting of ducks ducksand duckeand ducksand and goose makes it probable that sports sportsmen llpo llpomen sportmen ¬ men will bag many geese this fall and winter winterfor winterfor wintertoe for some geese remained in Long Island Islandwaters I Islandwaters land landwaters waters through the summer and ahdthea ahdtheanot these thesenot thesenot along the shorter leg of the frog after leav leaving leavIng Ieavlug ¬ ing Riverhead RiverheadOn On the Sound the shooting usually en enJoyed enjoyed enjoyed Joyed is of two kinds sailing which has hasalready h hasalready 18 18alr already alr adyboon been described and stringing stringingout stringingout out This latter method requires the co cooperation coo ccoperation ¬ operation o rnUon of a number of parties partieeThey partle6They partiesThey They go early to a point past which ducks are known to fly at daybreak and andliterally andentering andentering entering small rowboats or ducking boats boats literally string out outfrom from the point anchor anchoreach lag th their lr boats a little out of ofgunsiot guMnot from fromeach fromeach each other As the flockH flockHM thy past the thosportsmen theeportamen sportsmen obtain obtalnvery Very excellent shots shotsThe The onlydrawbllCk only drawback M jk to that character characterof of shootingis shooting ia that it lasts only during dur durthe the early flight of the birds But if the theself thOthoughtful thethoughtful thoughtful sportsman has provided him himself himself self with a sailboat he may enjoy sail ¬ Jnator ing for the remainder of the day State Game Protector John R Over ton who resides at Port Jefferson spends spendsmuch spendsmuch spendsmuch much time with his assistants In prevent ¬ ing enthusiastic hunters whose zeal out outstrips outIItrlps outstrips ¬ strips thou regard r g gitrci rdfor for law aW from shoot shootfor Ingoutof lngout of 8 season I180n and so poUlngthe sport sportfor sportfor
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v IMPERIAL TOMBS ABOUT WHICH CHINA J IS ANXIOUS ANXIOUSPARKLIKE ANXIOUSPAR PARKLIKE PAR K L I K E BURIAL BURIALPLACES BUR I A L 17 t QUEER R GUARDIANS G U A R D I AN S OF OFTHE 0 F FPLACES r J1 fWif r > C < l < tSfl < jtf 4 j3 PLACES OF THE MANCHU MANCHUEMPERORS flJ u r ti a ft f jiq r r r fr + > c THE GRAVES OP o THE L MING MINGDYNASTY MINGJ 4 J f1 i 4 1 f > Ji i < i iEMPERORS EMPERORS AT A T MUKDEN M UTTD J EN 1 M 1 f p c < t hr j > w F lF > > L st rl4 rl4O DYNASTY AT NANKIN > O > i 4e I > t ylf 14e i 1 fir S J N > < Wtf 2 j1m t ar e4y wwy w1Jr w STATUES JrArIESlINING711AVfNW5rOrWf7Vs1 liNING 7jlAV TllAVA1VFJTlJrHrTOI1C NleSnmTOMioTHt ° crYNIANGSNANKN TNKINfi KINGS NANKIN j Nothing NO jt Is more strikingly character characteristic > r ¬ istic ofctne of the Chinese Chlnt8eaa as a race than their theirveneration theirc veneration Vener tfon of their ancestors ancestorsIt It permeates all classes of the people peoplefrom peoplofrom peopleN from the Emperor down to tho hewers of ofwood ofwood ofwood wood and drawers of water You may rob robthem robthem them of their territories you OU may swindle swindlethem ewlndlethem swindlethem them out ut of their most precious ma material materlal mayt ¬ terial terlalposcessions possessions you 011 may beat them in incommercial Incommerolal incommerelnl commercial transactions or you may jeer jeerat jeerat Jeerh at their theirlackofprogreesnndgeneraleupine theirlackofprogreesnndgeneraleupineUess lack of progress and general genpralsupine genpralsupineI supine supineness ness ne Uess without disturbing dlsturbln for a moment momentthe momenti the philosophical equanimity with which whichthey whichthey whichs they look on while the world goes by byBut byD byv But D t lets let 8 proposition be made to die disturb dlsI dieCurb ¬ turb tholr honored dead or to desecrate desecratetheir desecratetheir deprecatetheir their graves gtawsor or tombs and you O arouse in instantly inJ ¬ stantly etantlythe the latent tiger In n the Chinese Ch nee char character charJ charactor ¬ actor It is this peculiarity pecullarltpccullar peculiar to tothe toWBlltern tor the the3Vesternnindatleastmore Western wind at least leastmore more than thanlmy thanlmyI anything any anything ¬ thing else that has kept China with her herteeming hert hert teeming Industrious population and un unmeasured unmeasured ¬ measured natural resources back in the themarch thAmarch themarch march of industrial and agricultural agriculturalprogress agriculturalproltJ agriculturaly progress progressThttlt proltJ lis listhl Thttlt thl ltls is that has obstructed the build building bulldI ¬ ing o oraUroads rallroads and other neceeeary ad adjunctojto adj iuneta juno junctojto Jo to advancement along material materiallinesiThagraves materialJines Jines linesiThagraves lThe graves must not be disturbed disturbedat dl turbed turbedat at anycost any cost The sacred bones must rest restIn restIn restIn In peace pe until the end of timeIt time timeIt timeIt It was for this reason that the Russian Russianand RUSlllanU1d Rusalany and Imperial railways in Manchuria were weredeflected weredeflect weredeflected deflected deflect ct from Mukden the capital and andby andby andi by faf fa fnrtho tho most important city In the prov province provifi provInoe ¬ ince In n order to get the concessions the theBusslan thenusein theRussian Russian Government Oovernmentand and the British Drltl h capltal capltalista capltallata capitallets lets who whobuUtthe bullttho two lines had to agree that thatMukdftn thatMukdln thatMukddn Mukdftn should be left out of their plans plansbecause planbecauB planes because there were burled tho ancestors of oftho oftheMlijjc ofthe the theMlijjc Miwchu MnchudynaatynowreigningInChina MnchudynaatynowreigningInChinaMukden udynastynowreljnlng dynasty now reigning In China ChinaMukden ChinaMu1i the ancestors of the dynasty now In power powerin in China ChinaMukden ChinaMukden ChinaMukden Mukden is situated in the valley of the theHun tbeHun theHun Hun River four kilometres from that thatstream thatstream thatstream stream on a perfectly level and open place placeThe placeTha placeThe The city with its suburbs is surrounded by bya a 1 clay wall fifteen kilometres long The Thewall Thewall Thewall wall is not solidly built and has fallen in inIn InIn InIn In many places placesIn In the centre or inclosed space Is the so socalled socalled o ocalled called Imperial or Sacred City It is square squarein in shape and Is separated from the rest of ofMukden ofMukden ofMukden Mukden by b a high and solidly built stone stonewall stonewnll stonewall wall provided with bulwarks bulwarluland and towersOne towers towersOne towersOne One mile south of Mukden Is Nan Ta Taor Taor Taor or South Dagoba one of the four Tibetan Tibetanshrines Tibetanshrines Tibetanshrines shrines which guard the Sacred City East Eastward EMtward Eastward ¬ ward about one mile from this tM Dagoba DagobaIs Is the Temple of Heaven Heaena a walled circular circularenclosure cireularenclosure circularenclosure enclosure with a plain altar in the centre centrewhere centrewhere centrewhere where sacrifices are offered as at Pekin Pekinbut Peklnbut Pekinbut but by the Emperors proxy The sacred sacredherd sacredberd sacredherd herd of black eattloandfiockof cattle and flock of white whltesheep whltesheepfeed hlte sheep sheepfeed sheepfoed feed on tho adjacent grassy plainWestward plain plainWestward plainWestward Westward of the Nan Ta is an enclosure enclosurein in which a fine herd of the sacred spotted spotteddeer spottOOdeer epotteddeer deer are maintained for the Emperor Emperorwhile EmperorwhUe Emperorwhile while a herd of Mongolian mulch cows cowsare cowsarealwnys cowsare are arealwnys always In readiness for his hl8l1aJesty hl8l1aJestywhenever Majesty Majestywhenever Majestywhenever whenever he may visit the sacred palace palaceIn In earlier times all the rulers of the present presentdynasty presentdynasty presentdynasty dynasty considered It a duty to visit Muk Mukden Mukden Mukden ¬ den at least once in their lives in order to topray toprny topray pray at the tombs of their forefathers On Onthis Onthis Onthis this account the sacred sacrc palace was a8 built builtThe b builtThe lllt llltThe The Emperor however has not visited visitedMukden vlllitedMukden visitedMukden Mukden in more than 100 years and for forthis forthisreason this thisreason thisreason reason tho castle is now completely In Inruins Inruins inruins ruins The palace was saved when tho thodisbanded thodl8banded thodisbanded disbanded soldiers and mob looted much muchof muchof muchof of the city after the Boxer troubles by bythe bythe bythe TOMBS or oETNf THE HINCS A7 NAN NANHIN NANHINrpySTlRroGfMHa XIN XINrgHSrlm6 rgHSrlm6 rpySTlRroGfMHa > f ° YR6Nrfo90YUrOIRwOGDfUNOlRW000 rlfNT > l1f114Y VlrPFIfWOfK14VNllIIfWPO HIW NIWYORK YPftf V c n r iwevaM + 6ATEWAYBEVRETNEGRAVtOifMPRORBAYLNoATMUMOW are kept the sacred archives of the dy dynasty dynaety dynasty ¬ nasty all vestments and clothes worn by bythe bythe bythe many still remain The tales of treasures treasuresbeing trensureoolng treasuresbeing being stored at Mukden are in all proba probability probabUlty probabUlty ¬ the beautiful lake near the summit of the thesacred thesacred thesacred sacred liver White Mountain over 700 700miles 700miles 100miles i t if < t J r 1 1po A > < i W ft po fit 1f ii 1 1f aL rt i4 > f t > c S r Jtt Jtti W s > i if d NOi µ ypMs SyoN1 RGURrSQNAVENU1lADIN67OTNE7VMB5cTREN1NGSNARKN forming a perfectly square enclosure enclosureThe enclosureThe enclosureThe The main approach Is over a long stone stonepared stonepaved stonepaved paved causeway which with the passing passingyears p passingyears 58lng 58lngyears years has become overgrown with weeds weedsand weedsand weedsand and trees Near the marble triumphal triumphalarch triumpbalarch triumphalarch arch It broadens and crosses n ruinedmarble ruined ruinedmarble ruinedmarble marble bridge which spans a stretch of ofartificial ofartltlciai ofartifidal artificial water now choked with weeds weedsand weedsand woodsand and sedge grass grassBeyond gr grassBeyond 58 58Beyond Beyond a grand gateway with yellow yellowand yello yelloand yellowand and purple tiled roof stand on either side sidebuildings sidebuildings sidebuildings buildings which were once palatial halls hallsIn halliJIn hallsIn In a brood avenue lined with stone Images Imagesof of animals and marble pillars with carved carvedclouds canedcloud8 carvedclouds clouds encircling them stand houses In Inwhich inwblch inwhich which the retinue of the I Imperor mperor can restThere rest restThere restThere There is I also there a magnificent square squaretower squaretower squaretower tower and a marble tablet nearly 30 feet feethigh feethigh feethigh high and standing on the back of a marble marbletortoise marbletortoise marbletortoise tortoise On this tablet is an inscription inscriptionsacred l15crlptlonsacred inscriptionsacred sacred to the wonderful deeds of TalTsung TalTsungthe Tai Tsucg Tsucgthe the conqueror of China who compelled its itspeople itapeople itspeople people to wear the queue and tried In vain vainto vainto vainto to make its women cease deforming their theirfeet theirfest theirfeet feet feetNear Near by is another square enclosure enclosureguarded enclosureguarded enclosureguarded guarded by high embattlemented brick brickwalls brickwa11e brickwalls walls Within are the three great halls hallswhere hallswhere hallswhere where the worship of the spirit of the de departed departed departed ¬ parted Tal Tsung is carried on by some somePrince somePrince somePrince Prince of blood or proxy of the Emperor EmperorTo To the north of this square and surrounded surroundedby by a high circular brick wall is a huge hugemound bugemound hugemound mound of earth beneath which slumber slumbersthe slumberthe slumberthe the mighty Tai Tsung who died In the theseventeenth the60venteentb theseventeenth seventeenth century and who finally ob obtained obtained obtained ¬ tained for his successors the beriditary heriditaryManchurian beriditaryManchurian beriditaryManchurlan Manchurian Imperial dignity and gave to tohis tohis tohis his dynasty the name of Datsln Ho was wasthe WI18the wasthe the father of the first Manchu Emperor of ofChina ofChina ofChina China ChinaThere ChinaThere ChinaThere There is apparently no entrance to the theinterior tbeInterior theinterior interior of this sacred mound Above Aboveit it can be seen the topmost branches of an anancient anancient anancient ancient elm still putting out leaves in the thospring thesprlcg thespring spring This tree Is said to be the dwell dwelling dwellIng dwelllag ¬ ing place of one of the spirits of Tal Tsung TsungHis TsungHis TsungHla His ancestors buried their chiefs in hollow hollowtrees hollowtrOO8 hollowtree trees To the rear of To Tsungs grave graveIs Is a small artificial horseshoeshaped moun mountain mountain mouataia ¬ tain to guard It from the evil north northThe northThe northThe The other imperial cemetery metery at Mukden Mukdenconsists Mukdenconsists Mukdenconsists consists of about five thousand acres of ofparkllke ofparklike ofparklike parklike forest with steep cliffs to the thesouth theIouth thesouth south under which winds the Hun River RiverNear Rhelear RiverNear Near ear the th centre Is the Fu Ling or Tomb of ofthe oftbe ofthe the Blessed Dle ed a somewhat larger mound moundthan moundthan moundthan than that of Tai Tsung T ung Under It repose reposethe repOfetbe reposethe Although Mukden has always suffered sufferedfrom sutreredfrom sufferedfrom from a dearth dearthof of fuel fuelnothing nothing would induce inducethe Inducethe Inducethe the Emperor to allow his subjects to mine minefor micefor minefor for coal anywhere within the prefecture prefecturefor for fear of disturbing the dragon and the thesacred thelIacred thesacred sacred spirits The dragon Is opposed to tofire tofire tofire fire thus he especially detests steam engines engineswar war and gunpowder gunpowderNot Not only are there the Imperial tombs tombsdescribed tombsdescribed tombsdescribed described above but a vast number of those thosebelonging tholebelonging thosebelonging belonging to kinsmen of the royal family familyclansmen fmUyclan8men familyclansmen clansmen and high mandarins are to be beseen bescen beseen seen along the dragon bill for many miles milesTho mlleTho milesThe Tho Chinese Government is now greatly greatlydisturbed grutlydisturbed greatlydisturbed disturbed by the fear that the imperial imperialtombs imperiatombs imperialtombs tombs at Mukden may be either damaged or ordestroyed ordeetroyed ordestroyed destroyed if a battle is fought there by the theRussians theRUS8lan8 theRussians Russians and the Japanese Representa Representations RepreeentatlOI1ll Representations ¬ tions on the subject have been made to both bothsides bothBides bothsides sides by the authorities at Pekin and a as the theCzar theCzar theCzar Czar and the Mikado are anxious now in inview Inview inview view of the critical situation in the Far Fist Fistnot Eutnot E jt jtnot not to give offence to China it is evident evidentthat evidentthat evidentthat that the armies of both will do their best to tosave toSBe tosave save tho tombs from harm harmIt harmIt harmIt It is I hard to imagine however how hOWthey hOWtheycan they theycon theycan can escape the crossfire of artillery should ihoulda a general engagement take place there thereAll thereAll thereAll All Chinese have a deep veneration for fortho fartbo torthe the idea of a soul or the continuity of life lifeThis lUeThis lifeThis This idea Is derived partly from the old oldShamanistio oldShamanistic oldShamanistic Shamanistic or natural religion and partly partlyfrom partlyfrom partlyfrom from the Buddhist notion of tnuumign tnuumigntlon tranmJ1 a ation Lion Hence the great reverence for the thedead thedead thedead dead the love Iollor of funeral funaraJOereaiomeetI funaraJOereaiomeetIreadlness beremonleath beremonleathreadiness > to toreadiness > readiness to spend money on graves the thedesire thedesire thedesire desire to propitiate the ghosts of ancestors ancestorthe ancestorsthe the yearning for a son the strong family famflysentiment famnysentiment familysentiment sentiment of unity and the strict subordina subordination eubordination ubordlnatlon ¬ tion of the younger to the elder Ancestral Ancestralworship An Ancestralworship tra1 tra1wership worship is perhaps the most vital cult cultamong ou1tamong coltamong among them themTho themThe themThe The difficulty of laying out lines of travel travelin in the most populous parts of the Empire Empirewithout Empirewithout Empirewithout without interfering with the graves of thedead the thedead thedead dead and violating the sacred customs of the thepeople thepeople thepeoplo people has proved practically an Insuper Insuperable lnauperable btanperable ¬ able obstruction to the Introduction of rail railroads railroads railroads ¬ roads in China It would be Impossible to toenter toenter toenter enter most of the cities and towns in the theGreat tbeGreat theGreat Great Plain without running over or en encroaching encronchlng cacroaching ¬ croaching upon many graves gravesThe EtravesThe gravesThe The tombs of the Ming dynasty which whichwas whlohwaa whichwas was overthrown by the present dynasty are areat areat areat at Nansln which was the Imperial city till tilljust tilljust tilljust just before the Mings were succeeded by the theManchu tbeManchu theManchu Manchu Tartars TartarsTho TartareThe TartarsThe The tombs of the Emperors of the Ming Mingdynnsty Mlngdynnsty Mingdynasty
10/9/1904 The sun.
v IMPERIAL TOMBS ABOUT WHICH CHINA J IS ANXIOUS ANXIOUSPARKLIKE ANXIOUSPAR PARKLIKE PAR K L I K E BURIAL BURIALPLACES BUR I A L 17 t QUEER R GUARDIANS G U A R D I AN S OF OFTHE 0 F FPLACES r J1 fWif r > C < l < tSfl < jtf 4 j3 PLACES OF THE MANCHU MANCHUEMPERORS flJ u r ti a ft f jiq r r r fr + > c THE GRAVES OP o THE L MING MINGDYNASTY MINGJ 4 J f1 i 4 1 f > Ji i < i iEMPERORS EMPERORS AT A T MUKDEN M UTTD J EN 1 M 1 f p c < t hr j > w F lF > > L st rl4 rl4O DYNASTY AT NANKIN > O > i 4e I > t ylf 14e i 1 fir S J N > < Wtf 2 j1m t ar e4y wwy w1Jr w STATUES JrArIESlINING711AVfNW5rOrWf7Vs1 liNING 7jlAV TllAVA1VFJTlJrHrTOI1C NleSnmTOMioTHt ° crYNIANGSNANKN TNKINfi KINGS NANKIN j Nothing NO jt Is more strikingly character characteristic > r ¬ istic ofctne of the Chinese Chlnt8eaa as a race than their theirveneration theirc veneration Vener tfon of their ancestors ancestorsIt It permeates all classes of the people peoplefrom peoplofrom peopleN from the Emperor down to tho hewers of ofwood ofwood ofwood wood and drawers of water You may rob robthem robthem them of their territories you OU may swindle swindlethem ewlndlethem swindlethem them out ut of their most precious ma material materlal mayt ¬ terial terlalposcessions possessions you 011 may beat them in incommercial Incommerolal incommerelnl commercial transactions or you may jeer jeerat jeerat Jeerh at their theirlackofprogreesnndgeneraleupine theirlackofprogreesnndgeneraleupineUess lack of progress and general genpralsupine genpralsupineI supine supineness ness ne Uess without disturbing dlsturbln for a moment momentthe momenti the philosophical equanimity with which whichthey whichthey whichs they look on while the world goes by byBut byD byv But D t lets let 8 proposition be made to die disturb dlsI dieCurb ¬ turb tholr honored dead or to desecrate desecratetheir desecratetheir deprecatetheir their graves gtawsor or tombs and you O arouse in instantly inJ ¬ stantly etantlythe the latent tiger In n the Chinese Ch nee char character charJ charactor ¬ actor It is this peculiarity pecullarltpccullar peculiar to tothe toWBlltern tor the the3Vesternnindatleastmore Western wind at least leastmore more than thanlmy thanlmyI anything any anything ¬ thing else that has kept China with her herteeming hert hert teeming Industrious population and un unmeasured unmeasured ¬ measured natural resources back in the themarch thAmarch themarch march of industrial and agricultural agriculturalprogress agriculturalproltJ agriculturaly progress progressThttlt proltJ lis listhl Thttlt thl ltls is that has obstructed the build building bulldI ¬ ing o oraUroads rallroads and other neceeeary ad adjunctojto adj iuneta juno junctojto Jo to advancement along material materiallinesiThagraves materialJines Jines linesiThagraves lThe graves must not be disturbed disturbedat dl turbed turbedat at anycost any cost The sacred bones must rest restIn restIn restIn In peace pe until the end of timeIt time timeIt timeIt It was for this reason that the Russian Russianand RUSlllanU1d Rusalany and Imperial railways in Manchuria were weredeflected weredeflect weredeflected deflected deflect ct from Mukden the capital and andby andby andi by faf fa fnrtho tho most important city In the prov province provifi provInoe ¬ ince In n order to get the concessions the theBusslan thenusein theRussian Russian Government Oovernmentand and the British Drltl h capltal capltalista capltallata capitallets lets who whobuUtthe bullttho two lines had to agree that thatMukdftn thatMukdln thatMukddn Mukdftn should be left out of their plans plansbecause planbecauB planes because there were burled tho ancestors of oftho oftheMlijjc ofthe the theMlijjc Miwchu MnchudynaatynowreigningInChina MnchudynaatynowreigningInChinaMukden udynastynowreljnlng dynasty now reigning In China ChinaMukden ChinaMu1i the ancestors of the dynasty now In power powerin in China ChinaMukden ChinaMukden ChinaMukden Mukden is situated in the valley of the theHun tbeHun theHun Hun River four kilometres from that thatstream thatstream thatstream stream on a perfectly level and open place placeThe placeTha placeThe The city with its suburbs is surrounded by bya a 1 clay wall fifteen kilometres long The Thewall Thewall Thewall wall is not solidly built and has fallen in inIn InIn InIn In many places placesIn In the centre or inclosed space Is the so socalled socalled o ocalled called Imperial or Sacred City It is square squarein in shape and Is separated from the rest of ofMukden ofMukden ofMukden Mukden by b a high and solidly built stone stonewall stonewnll stonewall wall provided with bulwarks bulwarluland and towersOne towers towersOne towersOne One mile south of Mukden Is Nan Ta Taor Taor Taor or South Dagoba one of the four Tibetan Tibetanshrines Tibetanshrines Tibetanshrines shrines which guard the Sacred City East Eastward EMtward Eastward ¬ ward about one mile from this tM Dagoba DagobaIs Is the Temple of Heaven Heaena a walled circular circularenclosure cireularenclosure circularenclosure enclosure with a plain altar in the centre centrewhere centrewhere centrewhere where sacrifices are offered as at Pekin Pekinbut Peklnbut Pekinbut but by the Emperors proxy The sacred sacredherd sacredberd sacredherd herd of black eattloandfiockof cattle and flock of white whltesheep whltesheepfeed hlte sheep sheepfeed sheepfoed feed on tho adjacent grassy plainWestward plain plainWestward plainWestward Westward of the Nan Ta is an enclosure enclosurein in which a fine herd of the sacred spotted spotteddeer spottOOdeer epotteddeer deer are maintained for the Emperor Emperorwhile EmperorwhUe Emperorwhile while a herd of Mongolian mulch cows cowsare cowsarealwnys cowsare are arealwnys always In readiness for his hl8l1aJesty hl8l1aJestywhenever Majesty Majestywhenever Majestywhenever whenever he may visit the sacred palace palaceIn In earlier times all the rulers of the present presentdynasty presentdynasty presentdynasty dynasty considered It a duty to visit Muk Mukden Mukden Mukden ¬ den at least once in their lives in order to topray toprny topray pray at the tombs of their forefathers On Onthis Onthis Onthis this account the sacred sacrc palace was a8 built builtThe b builtThe lllt llltThe The Emperor however has not visited visitedMukden vlllitedMukden visitedMukden Mukden in more than 100 years and for forthis forthisreason this thisreason thisreason reason tho castle is now completely In Inruins Inruins inruins ruins The palace was saved when tho thodisbanded thodl8banded thodisbanded disbanded soldiers and mob looted much muchof muchof muchof of the city after the Boxer troubles by bythe bythe bythe TOMBS or oETNf THE HINCS A7 NAN NANHIN NANHINrpySTlRroGfMHa XIN XINrgHSrlm6 rgHSrlm6 rpySTlRroGfMHa > f ° YR6Nrfo90YUrOIRwOGDfUNOlRW000 rlfNT > l1f114Y VlrPFIfWOfK14VNllIIfWPO HIW NIWYORK YPftf V c n r iwevaM + 6ATEWAYBEVRETNEGRAVtOifMPRORBAYLNoATMUMOW are kept the sacred archives of the dy dynasty dynaety dynasty ¬ nasty all vestments and clothes worn by bythe bythe bythe many still remain The tales of treasures treasuresbeing trensureoolng treasuresbeing being stored at Mukden are in all proba probability probabUlty probabUlty ¬ the beautiful lake near the summit of the thesacred thesacred thesacred sacred liver White Mountain over 700 700miles 700miles 100miles i t if < t J r 1 1po A > < i W ft po fit 1f ii 1 1f aL rt i4 > f t > c S r Jtt Jtti W s > i if d NOi µ ypMs SyoN1 RGURrSQNAVENU1lADIN67OTNE7VMB5cTREN1NGSNARKN forming a perfectly square enclosure enclosureThe enclosureThe enclosureThe The main approach Is over a long stone stonepared stonepaved stonepaved paved causeway which with the passing passingyears p passingyears 58lng 58lngyears years has become overgrown with weeds weedsand weedsand weedsand and trees Near the marble triumphal triumphalarch triumpbalarch triumphalarch arch It broadens and crosses n ruinedmarble ruined ruinedmarble ruinedmarble marble bridge which spans a stretch of ofartificial ofartltlciai ofartifidal artificial water now choked with weeds weedsand weedsand woodsand and sedge grass grassBeyond gr grassBeyond 58 58Beyond Beyond a grand gateway with yellow yellowand yello yelloand yellowand and purple tiled roof stand on either side sidebuildings sidebuildings sidebuildings buildings which were once palatial halls hallsIn halliJIn hallsIn In a brood avenue lined with stone Images Imagesof of animals and marble pillars with carved carvedclouds canedcloud8 carvedclouds clouds encircling them stand houses In Inwhich inwblch inwhich which the retinue of the I Imperor mperor can restThere rest restThere restThere There is I also there a magnificent square squaretower squaretower squaretower tower and a marble tablet nearly 30 feet feethigh feethigh feethigh high and standing on the back of a marble marbletortoise marbletortoise marbletortoise tortoise On this tablet is an inscription inscriptionsacred l15crlptlonsacred inscriptionsacred sacred to the wonderful deeds of TalTsung TalTsungthe Tai Tsucg Tsucgthe the conqueror of China who compelled its itspeople itapeople itspeople people to wear the queue and tried In vain vainto vainto vainto to make its women cease deforming their theirfeet theirfest theirfeet feet feetNear Near by is another square enclosure enclosureguarded enclosureguarded enclosureguarded guarded by high embattlemented brick brickwalls brickwa11e brickwalls walls Within are the three great halls hallswhere hallswhere hallswhere where the worship of the spirit of the de departed departed departed ¬ parted Tal Tsung is carried on by some somePrince somePrince somePrince Prince of blood or proxy of the Emperor EmperorTo To the north of this square and surrounded surroundedby by a high circular brick wall is a huge hugemound bugemound hugemound mound of earth beneath which slumber slumbersthe slumberthe slumberthe the mighty Tai Tsung who died In the theseventeenth the60venteentb theseventeenth seventeenth century and who finally ob obtained obtained obtained ¬ tained for his successors the beriditary heriditaryManchurian beriditaryManchurian beriditaryManchurlan Manchurian Imperial dignity and gave to tohis tohis tohis his dynasty the name of Datsln Ho was wasthe WI18the wasthe the father of the first Manchu Emperor of ofChina ofChina ofChina China ChinaThere ChinaThere ChinaThere There is apparently no entrance to the theinterior tbeInterior theinterior interior of this sacred mound Above Aboveit it can be seen the topmost branches of an anancient anancient anancient ancient elm still putting out leaves in the thospring thesprlcg thespring spring This tree Is said to be the dwell dwelling dwellIng dwelllag ¬ ing place of one of the spirits of Tal Tsung TsungHis TsungHis TsungHla His ancestors buried their chiefs in hollow hollowtrees hollowtrOO8 hollowtree trees To the rear of To Tsungs grave graveIs Is a small artificial horseshoeshaped moun mountain mountain mouataia ¬ tain to guard It from the evil north northThe northThe northThe The other imperial cemetery metery at Mukden Mukdenconsists Mukdenconsists Mukdenconsists consists of about five thousand acres of ofparkllke ofparklike ofparklike parklike forest with steep cliffs to the thesouth theIouth thesouth south under which winds the Hun River RiverNear Rhelear RiverNear Near ear the th centre Is the Fu Ling or Tomb of ofthe oftbe ofthe the Blessed Dle ed a somewhat larger mound moundthan moundthan moundthan than that of Tai Tsung T ung Under It repose reposethe repOfetbe reposethe Although Mukden has always suffered sufferedfrom sutreredfrom sufferedfrom from a dearth dearthof of fuel fuelnothing nothing would induce inducethe Inducethe Inducethe the Emperor to allow his subjects to mine minefor micefor minefor for coal anywhere within the prefecture prefecturefor for fear of disturbing the dragon and the thesacred thelIacred thesacred sacred spirits The dragon Is opposed to tofire tofire tofire fire thus he especially detests steam engines engineswar war and gunpowder gunpowderNot Not only are there the Imperial tombs tombsdescribed tombsdescribed tombsdescribed described above but a vast number of those thosebelonging tholebelonging thosebelonging belonging to kinsmen of the royal family familyclansmen fmUyclan8men familyclansmen clansmen and high mandarins are to be beseen bescen beseen seen along the dragon bill for many miles milesTho mlleTho milesThe Tho Chinese Government is now greatly greatlydisturbed grutlydisturbed greatlydisturbed disturbed by the fear that the imperial imperialtombs imperiatombs imperialtombs tombs at Mukden may be either damaged or ordestroyed ordeetroyed ordestroyed destroyed if a battle is fought there by the theRussians theRUS8lan8 theRussians Russians and the Japanese Representa Representations RepreeentatlOI1ll Representations ¬ tions on the subject have been made to both bothsides bothBides bothsides sides by the authorities at Pekin and a as the theCzar theCzar theCzar Czar and the Mikado are anxious now in inview Inview inview view of the critical situation in the Far Fist Fistnot Eutnot E jt jtnot not to give offence to China it is evident evidentthat evidentthat evidentthat that the armies of both will do their best to tosave toSBe tosave save tho tombs from harm harmIt harmIt harmIt It is I hard to imagine however how hOWthey hOWtheycan they theycon theycan can escape the crossfire of artillery should ihoulda a general engagement take place there thereAll thereAll thereAll All Chinese have a deep veneration for fortho fartbo torthe the idea of a soul or the continuity of life lifeThis lUeThis lifeThis This idea Is derived partly from the old oldShamanistio oldShamanistic oldShamanistic Shamanistic or natural religion and partly partlyfrom partlyfrom partlyfrom from the Buddhist notion of tnuumign tnuumigntlon tranmJ1 a ation Lion Hence the great reverence for the thedead thedead thedead dead the love Iollor of funeral funaraJOereaiomeetI funaraJOereaiomeetIreadlness beremonleath beremonleathreadiness > to toreadiness > readiness to spend money on graves the thedesire thedesire thedesire desire to propitiate the ghosts of ancestors ancestorthe ancestorsthe the yearning for a son the strong family famflysentiment famnysentiment familysentiment sentiment of unity and the strict subordina subordination eubordination ubordlnatlon ¬ tion of the younger to the elder Ancestral Ancestralworship An Ancestralworship tra1 tra1wership worship is perhaps the most vital cult cultamong ou1tamong coltamong among them themTho themThe themThe The difficulty of laying out lines of travel travelin in the most populous parts of the Empire Empirewithout Empirewithout Empirewithout without interfering with the graves of thedead the thedead thedead dead and violating the sacred customs of the thepeople thepeople thepeoplo people has proved practically an Insuper Insuperable lnauperable btanperable ¬ able obstruction to the Introduction of rail railroads railroads railroads ¬ roads in China It would be Impossible to toenter toenter toenter enter most of the cities and towns in the theGreat tbeGreat theGreat Great Plain without running over or en encroaching encronchlng cacroaching ¬ croaching upon many graves gravesThe EtravesThe gravesThe The tombs of the Ming dynasty which whichwas whlohwaa whichwas was overthrown by the present dynasty are areat areat areat at Nansln which was the Imperial city till tilljust tilljust tilljust just before the Mings were succeeded by the theManchu tbeManchu theManchu Manchu Tartars TartarsTho TartareThe TartarsThe The tombs of the Emperors of the Ming Mingdynnsty Mlngdynnsty Mingdynasty
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i I This attractive new model Is simple shepherdess shap It Is In strong evidence all fashionable gatherings and la one of the most popular of the early hats The crown and tint In inousiellne de sole and makes a beaming frame tbetaeo The bflm lifts somewhat at the rnt side and graceful ostrich plumes are deftly draped to fall over
11/2/1904 The evening world.
i I This attractive new model Is simple shepherdess shap It Is In strong evidence all fashionable gatherings and la one of the most popular of the early hats The crown and tint In inousiellne de sole and makes a beaming frame tbetaeo The bflm lifts somewhat at the rnt side and graceful ostrich plumes are deftly draped to fall over
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IMPROVEMENTS IN ST. LOUIS GAS SERVICE IN ONE YEAR ARE Enlarged Manufacturing Capacity of the Laclede Gas Light Company Equals Eight and a Half Mil lion Feet Larger Pipes, Better Connections, Better Pressure and the Establishment of Free Pay Stations Evidence the Company's Determination to Give Satisfaction and Make Its Service as Nearly Perfect as Possible. JL. yv7rt;gigSlB MMMMMlawE'Mif1v' mmi''r: F't&Zz'' W" - xVflMaHMHMMMMMMMMBMMMMHMMMMMHMMMMIl b MbMMMMMc!SbMS?S?5sSJ- SMbt. Vsi 'Mj2BN5Sje-w(' V"jC-pE ""Jl '-f 55"' e --bvMMMIb-MMMMMMMHkbMMMmVB jygw puheesg snmox, MODEL HATS oh SKCONl SflR4 -- ---- .- --,-- J-,-..- - ...--. -Miiiii mm Mia aWlllla-ira-aMlasaii fizgg&gs CAYim 2 MCK MAM. gggfO l'glgMg!7-m -T-Tar',l,,3wJI 1 r aVassKasHi 1l5?S3b1 LL . 1 1 Hffc i I'sssfrpini I v"- MaVJUaBllt Cbff&rroK of street eu hours IffTES BglNG TORK UP TOLSTFTF. Olft OF THE mW FZGZ TSTbTKTlOItS-' qopsr CHOUTGAU a--
11/24/1904 The St. Louis Republic.
IMPROVEMENTS IN ST. LOUIS GAS SERVICE IN ONE YEAR ARE Enlarged Manufacturing Capacity of the Laclede Gas Light Company Equals Eight and a Half Mil lion Feet Larger Pipes, Better Connections, Better Pressure and the Establishment of Free Pay Stations Evidence the Company's Determination to Give Satisfaction and Make Its Service as Nearly Perfect as Possible. JL. yv7rt;gigSlB MMMMMlawE'Mif1v' mmi''r: F't&Zz'' W" - xVflMaHMHMMMMMMMMBMMMMHMMMMMHMMMMIl b MbMMMMMc!SbMS?S?5sSJ- SMbt. Vsi 'Mj2BN5Sje-w(' V"jC-pE ""Jl '-f 55"' e --bvMMMIb-MMMMMMMHkbMMMmVB jygw puheesg snmox, MODEL HATS oh SKCONl SflR4 -- ---- .- --,-- J-,-..- - ...--. -Miiiii mm Mia aWlllla-ira-aMlasaii fizgg&gs CAYim 2 MCK MAM. gggfO l'glgMg!7-m -T-Tar',l,,3wJI 1 r aVassKasHi 1l5?S3b1 LL . 1 1 Hffc i I'sssfrpini I v"- MaVJUaBllt Cbff&rroK of street eu hours IffTES BglNG TORK UP TOLSTFTF. Olft OF THE mW FZGZ TSTbTKTlOItS-' qopsr CHOUTGAU a--
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of ofVendor ofVendor o oVendor y yEver cents centsapiece eMUa owntrapdeos g B Bhas Bh 13has bound boundwhen 1MM boarwhcu 8 8when attatraLA at atThe I sliver sliverdollars sdIr r rdollars on the theprincipal theIrincJpal I Iprincipal ll city citylast citylast I Ilast hawked hawkedabout bawJuNIIt hawkedabout Street Streetard Streetu to the themorning themorn themornlag Dur During During During ¬ and andflldresoed andWtUdrMH4 andw who offrred of ottred of all allthe allthe allthe boughtsilver bought boughtsilver bouptsilver ac actuui actual aactuul facts factsof laetaot Meteof by bythis b btbls bythis t eJU oltiseneIt eJUznslt GlUstnIt of ofWashington atWa ofWashington those thoseof t thoseof e eof who whoknow w whoknow o oknow the almighty al almighty almIghty ¬ the thecountry thecountry who whobought wlloboulht whobought dW dWnot cItclnot didnot actually actuallyrecogtitieU aotu aoturtcoaIIMIi aatuaJlyrecopisetl money neoneybut moneybut JIIOIWYbut had hadenough AadflI liedenough their theirVins theirtr or had hadtf IuwIrttd badrt being beingtritd Mtactritd hlegtried Could ould Not Be Fooled Fooledspecimens Fooledaped Fooledapedmens specimens aped of what a firstclass ftr tcJaa mint can canturn cantUrD canturn turn out and aIM would have oaued oaUllt4 d dSouth a aSouth aSouth South Carolina c negro untold delight But Butit ButIt ButIt i it was not to cottonHeld darkles drJd that thattlwe thattbfou thatthree three simoleans were to be ottered oteiedAt oteiedAtlluartel offeredata at ata a quarter each ell mind my myl my Halle Hallelujahhut Halle1UjahDut Hallet ¬ lujahhut to the educated eduoiaddtlans citizens etU of ofthe ofthe ofthe the Nations Natton Capital CapitalMethod CapitalMethod f Method of Approaeh ApproachThe ApproaehTbe ApproaehThe The sale Ie or rather the attempted attemptedsale attemptedbqan attemptedsale sale began m Pennsylvania Avenue Avenuenear Avenufnear Avenuenear near Eleventh Street Although the themethod th thMeth04 themethod method of approaching < < poesibibuyer poesibibuyerwas poesibi JIOMI buyers buyerswas ooyerwaa was varied usually some such IIUC formula formulawas tormulaAS formulawad was AS used to introduce the subject au ject as asthis asthis this 0 thisI I beg pardon sir but would you give giveme giveme giveme me a quarter for thIa r and Rice held heldup heldup heldup up a bright bri ht dollar In I every err ease h M ex explained explained explalned ¬ plained that it was good money just justfrom justtrom justfrom from the mint There was wa was no attempt attemptto to make the dollar look at all U Ilk Ilkeounterfelts UkCWMIfttertta like likeoeunterfoits eounterfelts They were ere as clean and andunworn andUftwora andunworn unworn and without nicks nick as the daythey day daythey da dathey they were minted It was as good us uscircus WIdrcua ascircus > circus to see the different expression expressionthat expr8 expressionthat lon lontltat One of the Many 4Too Too Wise WiseIn WiseIn WiseIn In front of pr the Treasury Department Departmentduring Departmentduring Departmentduring during the th noon hour was a crowd of ofclerks otclerks ofclerks clerks Now these tb bright dollars had hadcome hadcome hadcome come out oC f that that same Treasury just justtwo JUS1two justtwo two hours before It was possible seem seemed seamed seemed ¬ ed almost almo t probable that one of these thesewould tbesewould thesewould would know what was what A tall tallgrayhaired tallgrayhalret1 tallgrayhaired grayhaired man man been in the department departmtwitfor deptLrtm dl dltor for or years was talking to a friend before be before b btore ¬ fore dashing in to a It shop for a quick quicklunch quicklunch quicklunch lunch lunchBe lunchUBeg lunchBeg UBeg Beg Be pardon sir but I would like to tocall tocall tocall call this tb opportunity to your atten attention attention attention ¬ tion began the money seller Will you yougive yotlslve yougive give me 25 5 cents for this Ual dollar dollarEh dollar1I dollar1IElt dollarElir Elir Eh r said Id the Treasury Treaur man manWhats nutnWbat manWhats Whats Wbat that If you let them catch catchyou catchyon catchyou you working any an game of this tb kind over overthere ovrther overtherehe there ther therehe lie pointed toward the Treasury Treasuryyoull TreasuryfyOuU Treasuryyoull youll find yourself OuraelC In a tight place placeSeveral placeScveral placeSeveral Several other clerks clerk were approached approachedbut apJMoaehedbut approachedbut but all gave similar Iml r answers It was wasbad wasbad s sbad bad money mOM they the said and they were werenot wer wernot werenot not born yesterday e terda nor even the day da before be before betore Police Does Not Stop the had experience as a a soldier in the war as well as the wars of this and now commands the Second mont District of Columbia ColumbiaSuppose ColumbiaSuppose ColumbiaSuppose Suppose They Were Free FreeUp FreeUp FreeUp Up and down the streets for hours the dollars went It was 1IS giving money away as it possibly be without actually being so citizens of Washington would man stood on the corner and give them silver dollars for mains to be seen een Perhaps they take them perhaps not It is to give mo m must t anything away even a cold in the head If doctors dnctors say II Y i is true trueA trueA truerA A short tubby man of of countenance was standing corner of Seventh and G Streets the dollars came his way wayAch WIt WItlIAeh wayAsh lIAeh Ash Louis only 25 Y cents for inc Let me see dat com co coin young oung
12/4/1904 The Washington times.
of ofVendor ofVendor o oVendor y yEver cents centsapiece eMUa owntrapdeos g B Bhas Bh 13has bound boundwhen 1MM boarwhcu 8 8when attatraLA at atThe I sliver sliverdollars sdIr r rdollars on the theprincipal theIrincJpal I Iprincipal ll city citylast citylast I Ilast hawked hawkedabout bawJuNIIt hawkedabout Street Streetard Streetu to the themorning themorn themornlag Dur During During During ¬ and andflldresoed andWtUdrMH4 andw who offrred of ottred of all allthe allthe allthe boughtsilver bought boughtsilver bouptsilver ac actuui actual aactuul facts factsof laetaot Meteof by bythis b btbls bythis t eJU oltiseneIt eJUznslt GlUstnIt of ofWashington atWa ofWashington those thoseof t thoseof e eof who whoknow w whoknow o oknow the almighty al almighty almIghty ¬ the thecountry thecountry who whobought wlloboulht whobought dW dWnot cItclnot didnot actually actuallyrecogtitieU aotu aoturtcoaIIMIi aatuaJlyrecopisetl money neoneybut moneybut JIIOIWYbut had hadenough AadflI liedenough their theirVins theirtr or had hadtf IuwIrttd badrt being beingtritd Mtactritd hlegtried Could ould Not Be Fooled Fooledspecimens Fooledaped Fooledapedmens specimens aped of what a firstclass ftr tcJaa mint can canturn cantUrD canturn turn out and aIM would have oaued oaUllt4 d dSouth a aSouth aSouth South Carolina c negro untold delight But Butit ButIt ButIt i it was not to cottonHeld darkles drJd that thattlwe thattbfou thatthree three simoleans were to be ottered oteiedAt oteiedAtlluartel offeredata at ata a quarter each ell mind my myl my Halle Hallelujahhut Halle1UjahDut Hallet ¬ lujahhut to the educated eduoiaddtlans citizens etU of ofthe ofthe ofthe the Nations Natton Capital CapitalMethod CapitalMethod f Method of Approaeh ApproachThe ApproaehTbe ApproaehThe The sale Ie or rather the attempted attemptedsale attemptedbqan attemptedsale sale began m Pennsylvania Avenue Avenuenear Avenufnear Avenuenear near Eleventh Street Although the themethod th thMeth04 themethod method of approaching < < poesibibuyer poesibibuyerwas poesibi JIOMI buyers buyerswas ooyerwaa was varied usually some such IIUC formula formulawas tormulaAS formulawad was AS used to introduce the subject au ject as asthis asthis this 0 thisI I beg pardon sir but would you give giveme giveme giveme me a quarter for thIa r and Rice held heldup heldup heldup up a bright bri ht dollar In I every err ease h M ex explained explained explalned ¬ plained that it was good money just justfrom justtrom justfrom from the mint There was wa was no attempt attemptto to make the dollar look at all U Ilk Ilkeounterfelts UkCWMIfttertta like likeoeunterfoits eounterfelts They were ere as clean and andunworn andUftwora andunworn unworn and without nicks nick as the daythey day daythey da dathey they were minted It was as good us uscircus WIdrcua ascircus > circus to see the different expression expressionthat expr8 expressionthat lon lontltat One of the Many 4Too Too Wise WiseIn WiseIn WiseIn In front of pr the Treasury Department Departmentduring Departmentduring Departmentduring during the th noon hour was a crowd of ofclerks otclerks ofclerks clerks Now these tb bright dollars had hadcome hadcome hadcome come out oC f that that same Treasury just justtwo JUS1two justtwo two hours before It was possible seem seemed seamed seemed ¬ ed almost almo t probable that one of these thesewould tbesewould thesewould would know what was what A tall tallgrayhaired tallgrayhalret1 tallgrayhaired grayhaired man man been in the department departmtwitfor deptLrtm dl dltor for or years was talking to a friend before be before b btore ¬ fore dashing in to a It shop for a quick quicklunch quicklunch quicklunch lunch lunchBe lunchUBeg lunchBeg UBeg Beg Be pardon sir but I would like to tocall tocall tocall call this tb opportunity to your atten attention attention attention ¬ tion began the money seller Will you yougive yotlslve yougive give me 25 5 cents for this Ual dollar dollarEh dollar1I dollar1IElt dollarElir Elir Eh r said Id the Treasury Treaur man manWhats nutnWbat manWhats Whats Wbat that If you let them catch catchyou catchyon catchyou you working any an game of this tb kind over overthere ovrther overtherehe there ther therehe lie pointed toward the Treasury Treasuryyoull TreasuryfyOuU Treasuryyoull youll find yourself OuraelC In a tight place placeSeveral placeScveral placeSeveral Several other clerks clerk were approached approachedbut apJMoaehedbut approachedbut but all gave similar Iml r answers It was wasbad wasbad s sbad bad money mOM they the said and they were werenot wer wernot werenot not born yesterday e terda nor even the day da before be before betore Police Does Not Stop the had experience as a a soldier in the war as well as the wars of this and now commands the Second mont District of Columbia ColumbiaSuppose ColumbiaSuppose ColumbiaSuppose Suppose They Were Free FreeUp FreeUp FreeUp Up and down the streets for hours the dollars went It was 1IS giving money away as it possibly be without actually being so citizens of Washington would man stood on the corner and give them silver dollars for mains to be seen een Perhaps they take them perhaps not It is to give mo m must t anything away even a cold in the head If doctors dnctors say II Y i is true trueA trueA truerA A short tubby man of of countenance was standing corner of Seventh and G Streets the dollars came his way wayAch WIt WItlIAeh wayAsh lIAeh Ash Louis only 25 Y cents for inc Let me see dat com co coin young oung
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WOMEN TO KNOW witnesses sacrifices of sort and description question is, is it while and are the :e- what one would alwa\*s writes me her par to send her here to it will be a grr^nt if she accepts their Her wardrobe is inade her father and mother a good many lux to fill her trunk I frills and furbelows essential for city all this she asks. 'What a moment one apt to say "stay at of the two "evils the sharper *pain. All would be passed by ; uncomplainingly and a certain air of sat the ranchhouse. was having city ad the other hand, if the sacrifice too great profit by it. the eternal reminders that the most of her op be a bug-bear that it would soon be too house. is undoubtedly a good think sometimes the and that more mis are the fruits of else. Certainlv it kindness to send school and college and to be content with the of a farm or a small won't work and I who* could «xpect it to. lived in a coilc-ge town its atmosphere for a — in short, has lived of a student — she is out with her old surround as hard as she may, can her old niche with the comfort. she doesn't care exactly, cf tune with "everybody What has interested is like so much Grtck to and she is not !n the over Brir.dle's r.ew calf the iirigating water Is gradually it dawns on dad that all his efforts vain: that his many sac for wc-rse than of making his pet and a scurce of pride has only succeeded in between them and in into the very 5s bought at such does it really pay? It's to be between two know which way to turn. times it's back to the other one a career of a happy marriage. In alienation takes place, the kind that makes all much the sacrifices that the after results. Nearly mother give up some do it without a second's fact, it is rather a habit into and they never whether it is appreci mother who would not night sewing on a gown might appear at her the next day? And is loo low to permit and the old is too far she heaves a tiny and marches to the old and brings forth some wedding finery. As lavender-scented fabric now and then as recalled, but she sews even puts the last lin and pats to It as she watches her daughter a light "thank you, a careless nod. that is a little of everything of anything. appreciated? Not am sorr>; to say. Rather as a matter of course more than her natural on earth does mother all her pretty things old to need them any she never goes any true, but the reason of at home like a burr Is into, excepting once In her presence is needed or "You never have cumbs to her pretij >-.les and promlso fondly and loelish'.y, and then luuks about for a way to keep his word. .He "guesses his office suit will last a month longer if sent to the tailor to be thoroughly pressed." or he reasons out with himself "that the duck trio will be cold and disagreeable and not much fun, anyhow." By giving up a looked for pleasure the day has been won. and Miladi has a new fur. gives a theater party or trails about in yards of shim mering loveliness and looks the uer ponineation of all the graces and vir tues combined. Now and then she Is really ignorant of these little tricks of her people and would feel her.rt:ly ashamed of herself for her supreme selfishness, and when such is the case you may rest assured that the sacrifica has town a pleasure and the satisfaction of seeing the daughter of the house take her place In the world, radiant and happy, is more than enough compensation. Of the many sacrifices that occur daily I doubt if time and labor are not the least considered. There must al ways be one elegant lady of leisure in every household, end, or course, it is easy to guess who" it is. "I don't mind doing the dishes this evening as long as you are going out." is cheerfully announced as the mater years a tray kitchenward. "You go along . and dress." The next day John Brown Is expected to call just after lunch and cases. It is no*t the actual sacrifice that counts half as much as the spirit in which it is received. If an education is offered and one so much for a dainty trifle to hand out to some forgotten friend,. and it is not a 'bid scheme to always keep one or ting or a dainty silk mull. If you wan; a waist colored, say a pink, for in stance, I am afraid you ca^mut buy the old-fashioned bread and butter stuf fing is always good, but I take it for granted you know, it.. Use one pint MAKING OVER FURS are a bit of a problem for a woman who wants to dres3 well on a moderate sum of money. They are expensive to begln wilh and vary In style almost as often as frocks and hats do. There 1» a new cut In sleeves every winter, a different length, a* variation in collar and some novalty in lining. Furs used to be a real comfort. *You packed them away with" blankets and curtains and borax powder to 'outwit the moths and all you bad to' do , In' the fall. was to shako, them, hans them out to air and then be comfortable. But • nowadays women begin > in. August to wonder how they can set their furs up to date without bank rupting the family exchequer. For furriers are as heartless as plumbers and almost as essential to' happiness. Of course this fall's furs differ a good deal from last season's, but here Ij a word of comfort: they "suggest all sorts of practical schemes for the ar tistic remodeling of old garments. Almost all furs are trimmed or made up with other furs. Ermine is com bined with almost of dry bread chestnuts, boiled good sized lump of spoonful of grated pepper and a large sage and four chopped very fine. EVA (Eyebrows). obstinate your train them so they smooth to the skin. and train them short time you will great Improvement. falls out U3» the Rsd vaseline, Tincture Jamaica rum, Oil rosemary, Mix all daily* with the eye A little glycerin, will give the and brilliancy, and are healthy again that is necessary splendid condition. ANNA (Paste).— preference to any you will have to is not on the least, not to my Strained honey White soap, thin strips (a pure tiJe) " Tincture of White wax Borax Melt the soap, mix, then -add the Us? Instead of soan before retiring. A eambjcr cream the face has been If you" find that use this simple It is an excellent during the summer face is eo apt to •heel.' • v MILK Alcohol Tincture btnzcin • Strons white Mix and let stand then pass through MARY F. (Cork think any boots are the elements unle3s ber. I have tried all escape the I always managed wet feet and a bad try the rubber weather? They are and are very always a delicious are put in front purpose of wading did when a broideries. "I lie match the rotor ing as c!os")y as be very ea«y for a tate Russian or and make her o.vn match her coat. good fortune in They are buth loos? and In style whether blouse or basque, may ha\c a. fullness a tritie at the fect of last winter .Nearly all couta. fancy, have U;ht citin .brocade, and plain Hcht vas somewhat many women will this fall with a the toiled coat linings. Uut worry, for a rolled in good condition made as good as sort of home fur coats are fitted quite' finished,
12/25/1904 The San Francisco call.
WOMEN TO KNOW witnesses sacrifices of sort and description question is, is it while and are the :e- what one would alwa\*s writes me her par to send her here to it will be a grr^nt if she accepts their Her wardrobe is inade her father and mother a good many lux to fill her trunk I frills and furbelows essential for city all this she asks. 'What a moment one apt to say "stay at of the two "evils the sharper *pain. All would be passed by ; uncomplainingly and a certain air of sat the ranchhouse. was having city ad the other hand, if the sacrifice too great profit by it. the eternal reminders that the most of her op be a bug-bear that it would soon be too house. is undoubtedly a good think sometimes the and that more mis are the fruits of else. Certainlv it kindness to send school and college and to be content with the of a farm or a small won't work and I who* could «xpect it to. lived in a coilc-ge town its atmosphere for a — in short, has lived of a student — she is out with her old surround as hard as she may, can her old niche with the comfort. she doesn't care exactly, cf tune with "everybody What has interested is like so much Grtck to and she is not !n the over Brir.dle's r.ew calf the iirigating water Is gradually it dawns on dad that all his efforts vain: that his many sac for wc-rse than of making his pet and a scurce of pride has only succeeded in between them and in into the very 5s bought at such does it really pay? It's to be between two know which way to turn. times it's back to the other one a career of a happy marriage. In alienation takes place, the kind that makes all much the sacrifices that the after results. Nearly mother give up some do it without a second's fact, it is rather a habit into and they never whether it is appreci mother who would not night sewing on a gown might appear at her the next day? And is loo low to permit and the old is too far she heaves a tiny and marches to the old and brings forth some wedding finery. As lavender-scented fabric now and then as recalled, but she sews even puts the last lin and pats to It as she watches her daughter a light "thank you, a careless nod. that is a little of everything of anything. appreciated? Not am sorr>; to say. Rather as a matter of course more than her natural on earth does mother all her pretty things old to need them any she never goes any true, but the reason of at home like a burr Is into, excepting once In her presence is needed or "You never have cumbs to her pretij >-.les and promlso fondly and loelish'.y, and then luuks about for a way to keep his word. .He "guesses his office suit will last a month longer if sent to the tailor to be thoroughly pressed." or he reasons out with himself "that the duck trio will be cold and disagreeable and not much fun, anyhow." By giving up a looked for pleasure the day has been won. and Miladi has a new fur. gives a theater party or trails about in yards of shim mering loveliness and looks the uer ponineation of all the graces and vir tues combined. Now and then she Is really ignorant of these little tricks of her people and would feel her.rt:ly ashamed of herself for her supreme selfishness, and when such is the case you may rest assured that the sacrifica has town a pleasure and the satisfaction of seeing the daughter of the house take her place In the world, radiant and happy, is more than enough compensation. Of the many sacrifices that occur daily I doubt if time and labor are not the least considered. There must al ways be one elegant lady of leisure in every household, end, or course, it is easy to guess who" it is. "I don't mind doing the dishes this evening as long as you are going out." is cheerfully announced as the mater years a tray kitchenward. "You go along . and dress." The next day John Brown Is expected to call just after lunch and cases. It is no*t the actual sacrifice that counts half as much as the spirit in which it is received. If an education is offered and one so much for a dainty trifle to hand out to some forgotten friend,. and it is not a 'bid scheme to always keep one or ting or a dainty silk mull. If you wan; a waist colored, say a pink, for in stance, I am afraid you ca^mut buy the old-fashioned bread and butter stuf fing is always good, but I take it for granted you know, it.. Use one pint MAKING OVER FURS are a bit of a problem for a woman who wants to dres3 well on a moderate sum of money. They are expensive to begln wilh and vary In style almost as often as frocks and hats do. There 1» a new cut In sleeves every winter, a different length, a* variation in collar and some novalty in lining. Furs used to be a real comfort. *You packed them away with" blankets and curtains and borax powder to 'outwit the moths and all you bad to' do , In' the fall. was to shako, them, hans them out to air and then be comfortable. But • nowadays women begin > in. August to wonder how they can set their furs up to date without bank rupting the family exchequer. For furriers are as heartless as plumbers and almost as essential to' happiness. Of course this fall's furs differ a good deal from last season's, but here Ij a word of comfort: they "suggest all sorts of practical schemes for the ar tistic remodeling of old garments. Almost all furs are trimmed or made up with other furs. Ermine is com bined with almost of dry bread chestnuts, boiled good sized lump of spoonful of grated pepper and a large sage and four chopped very fine. EVA (Eyebrows). obstinate your train them so they smooth to the skin. and train them short time you will great Improvement. falls out U3» the Rsd vaseline, Tincture Jamaica rum, Oil rosemary, Mix all daily* with the eye A little glycerin, will give the and brilliancy, and are healthy again that is necessary splendid condition. ANNA (Paste).— preference to any you will have to is not on the least, not to my Strained honey White soap, thin strips (a pure tiJe) " Tincture of White wax Borax Melt the soap, mix, then -add the Us? Instead of soan before retiring. A eambjcr cream the face has been If you" find that use this simple It is an excellent during the summer face is eo apt to •heel.' • v MILK Alcohol Tincture btnzcin • Strons white Mix and let stand then pass through MARY F. (Cork think any boots are the elements unle3s ber. I have tried all escape the I always managed wet feet and a bad try the rubber weather? They are and are very always a delicious are put in front purpose of wading did when a broideries. "I lie match the rotor ing as c!os")y as be very ea«y for a tate Russian or and make her o.vn match her coat. good fortune in They are buth loos? and In style whether blouse or basque, may ha\c a. fullness a tritie at the fect of last winter .Nearly all couta. fancy, have U;ht citin .brocade, and plain Hcht vas somewhat many women will this fall with a the toiled coat linings. Uut worry, for a rolled in good condition made as good as sort of home fur coats are fitted quite' finished,
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r rr r wsi VASHINGTON DECEMBER 25 Q 0 1904 i O tm Ogfl P 4 4 i 5 4 < r D ay c YaP t O f < j t f < F I Ir r 1 I James Dudle y nor i iG k i Dr Stafford I DP JG G Batler BL I IL L Wl16 I 1 0 6 4 P1iy De11 4 0 II H V J p C J > > i > 4 4 I Marked Mar 4Chan Chan ges OinC in in in Gtistomsof C Customs st I1s Q of i f 0Jg 0J Gffis Observin J rvin t jri jn > g g rr 6liie l1iif BiMWiikle c f Wilki Tells t ns o of f Drummer Who Yuletide Yul tide Holiday HolidayNot I l1otas Iot ot as asNolsy asNolsyN asNolsyw N No Nois is syN y d Now N w w Cal ro41t JtTcE dohn W1th3C t tS as S Sai Santa nta nt ita Claus Diplomac D1plomacy Di plomac y Re Required quired v ms f as s It Vjas WasTwentyfiveYearsAgo Was Twentyfiv T entyfiv Years ars Ago jrr in ininviting Invitin g g ga gaHllo a Hun gr gryBoYJ y Boyjo Dine hourly thought th ught of men men who have been was w s no life insurance and andth the woman h interested tcr eSted in the city men men from all Thats T hars parts partso ts of o the coun country trj try who believe beli ve that tha left with a tenyearold ten vearoldda daughter s shterwas hterwas was p a great eat U agr suggestion 5 g getion observed 9b sened = j J Washington 1V S shlngton hI the theCapIta1 e Capital a p t of belig f the g fore f o ¬ forced orc to leave I eave her h her er at least comforta comfortable com fortable ble confined C to children whose parents pa rents are arew I Iwonder wonder w wo O nderand nde ran and d looking 10 okIngat at the tJ e ta tabfea tableaux b fea IX J cIO JOHN 0 Ii Nr NJ r E J WILKIE WI WILKIEuje T IL tKIE K IE the t e traveling tr2 tr2elin elin man m man man u an and an andthen d thenaddr then addressing addre eCSin sIn s most s sS st t nation fg xi i in the t tg g e world I should S Sh SO h O ld or r be b home no me and move into in to the wretched wretchedquu quar ¬ wealthy W weaIthyor ealth yo or r even evenfo to those th tho 0 se whose hose parents pa r ents l itbe the th tho e Nativity Natl NatlvitYtheshe Nativitythe V1ty the shepherds shep herds and an d c L YY the t1i waiter wai t er uEI1 UE Bring EI1 E I1 rm me heat at ters te In which I r Tfound found d her g some me m e wheat W 3t U the t e center f fter enter ter of < everything ever ything that is isgre great t Sew J J Uft ft ftd are gr grew we well w ell elloIL ll o pF pFI off oIL f I have In mind min ncia d da a Sunday Sunda kings 1n kingsand and d realizing in a a most mos cakes and andmakeemcrown andmake make em emcrown brown t thI J L thin t tli ink k k tioble l ti bl le and d worthy Worth of nit ut emulation SewiPir 1r netted nettedn 51 1 a a a day aYWhen when she o o Chief Ch Chiefof l f of 0 I th the e Secret s Secretervice ecre fS SeIVlce Service eIVlce Tells T e 11s I I theyll th yU taste tantegood good 7 f I a am ih l1 l < sure sure ure that hat I am not the only on 1 iy Jould could find findemplo employment emplo Yn Ynent ent an and d don on this the School schoo l lW which W h1cltis is lSmade made up of 0 the children way the scene that took toonn place J > lace ce on AboutP nCite o who whobeUeves believes U that these t men men have ave two subsisted until the Illness came came of the poorer p ob er classes the classes whp w wb wh starlit star t slopes of Bethlehem BethlehemInvo two two Incident one About AboutPathetic Pathetic thetic 1 incid of nt t This a n a completed com co m op Ple p e d the theordera order Orderan and n d dth the th tho eba e trav ra f gt Then he hen the daughter 1aUg < hter went out outto to hunt come come e pretty et near near being g successful su cessf e L work har hard d and andearil earn few dollars dol So gen ¬ sand nil years yearsag earsag ag ag3 Nothing Nothin Nothingperhaps perhaps 1 eling man turned tu turnedtowatch edtow to watch tch the flying ing work r on some O days y earning e a quarter r Bygone B yg one Christmas J landscape while hne the little li tJe tJefellow fellow quietly if on onothelda ro other o th days not no o 1 1y so = o oe much v Withthl With this f ferous erous erous were these boys and girls girlsand gir S Sand and F so o impresses Im im J1 e5a esachild a child chi d and hence h rice I resumed refJu ed his hlsco hlscotreeand coffee ireeand and crackers o A lit ¬ money medicine and food for f r the mother thoroughly did dldthe dldthey they r enter nterinto into the true always alw insisted in In my parish upon upo 1 O One was bought the lit little Ve one starving her ¬ Christmas spirit which w hIch always leads to Christmas entertainment enterammentand and tabr One Christmas Eve several ernl sago tIe later the thew l ItejacketRdwaiter I left ne Denver on ve the sev eastbound eastbound years yearsago year ago ex in with wl 11histray his tray whitejacketed piled full fuIlof of waiter dishes dIshes came and I REV R REVJ C V J G BUTLER BUT L LC C L R I W1U1aIlS iUi3ntS self Christmas ChristmasE to supply Eve her e she sick s ck had mother gone On for forthe that the the happiness of others that t they theftrifor theftri fur ¬ for or I think it teaches tea ches the lesson IeS esson n m press r and da amonr t the other passengers set them th ti inbefore m before the waiting passenger W doctor and he had refused refusedto to go until nished twentyfive Christmas Christmasdinners dinners to Potently than anything Everything = I Good GOOrIgr GoorIgra sraeipus grac1ou douE exclaimed the of ofLuth Luther Memorial Memo nar his bIIlwRS n3Id mt hv c hpp who wnn1 nt Ytti < n < thus consecrated TP1f2lnr Tnn n travel J i noticed a a rather ttber delicatelooking boy mg fng man heres more more stuff than I can call traveling trave1Inalon alone nIo I Ie e While not over twelve eat tln In four meals Say son sonthe the boy years arsofage otf age ° he was V quietly qu etI indepehd m inciep d pen r iid d 3ookedupI iooked np1 wonder if irou you cant can help i r me There Theres s more bre breakfast > fa < here < thUD thzqJ + 7 cnt iri IIlanl1exLb Iflauflei but t his rthn thhlw thn wliisom some could caul eat e t In a week face face with big d dark lk eyes attracted attract d the th The Th boy bo pushed away awa his p plate late of attention attenti i iotsbn 06 otsbn sbn some ie e of the Ias1Iei la hiies dies in Inthecrnc ln the crackers te s The Dl man sen served cd him gen genj l car 1 on oii i dC whorri iio discovered discov red that he I er erously R y j v 1 frPt hllT nnr t Ve 1 mn Xn 4 Pastor Place Church Speaks Qf a Christmas Cfuistmas Day in Forf7Nine Fo rtrNne a E ey rY Christmas is y erg ryS1i ixnUarto nj to j Its Itspr itsprdeCssor predecessor ec < isQr to me me aa aai T theBev tb i the thegiound ground the sport spoftwouldbe would be all the better Then we weco could couldtrack ldirack track ourrab our rah bits IIi in great style styleonnU and it itenhan enhanced ed the fun tnNor Nor did we have any of the thenew new model moaeI1 mmerles9br liammerless hninm rless breechJpading brechJpttdingsbbt chlOic1ings1i sb 6t t gisHsJJn sJ Sntnose tfiqse tf1 8e days KO KOj Q j Jnsteadswe fnst itw T li ha i3 L an a oldT olc t muzzle J 1Zzle Toader foa ei ll llaC that aC kcked k1ckeaj klcle nLclast last bill was paid It was by sheer accident ccldentthat that she happened to come to my office officeand and she came just in time An hour or two later would have been tot to > late Ia te YIW ffj I would pld like to know the name Of that Spctor aoctorwho ctor who on Christmas Eve Eveo of illlnighLqrcfused Sll nlghts nlghtsi nlghtsTefused i Tefused to a attend ttend a sick vTdow iTdo merely j ffierd1 r J Because tise she couFd oufd nor families aml1I who would otherwise not have hav e been able ableto to distinguish what should be I the most Joyful of all aUdayS days from the i limitless 1mlt1 ss stretch stretch h oth of humdrum ex exisienc existence istence e varied only by bt the hard fight fight for fordalIy daily ibre bread cL OI OIl I have mentioned only onlja a a single case c cds conseCrated d to religion with the tl1edivine divine spirit of beauty beatit = WALTER WALTER B
12/25/1904 The Washington times.
r rr r wsi VASHINGTON DECEMBER 25 Q 0 1904 i O tm Ogfl P 4 4 i 5 4 < r D ay c YaP t O f < j t f < F I Ir r 1 I James Dudle y nor i iG k i Dr Stafford I DP JG G Batler BL I IL L Wl16 I 1 0 6 4 P1iy De11 4 0 II H V J p C J > > i > 4 4 I Marked Mar 4Chan Chan ges OinC in in in Gtistomsof C Customs st I1s Q of i f 0Jg 0J Gffis Observin J rvin t jri jn > g g rr 6liie l1iif BiMWiikle c f Wilki Tells t ns o of f Drummer Who Yuletide Yul tide Holiday HolidayNot I l1otas Iot ot as asNolsy asNolsyN asNolsyw N No Nois is syN y d Now N w w Cal ro41t JtTcE dohn W1th3C t tS as S Sai Santa nta nt ita Claus Diplomac D1plomacy Di plomac y Re Required quired v ms f as s It Vjas WasTwentyfiveYearsAgo Was Twentyfiv T entyfiv Years ars Ago jrr in ininviting Invitin g g ga gaHllo a Hun gr gryBoYJ y Boyjo Dine hourly thought th ught of men men who have been was w s no life insurance and andth the woman h interested tcr eSted in the city men men from all Thats T hars parts partso ts of o the coun country trj try who believe beli ve that tha left with a tenyearold ten vearoldda daughter s shterwas hterwas was p a great eat U agr suggestion 5 g getion observed 9b sened = j J Washington 1V S shlngton hI the theCapIta1 e Capital a p t of belig f the g fore f o ¬ forced orc to leave I eave her h her er at least comforta comfortable com fortable ble confined C to children whose parents pa rents are arew I Iwonder wonder w wo O nderand nde ran and d looking 10 okIngat at the tJ e ta tabfea tableaux b fea IX J cIO JOHN 0 Ii Nr NJ r E J WILKIE WI WILKIEuje T IL tKIE K IE the t e traveling tr2 tr2elin elin man m man man u an and an andthen d thenaddr then addressing addre eCSin sIn s most s sS st t nation fg xi i in the t tg g e world I should S Sh SO h O ld or r be b home no me and move into in to the wretched wretchedquu quar ¬ wealthy W weaIthyor ealth yo or r even evenfo to those th tho 0 se whose hose parents pa r ents l itbe the th tho e Nativity Natl NatlvitYtheshe Nativitythe V1ty the shepherds shep herds and an d c L YY the t1i waiter wai t er uEI1 UE Bring EI1 E I1 rm me heat at ters te In which I r Tfound found d her g some me m e wheat W 3t U the t e center f fter enter ter of < everything ever ything that is isgre great t Sew J J Uft ft ftd are gr grew we well w ell elloIL ll o pF pFI off oIL f I have In mind min ncia d da a Sunday Sunda kings 1n kingsand and d realizing in a a most mos cakes and andmakeemcrown andmake make em emcrown brown t thI J L thin t tli ink k k tioble l ti bl le and d worthy Worth of nit ut emulation SewiPir 1r netted nettedn 51 1 a a a day aYWhen when she o o Chief Ch Chiefof l f of 0 I th the e Secret s Secretervice ecre fS SeIVlce Service eIVlce Tells T e 11s I I theyll th yU taste tantegood good 7 f I a am ih l1 l < sure sure ure that hat I am not the only on 1 iy Jould could find findemplo employment emplo Yn Ynent ent an and d don on this the School schoo l lW which W h1cltis is lSmade made up of 0 the children way the scene that took toonn place J > lace ce on AboutP nCite o who whobeUeves believes U that these t men men have ave two subsisted until the Illness came came of the poorer p ob er classes the classes whp w wb wh starlit star t slopes of Bethlehem BethlehemInvo two two Incident one About AboutPathetic Pathetic thetic 1 incid of nt t This a n a completed com co m op Ple p e d the theordera order Orderan and n d dth the th tho eba e trav ra f gt Then he hen the daughter 1aUg < hter went out outto to hunt come come e pretty et near near being g successful su cessf e L work har hard d and andearil earn few dollars dol So gen ¬ sand nil years yearsag earsag ag ag3 Nothing Nothin Nothingperhaps perhaps 1 eling man turned tu turnedtowatch edtow to watch tch the flying ing work r on some O days y earning e a quarter r Bygone B yg one Christmas J landscape while hne the little li tJe tJefellow fellow quietly if on onothelda ro other o th days not no o 1 1y so = o oe much v Withthl With this f ferous erous erous were these boys and girls girlsand gir S Sand and F so o impresses Im im J1 e5a esachild a child chi d and hence h rice I resumed refJu ed his hlsco hlscotreeand coffee ireeand and crackers o A lit ¬ money medicine and food for f r the mother thoroughly did dldthe dldthey they r enter nterinto into the true always alw insisted in In my parish upon upo 1 O One was bought the lit little Ve one starving her ¬ Christmas spirit which w hIch always leads to Christmas entertainment enterammentand and tabr One Christmas Eve several ernl sago tIe later the thew l ItejacketRdwaiter I left ne Denver on ve the sev eastbound eastbound years yearsago year ago ex in with wl 11histray his tray whitejacketed piled full fuIlof of waiter dishes dIshes came and I REV R REVJ C V J G BUTLER BUT L LC C L R I W1U1aIlS iUi3ntS self Christmas ChristmasE to supply Eve her e she sick s ck had mother gone On for forthe that the the happiness of others that t they theftrifor theftri fur ¬ for or I think it teaches tea ches the lesson IeS esson n m press r and da amonr t the other passengers set them th ti inbefore m before the waiting passenger W doctor and he had refused refusedto to go until nished twentyfive Christmas Christmasdinners dinners to Potently than anything Everything = I Good GOOrIgr GoorIgra sraeipus grac1ou douE exclaimed the of ofLuth Luther Memorial Memo nar his bIIlwRS n3Id mt hv c hpp who wnn1 nt Ytti < n < thus consecrated TP1f2lnr Tnn n travel J i noticed a a rather ttber delicatelooking boy mg fng man heres more more stuff than I can call traveling trave1Inalon alone nIo I Ie e While not over twelve eat tln In four meals Say son sonthe the boy years arsofage otf age ° he was V quietly qu etI indepehd m inciep d pen r iid d 3ookedupI iooked np1 wonder if irou you cant can help i r me There Theres s more bre breakfast > fa < here < thUD thzqJ + 7 cnt iri IIlanl1exLb Iflauflei but t his rthn thhlw thn wliisom some could caul eat e t In a week face face with big d dark lk eyes attracted attract d the th The Th boy bo pushed away awa his p plate late of attention attenti i iotsbn 06 otsbn sbn some ie e of the Ias1Iei la hiies dies in Inthecrnc ln the crackers te s The Dl man sen served cd him gen genj l car 1 on oii i dC whorri iio discovered discov red that he I er erously R y j v 1 frPt hllT nnr t Ve 1 mn Xn 4 Pastor Place Church Speaks Qf a Christmas Cfuistmas Day in Forf7Nine Fo rtrNne a E ey rY Christmas is y erg ryS1i ixnUarto nj to j Its Itspr itsprdeCssor predecessor ec < isQr to me me aa aai T theBev tb i the thegiound ground the sport spoftwouldbe would be all the better Then we weco could couldtrack ldirack track ourrab our rah bits IIi in great style styleonnU and it itenhan enhanced ed the fun tnNor Nor did we have any of the thenew new model moaeI1 mmerles9br liammerless hninm rless breechJpading brechJpttdingsbbt chlOic1ings1i sb 6t t gisHsJJn sJ Sntnose tfiqse tf1 8e days KO KOj Q j Jnsteadswe fnst itw T li ha i3 L an a oldT olc t muzzle J 1Zzle Toader foa ei ll llaC that aC kcked k1ckeaj klcle nLclast last bill was paid It was by sheer accident ccldentthat that she happened to come to my office officeand and she came just in time An hour or two later would have been tot to > late Ia te YIW ffj I would pld like to know the name Of that Spctor aoctorwho ctor who on Christmas Eve Eveo of illlnighLqrcfused Sll nlghts nlghtsi nlghtsTefused i Tefused to a attend ttend a sick vTdow iTdo merely j ffierd1 r J Because tise she couFd oufd nor families aml1I who would otherwise not have hav e been able ableto to distinguish what should be I the most Joyful of all aUdayS days from the i limitless 1mlt1 ss stretch stretch h oth of humdrum ex exisienc existence istence e varied only by bt the hard fight fight for fordalIy daily ibre bread cL OI OIl I have mentioned only onlja a a single case c cds conseCrated d to religion with the tl1edivine divine spirit of beauty beatit = WALTER WALTER B
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RICHARD TATES. Former Governor of Illinois, accepts po 'sVV-ft aaaaaa - ' Jjt, .'it! rJt , M..SBaaBBBBBBV saaaaV Vn th . aaaBBBBBBBVSal aaPjaf tJfrtJL . , lasavsammmmmmlawa -;.l-: SSSSSSSSSSSHBS SSHBS g ;.-.TvBfjjaf2fjjas tiiS!-... " 1 t:m v i&a i-'ll' -aaaaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaaaaatr:- -i SBaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBSaBB-'' - taaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaVJaU -. f m!iL!awawi'- f . n TiaWBAIP'CVvV -v; ' I aaaaaaSaaBBBaaTn i V s. w 9 SaVTr l gsgsgKawaaa. " .t.-'l gla-a-a-a-a-afe vk,'--'-1' BwawawaaMjawB'" ' m.- BaaBBBBBBBBaaBBBBBBVK WX ' .l.iLagK': '"WMi; HatssaSSaSS.SaSS.Slr' '" WM aWaSBBBSBaSSBaSSBSBt-i j. I a a s a a . a
1/25/1905 The St. Louis Republic.
RICHARD TATES. Former Governor of Illinois, accepts po 'sVV-ft aaaaaa - ' Jjt, .'it! rJt , M..SBaaBBBBBBV saaaaV Vn th . aaaBBBBBBBVSal aaPjaf tJfrtJL . , lasavsammmmmmlawa -;.l-: SSSSSSSSSSSHBS SSHBS g ;.-.TvBfjjaf2fjjas tiiS!-... " 1 t:m v i&a i-'ll' -aaaaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaaaaatr:- -i SBaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBSaBB-'' - taaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaVJaU -. f m!iL!awawi'- f . n TiaWBAIP'CVvV -v; ' I aaaaaaSaaBBBaaTn i V s. w 9 SaVTr l gsgsgKawaaa. " .t.-'l gla-a-a-a-a-afe vk,'--'-1' BwawawaaMjawB'" ' m.- BaaBBBBBBBBaaBBBBBBVK WX ' .l.iLagK': '"WMi; HatssaSSaSS.SaSS.Slr' '" WM aWaSBBBSBaSSBaSSBSBt-i j. I a a s a a . a
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JAPAN'S GREATEST DISASTER. - -*>,4 HOW THE BATTLESHIP HATSUSE WAS LOST. The destruction of the Hatsuse by a mine ten miles off Port Arthur is the only great disaster that has overtaken the Japanese, and at that it is an accident rather than a piece of naval strategy. The Hatsuse was a battle ship of 15,000 tons displacement She was launched (in 189») at Elswick at the cost of over a million. The deetructlon of the vessel has been the occa sion of strong protests from naval authorities at the action of Russia in strewing the high seas with mines. The revised figures show that sixty-one non-commissioned officers and 378 bluejackets were killed or drowned on board the Hatsuse, while twelve bluejackets were seriously, and fifty nightly,
1/27/1905 Camas Prairie chronicle.
JAPAN'S GREATEST DISASTER. - -*>,4 HOW THE BATTLESHIP HATSUSE WAS LOST. The destruction of the Hatsuse by a mine ten miles off Port Arthur is the only great disaster that has overtaken the Japanese, and at that it is an accident rather than a piece of naval strategy. The Hatsuse was a battle ship of 15,000 tons displacement She was launched (in 189») at Elswick at the cost of over a million. The deetructlon of the vessel has been the occa sion of strong protests from naval authorities at the action of Russia in strewing the high seas with mines. The revised figures show that sixty-one non-commissioned officers and 378 bluejackets were killed or drowned on board the Hatsuse, while twelve bluejackets were seriously, and fifty nightly,
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ABERDEEN INLAND this year that the old village of Vermillion a a a a SCHNE^NEAR^YANKTON THE YEAR OF THE H.QH WATE whom was employed by him on his farm, lost their lives in attempting tc save the house after it had been carried out into the BAN CH Xj1L5TAD lives lost in the vicinity of Yankton. The Missouri river was 20 milts wide near Yankton and the cottonwood tices on cMiorm ',rC ly submerged. The ice gorge that caused all the trouble did not give way until in May and the water on the James river Hats, was situated, was twenty feet deep until that time. The winter preceeding the high water was unusually severe as the snow that tell a H)u middle oi remained in the gullies until May. practically all the houses on the bottoms. Mi. bllei man lost a house and two men. fTWZ 1 YANKTON una ,ie^c 1 *o*J year, 1881, is the year of the time and" occav flats, some little dis ould be a flood. ]t on'5" an homeo
2/17/1905 The Aberdeen Democrat.
ABERDEEN INLAND this year that the old village of Vermillion a a a a SCHNE^NEAR^YANKTON THE YEAR OF THE H.QH WATE whom was employed by him on his farm, lost their lives in attempting tc save the house after it had been carried out into the BAN CH Xj1L5TAD lives lost in the vicinity of Yankton. The Missouri river was 20 milts wide near Yankton and the cottonwood tices on cMiorm ',rC ly submerged. The ice gorge that caused all the trouble did not give way until in May and the water on the James river Hats, was situated, was twenty feet deep until that time. The winter preceeding the high water was unusually severe as the snow that tell a H)u middle oi remained in the gullies until May. practically all the houses on the bottoms. Mi. bllei man lost a house and two men. fTWZ 1 YANKTON una ,ie^c 1 *o*J year, 1881, is the year of the time and" occav flats, some little dis ould be a flood. ]t on'5" an homeo
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n demand for trimming spring hats. ror's the quaint and barbaric type of ather than that in modern setting, has he gewon of the -bseautiful debe, ady Was~igtte,-I beth a lae leve
2/25/1905 Evening star.
n demand for trimming spring hats. ror's the quaint and barbaric type of ather than that in modern setting, has he gewon of the -bseautiful debe, ady Was~igtte,-I beth a lae leve
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GRAIN HOUSES SHAPED LIKE MEXICAN HATS.
2/26/1905 New-York tribune.
GRAIN HOUSES SHAPED LIKE MEXICAN HATS.
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Freunde vsn find die Aiiitter und Minder. Die Wohlthaten, die die Kinder in den i Per. Staaten durch Pe-ru-na er hielte, lassen sich nie in Worte fassen. Die chronischen Leiden, die es ver hütet. die Schmerzen, die es gelindert.! ivcxden niemals völlig bekannt. Wenigstens aber kann mau sagen, j daß die aufwachsenc Generation Pc ! rnna gegenüber eine große Schuld! übernommen hak. denn es ist in den! zarten Jahren der Jugend, daß kleine Leiden sich entwickeln und permanente Krankheiten und so die ganze Lauf bahn eines Menschen c Frau Thrcsa Rook, 258 N. Ashland Ave., Chicago, 111., Schatzmei- 5 i sterin der Ladies of tyc Maccabees, schreibt: < „In unserem Hei; ist Peruna die einzige Medizin, die wir haben. ! ? Großmutter, Mutter, Vater und Kind, alle haben Peruna gebraucht. Z i Es ist unser großes Mittel gegen Katarrh des Magens nnd des Kopfes. ! < gegen Erkältungen und Frauenleiden, von denen es mich kurierte. > ! Wir fi iden es von großem Werte, wein; mein Gatte übermüdet ist < oder sich etklällek hat. Cm paar Dosen kurieren ihn. e 8 „Wenn das Baby Kolik hat. oder am Magen leidet, wird es durch eine / i oder zwei Tosen geheilt. > 8 „Ich halte Peruna für besser als irgend eine Doktor-Medizin, die ich > e je probirt habe, nnd ich weiß, daß so lange wir es im Hause haben, wir > e uns alle gesund halte können." Thresa Nooke. ' > > Herr G. H. Farmer, Nelv Martins ; ville. W. Va., schreibt: s „Unser kleiner So!; Harry ist jetzt gesund und fällig und wir glauben, daß wem; wir fortfahren, wie Sie uns > gerathen haben, er seine Gesundheit behalten und kräftig werden Ivird. „Wir wissen, daß daS Leben unseres kleinen Sohnes durch Ihre wundervolle ! Medizin, Peruna, gerettet worden ist und Pe-ru-na sollte m jedem Honsliall geholten werden Wo kleine Kinder sind. Peruna sollte man stets in; Hause halten. Wartet nicht, bis das Kind krank ist und schickt dann in die Apo theke, sondern haltet Peruna vorräthig nehmt kein Substitut. Kinder besonders sind akuten; Ka tarrh ausgesetzt. Thatsächlich sind die meisten Affeklivnen der Kindheit Ka tarrh. Alle Fälle von wehen Hals. Quincy. Croup. Heiserkeit. Laryngitis u. s. w. sind bloß verschiedene Phasen von Ka tirrrh. Frau Amalie Sailer, Menasha, Wis„ schreibt: Ich habe Peruna seit mehreren Jahren gebraucht. Es lnrirte mich voi; chronischem Katarrh, an welchem seit meiner ! i ! i ! in
3/2/1905 Der Deutsche correspondent.
Freunde vsn find die Aiiitter und Minder. Die Wohlthaten, die die Kinder in den i Per. Staaten durch Pe-ru-na er hielte, lassen sich nie in Worte fassen. Die chronischen Leiden, die es ver hütet. die Schmerzen, die es gelindert.! ivcxden niemals völlig bekannt. Wenigstens aber kann mau sagen, j daß die aufwachsenc Generation Pc ! rnna gegenüber eine große Schuld! übernommen hak. denn es ist in den! zarten Jahren der Jugend, daß kleine Leiden sich entwickeln und permanente Krankheiten und so die ganze Lauf bahn eines Menschen c Frau Thrcsa Rook, 258 N. Ashland Ave., Chicago, 111., Schatzmei- 5 i sterin der Ladies of tyc Maccabees, schreibt: < „In unserem Hei; ist Peruna die einzige Medizin, die wir haben. ! ? Großmutter, Mutter, Vater und Kind, alle haben Peruna gebraucht. Z i Es ist unser großes Mittel gegen Katarrh des Magens nnd des Kopfes. ! < gegen Erkältungen und Frauenleiden, von denen es mich kurierte. > ! Wir fi iden es von großem Werte, wein; mein Gatte übermüdet ist < oder sich etklällek hat. Cm paar Dosen kurieren ihn. e 8 „Wenn das Baby Kolik hat. oder am Magen leidet, wird es durch eine / i oder zwei Tosen geheilt. > 8 „Ich halte Peruna für besser als irgend eine Doktor-Medizin, die ich > e je probirt habe, nnd ich weiß, daß so lange wir es im Hause haben, wir > e uns alle gesund halte können." Thresa Nooke. ' > > Herr G. H. Farmer, Nelv Martins ; ville. W. Va., schreibt: s „Unser kleiner So!; Harry ist jetzt gesund und fällig und wir glauben, daß wem; wir fortfahren, wie Sie uns > gerathen haben, er seine Gesundheit behalten und kräftig werden Ivird. „Wir wissen, daß daS Leben unseres kleinen Sohnes durch Ihre wundervolle ! Medizin, Peruna, gerettet worden ist und Pe-ru-na sollte m jedem Honsliall geholten werden Wo kleine Kinder sind. Peruna sollte man stets in; Hause halten. Wartet nicht, bis das Kind krank ist und schickt dann in die Apo theke, sondern haltet Peruna vorräthig nehmt kein Substitut. Kinder besonders sind akuten; Ka tarrh ausgesetzt. Thatsächlich sind die meisten Affeklivnen der Kindheit Ka tarrh. Alle Fälle von wehen Hals. Quincy. Croup. Heiserkeit. Laryngitis u. s. w. sind bloß verschiedene Phasen von Ka tirrrh. Frau Amalie Sailer, Menasha, Wis„ schreibt: Ich habe Peruna seit mehreren Jahren gebraucht. Es lnrirte mich voi; chronischem Katarrh, an welchem seit meiner ! i ! i ! in
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Freunde vsn find die Aiiitter und Minder. Die Wohlthaten, die die Kinder in den i Per. Staaten durch Pe-ru-na er hielte, lassen sich nie in Worte fassen. Die chronischen Leiden, die es ver hütet. die Schmerzen, die es gelindert.! ivcxden niemals völlig bekannt. Wenigstens aber kann mau sagen, j daß die aufwachsenc Generation Pc ! rnna gegenüber eine große Schuld! übernommen hak. denn es ist in den! zarten Jahren der Jugend, daß kleine Leiden sich entwickeln und permanente Krankheiten und so die ganze Lauf bahn eines Menschen c Frau Thrcsa Rook, 258 N. Ashland Ave., Chicago, 111., Schatzmei- 5 i sterin der Ladies of tyc Maccabees, schreibt: < „In unserem Hei; ist Peruna die einzige Medizin, die wir haben. ! ? Großmutter, Mutter, Vater und Kind, alle haben Peruna gebraucht. Z i Es ist unser großes Mittel gegen Katarrh des Magens nnd des Kopfes. ! < gegen Erkältungen und Frauenleiden, von denen es mich kurierte. > ! Wir fi iden es von großem Werte, wein; mein Gatte übermüdet ist < oder sich etklällek hat. Cm paar Dosen kurieren ihn. e 8 „Wenn das Baby Kolik hat. oder am Magen leidet, wird es durch eine / i oder zwei Tosen geheilt. > 8 „Ich halte Peruna für besser als irgend eine Doktor-Medizin, die ich > e je probirt habe, nnd ich weiß, daß so lange wir es im Hause haben, wir > e uns alle gesund halte können." Thresa Nooke. ' > > Herr G. H. Farmer, Nelv Martins ; ville. W. Va., schreibt: s „Unser kleiner So!; Harry ist jetzt gesund und fällig und wir glauben, daß wem; wir fortfahren, wie Sie uns > gerathen haben, er seine Gesundheit behalten und kräftig werden Ivird. „Wir wissen, daß daS Leben unseres kleinen Sohnes durch Ihre wundervolle ! Medizin, Peruna, gerettet worden ist und Pe-ru-na sollte m jedem Honsliall geholten werden Wo kleine Kinder sind. Peruna sollte man stets in; Hause halten. Wartet nicht, bis das Kind krank ist und schickt dann in die Apo theke, sondern haltet Peruna vorräthig nehmt kein Substitut. Kinder besonders sind akuten; Ka tarrh ausgesetzt. Thatsächlich sind die meisten Affeklivnen der Kindheit Ka tarrh. Alle Fälle von wehen Hals. Quincy. Croup. Heiserkeit. Laryngitis u. s. w. sind bloß verschiedene Phasen von Ka tirrrh. Frau Amalie Sailer, Menasha, Wis„ schreibt: Ich habe Peruna seit mehreren Jahren gebraucht. Es lnrirte mich voi; chronischem Katarrh, an welchem seit meiner ! i ! i ! in
3/2/1905 Der Deutsche correspondent.
Freunde vsn find die Aiiitter und Minder. Die Wohlthaten, die die Kinder in den i Per. Staaten durch Pe-ru-na er hielte, lassen sich nie in Worte fassen. Die chronischen Leiden, die es ver hütet. die Schmerzen, die es gelindert.! ivcxden niemals völlig bekannt. Wenigstens aber kann mau sagen, j daß die aufwachsenc Generation Pc ! rnna gegenüber eine große Schuld! übernommen hak. denn es ist in den! zarten Jahren der Jugend, daß kleine Leiden sich entwickeln und permanente Krankheiten und so die ganze Lauf bahn eines Menschen c Frau Thrcsa Rook, 258 N. Ashland Ave., Chicago, 111., Schatzmei- 5 i sterin der Ladies of tyc Maccabees, schreibt: < „In unserem Hei; ist Peruna die einzige Medizin, die wir haben. ! ? Großmutter, Mutter, Vater und Kind, alle haben Peruna gebraucht. Z i Es ist unser großes Mittel gegen Katarrh des Magens nnd des Kopfes. ! < gegen Erkältungen und Frauenleiden, von denen es mich kurierte. > ! Wir fi iden es von großem Werte, wein; mein Gatte übermüdet ist < oder sich etklällek hat. Cm paar Dosen kurieren ihn. e 8 „Wenn das Baby Kolik hat. oder am Magen leidet, wird es durch eine / i oder zwei Tosen geheilt. > 8 „Ich halte Peruna für besser als irgend eine Doktor-Medizin, die ich > e je probirt habe, nnd ich weiß, daß so lange wir es im Hause haben, wir > e uns alle gesund halte können." Thresa Nooke. ' > > Herr G. H. Farmer, Nelv Martins ; ville. W. Va., schreibt: s „Unser kleiner So!; Harry ist jetzt gesund und fällig und wir glauben, daß wem; wir fortfahren, wie Sie uns > gerathen haben, er seine Gesundheit behalten und kräftig werden Ivird. „Wir wissen, daß daS Leben unseres kleinen Sohnes durch Ihre wundervolle ! Medizin, Peruna, gerettet worden ist und Pe-ru-na sollte m jedem Honsliall geholten werden Wo kleine Kinder sind. Peruna sollte man stets in; Hause halten. Wartet nicht, bis das Kind krank ist und schickt dann in die Apo theke, sondern haltet Peruna vorräthig nehmt kein Substitut. Kinder besonders sind akuten; Ka tarrh ausgesetzt. Thatsächlich sind die meisten Affeklivnen der Kindheit Ka tarrh. Alle Fälle von wehen Hals. Quincy. Croup. Heiserkeit. Laryngitis u. s. w. sind bloß verschiedene Phasen von Ka tirrrh. Frau Amalie Sailer, Menasha, Wis„ schreibt: Ich habe Peruna seit mehreren Jahren gebraucht. Es lnrirte mich voi; chronischem Katarrh, an welchem seit meiner ! i ! i ! in
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THIS IS IS TOO EASY 1 1 w I It t LI w p c s 4 S t < I a i r 2 4 r NO TROUBLE TO PICK UPHA UP HATS S PowboyAmus Cowboy Amus mga ing a Crowd on Louis iana Avenue Before the Parade
3/5/1905 The Washington times.
THIS IS IS TOO EASY 1 1 w I It t LI w p c s 4 S t < I a i r 2 4 r NO TROUBLE TO PICK UPHA UP HATS S PowboyAmus Cowboy Amus mga ing a Crowd on Louis iana Avenue Before the Parade
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Stunning Spring Styles in Hats Tb« wholesale milliners arc sell* log amal) had for early woar. Mat* will tm worn Hli«hl decidedly toward th« front. Th« backs ar* hlich and well trimmed. •Small hat» am worn with m«ah far* Twlta. Th» Toll match** th« hat In color, Chtnlll* dots ar« still In cood styla, Th« farortta flowers for tli« •prtnn h»t» am lltaca, hy»4-lnth« and roam of all color*. Th« popular color. In it raw* »r* "•■'l* «r««l <• light irrwn), cor* flower bliif. Ut« onion ihadm. and anc«hr*t. Sail a rtbbona are moat popular. UMtUKk toaar of the sw«ll«at rnrneh h*U ar* trißUMd .lib molrav No. 1 ahbwa tluto! <>»k>a chip. rut trtamtil, with " .ml.m .h»!«] , molt* ribbon and pink cotton roM, Cotton flower* in a fa.! of th» ■». Few silk or tdliiK bUMaona »re to t» asm on tb» M ( h-(>rk«a hats. Th* brim of thn 'ip hat li tut tki «^ at back aad turr.M forward mmr bit of moir» rtbtxHi oraamontnl with a buck Uu»n» and tour th* high tunt*4 bark. No, I is a turl*u ■•>•• of c<>lori«l r««.t'i» iimw, Th* hat alni|>lr lir.H Jwl vitlvnt, with the ception of ilia straw •bout lbs mini up brim. medallions urn whenl-thapad, and Hie. caster of each I* a knot of lot satin ribbon, knottnl Into a ri". Th« lone neck of an bird la knotted and from thla •tart viol* c«ili>r«l wings. No. 1 la a modified Charlotte Cor day. Tha braid Is tuarao set lh« frame with alternating rows folded aa>iin ribbon of a violet abadn. riusirra of and violet ribbon are upon th* of th* hat and baaeath tb* brim. No. 4. the largo bat. la most iar II sttap*. It la called tha Vardea. Tla. brim. Instead rounding toward tae front, la square off arms the. far». so that *•>■»! side of the fare there la a tin. corner. Th« brim of the U edged with a ruche of oil o»l«a)-o.l..r*d " oiolr* Ptak *>d onion roaaa compleia cotor schema. Tba lite are of moire ribbon. LINOSLEY TURNED DOWN
4/6/1905 The Seattle star.
Stunning Spring Styles in Hats Tb« wholesale milliners arc sell* log amal) had for early woar. Mat* will tm worn Hli«hl decidedly toward th« front. Th« backs ar* hlich and well trimmed. •Small hat» am worn with m«ah far* Twlta. Th» Toll match** th« hat In color, Chtnlll* dots ar« still In cood styla, Th« farortta flowers for tli« •prtnn h»t» am lltaca, hy»4-lnth« and roam of all color*. Th« popular color. In it raw* »r* "•■'l* «r««l <• light irrwn), cor* flower bliif. Ut« onion ihadm. and anc«hr*t. Sail a rtbbona are moat popular. UMtUKk toaar of the sw«ll«at rnrneh h*U ar* trißUMd .lib molrav No. 1 ahbwa tluto! <>»k>a chip. rut trtamtil, with " .ml.m .h»!«] , molt* ribbon and pink cotton roM, Cotton flower* in a fa.! of th» ■». Few silk or tdliiK bUMaona »re to t» asm on tb» M ( h-(>rk«a hats. Th* brim of thn 'ip hat li tut tki «^ at back aad turr.M forward mmr bit of moir» rtbtxHi oraamontnl with a buck Uu»n» and tour th* high tunt*4 bark. No, I is a turl*u ■•>•• of c<>lori«l r««.t'i» iimw, Th* hat alni|>lr lir.H Jwl vitlvnt, with the ception of ilia straw •bout lbs mini up brim. medallions urn whenl-thapad, and Hie. caster of each I* a knot of lot satin ribbon, knottnl Into a ri". Th« lone neck of an bird la knotted and from thla •tart viol* c«ili>r«l wings. No. 1 la a modified Charlotte Cor day. Tha braid Is tuarao set lh« frame with alternating rows folded aa>iin ribbon of a violet abadn. riusirra of and violet ribbon are upon th* of th* hat and baaeath tb* brim. No. 4. the largo bat. la most iar II sttap*. It la called tha Vardea. Tla. brim. Instead rounding toward tae front, la square off arms the. far». so that *•>■»! side of the fare there la a tin. corner. Th« brim of the U edged with a ruche of oil o»l«a)-o.l..r*d " oiolr* Ptak *>d onion roaaa compleia cotor schema. Tba lite are of moire ribbon. LINOSLEY TURNED DOWN
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Was Alarmingly Afflicted With La Grippe. Cured by Pe-ru-na. Pcspsrlj Tcrsed Effsdmrfc: Caterrn. Pc-cu-qs. Gsrcs Every Focn cc C2f2rra, It Hats RsScred Mere Cases cf Gr Than. AM Oassr RasseoUs vjCOKS
4/12/1905 Daily capital journal.
Was Alarmingly Afflicted With La Grippe. Cured by Pe-ru-na. Pcspsrlj Tcrsed Effsdmrfc: Caterrn. Pc-cu-qs. Gsrcs Every Focn cc C2f2rra, It Hats RsScred Mere Cases cf Gr Than. AM Oassr RasseoUs vjCOKS
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•i hi« i8 a photo of a clav hill south of Ward King's house that Sua bren since 1896. The hats were placed in the road to bring out the curvature of the sur face' hi- road is^s faat wide between thi ditches and 40 feet between the fences to the day when th# second.4ictW^^^«pA^rr»*d waafirm. smoothed dry.
4/19/1905 The Denison review.
•i hi« i8 a photo of a clav hill south of Ward King's house that Sua bren since 1896. The hats were placed in the road to bring out the curvature of the sur face' hi- road is^s faat wide between thi ditches and 40 feet between the fences to the day when th# second.4ictW^^^«pA^rr»*d waafirm. smoothed dry.
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I WILL THE AUTO OUST THE HE COACH NO 9 SAYS SA YS COL JAY JAYMore JAYMore More Coaches at the Last Meet Than Ever EverThis This Is the Season for f r the Sport Sp rt Man Many any Y YA Women Now Driving Drivi g Coaches CoachesAmerican American A merican Progress in In an a English Diversion nM1S5ANjEL1CAGERR MISS ANGELICA ANGELICAGERRY GERRV = MRSTIIOMAS l HASTINGS HASTINGSw It w L 9 = Y k e = A i Society fJodet which flocks into town for the theHors theDom thefor Hors Show la muttered out ou after the tboseasons theaeaaona he hen seasons n gaieties by the spring meet of ofthe ofthe ofthe the Coaching Club Now the women too toob toobaTe toobave b baTe T a coach meet which accentuates l the thenqt then thenote nqt n note te of f depart me e So it happens that in Its Itso ltacoming 1 coming o m1Dg and it its flitting society mores to tolipofbeats tohoOCbeats toboofbeate lipofbeats lipofbeatsThe hoOCbeats hoOCbeatsThe boofbeateTbe The first Saturday in May is the time tlmebooored timebonored timebonored bonored occasion for the Coaching Club Clubparade Clubparade Clubparade parade The women appear on the box boxneat boxat boxC neat at an earlier day and at the mens mensmeet menae menemeet meet meet also in moat owes u guests guestsWill guestsWID gueetewill Will the motor ever supplant the coach coachas ooacbtho as the swell conveyance the chugchug chugchugof of the engine supplant the thud of hoofs hoofsto hoofsto to time th the Row and ebb of fashions tide tideThe tideThe tideTbe The motor has not affected the taste tastefor taeteI tastefor for 0 r coaching remarks rem rb Col William Jay Jaywho Ja Jawbo JayMho who aa president of the Coaching Club Is Isnaturally IIn lenaturally naturally n tUra1IY on the negative side There Therewere Tborewere Therewere were more eoaches at the meet last year yearI yearthan ear eari ban I n ever before which bears out my myopinion myo myobtnloa opinion o lnlon that That nearly every whip has nor nora nOTmotor a motor car dot does not alter the case caseThere calleThere caseThere There is t still no better preparation for forcoaching forI coaching whether on park or road than thanasojourn thani a sojourn in England to study how It is isdone JaI isdone done This is only natural for we have haveno haveno haveao no traditions no sentiment of the road roadher roadhere roadban her ban and very little worth copying save savefrom ea eavofrom 10 10from from the amateurs who have learned under underexpert unlterexpert underupert expert bands in England EnglandI I think on this matter as I dkl a decade addoO decadeago decadeago or forty coaches at the meet To be beamem beamembet a mem member member ¬ ber and to make publlo manifestation of ofthe ofthe ofthe the fact by b driving a coach at the meet meetla la a milestone on the road to society die distinction dlatinction dieUnction ¬ tinction that many now outside would ould fain fainpoint fainpoint fainpoint point to with pride The membership is leUmited islimited I Ilimited limited to 100 While all are coaching coachingmen men at their country places only a small smallproportion smallproportion emailproportion proportion of the membere have been beenactive beenactive beenactive active In the parades With the influx of ofthe ofthe ofthe the younger set there may be a change changeThere changeThare changeThere There was on Informal drive in 1875 with withCol withCol withCol Col Jay A Thomdlke Rice Delancey Kane Kaneand KaneBnd Kaneand and W P Douglas as participants and in inthe Intho inthe the same year the Coaching Club spranginto sprang sprangInto eprangInto Into life the Charter members besides be ldee the thefour tbefour thefour four named having been Fred Fredrfc rl Bronson BronsonJames BronaonJamee BronsonJames James Gordon Bennett Leonard W Jerome JeromeS S Nicholson Kane and Thomas Newbold NewboldThey NewboldThey NewboldThey They were not such sticklers as to the line linebetween IIn IInbetween lima limabetween between the park and road coaches coachlllin In those thosedays thOledays thoreedaye days as they are now nowIn nowIn nowIn In the first regular parade In 1878 ac according according according ¬ cording to published accounts Col Kane Kanedrove Kanedrove Kanedrove drove the t e coach he put on the road to Pel PelI Pelham I ham In the same year oar aa the TallyHo TallyHoRoad TllyHoRoad TallyHoRoad Road teams that la horses of flashy markInge mark markIngs markIngs Ings have not been unknown In very ery recent recentyears recentyeaiil recentyeah years but the coaches at least since 1894 1894have 1 1bave 1998have have been true park drags Nothing that thatsavors tbat68VOI1l thateavore savors of the road or of the exercising trap has been In evidence since that year yearNone yoarNone yearNone None but members may drive a coach coachto ooachto machto Ills Ilis1lrst first absence was In 1878 when he was wasabroad waaabroad wasabroad abroad on his wedding trip and Delancey VV CGULLIVER CGULLIVERtransitory CGULLIVERtransitory transitory in the changes of the hour hourOur bourOur hourOur Our coaches aa the thebwt thebMt thehest horses liveries Uv rlOli outfitting harnesses andLast and andlast andlast last but not least the suitable suitablefor Iultablofor suitablefor The Th women go as far as they like in dress dreelimited dreNlimited dresslimited limited only by tho fashion of the moment momentThe momentThe momentThe The parade this year is to be in the after afternoon afternoon afternoon ¬ noon as the races may not be the destina destination dOltlnatlon destination ¬ tion after the meet as In the case s of the the1lflt the1lfltpprado first flrstparade firstparade parade in 197 1878 Then Th n the line formed along alongMadison aloncMadlaon alongMadison Madison Square opposite op lte the Union League LeagueClub Lef4tuoCluh LeagueClub Club now the Manhattan Club and swinging swingingthrough swingingtbrough swingingthrough through Twentysixth street into Fifth Fifthavenue Fifthavenue avenue at the Brunswick corner the rtJute rtJutewas rEutewas I was 18 northward to Central Park ParkCircling ParkCircling ParkCircling Circling through the West Drive to the thaCircle tb tbCircle theCircle Circle for the review the drive was to Stet Stetsons Stetaonawhere Steteonswhere ¬ sons aonawhere where now is Stetsons Btet80nII4nd and back backby backb hackby by b way of the crowded East Drive to Fifth Fifthavenue ruthavenue Fifthavenue avenue and then cleorto clear to Washington n Square Squareand Squareand Squareand and back to Madison Square for the die diemissal dismissal dlsmwaL ¬ missal missalThotve mwaLIb0tl missalThose Those were the days da when the women womenwo womenwo womenwo wo grave e and delotocolosand deloJte colosand the most mostflimsy mostfllmay mostflimsy flimsy and gossamer materials with little littlebonnets IIttiabonncts littlebonnets bonnets for the matrons and gay bats for forthe forthe forthe the young girls and sat like flower girls as asthey AItbey asthey they received the salutes from the windows windowson on Fifth avenue enue JIth with their skirts over overflowing 0111flowing overflowing ¬ flowing with roses So runs the chat of ofthe ofthe ofthe the old guard who remember Fifth Fltb avenue avenuesans avenuaIhoP avenuesane sans shops nbopsThe IhoP shopsThe The parade pare whether the start lt has b been beenat bn bnat beenat at the Brunswick Drwlok or within wihin Central Centr Park Parkor Prk Prkor or along alon the Fifth Fltb avenue avuo wall wal of Central CentralPark Centr CentralPark Park opposite the Metropolitan MetropoUt Club the thefavorite thofavorlle thefavorite favorite oppte meet mot of late lae years and for many manyreasons manyrns manyreasons reasons the best that can be chosen has al always aiwa 1 1ways ¬ to the coach c tops and from IDOL lQl onward onwardluncheon a aluncheon alunchen luncheon lunchen was W8 a feature fetre after the arrival at ttMorris atHor atMorris Morris Hor Park ParkIt ParkIt ParkIt It was for long lon the te custom for the whip wblpiand whipIUId whipsand and their guests geate tq dine together at th thBrunswick the theDrunswlok theBrunswick Brunswick on tie t e night of the meet met the 11mgatherings 1118latherga thegatherings gatherings latherga were charming crmi reunions and andthe andthe andthe the pride prd of the chef was wa to rise m triumphant triumphantto to the sporting possibilities plbUltes of the occasion occasionOne oaion oaionOne occasionOne One year yer the centerpiece conterleco was Wi a repro reproduction reproductlon reproduction duction of the clubhouse cubhou and ad hill at Jerome JerotniPark JeromPark JeromePark Park and at other dinners the to artiste artbta re reproduced ro ropuced reproduced ¬ produced for this adornment adorent in flower flowenand fowe foweand flowerand and frosted frte work the yellow and red coach coachof cch cchof coachof of Col Col Jay or else el Frederic Bransons Bransonsred Bronlensred Bronsonsred red and blue drag d according acrding to which whih had hadbeen hadben hadbeen been ben the leader leaderIn ledor ledorIn In 1894 the drive dve after ater the format fo l review reviewwas revleW8 reviewwas was W8 to Jerome Park and the year rer before beforIt boroIt beforeit It was wa to the grounds of the ill I fated open openair openar openair air ar horse hOJ show now Manhattan Field JIeld tot torthe tottho forthe the intercollegiate Interleglte athletic meet meetThe meetro meetThe The ro last of the formal dinners dlnDrl was Wa s sstag Istag astag stag gathering of the members after aterthe aterthedrive afterthe afterthedrive tha thadrive drive of 1890 18 a belated belate celebration clebrtlol of Col Colfays ColJayw fays twentieth twenteth anniversary anniver as president presidentof prldeDI prldeDIof of the Coaching Coching Club It I was W8 served Int at althe atthe atthe the WaldorfAstoriai WaldorfAtoria amid ad decorations deoratlonlof deoratlonlofdogo of ofdogwood ofdogwood dogwood dogo and ad apple blossoms blOom fragrant fragrantof rllgrantof of May lray and tbo souvenirs were the olubd olubdmonogram cub cubmonog dubdmonogram monogram monog in interwoven Inttoen silver slver stirrups stirrupsThis stirrupsThis tlrp This May the tbeluncbeon luncheon to precede pre the thedrive thedrivewill drive drivewill d1 will wil again aain be resumed reumed and ad the start stt will w b bfrom 1 be befrom from the Metropolitan Club ClubThis CJubThl ClubThis
4/30/1905 The sun.
I WILL THE AUTO OUST THE HE COACH NO 9 SAYS SA YS COL JAY JAYMore JAYMore More Coaches at the Last Meet Than Ever EverThis This Is the Season for f r the Sport Sp rt Man Many any Y YA Women Now Driving Drivi g Coaches CoachesAmerican American A merican Progress in In an a English Diversion nM1S5ANjEL1CAGERR MISS ANGELICA ANGELICAGERRY GERRV = MRSTIIOMAS l HASTINGS HASTINGSw It w L 9 = Y k e = A i Society fJodet which flocks into town for the theHors theDom thefor Hors Show la muttered out ou after the tboseasons theaeaaona he hen seasons n gaieties by the spring meet of ofthe ofthe ofthe the Coaching Club Now the women too toob toobaTe toobave b baTe T a coach meet which accentuates l the thenqt then thenote nqt n note te of f depart me e So it happens that in Its Itso ltacoming 1 coming o m1Dg and it its flitting society mores to tolipofbeats tohoOCbeats toboofbeate lipofbeats lipofbeatsThe hoOCbeats hoOCbeatsThe boofbeateTbe The first Saturday in May is the time tlmebooored timebonored timebonored bonored occasion for the Coaching Club Clubparade Clubparade Clubparade parade The women appear on the box boxneat boxat boxC neat at an earlier day and at the mens mensmeet menae menemeet meet meet also in moat owes u guests guestsWill guestsWID gueetewill Will the motor ever supplant the coach coachas ooacbtho as the swell conveyance the chugchug chugchugof of the engine supplant the thud of hoofs hoofsto hoofsto to time th the Row and ebb of fashions tide tideThe tideThe tideTbe The motor has not affected the taste tastefor taeteI tastefor for 0 r coaching remarks rem rb Col William Jay Jaywho Ja Jawbo JayMho who aa president of the Coaching Club Is Isnaturally IIn lenaturally naturally n tUra1IY on the negative side There Therewere Tborewere Therewere were more eoaches at the meet last year yearI yearthan ear eari ban I n ever before which bears out my myopinion myo myobtnloa opinion o lnlon that That nearly every whip has nor nora nOTmotor a motor car dot does not alter the case caseThere calleThere caseThere There is t still no better preparation for forcoaching forI coaching whether on park or road than thanasojourn thani a sojourn in England to study how It is isdone JaI isdone done This is only natural for we have haveno haveno haveao no traditions no sentiment of the road roadher roadhere roadban her ban and very little worth copying save savefrom ea eavofrom 10 10from from the amateurs who have learned under underexpert unlterexpert underupert expert bands in England EnglandI I think on this matter as I dkl a decade addoO decadeago decadeago or forty coaches at the meet To be beamem beamembet a mem member member ¬ ber and to make publlo manifestation of ofthe ofthe ofthe the fact by b driving a coach at the meet meetla la a milestone on the road to society die distinction dlatinction dieUnction ¬ tinction that many now outside would ould fain fainpoint fainpoint fainpoint point to with pride The membership is leUmited islimited I Ilimited limited to 100 While all are coaching coachingmen men at their country places only a small smallproportion smallproportion emailproportion proportion of the membere have been beenactive beenactive beenactive active In the parades With the influx of ofthe ofthe ofthe the younger set there may be a change changeThere changeThare changeThere There was on Informal drive in 1875 with withCol withCol withCol Col Jay A Thomdlke Rice Delancey Kane Kaneand KaneBnd Kaneand and W P Douglas as participants and in inthe Intho inthe the same year the Coaching Club spranginto sprang sprangInto eprangInto Into life the Charter members besides be ldee the thefour tbefour thefour four named having been Fred Fredrfc rl Bronson BronsonJames BronaonJamee BronsonJames James Gordon Bennett Leonard W Jerome JeromeS S Nicholson Kane and Thomas Newbold NewboldThey NewboldThey NewboldThey They were not such sticklers as to the line linebetween IIn IInbetween lima limabetween between the park and road coaches coachlllin In those thosedays thOledays thoreedaye days as they are now nowIn nowIn nowIn In the first regular parade In 1878 ac according according according ¬ cording to published accounts Col Kane Kanedrove Kanedrove Kanedrove drove the t e coach he put on the road to Pel PelI Pelham I ham In the same year oar aa the TallyHo TallyHoRoad TllyHoRoad TallyHoRoad Road teams that la horses of flashy markInge mark markIngs markIngs Ings have not been unknown In very ery recent recentyears recentyeaiil recentyeah years but the coaches at least since 1894 1894have 1 1bave 1998have have been true park drags Nothing that thatsavors tbat68VOI1l thateavore savors of the road or of the exercising trap has been In evidence since that year yearNone yoarNone yearNone None but members may drive a coach coachto ooachto machto Ills Ilis1lrst first absence was In 1878 when he was wasabroad waaabroad wasabroad abroad on his wedding trip and Delancey VV CGULLIVER CGULLIVERtransitory CGULLIVERtransitory transitory in the changes of the hour hourOur bourOur hourOur Our coaches aa the thebwt thebMt thehest horses liveries Uv rlOli outfitting harnesses andLast and andlast andlast last but not least the suitable suitablefor Iultablofor suitablefor The Th women go as far as they like in dress dreelimited dreNlimited dresslimited limited only by tho fashion of the moment momentThe momentThe momentThe The parade this year is to be in the after afternoon afternoon afternoon ¬ noon as the races may not be the destina destination dOltlnatlon destination ¬ tion after the meet as In the case s of the the1lflt the1lfltpprado first flrstparade firstparade parade in 197 1878 Then Th n the line formed along alongMadison aloncMadlaon alongMadison Madison Square opposite op lte the Union League LeagueClub Lef4tuoCluh LeagueClub Club now the Manhattan Club and swinging swingingthrough swingingtbrough swingingthrough through Twentysixth street into Fifth Fifthavenue Fifthavenue avenue at the Brunswick corner the rtJute rtJutewas rEutewas I was 18 northward to Central Park ParkCircling ParkCircling ParkCircling Circling through the West Drive to the thaCircle tb tbCircle theCircle Circle for the review the drive was to Stet Stetsons Stetaonawhere Steteonswhere ¬ sons aonawhere where now is Stetsons Btet80nII4nd and back backby backb hackby by b way of the crowded East Drive to Fifth Fifthavenue ruthavenue Fifthavenue avenue and then cleorto clear to Washington n Square Squareand Squareand Squareand and back to Madison Square for the die diemissal dismissal dlsmwaL ¬ missal missalThotve mwaLIb0tl missalThose Those were the days da when the women womenwo womenwo womenwo wo grave e and delotocolosand deloJte colosand the most mostflimsy mostfllmay mostflimsy flimsy and gossamer materials with little littlebonnets IIttiabonncts littlebonnets bonnets for the matrons and gay bats for forthe forthe forthe the young girls and sat like flower girls as asthey AItbey asthey they received the salutes from the windows windowson on Fifth avenue enue JIth with their skirts over overflowing 0111flowing overflowing ¬ flowing with roses So runs the chat of ofthe ofthe ofthe the old guard who remember Fifth Fltb avenue avenuesans avenuaIhoP avenuesane sans shops nbopsThe IhoP shopsThe The parade pare whether the start lt has b been beenat bn bnat beenat at the Brunswick Drwlok or within wihin Central Centr Park Parkor Prk Prkor or along alon the Fifth Fltb avenue avuo wall wal of Central CentralPark Centr CentralPark Park opposite the Metropolitan MetropoUt Club the thefavorite thofavorlle thefavorite favorite oppte meet mot of late lae years and for many manyreasons manyrns manyreasons reasons the best that can be chosen has al always aiwa 1 1ways ¬ to the coach c tops and from IDOL lQl onward onwardluncheon a aluncheon alunchen luncheon lunchen was W8 a feature fetre after the arrival at ttMorris atHor atMorris Morris Hor Park ParkIt ParkIt ParkIt It was for long lon the te custom for the whip wblpiand whipIUId whipsand and their guests geate tq dine together at th thBrunswick the theDrunswlok theBrunswick Brunswick on tie t e night of the meet met the 11mgatherings 1118latherga thegatherings gatherings latherga were charming crmi reunions and andthe andthe andthe the pride prd of the chef was wa to rise m triumphant triumphantto to the sporting possibilities plbUltes of the occasion occasionOne oaion oaionOne occasionOne One year yer the centerpiece conterleco was Wi a repro reproduction reproductlon reproduction duction of the clubhouse cubhou and ad hill at Jerome JerotniPark JeromPark JeromePark Park and at other dinners the to artiste artbta re reproduced ro ropuced reproduced ¬ produced for this adornment adorent in flower flowenand fowe foweand flowerand and frosted frte work the yellow and red coach coachof cch cchof coachof of Col Col Jay or else el Frederic Bransons Bransonsred Bronlensred Bronsonsred red and blue drag d according acrding to which whih had hadbeen hadben hadbeen been ben the leader leaderIn ledor ledorIn In 1894 the drive dve after ater the format fo l review reviewwas revleW8 reviewwas was W8 to Jerome Park and the year rer before beforIt boroIt beforeit It was wa to the grounds of the ill I fated open openair openar openair air ar horse hOJ show now Manhattan Field JIeld tot torthe tottho forthe the intercollegiate Interleglte athletic meet meetThe meetro meetThe The ro last of the formal dinners dlnDrl was Wa s sstag Istag astag stag gathering of the members after aterthe aterthedrive afterthe afterthedrive tha thadrive drive of 1890 18 a belated belate celebration clebrtlol of Col Colfays ColJayw fays twentieth twenteth anniversary anniver as president presidentof prldeDI prldeDIof of the Coaching Coching Club It I was W8 served Int at althe atthe atthe the WaldorfAstoriai WaldorfAtoria amid ad decorations deoratlonlof deoratlonlofdogo of ofdogwood ofdogwood dogwood dogo and ad apple blossoms blOom fragrant fragrantof rllgrantof of May lray and tbo souvenirs were the olubd olubdmonogram cub cubmonog dubdmonogram monogram monog in interwoven Inttoen silver slver stirrups stirrupsThis stirrupsThis tlrp This May the tbeluncbeon luncheon to precede pre the thedrive thedrivewill drive drivewill d1 will wil again aain be resumed reumed and ad the start stt will w b bfrom 1 be befrom from the Metropolitan Club ClubThis CJubThl ClubThis
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STYLE ST Qf OF MOVING 1 4i iV U G TAKE lKE THE THE WHOLE HOUSE L 0 t You Can Keep On Living in It ItThus ItThusAll ItThusAll Thua ThuaAH Discomforts Di comforts of Moving in the Ordi Ordinary OrdiI Ordinary ¬ Way Are Avoided AvoidedA A Spectacular SpectacularCustom SpectacularCustom r rCustom Resulting From the Real RealEstate RealEstate RealEstate Boom Across the Harlem ATIwUB o cr cr8JFF 8JFF 2OFETOFGGJaI s ss v s CIITOFFWMAXBITFIT CIITOFFWMAXBITFITr CIITOFFWMAXBITFITJHORT7f8D JHORT7f8D 011 011i 011f r i + f j L hc Ir ZcSIO t WLW v4WOFFOURI1FJr1 r f F1 jjJfY RYFlATP FLAlJ J71Ar 7IATW JiIER REMOY67 REMOY67r REMOY677JFLTSpEMYJAN03JPEBB N Y fj r 7JFLTSpEMYJAN03JPEBB 75 FL7 fIJ f1YJ AlliJ 3J FL r MCI CKCOQNFWOJJ8Wfl CKCOQNFWOJJ8WflCUTIrlAlfANIJR CafW H < r MIS MISt t CUTIrlAlfANIJR crn IIIMV AYt 1Af ARPoRTlONL RfTOH anlN FTINJORIGI OJ RIGlllAlPtlflOll 4GftyJI dy Not Frame House HousesAlone Alone Treated inThis in This but Five Story Flats Also AlsoBrio1 DricK Cut Up Into Lengths to lSuit Suit New Sites SitesHouses SitesHouses SitesHousesDivided Houses HousesDivided Divided Against Themselves AHDDEsrPrIY1Vf AHDDEsrPrIY1VfH t a H NX0SEJYQWJV0 WHO I have known of janitors and caret caretwho oareCaken oareCakenwbo earetakenwho who have stayed Itao even In them white hi > > thi thishift thehltt thishift shift was taking place placeWhat placeWhat placeWhat What exclaimed the Mnhattanlte Mnhattanlteyou you mean to tell me that they juggle bl blbrick blbrick bit bitbrick brick houses around the iamo aa they d dtheso do dotlll8Q do dothese < these frame ones onosSurething onesSure onusSuretldng Surething Sure thing They move anything thati thatiworth thatsworth that thatworth worth moving Four and five story flatsbeyond flats flatbeyond flatsbeyond beyond number have been fitted to th thnew the thenew thenew < new street lines Even rows of brick build buildIngs buildIn buildlags I lags In have been handled handledAbout bandloclAbout handledAbout About the biggest blggl t job of this thl kind ww wwdone wudone wasdone done when Fred Damm shifted four five fivestory fiveatoty fivestory story flats 8 that got in the way when Willis WUllii WUUaavonue Willisavenue i avenue wail widened a tow years ago The Therow Therow fberow close upon each other otherLong otherLong otherLong Long before tho auctioneer is due people begin to gather along the It 1s easy to pick out those who have a in tho game They are grimfaoed grlrn aoed anxlottjusually standing lng in their front like soldiers on guard guard Their wives often their children are with thorn friends and neighbors too are on see whether the luck shall be good or The condemned buildings are pl with big pouter peMtenTo To Be Sold At Auction lc < c It looks like a of an entire community communityThe commllnlt commllnltThe The auctioneer has already nlread one end of the street perhaps a mile
5/21/1905 The sun.
STYLE ST Qf OF MOVING 1 4i iV U G TAKE lKE THE THE WHOLE HOUSE L 0 t You Can Keep On Living in It ItThus ItThusAll ItThusAll Thua ThuaAH Discomforts Di comforts of Moving in the Ordi Ordinary OrdiI Ordinary ¬ Way Are Avoided AvoidedA A Spectacular SpectacularCustom SpectacularCustom r rCustom Resulting From the Real RealEstate RealEstate RealEstate Boom Across the Harlem ATIwUB o cr cr8JFF 8JFF 2OFETOFGGJaI s ss v s CIITOFFWMAXBITFIT CIITOFFWMAXBITFITr CIITOFFWMAXBITFITJHORT7f8D JHORT7f8D 011 011i 011f r i + f j L hc Ir ZcSIO t WLW v4WOFFOURI1FJr1 r f F1 jjJfY RYFlATP FLAlJ J71Ar 7IATW JiIER REMOY67 REMOY67r REMOY677JFLTSpEMYJAN03JPEBB N Y fj r 7JFLTSpEMYJAN03JPEBB 75 FL7 fIJ f1YJ AlliJ 3J FL r MCI CKCOQNFWOJJ8Wfl CKCOQNFWOJJ8WflCUTIrlAlfANIJR CafW H < r MIS MISt t CUTIrlAlfANIJR crn IIIMV AYt 1Af ARPoRTlONL RfTOH anlN FTINJORIGI OJ RIGlllAlPtlflOll 4GftyJI dy Not Frame House HousesAlone Alone Treated inThis in This but Five Story Flats Also AlsoBrio1 DricK Cut Up Into Lengths to lSuit Suit New Sites SitesHouses SitesHouses SitesHousesDivided Houses HousesDivided Divided Against Themselves AHDDEsrPrIY1Vf AHDDEsrPrIY1VfH t a H NX0SEJYQWJV0 WHO I have known of janitors and caret caretwho oareCaken oareCakenwbo earetakenwho who have stayed Itao even In them white hi > > thi thishift thehltt thishift shift was taking place placeWhat placeWhat placeWhat What exclaimed the Mnhattanlte Mnhattanlteyou you mean to tell me that they juggle bl blbrick blbrick bit bitbrick brick houses around the iamo aa they d dtheso do dotlll8Q do dothese < these frame ones onosSurething onesSure onusSuretldng Surething Sure thing They move anything thati thatiworth thatsworth that thatworth worth moving Four and five story flatsbeyond flats flatbeyond flatsbeyond beyond number have been fitted to th thnew the thenew thenew < new street lines Even rows of brick build buildIngs buildIn buildlags I lags In have been handled handledAbout bandloclAbout handledAbout About the biggest blggl t job of this thl kind ww wwdone wudone wasdone done when Fred Damm shifted four five fivestory fiveatoty fivestory story flats 8 that got in the way when Willis WUllii WUUaavonue Willisavenue i avenue wail widened a tow years ago The Therow Therow fberow close upon each other otherLong otherLong otherLong Long before tho auctioneer is due people begin to gather along the It 1s easy to pick out those who have a in tho game They are grimfaoed grlrn aoed anxlottjusually standing lng in their front like soldiers on guard guard Their wives often their children are with thorn friends and neighbors too are on see whether the luck shall be good or The condemned buildings are pl with big pouter peMtenTo To Be Sold At Auction lc < c It looks like a of an entire community communityThe commllnlt commllnltThe The auctioneer has already nlread one end of the street perhaps a mile
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it. .---- . - " f ' - ' ' ' ' - 1 - --5 , " - ' , - . - - . ' - - - - " ' a r .". - . - ' " - tr ... - - . - Number "2 B." This is a photo of a clay hill south! of D. Ward King's house that has been dragged since 1896, The hats were placed in the road ito bring out the curvature of the surface. This road is twenty five feet wide between the ditches and forty feet between the fences. Be ginning at the top of this hill and going south a half mile stretch of road
5/23/1905 The progressive farmer and the cotton plant.
it. .---- . - " f ' - ' ' ' ' - 1 - --5 , " - ' , - . - - . ' - - - - " ' a r .". - . - ' " - tr ... - - . - Number "2 B." This is a photo of a clay hill south! of D. Ward King's house that has been dragged since 1896, The hats were placed in the road ito bring out the curvature of the surface. This road is twenty five feet wide between the ditches and forty feet between the fences. Be ginning at the top of this hill and going south a half mile stretch of road
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r Siinimer Dresses for 101 i t I and Hats tuu Match for f J I t j Jttmmmui T1IMMH I WHlaoClh
5/25/1905 The evening world.
r Siinimer Dresses for 101 i t I and Hats tuu Match for f J I t j Jttmmmui T1IMMH I WHlaoClh
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8len. Italy, Is famous for the large hats of Its women, and the long borns of Its cuttle. . k" ...
5/28/1905 Omaha daily bee.
8len. Italy, Is famous for the large hats of Its women, and the long borns of Its cuttle. . k" ...
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DQ OU 17 WANT A BUNGALOW BUNGALOWBY BY THE SEA THATS PERFECT SHOWING LIVING ROOM OPENING INTO DINING ROOM i < 1 1This This lovely summer home lo located located located ¬ cated on one nt of the best streets streetsof of Ocean Park Park stands on a acor acorner cor corner corner ¬ ner lot 35x96 feet within fthln 150 l O feetof feet feetof feptof of the ocean Was built built about abouttwo abouttaro bouttwo two years ears ago of the finest finestse finestselected ee eelected lIelected lected lumber procurable The lot lotnext lotntxt lotnext next to it will be vacant for many manyyears maD maDars mansyears years ars as as it is in irt litigation litigation In an anestate anestate anestate estate that cannot be settled for forsome forsome forrsome some years ears to come An advan advantage adantage advantage ¬ tage not to he a overlooked in sa sahousas sahouses seahorsaa houses Has seven large rooms roomsconsisting roomto roomsconsisting consisting to 7isting of living room whichextends which whichextends whichextend J < 1 1f = f l = is isCellar Cellar under house OU e I vt > t ail ailfenced at1fenced ailfenced fenced Has lawns in front and andflowers aJildflowers andflowers flowers all around lU und la fact a aperfect aerfeet aperfect perfect erfeet horn tOma a Elegantly far farnished tarnished farnished nished Including new Fisher up upright upright upright ¬ right piano Instantaneous water waterheater waterheater Waterheatar heater and everything complete cempleterice completenct completerice > rice furnished 5500 2000 000 can canremain canr canremain remain r < man on mortgage at 1 pe per < centt centtbalance centtbalance eenttbalance balance cash The picture shoves shovesa a board walk but the street is isto isto Isto to be cemented and curbed at atonce atoncE atonce once which exx eXDeDS > ense Is included includedin ¬
6/12/1905 The Salt Lake herald.
DQ OU 17 WANT A BUNGALOW BUNGALOWBY BY THE SEA THATS PERFECT SHOWING LIVING ROOM OPENING INTO DINING ROOM i < 1 1This This lovely summer home lo located located located ¬ cated on one nt of the best streets streetsof of Ocean Park Park stands on a acor acorner cor corner corner ¬ ner lot 35x96 feet within fthln 150 l O feetof feet feetof feptof of the ocean Was built built about abouttwo abouttaro bouttwo two years ears ago of the finest finestse finestselected ee eelected lIelected lected lumber procurable The lot lotnext lotntxt lotnext next to it will be vacant for many manyyears maD maDars mansyears years ars as as it is in irt litigation litigation In an anestate anestate anestate estate that cannot be settled for forsome forsome forrsome some years ears to come An advan advantage adantage advantage ¬ tage not to he a overlooked in sa sahousas sahouses seahorsaa houses Has seven large rooms roomsconsisting roomto roomsconsisting consisting to 7isting of living room whichextends which whichextends whichextend J < 1 1f = f l = is isCellar Cellar under house OU e I vt > t ail ailfenced at1fenced ailfenced fenced Has lawns in front and andflowers aJildflowers andflowers flowers all around lU und la fact a aperfect aerfeet aperfect perfect erfeet horn tOma a Elegantly far farnished tarnished farnished nished Including new Fisher up upright upright upright ¬ right piano Instantaneous water waterheater waterheater Waterheatar heater and everything complete cempleterice completenct completerice > rice furnished 5500 2000 000 can canremain canr canremain remain r < man on mortgage at 1 pe per < centt centtbalance centtbalance eenttbalance balance cash The picture shoves shovesa a board walk but the street is isto isto Isto to be cemented and curbed at atonce atoncE atonce once which exx eXDeDS > ense Is included includedin ¬
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LOS ANGELES i VISITORS TASTE DELIGHTS DELIG TSOF OF LAGOON LAGOONCouncilman Councilman A Houghton of Los AnSenator Ans An AnSenator Senator s nto V V r + h Mnve V E W Griffiths of L Los A Angeles l geles Behind d the thOB Bars On the Way to the th Feast SL = c = ehed a crisis It Is understood that thathalf thathalf thathalf a dozen Angels who were closely closelystrapped closelYstrapped closelystrapped as a result of their Commer Commercial CommerciAl Commercial ¬ street enterprises found that they theyhad theyhad theyhad coin enough to last but half theirnumber their theirnumber theirnumber They The agreed that it would wouldbe wouJdbe would wouldhe better to open ajjame a game me among themselves them themselves themselves ¬ whehre some s me of them t em would wouldwin wouJdin wouldwin in than to t lose J e it to the brace men menAt menAt menAt this point their fears were removed removedby removedby a certain city cll councilman of Ix LOs LOsAngeJes LosAngeles > s sAngeles who informed them that he hehad hehad hehad pulled out 3400 900 ahead after pos posing posing posing ¬ as a tenderfoot tenderC t over the wheel wheela wheelWhats wheeJW e a s sWhats Whats aCs in a badge jWhats the themagic themasle themagic of a silk ribbon With a few fewwords fewwords fewwords stamped on it itWell itWell itWell for one thing not counting free freestreet freestreet freestreet car rides free baths free drinks drinksand drinksa drinksand free papers badges badg s did wonders wonderslast wonderslast wonderslast night at the Lagoon goon dance Un a man might ask for a dance dancewith dancewith dancewith some fair Davis county < or Salt SaltLake SaltLake Sa1tLake lass and be promptly turned down he hadnt been introduced But Butwith Butwith Butwith Presidents Theodore Summerland of Los Angeles and F J Hewlett of Salt SaltLake SaltLake SaltLake Phtt5 a Vy HaIT Harry ShiplprRYAN Shiplpr ShlplerRYAN RYAN SOLE OWNER OWNEROF OWNEROF OWNEROF OF HYDE STOCK STOCKTrustees STOGTrustees Trustees Meet and Elect Cleveland ClevelandPresident ClevelandPresident ClevelauPresident d PresidentEQUITABLE President Presidenti PresidentEQUITABLE PresidentEQUITABLE i EQUITABLE TROUBLE OVE OVEPOLICY OVER OVERPOLICY PVERPOLICY R RT POLICY HOLDERS WILL GET JUST JUSTNew JUSTDUES JUS JUSDUES T DUES DUESNew DUESNew
6/16/1905 The Salt Lake herald.
LOS ANGELES i VISITORS TASTE DELIGHTS DELIG TSOF OF LAGOON LAGOONCouncilman Councilman A Houghton of Los AnSenator Ans An AnSenator Senator s nto V V r + h Mnve V E W Griffiths of L Los A Angeles l geles Behind d the thOB Bars On the Way to the th Feast SL = c = ehed a crisis It Is understood that thathalf thathalf thathalf a dozen Angels who were closely closelystrapped closelYstrapped closelystrapped as a result of their Commer Commercial CommerciAl Commercial ¬ street enterprises found that they theyhad theyhad theyhad coin enough to last but half theirnumber their theirnumber theirnumber They The agreed that it would wouldbe wouJdbe would wouldhe better to open ajjame a game me among themselves them themselves themselves ¬ whehre some s me of them t em would wouldwin wouJdin wouldwin in than to t lose J e it to the brace men menAt menAt menAt this point their fears were removed removedby removedby a certain city cll councilman of Ix LOs LOsAngeJes LosAngeles > s sAngeles who informed them that he hehad hehad hehad pulled out 3400 900 ahead after pos posing posing posing ¬ as a tenderfoot tenderC t over the wheel wheela wheelWhats wheeJW e a s sWhats Whats aCs in a badge jWhats the themagic themasle themagic of a silk ribbon With a few fewwords fewwords fewwords stamped on it itWell itWell itWell for one thing not counting free freestreet freestreet freestreet car rides free baths free drinks drinksand drinksa drinksand free papers badges badg s did wonders wonderslast wonderslast wonderslast night at the Lagoon goon dance Un a man might ask for a dance dancewith dancewith dancewith some fair Davis county < or Salt SaltLake SaltLake Sa1tLake lass and be promptly turned down he hadnt been introduced But Butwith Butwith Butwith Presidents Theodore Summerland of Los Angeles and F J Hewlett of Salt SaltLake SaltLake SaltLake Phtt5 a Vy HaIT Harry ShiplprRYAN Shiplpr ShlplerRYAN RYAN SOLE OWNER OWNEROF OWNEROF OWNEROF OF HYDE STOCK STOCKTrustees STOGTrustees Trustees Meet and Elect Cleveland ClevelandPresident ClevelandPresident ClevelauPresident d PresidentEQUITABLE President Presidenti PresidentEQUITABLE PresidentEQUITABLE i EQUITABLE TROUBLE OVE OVEPOLICY OVER OVERPOLICY PVERPOLICY R RT POLICY HOLDERS WILL GET JUST JUSTNew JUSTDUES JUS JUSDUES T DUES DUESNew DUESNew
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"a rfr mm rtC 0 t-KV m f ... i 5 ? V4" i. -: r "A nr. ) V t.i i -i ' . "is! DueerillJilKelraxna of Holland feF you say a girl dresses like a quern you may mean to praise her, but, according to the testimony of perhaps the greatest dress maker and authority on dress In the United States, you are " knocking." The queens of the world In this day are declared by this authority to have execrable taste In the se lection and wearing of clothes, bad judgment of color schemes, and they go among their subjects attired In such dowdy style that a shop girl would give up her cherished trip to a picnic rather than wear such Ill-fitting, badly chosen clothes. Wilhelmina Is the worst, according to this critic of roynl garments, and Edward's queen Is but little behind her, for, although she chooses clothes fairly well (or has them chosen for her), she does not know how to put them on or wear them, does not know how to wear her hair, or what to wear upon her head. The dowager Margherita alone of all these crowned heads knows clothes. Some of them, according to the dressmaker critic, cannot even wear their crowns becom ingly, and make their robes of state look like hand me downs from a bargain counter, while their every day clothes, placed on them by scores of maids, look as If they had been thrown at the wearer and alighted haphazard. That England's queen manages to dress even as well as he does is because she has made a chum of a well dressed American woman who has shown her how to shop and something of how to wear clothes. 4 4 Queens Indicted for Poor Taste. The Indictment of bad taste brought against the female royalty of the world by this American dressmaker, who has gowned scores of American queens of fashion and finance, contains the following counts: " There Is no such thing as the queen's taste, or If there Is, It is apt to be bad taste. Indeed. To be dressed like a queen means to be dressed a great deal worse than the average rich American woman who goes to the capitals of the world to get her clothes. In fact, the American woman did years ago what most of the queens of Europe have failed to do even yet she grasped the fact that the whole secret of dress Is to make women look young. This waa the Idea that got Into the head of the great men dress makers and which made fortunes for them because of the good taste which has made Americans and other rich women of the world recognize their achievements In this line. I " This kind of taste, queens, that Is most of the queens of the present, are not blessed with. They not only haven't any taste., but they are pigheaded. Take W'llhelmlna for Instance. Was there ever anything more absurd than the way she has dressed ever since she has come to the throne? She Is not yet much out of her teens, and yet she wears the most costly brocades and satins. It Is not that Queen W'llhelmlna does not have a Parlsli-nne dress maker, as she patronizes a house which Is probably con sidered perfection by the elderly women of the Fauberg St. Germain quarter. It Is not one, you may be sure, patron r j A" '2?&&Ct '.; mm i till j ; t-v. till vt.tefl in a 'i'ftJT.i; i lV ... yf ' :" jQueerx Qrumti dF ' f! ' ii fM fi Queen fllexanarm ' QineEnKecpeul of Bpaiu V, although It was commonly attributed to her. The fact was that It was for the then princess of Wales that a famous London modiste brought out the glove fitting seamless waist. It pleased the ' Jersey I.Ily,' who took to It at once and ordered a duplicate. The modiste to her royal highness, however, refused to make it, and for a year the princess was the mistress of the jersey. After that It became common property and was greatly affected by the Jersey Lily. " The queen also Introduced the princess bonnet, which she wore with her close cloth gowns and which was good In Its day. She has never Bhown any flexibility, however, and has never been seen in a Gainsborough hat or In any other style of headgear than some modification of her former favorite. "Years ago the queen wore navy blue.whlte, and mauve and a great deal of cream color. Lately, however, she has worn only black, white, and gray, until even the king ob jected, to the point of getting an American woman, Mrs. Arthur Paget, to try to persuade her to put on more color. Alexandra likes Mrs. Paget's taste in dress and takes her shopping with her, and it was throuKh her suggestion that the note of green In which she has lately been seen, was introduced Into her costume. Queen Alexandra can recog nize and accept good ideas from others, but she has lost whatever vogue she once possessed for being an original dresser. .4 Kaiserin Looks Bad in Anything. " The kalserln's husbund, as everybody knows, Inter fered with her clothes, and It is said that when he did so, he tried that good woman to an even greater extent than he has by his other foibles. Ho did not succeed, how ever, In making the Empress Augusta the fashion, and the truth is that for all she has wonderful gowns made for her and spends large sums upon her clothes, the empress has not the faculty of wearing her things effectively. " Her hats are worn too fur back upon her head and her hair Is of the short and fuzzy order around her fore head, which is hopeless In these days of luxuriant locks. She makes the mistake of drawing the rest of It back skin tight from her face, nml this Is one of the reasons that she la never at her best In evening gowns. " The kaiserin has not many Individual Ideas about her dress and leaves the details to her dressmaker. Her good figure and the fact that her riding hats are worn low over her forehead In a way that suits her, makes her riding dress the most becoming that the empress puts on. The late tip-tilted down hats are also more suited to her than anything she has worn formerly, and have improved her considerably, .4 4 Dowager Queens Are Frumps. " The dowager queens are, all of them, what a stylish American woman would call ' frumps.' Take Isabella, for Instance. She gets herself up ' regardlessly,' of course, and makes courageous efforts after stylish effects even
7/23/1905 Omaha daily bee.
"a rfr mm rtC 0 t-KV m f ... i 5 ? V4" i. -: r "A nr. ) V t.i i -i ' . "is! DueerillJilKelraxna of Holland feF you say a girl dresses like a quern you may mean to praise her, but, according to the testimony of perhaps the greatest dress maker and authority on dress In the United States, you are " knocking." The queens of the world In this day are declared by this authority to have execrable taste In the se lection and wearing of clothes, bad judgment of color schemes, and they go among their subjects attired In such dowdy style that a shop girl would give up her cherished trip to a picnic rather than wear such Ill-fitting, badly chosen clothes. Wilhelmina Is the worst, according to this critic of roynl garments, and Edward's queen Is but little behind her, for, although she chooses clothes fairly well (or has them chosen for her), she does not know how to put them on or wear them, does not know how to wear her hair, or what to wear upon her head. The dowager Margherita alone of all these crowned heads knows clothes. Some of them, according to the dressmaker critic, cannot even wear their crowns becom ingly, and make their robes of state look like hand me downs from a bargain counter, while their every day clothes, placed on them by scores of maids, look as If they had been thrown at the wearer and alighted haphazard. That England's queen manages to dress even as well as he does is because she has made a chum of a well dressed American woman who has shown her how to shop and something of how to wear clothes. 4 4 Queens Indicted for Poor Taste. The Indictment of bad taste brought against the female royalty of the world by this American dressmaker, who has gowned scores of American queens of fashion and finance, contains the following counts: " There Is no such thing as the queen's taste, or If there Is, It is apt to be bad taste. Indeed. To be dressed like a queen means to be dressed a great deal worse than the average rich American woman who goes to the capitals of the world to get her clothes. In fact, the American woman did years ago what most of the queens of Europe have failed to do even yet she grasped the fact that the whole secret of dress Is to make women look young. This waa the Idea that got Into the head of the great men dress makers and which made fortunes for them because of the good taste which has made Americans and other rich women of the world recognize their achievements In this line. I " This kind of taste, queens, that Is most of the queens of the present, are not blessed with. They not only haven't any taste., but they are pigheaded. Take W'llhelmlna for Instance. Was there ever anything more absurd than the way she has dressed ever since she has come to the throne? She Is not yet much out of her teens, and yet she wears the most costly brocades and satins. It Is not that Queen W'llhelmlna does not have a Parlsli-nne dress maker, as she patronizes a house which Is probably con sidered perfection by the elderly women of the Fauberg St. Germain quarter. It Is not one, you may be sure, patron r j A" '2?&&Ct '.; mm i till j ; t-v. till vt.tefl in a 'i'ftJT.i; i lV ... yf ' :" jQueerx Qrumti dF ' f! ' ii fM fi Queen fllexanarm ' QineEnKecpeul of Bpaiu V, although It was commonly attributed to her. The fact was that It was for the then princess of Wales that a famous London modiste brought out the glove fitting seamless waist. It pleased the ' Jersey I.Ily,' who took to It at once and ordered a duplicate. The modiste to her royal highness, however, refused to make it, and for a year the princess was the mistress of the jersey. After that It became common property and was greatly affected by the Jersey Lily. " The queen also Introduced the princess bonnet, which she wore with her close cloth gowns and which was good In Its day. She has never Bhown any flexibility, however, and has never been seen in a Gainsborough hat or In any other style of headgear than some modification of her former favorite. "Years ago the queen wore navy blue.whlte, and mauve and a great deal of cream color. Lately, however, she has worn only black, white, and gray, until even the king ob jected, to the point of getting an American woman, Mrs. Arthur Paget, to try to persuade her to put on more color. Alexandra likes Mrs. Paget's taste in dress and takes her shopping with her, and it was throuKh her suggestion that the note of green In which she has lately been seen, was introduced Into her costume. Queen Alexandra can recog nize and accept good ideas from others, but she has lost whatever vogue she once possessed for being an original dresser. .4 Kaiserin Looks Bad in Anything. " The kalserln's husbund, as everybody knows, Inter fered with her clothes, and It is said that when he did so, he tried that good woman to an even greater extent than he has by his other foibles. Ho did not succeed, how ever, In making the Empress Augusta the fashion, and the truth is that for all she has wonderful gowns made for her and spends large sums upon her clothes, the empress has not the faculty of wearing her things effectively. " Her hats are worn too fur back upon her head and her hair Is of the short and fuzzy order around her fore head, which is hopeless In these days of luxuriant locks. She makes the mistake of drawing the rest of It back skin tight from her face, nml this Is one of the reasons that she la never at her best In evening gowns. " The kaiserin has not many Individual Ideas about her dress and leaves the details to her dressmaker. Her good figure and the fact that her riding hats are worn low over her forehead In a way that suits her, makes her riding dress the most becoming that the empress puts on. The late tip-tilted down hats are also more suited to her than anything she has worn formerly, and have improved her considerably, .4 4 Dowager Queens Are Frumps. " The dowager queens are, all of them, what a stylish American woman would call ' frumps.' Take Isabella, for Instance. She gets herself up ' regardlessly,' of course, and makes courageous efforts after stylish effects even

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