10 research outputs found

    And So The Judge Returns: Blood Meridian Workshop at the University of Warwick

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    Pulitzer Prize winning author Cormac McCarthy’s work has become required reading in literary criticism, and yet no syllabus appears to provision for the in-depth discussion his texts, particularly the 1985 novel, Blood Meridian: Or, the Evening Redness in the West, require. The ‘And So the Judge Returns: Blood Meridian Workshop’ at the University of Warwick emerged from the idea to provide a space that facilitates such a discussion. Designed to bring academics and non-academics of all ages together in one space, the workshop quickly developed from a small, Warwick-based event into a live-streamed and recorded international conference with a significant audience based in the United States. The workshop reaffirmed the interest in the novel’s enigmatic antagonist Judge Holden and motifs such as the landscape and violence. Less traditional ideas of the judge were also discussed, such as reading the judge as fraud or as weary of chaos and perpetual violence. The workshop succeeded in creating a space to share thoughts and ideas and continue the academic discourse on the novel. Speakers included Dr Nicholas Monk and Dr David Holloway, both established McCarthy critics; Peter Josyph whose artistic engagement with McCarthy’s work and career his highly respected among critics; and Dr Dan O’Hara, expert in American Studies. Ronan Hatfull and Katja Laug represented the younger generation of McCarthy critics. Live-streaming also afforded insights into the academic discourse to the mostly non-academic online audience. The article provides a summary of the day’s events and the links to the edited recordings

    And So The Judge Returns: Blood Meridian Workshop at the University of Warwick

    No full text
    Pulitzer Prize winning author Cormac McCarthy’s work has become required reading in literary criticism, and yet no syllabus appears to provision for the in-depth discussion his texts, particularly the 1985 novel, Blood Meridian: Or, the Evening Redness in the West, require. The ‘And So the Judge Returns: Blood Meridian Workshop’ at the University of Warwick emerged from the idea to provide a space that facilitates such a discussion. Designed to bring academics and non-academics of all ages together in one space, the workshop quickly developed from a small, Warwick-based event into a live-streamed and recorded international conference with a significant audience based in the United States. The workshop reaffirmed the interest in the novel’s enigmatic antagonist Judge Holden and motifs such as the landscape and violence. Less traditional ideas of the judge were also discussed, such as reading the judge as fraud or as weary of chaos and perpetual violence. The workshop succeeded in creating a space to share thoughts and ideas and continue the academic discourse on the novel. Speakers included Dr Nicholas Monk and Dr David Holloway, both established McCarthy critics; Peter Josyph whose artistic engagement with McCarthy’s work and career his highly respected among critics; and Dr Dan O’Hara, expert in American Studies. Ronan Hatfull and Katja Laug represented the younger generation of McCarthy critics. Live-streaming also afforded insights into the academic discourse to the mostly non-academic online audience. The article provides a summary of the day’s events and the links to the edited recordings

    Mementoes of the broken body: Cormac McCarthy’s aesthetic politics

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    This thesis analyses representations of the broken body in Cormac McCarthy’s novels. McCarthy presents bodies remarkable in their unwholesomeness, often marked by wounds and scars, alcoholism and illness, or forms of monstrosity. The majority of these bodies exist in marginalised spaces at the fringe of mainstream society, and the markings on their bodies correlate to their lifestyle. Expanding upon the sociology of Pierre Bourdieu to include a broader understanding of class structures, this thesis demonstrates how McCarthy connects an aesthetics of the body to class hierarchies, categorising the unbeautiful body as lower class and the beautiful body as upper class. Using the screenplay The Gardener’s Son to illustrate the theoretical nuances, Chapter One introduces the overall thesis and the underlying theoretical approach. The project expands the sociology of Bourdieu to include the poor and marginalised under- and lower class, and forms a dialogue with Foucault’s work on biopolitics and criminality, as well as Nietzsche’s approach to morality. This reading of the body within class and power hierarchies analyses the dynamics of class and power through an aesthetics of the body, and forms of community and resistance to society’s dominant power structures. Chapter Two utilises the theory of the aesthetic politics of the body to read wounded and scarred characters in Suttree and the Border Trilogy. I locate selected characters’ positions within the class hierarchy. This application of the theory allows for an understanding both of power hegemonies and the mechanics of their reinforcement, for example through law-enforcement, as well as delineating forms of resistance against systems of power, such as community and kindness. Similarly, Chapter Three traces power structures, class hierarchies, and forms of resistance through a reading of drunk and sick bodies in The Orchard Keeper, Outer Dark, Suttree, and Cities of the Plain. Chapters Four and Five offer readings of monstrous bodies in the Appalachian works, Outer Dark and Child of God, and the Southwestern novels, Blood Meridian and No Country for Old Men, respectively. Whereas Chapters Two and Three consider the potential for unity and community amongst the lower classes, Chapters Four and Five read monstrosity as a signifier of division and ostracism, as well as visible manifestation of the corruption generated within and by hegemonic systems of power and associated hierarchical social structures. McCarthy’s latest novel The Road is the focus of the postscript in Chapter Six. Situated in a post-apocalyptic, post-societal environment, the body-politics evident throughout the preceding nine novels do not apply to the social structures in The Road. Whereas McCarthy revisits tropes of illness, community, and monstrosity in The Road, the Postscript offers an adjusted reading of collapsed societal and power structures. My research shows that this system of classifying the body reveals McCarthy’s concern with a politics of the body that underlies American social hierarchies and power structures, an approach that has hitherto received little attention in McCarthy criticism

    The New Silk Road

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    The management of intelligence-assisted finite element analysis technology

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    Artificial Intelligence (AI) approaches to Finite Element Analysis (FEA), have had tentative degrees of success over the last few years and some authors have argued that effective FEA can help in the manufacture reliability and safety aspects of engineered artefacts. The author of this paper reviews how such AI techniques have been applied and in this light, the author then uses a Fuzzy Cognitive Mapping (FCM), to develop a framework for the management of intelligence-assisted FEA

    Solstice: An Electronic Journal of Geography and Mathematics, Volume IX, Number 1.

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    This document was delivered over the internet.The purpose of Solstice is to promote interaction between geography and mathematics. Articles in which elements of one discipline are used to shed light on the other are particularly sought. Also welcome, are original contributions that are purely geographical or purely mathematical. These may be prefaced (by editor or author) with commentary suggesting directions that might lead toward the desired interaction. Contributed articles will be refereed by geographers and/or mathematicians. Invited articles will be screened by suitable members of the editorial board. IMaGe is open to having authors suggest, and furnish material for, new regular features.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/2/barmore.PDFhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/3/1_barmore.PDFhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/4/sols198.htmlhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/5/1_sols198.htmlhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/6/2_sols198.htmlhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/7/syrnewn.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/8/syrnewm.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/9/syrnewl.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/10/syrnewk.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/11/syrnewj.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/12/syrnewi.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/13/syrnewh.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/14/syrnewg.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/15/syrnewf.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/16/syrnewe.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/17/syrnewd.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/18/syrnewc.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/19/syrnewb.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/20/syrnewa.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/21/solss.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/22/province.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/23/image401.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/24/Image155.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/25/Image153.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/26/Image152.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/27/Image151.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/28/Image150.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/29/Image149.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/30/Image148.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/31/Image147.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/32/Image146.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/33/Colorbar.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/34/animate2.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/35/animap3.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/36/animap2.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/37/animap1.gifhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/73/sols198.htmlhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58289/74/sols198.htm

    Knowledge representation within information systems in manufacturing environments

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    This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.Representing knowledge as information content alone is insufficient in providing us with an understanding of the world around us. A combination of context as well as reasoning of the information content is fundamental to representing knowledge in an information system. Knowledge Representation is typically concerned with providing structures and theories that are used as a basis for intelligent reasoning. For this research however, the author defines an alternative meaning, which is related to how knowledge is used in a given context. Thus, this dissertation provides a contribution to the field of knowledge within information systems, in terms of the development of a frame-of-reference that will support the reader in navigating through the different forms of explicit and tacit knowledge use within the manufacturing industry. In doing so, the dissertation also presents the generation of a novel classification of three forms of knowledge (Structural, Interpretive and Evaluative forms); the development of a conceptual framework which highlights the drivers for knowledge transformation; and the development of a conceptual model which seeks to envelop both the content as well as the context of knowledge (Semiotic as well as Symbiotic factors). This is established through the use of an Empirical, Quantitative case study approach, that seeks to explore an interpretivist view of knowledge representation within two information systems contexts, within two UK manufacturing organisations. The first case study presents how a-priori knowledge assumptions are used in a computer aided engineering decision-making task within a high technology manufacturing company. The second case study shows how knowledge is used within the IT/IS investment evaluation decision making process, within a manufacturing SME. In doing so, both case studies attempt to elucidate the inherent, underlying relationship between explicit and tacit knowledge, via a frame-of-reference developed by the author which defines key drivers for knowledge transformation

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    ha yx the tum rbjtt to yocr simmer aw- press, th eke is ho ex* ou charge for te» laUg ffofo Mm Wm ProjrutlT. in Bail**** •a* Pr*tre»«lve In follilc. VOLUME jr EIGHT P.-iGEf PALO AI.TO- CAL- Till KSHW. jll.V aa ,.,,, EIGHT PAGE. NO 155 YOUR ORDER for ftpotrmo awd ..VACATION OOOHS ra*. be .applied hy_ as n-adtty aad *fatckJy A fall liw ol (H'Nf*. PIAHINO TACKLK aad CAMPERS' UUlflUI earned bs stock. Ha CtTLKRY. l.K.i **. (.A fill FN iMli 1 Ml M- I.AWNMOWKRK, rata, Oar .i,-,k kt ...in-deie aad rare-tally —lected aod i*ar price* an- very low. I...1 u. *tw>w yoar n«r g<"*d« aad '!«•■•»■ J"* prtrro at lhe 318k Call us up by Phone Sale prices on all yopr needs for the summer or outing wear Twenty=Five Build= - ing Permits Issued Why Not Put Up Fruit When You can Get Jars at These Prices V Plats. Quart* tt.lt Knolloa Vacuus* . . Kconomi ....* At 1% l.M Premium . .*> li ,„•.,,.,.. HIKM KABI.V. Oxfords for Warm Weather Low Shoes afford (he greatest comfort ln lammerdme. Light ln welfjht. cool, and if properly fined. comfortable. We fit oor oxfords properly Redwood City Local Items Mrs Z.,e Thorpe, her children and Mi** Florence Einstein, have gone 10 Camp Curry, nrar Lot Cato*. lo «pend a vacation of- Ihrce -a/rei* Mr and Mr*. A. 11 Wnlsi and children letl on Saturday (of Crag* and will bc away (or thro- week. Mr*. Hrnry Sleinberger ami Or inbergc ■ and M C Boa I Montr Hi.- of Alameda term, ha* resigned to accept ihr prie cipalsliip ol a grammar .chool al !«»•* \ogele*. Owing 10 hi. wile'* health he wa* ■ ■.■<!* *"cl to go-•'•nth aad gi.r up his -Hi.itton here W W Price and wile lett M-.n.lay lor a ten day*' vara!--", ai Monie Iti,. Street Superintendent Joe Dickey and t.imil) arr ramping at 1-j Honda Kihel Swain, who taught nt lhc lo CSi high -ch«i mr MSergl >*ar., iu- t.eeo appointed teacher ,-i Kngli*h in the San J4*e high school She did noi iiiteti.I lo teach for at lra*t a year, hut the "tier front the San JeM -cli»*'t Sail t-ake City Ceorge Mctlanirl*. who ..a* meg ly re-elected principal of the Redw, Great Opportunity for Investment FOR SALE—The following property. It la altuated In tbe immediate vicinity of the strike. It Is la the Qolcksllrer Belt. Good' prospect 'oa this properly. Tbe Goadalnp* Co. hss s mine adjoining nee> the, John D. Ma.ker.ile new ISO too, strike. It ta as follows: Lota t. 1, 1 nnd I. Section l. Township » 8. R 1 W. of Mount Diablo Meridian— 120 nnd 01-100 acres. Title perfect; homestesded lo 1S88: stream running through: two springs: nearly! one-halt land can be cultivated: some Umber snd aboul six asd one- half miles from Los Ostos sad flre snd oae-halt mile* trom Alma. Price 25.0-9 per Acre Por particular* spply to THE 3. 3. MORRIS REAL ESTATE COMPANY. 130 I'alveeeKy Aveaa*, rale Atto. HEALTH OFFICER FILES REPORT HI HI lit II KM,|.s , .u t *. Mt I whit potrwwntii nr sysy. nn my, . Iteiaallilii. llfUU.it, ..-.iMgl.-Ua |i|..„.. lt.K — IPC Milk Aboat Forty Thousand Dollars Is Spent."* This Year on Improvements-Many New Buildings Planned "-'"• °"~ ""-*•' •>-'-•>•» ° ba* aabmilied hi* repnn for. tbe .. ,' ■ -i month ol June and* pan of* July -, J.„ , , „m'- _ _. «- . «_ «, HKua _, „ A» *.^m* ■" 'he l«>*rd of public ~«l..i > The JULY PERMITS ALREAIY COME TO 9,350! - *. Heath*. I'aii.e* ..l-ir.. *n- Presbyt enans Give Farewell Reception i:\IKMI WKHl W1HIIKH AND IA I'HKMMO**.* IIP I-IIIM Tti ll Ht \ I \MI- 11 - ' * Tt.- ...agrrgaii.if ,.f ,t,, ITe-b) - teriaii Church tendered s f*r*-wcli recrpiliin al thy. church Isst night !lo Ite. t; R ^Idi-n and Mrs. Alden. |-...f.-...r IL M. Alden. Mr* Hsrbsrs Alden Ml — lull, M.;rloii-iii and Mr** I* 11..-Williamson, who leave Tseniy-fl.e building permit* .-ailing for ibe ripa-adttnre at *lm.**t rott. ihitiitatiil dnllar* hair been I*- ii. i by llulldlng Inspector John Y llyalx-,- Jr since the first of lhe p-T*eni veer Fourteen of the*e pvtniif* are for new residence*. imi-' of which will be n( the bungalow type Tha other permit* are ■ • ■ alteration* nr addltloas. gsrsges and balldlng* to be a*ed for ba»l- ne.. HeeMe* these permit* already i.-n.ii plan* are being made for many new balldlng* to be begun within a very short ilm* The money lo he spent on Ibeac new buildings will probably amount to many beautiful new l.o-ue* In ihe •oathern pen ot towa Thl* section of towa I* fast becogslag a rival of lhe eastern end nf t'alierslly ■ are* nue m the st tract Irenes* of It* homes. Waller L Morton I* the owner ol the . I,, i-m frame dwelling creel - ed at 331 Pulton *ire*t for tt.ono. The utii-ilnii frame r*eldenee St . 1X12 Byron slreel Is tbr property of if~. [I. silin Tbe rosl of Ibe hoase Is ri.-n al 11.400 Kdward J Klngham, a Mayfieli] eonirartor. ha* erected a frame mintage for tiiin..ir road for SI00. K-rin. male, aged 1 moatb. pneumonia' female, aged 7: year*, pal* •Bnsary Iw be tea Inst*, male aged I* years eerebrs) hemorrhage male. aged U year* liri.nfh.. vi" umonla isle. Illrlh*. Bd I onths nale what hai air- thla r alter- - Hlgb The first permit wa* le.u. II Unlaw nn January lath f. atli-iia m a building at III atreet oo ned hy U«li-i * Hi bet The ■ • ,i.ii,i< . price 1.x "ihei alteration* wa* ll,;00 c.'.xv. m.i.i,. , got ihe second per* h* ki.„i -,., ihe t»-nInsula mil ii, l.ulld * flrr-rootj' bungalow __^ iwdstory fraiio- rrsldeti for John Hudfield tt rast eel ai^Kjng t.llll U n**srlng >nmpl, ferley *lrnel. for »:.oefl. /*fhl*| pm Rryaai alreei Di |t Thomai Case* or ...iiiAgt.iu* disease report ad during jgg*' aad ihtru Meosle*. J. ' ijermaa awasW*. C tfaaeo on a J sly. Itih.* Measbtf t. Herman measlee, I. li,. lis ui, ,,.. 11,.... made. k. milk 34 Mlddlefield | aaiuple* levied. 14. cream samplne Iient.-d I. baeleriologlra) eiamlna- • lon. made I typhoid twldsll. 0**- stive Dr R. M Olseoa-aeffer ha* built ! ' T%* ******* * »eas(es seeai lo base- a i.n** .tor, Trsnir balldlng. at «i:'*Mrn ,rnn *' ***** '*» io*'1* (>n* Vma sireet. The co*l wag 11.300* ***** **** n*1******. *>T eiposare to Thi* building I* used aa a veterinary.' t **** ,rom ,b* Stanford campus, ■hoa(iliai and I* one of (fto rim -i of A pe about lhe Orst of August for Ihelr l-ungalow now complKed. I* '^oe of, u Ix.oi.e ta other *talee The Ibg mim attrarltte Is the ell Informal, but the A permit was Iseiied f.*r\ 'he|rngm Isrgi- nuiiilicr predent and the kind-, bulldtag ol n furatrar,- .wr-l ly word* spoken Indicated the high for W II Hale* al ft!" naffiona e*t-i.*m and affeeiton entertslnrd for "slreel to co*t 11.000. Hie Iwo famllle* by ihe church to A bne*iory residence*.la being whleh they hsve sll given murh of) erected for Dors Raker at 3*0 Pul* Ihelr lime and energy, : ton *ire-*t The price I* |*..3un Thr Alden* hare lived In Palo Henry Schomberg. the piano mi alio stare 1*01. when, R M. Alden drew nut a permit to build a garage w«. appointed to a position In the at the rear of l»'- Alma ttreet tbi department of Kngllsh st Stanford ! contract pHre wa* placed at I'.'.O Since iba'i time h* ha* been pro*j The l'enin*u)a rfiih n*celved ijer moled to a position ta lhe depsrt- tnUalon to bnlld It* handball court mem of Knsli-li at Stanford Since as sn addition to ih* clubhouw lhal Hme he has been] which Is situated on Porest avenm promoted *teadlly. ' onlll re-{ betwiyn Hryant and Watorte* eently when he rewlgned an aaaoei-i streets The*cost was tl.goe ate prnfeasorshlp to arcepl tbe cbai he own«r. T McKlnui) Im* added thr. or Rngllsh Htrralure at the Hnlvri ally of llltaols. He Is widely known as a writer of short stories Por the lasl year ar two In- has plfcyrd the pipe organ at the Preabyterlsn Churrh His mother, Mrs, O. It. Alden. Is the author nf many books written under the pen nsme (if "Pansy " Rev O. R Aldea I* a retired (Costtaued on page I.) O. W Mn."if* look oat another permit (o eerci a one snd-a-hslt- story residence at "04 Water Ic*/* atreet for John Dtldfleld This house, which I* slso completed, cost 13.000. A I-'" gsrage wa* built for J 11 Relnbart at JU Lytton avenue. Mr*. Gertrude Huff I* bulldtag s two-story frame dwelllag al I 7 Mejrllle avenue The contract price ia fl.300 Thi*.hnnse I* one nf Ibe St. John Peaches Picked Ripe. Packed Right* Beautiful in color, high in flavor, yellow mealed, Free Stone. Grown at Los Altos by M. 0. ADAMS ASK YOUR QROCER fit" Waterier, tatrtapad building of ' ' In the rear ""' ' l«o Hryant I *r*oa* trot hmltl***"-*** * Ol the year was hoard for n < slory frame bouse *t *tt llyronj slreel The coat |* pnt at ll.fdl ' K A and A. 11 • and from whlrh no rurlher cases have oeciirr-j-d Another ras* came- in.i'j .- probable .-ii-fiNur.-, in Bars Pranci*.o Thl* resulted in ihr*-a» oih.-r rage* hy direct eapaewre before the dl*eo*c had broken bal. and from one ol these ■ fourth rat*- ilso by ei|>o*ur,' before wa* known Tbe origin r ni..-. 1* doubtful utiali* tbst messlpB. did Pnlo Alio 'before the e i-li.*.il. 6ecauBf* ih.* long period of Ineuballon wben the • already . Infeclloas. even J before the appearance of ihe rash, disease very bard Itv • H O JKNKINH. Health Officer. Matthew* The building permit* for the*pre«*. ent month of July are as follow*- | One glory frame residence for Prank Hapgood at 111 Mlddlefield road, tar 12.400 are In the course or rnnatturtlon , lhe many *ubutb* nf Ihe lown, [including South Pslo Alto. Rv*r- rn.n park SBd North* Palo Alto 11'RK WOOL Take any suit thai I* made by us to a fabric etpt-n lor eiamlnattoD— nnd his Verdict will be either pure wool or pure silk snd woe!. We hate an excellent stock ef sammer fabrics that make exceptionally cool, amart suits—step In aad have us show you them. 8. P. LAUSTEN A New Los Alton Bungalow for Sale or Trade I have lust completed a new modern i. room with Urge Bleeping porch bunralow on large lot ln the choicest part of town and will sell at a very low figure, only part raab; or will take I-os Altos lot as part of caah payment: balance like rent. Would conaldyr automobile ta good condition. Consult owner at once. C. E. MACRUM . Las atlM, OaUfiffBla. Camp' Curry lo lhe Santa t'rux Mountain*. A HOTKL TAMP" having every modern eonvcoleare of a we!1**ltuat*d,*ummer resort. Tents leompletely furnished! smld lhe redwoo-d* or beside the brook. Shady Wood*. Mow*y fauiyon*. Mi.n.ila..i. Sin-am-, l-l. ......I Trail*. Run oo tho TAMP CHRRV" plaa. Camp (*urrv's rarrlags meets tbe Irsla leaving Palo Alto every morning at 9:15 ta Loa tialoe. 44 minute* by train. 30 minute* by earrlsge- 74 minute* from Palo Alio FOr illustrated folder., or rate*. addre** FOSTER CURRY Loa nat»*. California. One-.tf.r. frame dwelling at 32g fininda *treet to co*l fl,.'.0fl. for J. f'ailln Araoti. Thl* hou*e wa* * ifii,-d by ihe owner R. L, Taylor, of Menlo Park, erecting a one-siorv frame bungalow for |! --.i-i at ■; i, Webster ■ freer Mr* Margaret lb II of Jl| Hamona Btrset I* remodeling her horae for • tea: A I. Rnrklnghsm Is putting up a one-slory frame dwelling at t>09 Klngsley avenus for 11,30 it. The barn al *3.', Pnreai avenue Is being remodeled into a dwelling for II.*«n by 8 fbambers The last permit to be ,--,;.,» ni> In II o'clock tbls morning was foi- a 1100 frame house for C R H». rom at 1** Waverley sireet The tots) amount of the cdntrnrl prfew for building permlls during the present year la |3B,-t<g. Ot Ihls sum |9,3i0 Is credited to the pa«l nineteen days of July A new bungalow* I* belsg planned by L. D. Kelly to be er-Vied Bryaat stre-t near Hawthorne There will he .ii tooma A J Rain w||] .,,„„ erect a fine hiingatos on King-ley * avenue near Waverle, *ir,H-t Mr Ilsln, is the arehlteei nt Stanford I .'nl verslty. - All of the buildings for which permlls hsve been Issued sre wllhln j Ihe Incorporated area of Palo Alio. Many other house* bave been built I About forty thouaand dollar* la bow being eipended by Stanford sta- •i-iii- In building on ibe campus* i .,-..-in. n,.ii work on two mom laitirient hultdlngs will soon he commenced These new edifice* will be known sa the Sianford t'nlnn. wblcb Will' CO*! I'.ii.I.ll-l. BBd Ihe Woman'" ' ■•I itihi.ij.. wblrh will he .-re, ted for MMt-ta' Mia* Catherine Martinis bas lust been sppotnted a practice leacher of music sf Csstlllejs School for neat term. Novelty Theater THK PAMILT RESORT NEW I'KTI lil.s TIKHIIAY, Tilt IIMUV. s \ rt nn iv. SlIfDAT. IIRdT OF THE LATEST I.KAV WOLt-n KNIi liteal i,,-s!i rti plclare' HHrfilNKKM VS. JlimoNK Tou'll laugh all right AND TWO. OTHKIt Night TldC Matlaea 1:M. Halarday Xigbt 71.1. A HOME OF YOUR OWN Is a good investment Write os re- p.ardlnn Ihe cosi ot building. Santa Fe Lumber Compan

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    :-'- ."i falb 3Mfcm MAGAZINE SECTION. PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA, 1K1DAV, JUNE IS, 1906. PAGES 1 TO a. GIBSON GIRL WEDDED. AtRS. XAXSIB SBAW, SISTBR'IS. LAW OF ARTIST. URIOB OF WAIOORF AS lute. One «>t the 1*1** Virginia B*aut>ea.-A Darloa Horse Woman aad rood <st Excrctsc. riv* MUlloo Dollar gnC. lir.it t»i*«c a Wedding Present. A "Gibson OIiT* 1* lite talk of all England, for ahe b*s married a young I'saniif that cvtuutry wbo is belr toan estate of more than sua.....1.1... Tbe. i-rltlt* t* none other than Mr*. Waldorf ,\«tor. and a stster-lo-Iaw of l-hart-*** Dana «lh*on, tbe crtebrated AlSeri.*an Mtlisl. Mrs, Astor Is one »f five sister*, all native* of Virginia and tw-fc-uginB to a fatnlI■ pumliered auiong tbe I'. 1'.. '*., slsudlng blgb lu tbe aristocrat*" of tbe Soutb. She wss a Miss Nannie Laug- boror and later tha all* ul lluUty t-tfaaw, l*rom whom site was dtvurvt-tt. All of Ha' laa-iK'U-mc *i**ter-> art* re* markable beauties, paying particular attention to every detail of fare and Ill-lire. A Virginia lady wbo knew tbem In tbelr girlhood days stated that tbetr rules at living were soroetblng like tbla: -I.*vskf-i-.t earl) and excrrt-te IfftaUl rof uu hour ot tWO. Have a luoeticott nnd exercise attain, thi* tin*, ikling. I,tt:i.hev.n agslu and tben a lung, \ I ft-roust tntiupor a<-rvt*sn*iuit# ride tn tiiitimla. Just fur llh- iiW»a*Ve or It. 1 ben a hearty swpp**. Um*ii a Isasj walk In tbe souttwrn t-lltcbi, aud fcen bsaV" KI'l.IiMHO WOMAN RIDER Witb a strong borse Iteneatb ber. and Ibe i-.it k In full cry, to -sec Nannie latuia-iinriic rlilltii; tu liuunils waa n sight for ii.-n aud gotl*. lo the daya of ber glrlt-01-d, at tb* I*—-,. Run. In Virginia, -><■■■ wm Illsua atln-uped, and It is no HtreleliltiK of facts wbeii one avows Hint men came from far arJ'-ld Just to see ber, with ber pink r-bevk* aglow and tier fair hair loos- * *t- si to the bswasa, iKttiiid tin- sod In a mailesp altautloa for tl;- brush. Notblug ilsnnted Ibis young Vtrglntsn In tbe way of dlteb or feut-e. bill or liollou-, awl at IU sin* »n» faii-i-d a* tn* most lotrejild and brilllsnt borae- womsn tn ber native State. Two things wuu for Mra. Laiigborns Sbsw the belr of William Waldorf Astor: tbe beauty of ber being, wbea 00 Ik•*-•—1■*tkl and l.c-r bubbling ir repr**aallite A merles dJ*Ui. Young As tot, when be beheld tier tu ber glury : - *. gh>>n by Mr. Alitor to bis flaut-liter-ltilfivv, which later on la to be reset and worn on ber pi*wituilon at court. This historic gem tiTh-oxcd to Charles ■ the Bold,- the Duke of Itor- gundy, aud fetched SlukUUU at tbe sale of the DemldutT Ca41«cUoa to l***J3 It waa avxnred by Mr. Astor aome years ago from a uilflonaln' {•■■■<■ ■■■-, Sir C Ji-.-j.-i.iin... for m .".!•■' Mr. Astor also gave ooe of tbe Onest tiara* |n aU-odou. iu!..■ !i cost raorr Ihan ,• I'm.'---:, as well as tbu title deeds to Cliveden uutuxion and esute*. wllh tlie many ti*va*urra be baa added :>i'*vi. including a maenliu-cut suite or old (1ilp|Hirnt> funilture, mul aome wootterful Krvncb china, uriginally from • ■ .-...'-.!> «, and ouvc the property ot l.n.!■:■-•» Lii.-i-tne. Tbe value of thla I.iti.t.- .':ifi probably, exceeds .".'.,- OU1.0UU It I* »:ider>ttx-d gbat tfj-e yonng p-t.-ii- |>lan go make tbelr fMtno ni Cliveden. In 1SU0 Mr. Astor purvliased WARSHIPS NOT WANTED. •FJfiRTISt: BOB" STASIS SBWS OROERED TO LEAVE SEW YORK BARROR. United Mates Ha.tk--ih.p3 and Cruiser* Obstructions to f-.a*lga- i...n-Ih..u»and» of Callona of Oil Released by routed Anchor. New York Ctty tn IU hurry and nntfa of i> >.!.- ■ - did not seem to stop for patriotic rvasona to enjoy tin- night of a dust-tt l mini Slate* wanihli** an- ch*>rvd ta ber hart-or. Tbe A111.Ti.-a11 fleet rating majestically at ai-chor in the North River, attracting the attention 11rtl1.1u--m.l-. of sight scirs. wss requested to "wove oa." Tbe stalwart ttstthwhlp* and ai-morcd cruisers wltb tbelr great li'tiglb anJ In eoinmaud of 00 less a i>er*ouage than says Crawford was In good health and good spirits. While Mr. Crawford was In Betrwt American mlaalonarlea attempted to dissuade him from entering on the trip, and pointed out to him the great danger of the undertaking. II* was firm In his resolve, however, and left on January Kb. Before departing the skater left his lUasrary wltb Dr. Williams, an American dentist, whoa* guest he wa* temporarily. Crawford* Intention wo* to ■true out over the bard-road to Beg- which is about *00 mile* from Beirut. '1 in ie - ho lutends going southeast 300 miles-to Baasorah, at lb* mouth of th* Euphrates and near Persian roast. He was undecided whether h* would travel by land or see over J.I.* 1.100 mites lo Beloocb* latao, * Ills plans Included many excursion* through Reloochtattan. a Journey sa th* Oulf to India, and a j-ear or mora la that mubUt, H* purpose* to accomplish all this on money be may earn along the way. rt.ivm.rs mansion on tue hankr op ttoi TstAatatt. tlie beantlfnl country trtonse from tbe Duke of Westminster and paid |l.- _■-'■■■. tor it >'li,.-I. ii is situated tn the heart or tlie l-oullng and plcukliig region ot ibe t'pper Ttmin***, OFFENDED THE POPULACE. Arter an)iilrltig It. Astor bad an opportunity to show nlmseir inure es* elusive Uisn the link* of W'estniluster. Tbat potentate and all previous owners of tb* estate bad allowed tbu comniuu Oa* of lb* Ptf caught his breath Just a* Bobby Shaw.. bar divorced husband, had dop* art-, ersl v.-tr* ago ln Old Vlrclnls- And tit!* wa* not Strang*. Waldt-rf Astor. always bre*>tbiiaC In lb* cn-ppreaaed air of bis fstber*a house, timid, retiring ami atudlous by nature, had not much opportunity for young gins* society, and almost never tbat of Atnenc-i. girl*. To blft Mr*. Nanai* Boaw wal u ri'veijiii.iii. For seven Ut-Dliui br wooe*i ber. and at the end of that time n*> was ilirtr-fourUis American and four-founl** la love. tilowloe, be followed l«*r across the Attanti--. It ts only fair to joone Astor to aay that be has never been so nKgreaalvely British a. bis father, wbo apuru* •'■ nio*t everything Amertesu. or bis januajag ttrotber. John Jacob, wbo t* an out-and-out CuglUhman. EX-I.rslVK WEDDING tssttVlCss, Tb* -a.-1.1.1,2. whk-h <-cciiiTt*4 at laondon in May. waa a very <iult*t affair, only 17 Invitations being *'■•»* out for tbe eeret**.rii-[. Tbe brfclf iMd* tbr tOTeUest plcUire. suajdiiiiz. aa lt ■ spi-e.tr-tl. In a b*d of lilies snd r< Dear the cham-el. a work of art. in- deed, wa* ber we-ldluc rown, tor tt -*■■• Bja-J-* t*f It** .-..;- 11H|'*T''"**"' ****■ obtsinablr. adorned with rare old isee. Among tbe many weddlog present*. tb* mean notabtW-ws* IA* Saucy dis people to picnic and to vrslk throngb that [>sn of the property lying along ths river. Ttie Aiuerlean uiillionatra threw tbem out and threatened tbrm wltb tb* uttuoat rts-ora of the taw. Now thst be lis* Bottle.! tlte estate on ba* son,, tbe lutiabttant* of C.-okhsra and Maldeobead on the Thsiue-t-— ■urroundlng hamlet*—are delighted. for tbey l-elk*ve lliat young Aatiar w|H at onee give onlere for the t-anci-l- Utloa, af tu- uxaay strict urtXar* s**aiti-*t ira-j.x*..n-r made by hi* fattier -<-nk-rs vrbir-ti turned sll the riverside folk Into bitter eiM-n.l'-i of Ibe American millionaire. fireat wall* surmoonted with lin-keo •flaita to protect tlu* Astor vegetahle -.'-ir-b-B *|-»tll lovely view* from tbe public road, and anyttudy daring to picnic tn ibe Olreden woods, as in the oldeti -lays, is st once threatened i.i a keeper with impri-ummeat. It Is believed thst yonng Mr. Astor. etui Is very i-opular wllb rowing men. will abolish tin--,- feudal and dis testvfat r-t-ifulstl.-as. Rear Admiral "Figbtlng Bob" Evans were found to It* tn the way. Dispatches from tbe nietrac-ollM say thai tb* supervisor of the harbor of New York called ou Admiral Evans and served a forma] notice on lilm that the siiljM wen* tuklug up too iniieh room la the river, and were seriously tuierf.-riii-; wltb nsvls-atlon. While It was admitted on tbe Culled Slat.- v.■.-.■!- tbnt they were well out Iti Hie usual channel taken by steamera, ili.-i could not ancbor further luabure oa account of tlie shallow lit*** of tbe water. There Is probably 00 place In the World where tbe great wbjte and buff -Mi" of tbe \iii-i ;■ .hi navy show off to better advantage ilnin In tbe North River. Tbe duaeti wsrrloni strung *- long at ancbor at lutervals of aliout 1'" yarda stretching from tbe foot or Riverside* Drive at T'.'ml Sir.-.-t lo (.rant's Tomb at l-'ili Htreet and * -> yond. v.!;m Prince I.oui* ot Itailen' burg bad Ills Brltlah anuunxl flyers III tbe New, York port tbey worn given i-rtlj. lu the North River and only a few weeks ago the Paul Jones Frent-b Itn-t waa In tlie atn-am. Tbe New York people could not be labospltsblw to tbeae Q.H* on ner-nont of ibe loter* italic.mil a*p-r-ct* of things, but when Ibe American ships srrlve.1. walllutf tbelr tarn lo gu to tb*> repair docks. tbey were oi-di*red to move away and give He- lug Im-si* ami scows ranged In the ilu'J.'iu River trade a chance to pa**, l> - ..- the aliort ■■■•■■ of Itio fleet In New York tlte ltaitlertbl|> Illinois In dragging at snebwr autplenly tippe-I open a Htandard oil pipe Hue laid cros* the l-c-d of the river. This line II seems was not charted and no on* In authority sreined to know Just bower wbeo tt got tbrrc, but u«*vei-ihe.**<** iiti* ttlsndanl OH Coinpany find Ireu pumping tl-ousnnd* or gntlona into New York *'Uy tbrougb It every day ror year*. Wbeo tbe Illinois fouled Ibe plli* line Hie orflter* on l-oard Ibe ship ■ ■.nit! '■■■■ Itn-iglne what Hie anchor bad taken bold of umil the *nrface of the river l-ecsttM* a shining maaa, bright with ibe bne* of petroleum. Before the pipe Hue could 1mi rep.-iin-.l more than »'.•■*' t ,;:■.: . of gotxl SHERLOCK HOLMES, l RE A THIS OF MOST W0SOERFVL ASO FVXZLtSti OF DBTECT1VB CRARACTBRS. Sketch of Ols-courageitwota of Cooan Do>lc to lire** lata (be field of Literature Manuscript. HcguUHy Hcturoed. Tbe author or The White Company." "Htr Nigel." '■Study In t*Wrlet" and oilier Sherlock Holme* stori**— Kir Artliur connn Doyle--was born Edinburgh, Keotlan.1, on Mar IS.V1. He con-es of an artl.tic family, and Is tbe granaaon or John Doyle- tbe famous political caricaturist. Whose pictorial altetrlies appeared for more than thirty {rears under llio I iltlal* of **H. " " wiiboot Ulacloauri- of tlw artlst'i SEW RAU AVTOROUILES Each Machine Runslndcprivdawity by It* Own Motor. The cruse of autolat* to bnlld pal- are touring cars ror plt-astirr- trip* has caused railroad corporations to dabble in ibe novelty or motor vehicle 11.it.-j. nt.iiiuii. Some of the unique car* that patrols have tieen applied for are cvrtalnly freak rrodorts. A car tbat rcsemliles a huge •■ lailtering ram lina i.-.-n completml at the shops of the I'ulon Pacific railroad, at Omsbs, Neb. It I* a big steel structure e*|ieelnlly ileslgned for climbing s-rinle- tajtd run by hi own i*a*itl.-in' inotur, over stauUard gauce rail*. On Its trial trip It d*> vi'luj.i-i u -i-eeil ot forty lollea an hour, ellmblug. It i" '■ si'l. a grrnb* of sti per cenL /* RACED THE STEAM CAR8. It was given lis first long-dlataut-e trial 00 April lttb. wben it left Omaha a* the Bti-rvad *-rctton or train No. 1. known n* tbe Overlsnd Umlted. Tbe motor car gained on No. 1 to such extent that at Freutoot. 40 miles from omsbs, tbe motor car was held on the block six uituute*. Owing tc bravy wind ami meeting trains from thi* time on, Na 1'* schedule was not maintained, however, tbe total tlm< Of Ihe motor ear from Omaha t< Oratul Island. 11*10 mtlea, waa 1 bc-nr* and IS minute*, with delays atoomittng t- 40 Minute* on account of order*, ineotlug trelus, etc. The s'ttusl nmulng time for tbe l'-:<. tulle* wss 4 bovra It! mlnulee, or IH miles per hour. Ttmre was no delay whatever ou ncniunt of tlie nmior ear, and tbe ma<*blnrry wss In slun-st < aunt utotlu-n frotn Omaba to Urabd ri.ii.il. On ttie return trip April IR tbe actual running time waa 4 hour* 10 minutes, or .tfUl mile* per hour. From Elslmni 1o South Orosba. a distance of "Jl.'i m;i.-. wna covered In ■Hi mtuules, or 41! mile* per Iioiir. A maxjmnm speed of M mile* per hour was attained or this trip. liiitlKi.nl .'Hi' i;iIh Williltattltig machine's trial irlp expresae-I much grstlOeatlon. Some of Ibe otBdsI* •vrn *o far *a lo predict that tbe |-a*oltt.e motor -will ultimately I*vo- lutlonlxe Interurtian railroad tr*u»- l-ortatitjii. SCHEME OF VE.NT1I.ATION. ilila maeblue hss several new ar- raiik'eii.eiiis. the moat (-on*|iii*ut-us of whleb Is tlie ventilation «>T tbe (ar*. 'i tn- windows are round, similar to ]>ort hole* 011 t-tear*i*blp*. and are air. water aad dost proof. Tbe car* have entrant*. In ibe middle luaii-ad of at tbe end. Tbe new iiietlto-t of ventilation fairly well avoid* ibe rtoa* and sometime* foul i.!n.-i-|.!i-i!<- eomlltfons so orten em*ouutered lit olei-trie ami other ir portaltoa car*, sulaiciently so a* lo predlet catmplete aoi-c-eea tn thla dl< recllon, Tlie vlbrailon and noise ol Ihe engine were larttely eliminated and ii..--!i-st;i.iii of Ibe ear w-cked sptetKtidly ou tht* trial rnn The ear* will ac-eommotlAte slxly l>.i-..'i:.-ert ,-srb, with comfort. Ttiey bare every modern convenience, and gin A C0KA.N DOTUs. Identity. Many of these were -*o fauiotts la tbetr day that tbey were frr-tuently porchejted at large price* by tbe Brltlsb Unaenm. John Doyle tim) tour oons,. -who alao bocam* artists. Ills eldest son, Chart*-* Doyle. was th* fstber of tbe tvovetlst. and another son was Rlebard Iwryle, who '■.in,.' by hla nickname of "Dicky" ltoyle tbrougb bis signature of a "!'" wllb a little bird perched npon It, whleb msy yet be seen on tbo cover design of Punch. f'onan Doyle's education bes-vn England, where already In bis tenth year bo inhibited a wonderful pre- rvx-liy ror telling atorlea. But even at Ibe early age of six tbe future novelist and creator of Sherlock Holmes was snllrlpeled In a story of terrible nd. venture, written In a bold band on f.».i». up paper, four words to tbe line, snd seeompsnled wltb original peit- 11.nl Ink llluatTutloii*. -There waa a man and a tiger In It." be say* of this Infantile effort; forget wblt-b was tbe hero; bnt It didn't matter much, for tbey became blended Into one about ibe time wben tbe tiger met tb* win. I wma a realist in the age or tbe romanticists. I described at aome length, both rat-bally and plctorlally. ibe untimely end or that wayfaring man. But wben the tiger bad *.t»<-rlK*.l biro, I found my- aeir ■IlKhtly emrterrnsse-l a* to bow story was to go on. 'It Is vary easy to get people Into scrap** and very hsrd to get tbem out again,* vra* my sage eonnm-nt on the difficulty; and 1 bav* often had cause to repeat ihla prv*cortoua aphorism of my child- !"*"■!. Upon tbls oecaalob lb* situation wa* beyond me, and my book, like my man. was engnlfed In my tiger.** At Rlonyborst, and also at Felt}. klreh. In Germany, Doyle's literary Inclination was shown In the editor, ship of school msgaslnaa In 1870 lie returned to Edinburgh end took np the study of msdlcin* at tbe university there, where be reniatiwd until be obtained his diploma, five years later. In IK8U Dr. Hut I- left the unlraralty to make a acveii-inontbs' trip to tb* Arctic seas as unqusllfted surgeon on board a whaler. There was very little demand for surgery aboard the Hope, and lie has d-*a-*rlb«d ht* chief occu- patloo dnrlng tbe voyage as being tra- ptoyt-U In keeping Ihe captainJa cut l.ii.ii..... worklug la lb* -boats after tab. and teaching tbe crew to box. He utilised bis experlenc* late* In hla *tory. Tbo Captain or Ihe pDleater.** Two years later. In IM-O, after g four-mouths' voyage to th* west coast of Afrit*, be settled down as a medical practitioner at Ninitl.«e-i. tn England, where he remained until IStsi, Those were snluoos and trying years. In wbleh be earoe to regard tbe call* of tbe firofeasion be bad adopted aa Interruption* itrtbe real work of hla life, and found that tha writing of stories was a very slender prop upon which to lean for a livelihood. "Fifty little cylinder* or tMnt*»crlpt,** tt* says, "did 1 aen,t I*,,,,, .luring eight year*, which <l,wrlN**l ar*Jtulor orbit among pul-IMH*r*, aiitT'usuiilljr cam. hack. Ilk* pai**r boomerangs, to tb* Place tbat tbey bad started from.** All this tim* be wan writing anony. tnouaty, and during the ten yeara of lti*> literary apprentices-hip, b* sfat** Ihsi. In spite of anceaslng and untiring literary effort, be never lo any-Vi** t.-nr earned fifty poumls by bis pen. Then. In 18K7, spp**red In Bertoo* Christinas Annual a atory from hi* pen called "A Study iu" Scarlet." It I* a aigtiliteaiit point In tbe author's career, for tn this story Sherlock Holm** made bl* first *|r|iearance. It wa* puliilalied later In a liook form, and went forth aa bU first novel, end immediately began to attract attention. Under Ibese farming <-|rcum*tsni**a be undertook the writing of "Mtcah Clsrk*." It was completed after a year* reading and live months' writing, and n-i>n**euted tbe moat an> I1IH011* ami lt.-iM.ruI work tb* author bad yet in-^.lp7la*a--.l. Bnt It am* h*ck to bltn-fr-..m pfte publlablng boost- sfttrr 1 :!i. r, irtifil be began to des> palr of 11- at-eetitance. "I remember.** be Bays, "smoking over my dog-eared msnutcript when It returned for a whiff uf rotnitry air, snd wondering Ao Expert Opln/on. "Wilt alcohol dissolve sugar?" 11 wm. replied -Oalde Sosque: -11 I will dissolve gold, brick bouse*, and . borse*. and tmpplness. and tore, and ' eTsryUiing els* worth bavlag." Al'TOHCBILi: rag or t'MON PACIFIC K. B. CO. Standard oil went skimming down 1h< Hudson into tbe ocran. Tbere appear* to be no way In whleb the oil company can etill.it for fn* isKroteutn iba* wasted, as there I* no offleinl cbsrl showing tbe location ot tbe lint; lo the river Led. ■ devoted ea|N-ela1ly to touring p:in!i'« tbroiigtiout the West. Tin- car* j wilt br run **if**>r •«*■■, raiety or in itin.* In tb" latter ea*e one car can easily Is? fitted np as a combination nli-aervalroo dining ear. I. tt.-r on •■■lulpiiietit* for inn*fonalng tbr care Into palai-e sleepers will be InsUlled. Trn rcralag iVnas/a on Roller Skate* A caravan which recently iniTed al 'Il»lrut from Bsjedsd reported baring passed near tbe city or Unab about :.'¥» miles eaal rrom there, aa American nam*d Arthur Crawford, who left that p-ii-i *-*Hs- !«-/• --—— •(, with the Intention of proceeding through Asia Minor and India on in- ■treea-cu which b» called road skatvU-a. Tne leader of the caravan Prealdeat Belierc* to Exereiac. President nooseTell once r*-th*r •hocked a mothers' meeting by announcing that a boy who wouldn't fight was not worth his sail. "He Is ei.beV a >u-.aiJ ot eons-ntitionsiiy weak, have taught my boys to take tbelr own part 1 do not know which I should the more punish my boy* lor. cruelty or flinching. Both ara abotnlnsble." ■ a • JU8T PUBLISHED £1 A POPULAR EDITION OP THE COMING PEOPLE'' BY CHARLES F. DOLE Anther of " Tbe American CUixcn;" " Tbe Religion of a lfr***awawa*f C* ■' Tbe Spirit of Dtmoctacy,** etc. THIS irtTiarkgbly interesting and gtimrjlatiag book b-u' been everywhere weicomed gg a moat valuable con* mhuiioo to the thought uf the prxu*cnt day. THERE 18 IN IT THE INSPIRATION OP HIGH AND PATRIOTIC IDEAL8 It shedg ■ new light, bright, clear and convincing, in ita comiiviii *^fnse optimism, upon the conditions that confront the nation to-day. Everyone who reads it will go forward with A dearer vision of the future ot ova covhtiy and with renewed courage and faith, in the cause or the i-sm-i.i:. Theodore C Williams, late Master of the Havcgley School, Kew York, in a San Francisco paper, declares that "it giveg the profoundest thought with a transparent simplicity and charm that make it universally readable. It «pcaks as a friend to a friend. It bas the rare eloquence of perfect cast- and ctearnegg.M Tho London Spectator calls it **a healthy and virile essay.'* The Bradford (England) Observer, speaking of iu reality god reasonableness, gays it ib " a very revelation." These are only a few from hundreds of ecomiunis co**> rnending the book for its timeliness. It should be re>ad by all who feel the pressure of THE TREMENDOUS SOCIAL QUESTIONS or our time. Price twenty-five cents (postage included). Remit by postal money order, express money order or pc*tagc stamps, to Publishers of 'I COR WW 143 MI STREET WSTEBTOWN, IASS
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