Catalogue of Magazines in the Collection of the CATALO.W of Manaz1nes 1N TT-7, COLUCT1ON of Ap17nna U1ST0TUAN

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Catalogue of Magazines in the Collection of the CATALO.W of Manaz1nes 1N TT-7, COLUCT1ON of Ap17nna U1ST0TUAN Catalogue of magazines in the collection of the CATALO.W of MAnAZ1NES 1N TT-7, COLUCT1ON of AP17nNA U1ST0TUAN. April, 1910. A . :77.1CA7 A7THPC70L0c10T. July 1892. Fewkes, J. Walt e r. Tusayan Ceremony. Villard-Pandelier South American 7xpe1ition. ay 1908, 7ough, Walter. P.nvironment Inter-relation. 7ov. 189. Fewkes, J. Walter. Pacffic Coast Shells. From Tusavan Pueblos. cot. 189C. 77o:de, 7, 7. Pue7)10 Indian Clans. Anril 7odhe, 7. 7. Pueblo Snake Cereonies. Feb. 196. Hatthews, WashinTton. A. 7avalo Ceremony. Jan. 1894: Fe7k03, J. W. Certain Persona:es Who Aplear in Tusayan Ceremonials. Suicide Among Primitive Teor)les. Au,. 1806. Fewkes, J. W. Two Puins Recently Pis- - ce,vereJ in the Ted ock Country of Arizona. ray, 1196. Fewkas, J. T. Prehistoric Culture in Tusayan. Partial List 'Mogul_ Animal Hale loril 1894. roewke, J. W. 7inshi-c, of Tanoan- Speaking Comunity at "lusayan.1- 7.1atthews, Tashington, The Pasket D'cum. Cot. 1694. Fewkes, J. 7. Tinshilo of Tu ran JOUTTAL nr A717P1CAN F0L7L0T7. .Tan, -ch 1001. Mntthews, 7ashngton. 77,v aj O Tiht Ch,tnt. Anril-June 19- 3 . 73:1 -Los, T. interpretation of 7atchl a -Tor'fliy. 19 06. Fe-rkes, J. W. Sky-Cod 60333 la 70pi , - - - . c'on,--Songs of the Nava j4 00. ' t. 1094. 7[-tth-r Sept. 1888. Stephens, A. M. Legend of the Snake Order Of the Moquis. - As Told By Outsiders. Dec. 1897. Matthews, Washington. The Study of Ceremony. Ancient Mexican Superstitions. AMERICAN NATURALIST. June 1881. pueblo Pottery. Sept. 1896. Hyatt, A. The Chasms of the Colorado. AUGLO-AMERICAY. Oct. 1900.. Blackman, ,E. E. Quivera--History And Legends. 2nd. part. AMERICAN GUOLOGIST. March 1901. Blake, W. P. Geology of Arizona. AMERICAN JOURNAL OP SCIENCE. March 1883. Blake, W. P. New Locality Where Green Turquoise Occurs. Oct. 1900. Davis, W. M. Notes on the Grand Canon. APPLETON'S BOOKLOVERS MAIAZI7E. Jan. 1906. Sadie, A Tale of the American Desert. Nov. 1905. Sabin, E. L. On The Western Sheep 'Range. Harriman, Karl A. A Pair of Mules. APPLETON'S POPULAR SCIENCE 'iONTTLY. Jan. 1886. Kunz, Geo. F. Agitized Tood In Arizona. Aug. 1891. Shufeldt, E. Head—flattening As Seen Among The Navajos. Sept. 1897. Tourney, Prof. James W. The niant Cactus. Oct. 1899. Dorsey, Geo. Hopi Indians of Arizona. June 1874. Leow, Dr. Oscar. The Mogul Indians of Arizona. June 1382. Cushing, Frank. Zuni Social Myths And Religious Systems. THE ARGOSY. April 1898. Jayne, Lieut.'R. F. The Butt of Apache Humor. (Story.) • March 1898. Jayne, Lieut. R. F. Cochita's Last Raid. (Novel.) May 1907. That Fellow From Arizona, CENTURY. March, 1902. Hyde, Albert E. The Old Regime In The Southwest. An Apostle to the American Ind ians. May 1883. Cushing, Frank. My Adventures in Zuni. Dec. 1882. Cushing, Frank. My Adventures in Zuni. Feb. 1883. Cushing, Frank. Adventures in Zuni. Nov. 1902. Muir, John. Grand. Canon of Colorado. Jan. 1889. Remington, F. Horses of the Plains. Aug. 1889. Remington, F. An Artistb Wanderings Among the Cheyennes. Jan. 1896, Fletcher, Alice. Life Among the Omahas.. Tilson, Thomas, The Trumpeter of the Troop. Sept. 1904. Fossil Wonders of the West. CAMERA CRAFT. Dec. 1905. photographing in Hopi Land. THE CALIFORNIAN. May 1895. Robinson, R. E. L. Lost Races in Arizona. Nov. 1893. Early Americans, Yuma, Arizona. July, 1892. Gill, E. S. Phoenix, Arizona. June 1893. Lummis, C. P. Grand Canon, Colorado. Aug. 1893. A Navajo Blanket. Californian—Overland. Wozencraft. Through Northern Mexico in 1849. COSMOPOLITAN. Mo. 1896. "A Legend of the Navajos". Aug. 1895. "The Stampede on the Turkey Track Range". By Will C. Barnes. Jan. 1905. "In Arizona". Cyrus T. Brady. Nov. 1895. "The Samoan Disaster." CRAFTSMAN. June, 1906. "The Hopi Indians". Marc, 1907. "The Destruction of Our Indians." .Arril, 1907. "Pueblos od The Painted Desert." May, 1907. "Primitive Folk of the Desert." (Hopi Indians.) June, 1907. "Religious Dances of the to i." CURRFNT L1TRATURE. July, 1909. "The Rise of General Leonard Wood." DONAHUE'S. Aug., 1901. An Old Mission in Arizona," EVERYBODY'S MAGAZINE. June, 1907, "Making An Individual of the Indian." July, 1903. "The Wooing of . Ali-te." (Story.) Picture-"Custer's Demand" Schreyvogel. Jan. 1902. "The Making of a Navajo Blanket." By Geo. Pepper. FRANK LESLIE'S POPULAR MONTHLY. Oct. 1900. "The Estuffa." Nov. 1890. "Costa Rica Customs." FORESTRY AND IRRIGATION. March, 19 0o. "Yuma irrigation Project." ”Black Mesa Forest Reserve." FOUR TRAoK NEWT!. Oct. 1904. "The "Big Cry" Of The Tollapais." HARPER'S 1T7W MONTHLY MAGAZINE, Nov. 1900. "Fruit Growing in America." Dec. 1387. "Precious Stones In The United States." Sept. 1903. "An Americn Indian Composer." By Natalie Curtis. April, 190E'). "Gamesters of tie Tilderness." By Agnes C. Laut. Sert. 1896. "A. Summer Among The Cliff-Dwellings." By T. Mitchell Prudden. June, 1897.. "An Elder Brother to the Cliff-Dwellers." By T. Mitchell Prudden. Aug. 1898. "Under The Spell of the Grand Canon." By T. Mitchell Prudden. Oct. 1901. "The Trial Path." By Zitkala-Sa. March, 1901. "In A Fox Canon On The Gila." By Cyrus T. Brady. Aug. 1902. "The Primeval North American." By Charles Hallock, M. A. HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA. ANNUAL PUBLICATIONS. 1898. "Los Angeles In The Adobe Stage." "Early Postal Service in California." 1903. "Origin of the Trouble Between The Yumas And Giant on." 1396. "A Two Thousand Mile Stage Pide." 1893. "Old landmarks on the Western Slope of the Rocky Mountains." LAUD oF SUNSHINE. June to December, .1895. Jan. to Dec.', 1896. Jan. to Dec., 1897. Jan. to Dec., 1898. Jan. to Dec., 1899. 1000 to Dec., 1906. LEND A TTAND. April, 1891. "History of the Chiracahua Apaches." Isabel B. Eustis. Jan. 1890. "The Apaches At Mount Vernok." McCLURE'S MAGAZINE. Sept., 1905. "On Bright Angel Trail." By William Allen White. Feb. 1902. "Delmar of Pima." (Story of New Mexico.) Hamlin Garland. _ June, 1902. "The Roping At Pascoe's." (Story.) Ray Stannard Baker. MUYSEY'S MAGAZINE , July, 1903.- "Our National Forest Reserves." NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE. July, 1903. "Chalcedony Park." P. I. Greare. July, 1897. "The Casa Grande Ruin of Arizona." By Cosmos Mindeleff. Sept. 1904. "The Navajos and Their Blanket Weaving." By Geo. L. Patterson THE NATIONAL (107GPATE1C.MAGAZ1NE. April, 1909. "Panama Canal." May, 1909. "Call of the West." June, 1909. "When the Country is rifty Years Older." July, 1909. "Alaska." "Eucalyptus Trees." Aug., 1909. "The Colorado Desert." Sept. 1909. "Pre-historic Ruins of Tsankawi." Feb. 1906. "Arizona And New Mexico." NATIONAL MAGAZINE. March, 1909. New Mexico. (Also poem on Lincoln.) 0V7RLAND MONTHLY. June, 1903. "The Grand Canon of Arizona." By Arthur Inkersley. March, 1900. "Types of Female Beauty Among the Indians of the Southr:est." G. Wharton James. March, 1871. "An Fpisode of Fort Desolation." Josephine Clifford. Oct. 1897. "A Desert incident." (Story.) April, 1898. "Lost in the Petrified Forest." Will C. Barnes. Aug. 1903. "Pre-historic Rock Paintings." Newton C. Chittenden. May. 1902. "The Preservation of the Cliff-Dwellings." "Adios." March, 1901. "Indian Paintings At Los Angeles." Oct. 1900. "Prehistoric Ruins of the Casa Grande." May, 1905. "Some Picturesque Ruins of Tucson." "A Great Copper Plant." (Morenci.) OUTDOOR LIFT. March, 19n7. "Stage Coaching in the r.loconino Forest." OUT Feb. 1908. "A Voyage Below Sea Level on the Salton Sea." Dr. P. T. McDougal. "Dad Lane's Buffalo Yarn." "The Coming of Law to the Frontier." Sept., 190 0 . "The Quin-Ahts1; 1 3 Quits." "A Camel Mint in Arizona." April, 1888. "A Paid Into Mexico." Lie -At. P.G.Carter. "Habits of the California Quail." Jan. 1906. "Jim Bridger; Master Trapper and Trail Maker. By Arthur Chapman. "The Teaming of he Test." (Pictures.) March, 1901. "Indian Dances Of The Southwest." Oct. 1901. "Mogul And Navajo Indian Srorts." O. Wharton James. March, 1902. Indian Blanketry. Jan. 1905. "The Heart of the Desert." C. F. Holder. "Kit Carson." By Emerson Hough. OUTLOOK. Feb. G, 1904. "Among the Navajos." . OUTDOOR LIFE. March, 1901. "A Belled Wolf of the Mohave Desert." (Story.) "Marriage Customs of the 'Hopi Indians." July, 1905. "Down Bright Angel Trail." Jan. 1907. "The Jewelled Forests of Arizona,." By F. 1. Goare. PF,ARSOU'S MAGAZINP. Oct. 1900. "The 'Petrified Forest of Arizona." Clifford Howard. PACIFIC MO7THLY. Jan. 1908. "Story of the Central Pacific." "The Last Stand of the Ar7onauts." "flown the Yellowstone Forty Years Ago." Aug. 1903. "Irrigation." May, 1906. Japanese Number. Dec. 1906. "At A Medicine of the Navajos." RECORDS OF THE PAST. Jan. 1904. "Arizona Ruins." J. Walter Fewkes. Oct. 1904. "History of Laguna And Acoma." "Expedition to the Southwest." Nov. 1904. "History of Laguna And Acoma." March, 1902. "Prehistoric Ruins of the Sout1u7est." REVIEW OF REVIEW'S. Hay, 1909. "Americanizing The Ostrich." April, 1906. "Problems of the Colorado Delta." July, 1899. "Scenes of Spanish Occupancy in Our Southwest." • June, 1908. "The Covernment's Great Storage Dams." June, 1906. "The Indian Today And Tomorrow." SCRIBNER'S TIAGAZ11flE. May, 1905. "Over Night On The Edge of the Grand Canon." Benjamin Brooks. March, 1905. "Portraits of Indian Types." Curtis. Sept. 1901. "A Burro Puncher." Walter A. Wykoff. Dec. 1878. "The Cliff Dwellers." Emma C. Eardacre. May, 1906. "Vanishing Indian Tyres." Clr:tis. July, 1891. "Outlawry on the Mexican Farder." SUNSET. Jan. 1908. "A Tenderfoot in Greenstone." (Copper Mines.) Rufus Steele. March, 1908. "Her Indian Lover." F. C. Hooker. (Story of San Carlos. May, 1904. "Like A Mirage Miracle; A Study of Tucson." July, 1907. "The Spur of War Paint." (Story.) March, 1906 . "Yuma." (Poem.) SUNSET MAGAZINE. -Nov. 1903. "The University of Arizona." Charles S. Aiken. Dec. 1905. "Stpry of the Pierce Mines." Jan. 1905. "The Rodeo At pinal." Aug. 1904. "Phoenix; Born of Water." April, 1905. "Ostrich Farming in Arizona." Nov. 1904. "Baja Ca1if3rnia. "Mariposa Lily." Jan.
Recommended publications
  • NJDARM: Collection Guide
    NJDARM: Collection Guide - NEW JERSEY STATE ARCHIVES COLLECTION GUIDE Record Group: Governor Franklin Murphy (1846-1920; served 1902-1905) Series: Correspondence, 1902-1905 Accession #: 1989.009, Unknown Series #: S3400001 Guide Date: 1987 (JK) Volume: 6 c.f. [12 boxes] Box 1 | Box 2 | Box 3 | Box 4 | Box 5 | Box 6 | Box 7 | Box 8 | Box 9 | Box 10 | Box 11 | Box 12 Contents Explanatory Note: All correspondence is either to or from the Governor's office unless otherwise stated. Box 1 1. Elections, 1901-1903. 2. Primary election reform, 1902-1903. 3. Requests for interviews, 1902-1904 (2 files). 4. Taxation, 1902-1904. 5. Miscellaneous bills before State Legislature and U.S. Congress, 1902 (2 files). 6. Letters of congratulation, 1902. 7. Acknowledgements to letters recommending government appointees, 1902. 8. Fish and game, 1902-1904 (3 files). 9. Tuberculosis Sanatorium Commission, 1902-1904. 10. Invitations to various functions, April - July 1904. 11. Requests for Governor's autograph and photograph, 1902-1904. 12. Princeton Battle Monument, 1902-1904. 13. Forestry, 1901-1905. 14. Estate of Imlay Clark(e), 1902. 15. Correspondence re: railroad passes & telegraph stamps, 1902-1903. 16. Delinquent Corporations, 1901-1905 (2 files). 17. Robert H. McCarter, Attorney General, 1903-1904. 18. New Jersey Reformatories, 1902-1904 (6 files). Box 2 19. Reappointment of Minister Powell to Haiti, 1901-1902. 20. Corporations and charters, 1902-1904. 21. Miscellaneous complaint letters, December 1901-1902. file:///M|/highpoint/webdocs/state/darm/darm2011/guides/guides%20for%20pdf/s3400001.html[5/16/2011 9:33:48 AM] NJDARM: Collection Guide - 22. Joshua E.
    [Show full text]
  • Microfilm Publication M617, Returns from U.S
    Publication Number: M-617 Publication Title: Returns from U.S. Military Posts, 1800-1916 Date Published: 1968 RETURNS FROM U.S. MILITARY POSTS, 1800-1916 On the 1550 rolls of this microfilm publication, M617, are reproduced returns from U.S. military posts from the early 1800's to 1916, with a few returns extending through 1917. Most of the returns are part of Record Group 94, Records of the Adjutant General's Office; the remainder is part of Record Group 393, Records of United States Army Continental Commands, 1821-1920, and Record Group 395, Records of United States Army Overseas Operations and Commands, 1898-1942. The commanding officer of every post, as well ad commanders of all other bodies of troops such as department, division, brigade, regiment, or detachment, was required by Army Regulations to submit a return (a type of personnel report) to The Adjutant General at specified intervals, usually monthly, on forms provided by that office. Several additions and modifications were made in the form over the years, but basically it was designed to show the units that were stationed at a particular post and their strength, the names and duties of the officers, the number of officers present and absent, a listing of official communications received, and a record of events. In the early 19th century the form used for the post return usually was the same as the one used for regimental or organizational returns. Printed forms were issued by the Adjutant General’s Office, but more commonly used were manuscript forms patterned after the printed forms.
    [Show full text]
  • Law School Announcements 1903-1904 Law School Announcements Editors [email protected]
    University of Chicago Law School Chicago Unbound University of Chicago Law School Announcements Law School Publications Summer 6-1903 Law School Announcements 1903-1904 Law School Announcements Editors [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/ lawschoolannouncements Recommended Citation Editors, Law School Announcements, "Law School Announcements 1903-1904" (1903). University of Chicago Law School Announcements. Book 29. http://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/lawschoolannouncements/29 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School Publications at Chicago Unbound. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Chicago Law School Announcements by an authorized administrator of Chicago Unbound. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ttbc 1llnh'crsttp of (tbtcago FOUNDED BY JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER ANNOU'NCEMENT,S VOL. III JUNE, 1903 NO.4 THE LAW SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO TABLE OF CONTENTS CALENDAR FOR THE YEAR 1903--4 .' 2 The Professional Curriculum: OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION 3 First-Year Courses. THE FACULTY. 3 Second and Third-Year Courses INTRODUCTORY: COURSES OF IN'STRUCTION, 1903-4 : Organization and Purpose 3 The Pre-legal Curriculum. H) The Library 4 Requirements for Admission 4 The Professional Curriculum: Arrangement of Courses 5 First-Year Courses 11 Degrees 5 Second and Third-Year Courses 11 OF General Information .. 6 REGISTRATION STUDENTS, 1902-3 12 THE CURRICULUM: Summary of Attendance 15 The Pre-legal Curriculum 6 THE SUMMER QUARTER, 1903 .' 16 ; �� PUBLISHED SIX TIMES A YEAR BY �k�(� , fL THE UN IV E R SIT Y 0 F CHI C AGO 4(A�:hIV� .
    [Show full text]
  • Tech Names Girls - 1914 to 1987
    TECH NAMES GIRLS - 1914 TO 1987 GIRLS – A AARON, Julia Farley (Tarbox) - T-35 - Born: 2 September 1916 - Died: 27 May 2005 AARON, Letriunna -T-87 - Memphis TN ABBOTT, Ruth (Swafford) - T -62 - Born: 5 July 1944 - Died: 12 May 2016 ABERCROMBIE, Grace - T-60 - (Need to find) ABERNATHY, Ginger Ann (McEvoy) - T-60 -Memphis TN - (Need to find) ABERNATHY, Margaret Jarvin (Patterson) - T-37 - Born: 27 April 1918 - Died: 27 November 1989 ABLES, Dale (Huet) - T-55 - Born: 3 October 1937 - still living 20 Sep 2012- (Need to find) ABLES, Gayle (Lynch) - T-55 - Born: 3 October 1937 - still living 20 Sep 2012 - (Need to find) ABRAM, Valerie (King) - T-77 - (Need to find) ABSTON, Helen - T-83 – (Need to find) ACOSTA, Dorothy Naoma (Burns) - T-38 - Born: 14 March 1920 - Died: 6 April 2001 ACRED, Florence Margaret - T-37 - Born: 2 April 1919 - Died: 1 March 2004 ACRED, Virginia (Ferguson) - T-32 - Born: 2 November 1912 -Died: 22 July 2001 ACREE, Bettye Ann - T -56- (Need to find) ACREE, Edna Leona (Mosley) - T-42 - Born 13 July 1924 - Died:17 July 2005 ACREE, Geri (Maxwell) - T-62 - Born: 23 February 1944 - 3427 Earlynn Drive, Memphis TN 38133 ACREE, Mildred Ann (Schneller) - T-49 - Born: 17 December 1931 - Died: 26 November 2008 ACTON, Margaret Ida (Underdown) - T-55 - Born: 3 July 1937 - Died: 27 November 2012 ADAMS, Alice Armon (Black) - T-32 - Born: 14 September 1916 - Died: 15 December 2000 ADAMS, Anita - T-83 – (Need to find) ADAMS, Anita -T-87 - (Need to find) ADAMS, Arlene - T-63 - (Need to find) ADAMS, Betty - T-59 - (Need to find) ADAMS, Brenda Faye - T-82 - (Need to find) ADAMS, Ellanora (Wade) - T-28 - Born: 29 June 1909 - Died: 24 May 1980 ADAMS, Gloria (Ferguson) - T -44 - Born: 18 April 1926 – Died: 22 July 2020 ADAMS, Jean (Hart) - T-50 - Born: 8 December 1932 - Died: 14 April 1976 ADAMS, Labrigette - T-84 - (Need to find) ADAMS, LaVerne -T-85 - (Need to find) ADAMS, Lillian F.
    [Show full text]
  • The London Gazette, June 16, 1903. 3785
    THE LONDON GAZETTE, JUNE 16, 1903. 3785 The undermentioned appointments have been South Africa, is granted the honorary rank of made to the ' Staff of the Somaliland Field Lieutenant in the Army. Dated 1st June, 1902. Force:— Lieutenant B. R. Moberly, Indian Army, to be RESERVE OF OFFICERS. Staff Officer, Base and Lines of Communi- The undermentioned Captains resign their cation, Obbia. Dated 5th March, 1903. Commissions. Dated 17th June, 1903 :— To be Special Service Officers, and to be graded W. McKay. for pay Rate XIII, Scale B, Article 115, Royal H. F. Easton. Warrant of 26th October, 1900 :— Captain and Brevet Major A. W. S. Ewing, The ERRATUM. Prince of Wales's (North Staffordshire Regi- Major F. G. W. Jones was promoted for " service ment). Dated 7th May, 1903. in South Africa," and not as stated in the Captain F. D. Farquhar, D.S.O., 'Coldstream London Gazette of the 24th February, 1903. Guards. Dated 8th May, 1903. To be Special Service Officers, and to be graded for pay Rate XIV, Scale B, Article 115, Royal Warrant 26th October, 1900:— Civil Service Commission, Lieutenant R. W. M. Stevens, The Royal Irish June 16, 1903. Rifles. Dated 7th May, 1903. The Civil Service Commissioners hereby give Lieutenant C. L. Smith, The Duke of Cornwall's notice that the Open Competitive Examination Light Infantry. Dated 15th May, 1903. for the situation of Junior Clerk in the High SCHOOLS OP INSTRUCTION FOR MOUNTED Court of Justice, Ireland, of which notice was INFANTRY. given in the London Gazette of the 9th instant, To be Commandants: — will commence on the 22nd July, instead of on Major and Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel A.
    [Show full text]
  • June, 1903. Monthly Weathex Review
    JUNE,1903. MONTHLY WEATHEX REVIEW. 276 While some of these displacements must be attributed to resistance (which could be made Q) ) and M the ammeter sup- temperature changes and effects entirely within the instru- plied with the apparatus. R is a resistance box of considera- ment, yet slow tiltings of the ground also occur, due to a ble size, which was used, partly to cut down the current on variety of causes. The seismograph, as now installed, answers cloudy days, and partly to keep two Daniels’ cells (B) in con- every purpose for the registration of distinctively earthquake dition when the apparatus was not in use. T is a mercury movements, but the slow tiltings referred to can not be three-way key. studied satisfactorily in the present location of the apparatus *Earlyin December the behavior of the observing tube be- which for such purposes should be isolated as far as practicable. came very irregular, its resistance often becoming infinite for no apparent reason whatever. It was, therefore, returnect to OBSERVATIONS OF SOLAR RADIATION WITH THE Washington and its contacts thoroughly examined, and, al- AN(3STROM PYR-LIOMETER, AT PROVIDENCE, R. 1.l though no trouble could be found, the bad contact was in By Mr. HARVEYN. Davrs, dated Marrh 9.1903. some way improved, for it functioned properly during the rest of the year. During the fall of 1901 arrangements were macle by Prof- During the summer of 1902 the writer was obliged to give Cleveland Abbe, on behalf of the United States Weather up the work on account of his absence from the country, and Bureau, and Prof.
    [Show full text]
  • State of Ambiguity: Civic Life and Culture in Cuba's First Republic
    STATE OF AMBIGUITY STATE OF AMBIGUITY CiviC Life and CuLture in Cuba’s first repubLiC STEVEN PALMER, JOSÉ ANTONIO PIQUERAS, and AMPARO SÁNCHEZ COBOS, editors Duke university press 2014 © 2014 Duke University Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America on acid-f ree paper ♾ Designed by Heather Hensley Typeset in Minion Pro by Tseng Information Systems, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data State of ambiguity : civic life and culture in Cuba’s first republic / Steven Palmer, José Antonio Piqueras, and Amparo Sánchez Cobos, editors. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 978-0-8223-5630-1 (cloth : alk. paper) isbn 978-0-8223-5638-7 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Cuba—History—19th century. 2. Cuba—History—20th century. 3. Cuba—Politics and government—19th century. 4. Cuba—Politics and government—20th century. 5. Cuba— Civilization—19th century. 6. Cuba—Civilization—20th century. i. Palmer, Steven Paul. ii. Piqueras Arenas, José A. (José Antonio). iii. Sánchez Cobos, Amparo. f1784.s73 2014 972.91′05—dc23 2013048700 CONTENTS Introduction: Revisiting Cuba’s First Republic | 1 Steven Palmer, José Antonio Piqueras, and Amparo Sánchez Cobos 1. A Sunken Ship, a Bronze Eagle, and the Politics of Memory: The “Social Life” of the USS Maine in Cuba (1898–1961) | 22 Marial Iglesias Utset 2. Shifting Sands of Cuban Science, 1875–1933 | 54 Steven Palmer 3. Race, Labor, and Citizenship in Cuba: A View from the Sugar District of Cienfuegos, 1886–1909 | 82 Rebecca J. Scott 4. Slaughterhouses and Milk Consumption in the “Sick Republic”: Socio- Environmental Change and Sanitary Technology in Havana, 1890–1925 | 121 Reinaldo Funes Monzote 5.
    [Show full text]
  • 'Tour De France' 1903
    Unusual and little-known Tales from the ‘Tour de France’ 1903 – 1947 With Barrington Day The line between insanity and genius is said to be a fine one, and in early 20th century France, anyone envisaging a near 2,500km cycle race around the country would have been widely viewed as unhinged. But that didn’t stop Géo Lefèvre, a journalist with L’Auto magazine at the time, from proceeding with his inspired plan. His editor, Henri Desgrange, was bold enough to believe in the idea and to throw his backing behind the Tour de France. So, on 1st July 1903, sixty pioneers set out on their bicycles from Montgeron. After six mammoth stages (Nantes - Paris, 471 km!), only 21 “routiers”, led by Maurice Garin, arrived at the end of this first epic. Having provoked a mixture of astonishment and admiration, le Tour soon won over the sporting public and the roadside crowds swelled. The French people took to their hearts this Tour Founder - Henri Desgrange unusual event which placed their towns, their countryside, and since 1910, even their mountains, in the spotlight. Le Tour has always moved with the times. Like France as a whole, it benefited from the introduction of paid holidays from 1936; it has lived through wars, and then savoured the “trente glorieuses” period of economic prosperity while enjoying the heydays of Coppi, Bobet, Anquetil and Poulidor. It has opened itself up to foreign countries with the onset of globalisation. Over a hundred years after its inception, le Tour continues to gain strength from its experience.
    [Show full text]
  • !!35%5~9F PA FORT HUNTER COLLECTION
    I '-LOMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA SUBJ EMG-316, Fort Hunter Collection Deposit Division Staff FROM: Linda A. Ries, Head Appraisal Section Division of Archives and Manuscripts This is to inform you that MG-316, the Fort Hunter Collection, which was on deposit at the State Archives since 1979, was returned to the Fort Hunter Museum September 19, 1995. At this point, all requests for the collection should be referred there. Carl Dickson, Director Fort Hunter Flusem 5300 North Front Street !!35%5~9f PA FORT HUNTER COLLECTION A. General Correspondence -Box Folders General Correspondence, 1862-1939 &I% bEdd2, U64-65 , 1867, J.872, 2.874-&BBQ (1579, Cd .Ma MtaCaWLey, Mwa Treasure, Charles L. Bailey, President of Central Iron and Steel Works) 7.56 1881-82 . 1883-84 1884-86 2.758 1886-92 r150 1893-99 L-7 4y 1900 (1900 on-Ed. Hurnrnel from John Reily; Edwin Decevee, Hbg. Conservatory of Music; James B. Bailey, Cen- tral Iron and Steel; J. Horace McFarland, Mt. Pleasant Printery, I-Ibg. , Pa. ; Edwin Bowers ; ICline Cycle Manufacturing; Mr. Naumann, P.R.R.; Edward ~ailey,Pres. of Hbg. Nat.; John Herman-Atty.; Golm A. I-Ierman-Atty. ; Dr. MoEf itt; Spencer Gilberk; Meads R. ~e.kwaihr,Htty. ; J'amer~ Lett ; W. Q. 13i~kok, Mfg.; Chas. Adler, Real Estate and Insurance; Chas. H. Bergner, Atty.; Dives Pomeroy €4 Stewart, Dept. Store; John C. Kunlcle, John D. Bogar & Son;*Vance McCormick; James McCormick, Jr.; Harry Moore; G.W. Reilly; W.C. Whitney; Gabrielle Gilbert; Ross A. Hickok; Henderson Gilbert. 1900-01 8 9 1902 (Dietrich & Son Confectioners) 9 6 1902-03 10 9 1904-05 11 12 1906-08 12 12 1908-09 13 8 1909-10 14 7 191.0-1.2,' 1.914-lG, 1.923, 1936-33 15 13 n.d.
    [Show full text]
  • Holy Land and Holy See
    1 HOLY LAND AND HOLY SEE PAPAL POLICY ON PALESTINE DURING THE PONTIFICATES OF POPES PIUS X, BENEDICT XV AND PIUS XI FROM 1903 TO 1939 PhD Thesis Gareth Simon Graham Grainger University of Divinity Student ID: 200712888 26 July 2017 2 CONTENTS Chapter 1: Introduction – Question, Hypothesis and Methodology Chapter 2: A Saint for Jerusalem – Pope Pius X and Palestine Chapter 3: The Balfour Bombshell – Pope Benedict XV and Palestine Chapter 4: Uneasy Mandate – Pope Pius XI and Palestine Chapter 5: Aftermath and Conclusions Appendix 1.The Roads to the Holy Sepulchre – Papal Policy on Palestine from the Crusades to the Twentieth Century Appendix 2.The Origins and Evolution of Zionism and the Zionist Project Appendix 3.The Policies of the Principal Towards Palestine from 1903 to 1939 Appendix 4. Glossary Appendix 5. Dramatis Personae Bibliography 3 CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION – QUESTION, HYPOTHESIS AND METHODOLOGY 1.1. THE INTRIGUING QUESTION Invitation to Dr Theodor Herzl to attend Audience with Pope Pius X On 25 January 1904, the Feast of the Conversion of St Paul, the recently-elected Pope Pius X granted an Audience in the Vatican Palace to Dr Theodor Herzl, leader of the Zionist movement, and heard his plea for papal approval for the Zionist project for a Jewish national home in Palestine. Dr Herzl outlined to the Supreme Pontiff of the Catholic Church the full details of the Zionist project, providing assurances that the various Holy Places in Palestine would be “ex-territorialised” to ensure their security and protection, and sought the Pope’s endorsement and support, preferably through the issuing of a pro-Zionist encyclical.
    [Show full text]
  • Flags of the Pope's Swiss Guard Since 1798 Emil Dreyer
    Page 427 Emil Dreyer: Flags of the Pope’s Swiss Guard since 1798 Abstract: A chronological history of the flags of the Pope's Swiss Guard since the establishment of the Roman Republic in 1798 until today is presented and richly illustrated. Up to the first half of the 19th century only colour drawings can he used as a pictorial testimony of the guard’s flags, since no original flag from before that time is known to have survived. The flags used to he striped in the Medici livery colours blue, red and yellow and had the Pope's and the commander's arms painted on them. When a Pope or commander changed, the new arms were painted covering the old ones, so the flag fabric was rarely made new. A new flag design by Robert Diirrer with a white cross throughout was accepted in 1913 and blessed by Pope Pius X on 5 May 1914. Changes of a Pope and/or commander were now reflected on the flag by cutting out the old personal emblems and replacing them bv the new ones, the basic design remaining unchanged, hut in the course of the 20th century flags were made completely new more often. Original flag photographs document the history of the guard’s flags since the middle of the 19th century until present times with the flag under Pope Benedict XVI and commander Elmar Mdder. In a second part of this work the various flags of the veteran ’s association of the Pope’s Swiss Guard, founded in 1921, are presented.
    [Show full text]
  • WHEAT STUDIES of the FOOD RESEARCH INSTITUTE
    WHEAT STUDIES of the FOOD RESEARCH INSTITUTE VOL. XVII, NO. 7 (Price $1.00) APRIL 1941 WHEAT IN THE POST -SURPLUS PERIOD 1900-09 WITH RECENT ANALOGIES AND CONTRASTS Helen C Farnsworth The wheat-surplus period of the 1890's was followed by a decade characterized by extremely heavy wheat output. In per capita terms, this output was larger than that respon­ sible for the burdensome surplus stocks of the mid-'nineties or that later associated with the depressing surplus of 1928- 35. But the early years of this century witnessed no piling up of surplus stocks comparable with the accumulations of 1892-96 and 1929-35. Historical and statistical analysis sug­ gests that this extraordinary outcome was largely due to three factors: (1) the sharper upward trend and higher level of per capita normal wheat disappearance in the early 1900's; (2) the more favorable timing of crop surpluses and deficits in those years; and (3) the fact that wheat disappearance was then farther above normal than in 1928-35. In the absence of burdensome wheat stocks, the purchas­ ing power of British import wheat, trend considered, was moderate rather than low during 1898-1909. Except in 1898- 99 and 1901-02, deflated prices of such wheat reflected rea­ sonably well the wheat commodity position of each of the crop years considered. From about 1902 to the beginning of the World War, the trend of purchasing power of British import wheat was horizontal, in sharp contrast with down­ ward trends during the 15 to 20 years prior to 1902 and from 1922 to 1939.
    [Show full text]