Albuquerque Citizen, 07-07-1909 Hughes & Mccreight

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Albuquerque Citizen, 07-07-1909 Hughes & Mccreight University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Albuquerque Citizen, 1891-1906 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 7-7-1909 Albuquerque Citizen, 07-07-1909 Hughes & McCreight Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/abq_citizen_news Recommended Citation Hughes & McCreight. "Albuquerque Citizen, 07-07-1909." (1909). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/abq_citizen_news/3121 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Albuquerque Citizen, 1891-1906 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. TRAIN ARRIVALS WEATHER FORECAST No. I 7.4S p. m. rrnfr , No 4 5.50 p. m. No; p. m 710.55 Deorer, Colo., Jul 7Toa!.M aid Tlors-tfj- y No. 8 6 , p. m.. ALBUQUEEQUE Pi generally fair except uBtfc-ea- ZEN showers it st No. vTm.'-'- 9. WE GET THE NEWS FIRST perlloa Unlght. v 1 ii 1 ivi r. x ALBUQUERQUE. NEW MEXICO WEDNESDAY. jtfLY 7. 1909. NUMBER 149 THE RADICAL SEiN FIGHTING SUGAR TRUST Wtl MEXICO CENTRAL KANSAS AND, MISSOURI Head of Tin Workers BLAMES THE FARMER MAKE LAST STAND ELECTS NEW BOARD TOWNS ARE AGAIN for not mm FOR REVISION OF DIRECTORS HIS CHILDREN Many Portions of Tariff Bill Two Rising Plttsburgers and Two Albu- Rivers are Rapid Quebec Educator Charges Reserved for Further querque Men Among lv as Result of Heavy That Not Enough Money Consideration the Directorate Rains In the Past Is Spent for the Today. Chosen Today. Few Days. Purpose. MEWLAND ADVISES Will TAKE TRIP SANTA Ft TRAINS CHICAGO TEACHER PRESIDENTS VETO TOjOtt FIELDS HELD AT TOPtKA ATTACKS COLLEGES He Is Not Pleased with Tariff BUI A v. j- Expected Party Will Reach This Water Is Over the Tracks and Declares That Higher institution and Would Make Some By-Fur- ther City Thursday Evenlng--The- y Trains Can't Get P. J. McArdle, President of Tin Has Failed In Its Purpose -- r m Changes -- Aldrlch w, I Workers Who Leads Fight for Decilne to Discuss Damage Is His I'nlon Against Steel and There Is Need lo Help La Plans of Road at Feared at Sev- Corporation. of Radical Follette The strike of tin workers In several This Time. eral Points. states Inst week begins the fight of Change. Ihe union against the Steel corpora- - Washington. Jul 7. Setiat-- g. tion, which owns the tin companies. When Kansas City, Mo.. July 7. Denver, July 7. Aldrlch moved today for an Santa Fe, X. M., July 7. Much in- P. J. McArdle, age 30, became presi- The farmer m Missouri, a town 1.500 charged with being parsimonious by on parn-grap.- ig terest was of dent of the amalgamated years and jgiee ment the Senate all manifest here today when three selfish dealing in tin- - inhabitants, sixty miles north of here, ago, succeeding Sehnffer, whom Mor- in with the education tariff bill which the the stockholders In the New Mexico of his son. in an st i.at rs did not care' to reserve fo:' is under ten feet of water and Chief gan and his associates whipped in address before the Central railroad held their annual 1901. rural and agricultural department of further amendment, there was a wido of Police Snow of this city has re- ei.read movement to reserve parts of meeting and selected the following McArdle comes from Indiana, the National Kdueatlon association ceived a telegram this morning ap- this morning. James W. Robertson, the bill against which the senators de- OKO H. board of directors: Harrison Nesbit, where he worked In the rolling mills a EARLE Jr pealing for boats to rescue the ma- of Muncie Wayne president of McDonald college at St. sire lo make last tetand for a change Receiver for the Real Estate Loan rust Company. Who Makes Charg- C. C. Murray, John B. Flnley and and Fort ns a heat- Anne of and many er. His principal schooling got de Bellevue, Quebec, declared schedule. es Against the Sugar Trust. ('eneral Francis J. Torrance of Pitts- rooned citizens, of whom have he that the wants fa ley reserved the corporation been driven to the roofs of their at night school. He is a ready farmer a little educa- tax amendment while Hughes reserv- Washington, July 7. Attorney settlement the trust admits this burg; W. S. Stricklcr and Col. W. S. an Irishman, a lover of a fight, tion for his son but does not want to-pa- that homes. The chief loaded fifty row and does more ed the Philippine tariff. La Follette. Cieneral Wickersham now has in his enormous amount was obtained by I- Hopewell of Albuquerque and Charles bouts on a special train and sent but always a fulr fight. He has held not want educa- paying no opportunity in- hands the evidence of crimes charged llegal methods the V. Kaslcy of Santa Fe. the amalgamated, tog. t:,oi tion because ha thinks his son will he hud to from Real Kstate them, with a of officers, 'or thrta leave him, spect the reprint of the bill as acted against the now notorious sug;.r trust. trust company which Hippie headed. The directors immediately elected to aid in the rescue work. years during all of which time labor "This is where is wrong.' n, cn in committee of the whole, insist- It was on evidence like this that the Karle. trying to interest the govern- Mr. Xcsbit president of the road; C. leaders were predicting that It was he According to the telephone opera- "bet-ant- ) If aon knew ed he would not respect sup-rose- d trust mid Its officers were indicted in ment in his evidence against the trust, C. Murray secretary going to pieces. the that the and treasurer; tor the water Is still rising rapidly and more the bv unanimous consent agreement New York by a federal grand Jury. began with Attorney lleneral Moody. 11. A. any farmer's acre would and Comer auditor. If r. drizzling rain Is falling, adding to worth more." unless he be a . Karle Pegged for government help. could assured of The crimes Involve violation of the changes aro contemplated in the ilne discomfiture of the sufferers. Dick Criwby, chance to present such amendments Sherman law and the responsibility At tho beginning of the fight when operating force of the railroad, they GERMANS DEMAND J. of the agricultural might he took Aided by a two inch rainfall here department, Washington, pleaded (or as he desire to introduce. He for embezzlement, extortion and sui- hold of the receivership he were not made public at the meeting a declared that the unanimous consent cide. wrote to the attorney general.: today. and rising rivers above, the Missouri closer relation between tho rural and Kansus showed , rises of schools and the community. He want- i was hnsty and consummated in such "I imperatively need your aid and Mr. Xesbit, the president is the vice rivers IRE PROTECTION When Frank Hippie, financier, blew . during past twenty-fou- r ed to make a knowledge good a way that many senators did not covopej-Htlolif'- With it I feel assured president one foot the of rook his brains out in 1906 in Philadelphia, of the Bank of Pittsburg fore- lug and ability understand. He might be called upon that JuitW will be done; without It I and in charge hours at Kansas City. The local the to make fences he died the victim of a conspiracy of of the active work of caster predicts Missouri will the goal of strife for community to reserve all paragraphs in the bill may be myself crushed In the effort to the institution. Mr. Finley and Mr. that the They Think America Is Taking' Too the ( lawyers and directors of the trust. reach Uli foot stage tomorrow. If as well as familiarity with the thre unless he could select the paragraphs obtain Justice for the smaller body of Murray are also bankers and coal op- the Many Plums Front Kaiser's Such is the shocking accusation I proves con tie dosired to amend, people I represent. Hut with it or erators in Pittsburg. Mr. Murray is this true and the Kansas SuhlcvlN. R. borne out by testimony which " Aldrich agreed to with has without It no consideration that I at present receiver for Enterprise tinues to rise, back water will be run College a Failure-.- been presented to the government by the ning into the lower streets of the west College La Toilette in obtaining an opportun- have been able to give this subject has -- -- "The American of Libera! Hip-pin- and Fort Pitt banks. All are reputed Berlin, July t Citing recent d CJeo. H. Karle, Jr. receiver for 's bottom tomorrow. Portions of the popu-th- at ity for the latter to offer amend- enabled me to feel that I can possibly to be men of wealth, vflopments in American Industrial Arts lias lamentably failed a" a request for a vote company. absolve myself duty little town of Harlem. river lrtltutloiv higlieV Iducall hi In ments. Aldrleh's from the of aolmr The directors and oiTS Interested " a.jd tcuiitlcai IJfe evidence ; ,'- - wno got vi from here, are under wnler. 14 trains-- ' the paragraphs iyirie, is me msn from the on, Ith you, if such good fortune In the road will lea.v here tonight or the l.ntted stalet is embarking upontJl that 4t ess than one per Vent sugar trust a settlement of his yon. Ha-g- ToK-k- of our young men women, then granted and the amendments suit awaits me; without must I act tomorrow for Morlarlty an I'I'XhIoI.
Recommended publications
  • William J. Hammer Collection
    William J. Hammer Collection Mark Kahn, 2003; additional information added by Melissa A. N. Keiser, 2021 2003 National Air and Space Museum Archives 14390 Air & Space Museum Parkway Chantilly, VA 20151 [email protected] https://airandspace.si.edu/archives Table of Contents Collection Overview ........................................................................................................ 1 Administrative Information .............................................................................................. 1 Biographical/Historical note.............................................................................................. 2 Scope and Contents........................................................................................................ 3 Arrangement..................................................................................................................... 4 Names and Subjects ...................................................................................................... 4 Container Listing ............................................................................................................. 5 Series 1: Professional materials............................................................................... 5 Series 2: Photographs and other materials............................................................ 13 William J. Hammer Collection NASM.XXXX.0074 Collection Overview Repository: National Air and Space Museum Archives Title: William J. Hammer Collection Identifier: NASM.XXXX.0074 Date:
    [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]
  • The Buffalo Soldiers in Vermont, 1909–1913
    The Buffalo Soldiers in Vermont, 1909–1913 The arrival of the Tenth Cavalry sent Burlington into demographic shock. Almost overnight the small city acquired a substantial black community, a situation that clearly dismayed many residents. By David Work n July 1909, the Tenth United States Cavalry Regiment, one of four regular army black regiments collectively known as the Buffalo ISoldiers, arrived in Burlington, Vermont, to begin a four-year tour of duty at Fort Ethan Allen in neighboring Colchester. Their arrival alarmed the almost exclusively white population. Many people feared the presence of sizable numbers of African American soldiers in their community and a bitter debate ensued over whether the city should adopt Jim Crow facilities. For the next four years, the Tenth Cavalry would encounter similar reactions as it traveled throughout the north- east and as far south as Winchester, Virginia. Wherever they went, the black soldiers faced fear and suspicion and had to demonstrate good behavior to win the acceptance of the white population. Created in 1866, the Tenth Cavalry achieved its greatest fame in the late nineteenth century on the western frontier and then served with distinction during the Spanish-American War. In that conflict, the regi- ment charged up San Juan Hill with Theodore Roosevelt’s Rough Riders and won public renown as the “fighting Tenth Cavalry.” In the early twentieth century, the Tenth fought in the Philippine War, served in ..................... DAVID WORK earned his Ph.D. in American history in May 2004 at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas. He is currently teaching at Texas A&M Uni- versity in Doha, Qatar.
    [Show full text]
  • Trinity College Bulletin, July 1909
    Trinity College Trinity College Digital Repository Trinity College Bulletins and Catalogues (1824 - Trinity Publications (Newspapers, Yearbooks, present) Catalogs, etc.) 1909 Trinity College Bulletin, July 1909 Trinity College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/bulletin Recommended Citation Trinity College, "Trinity College Bulletin, July 1909" (1909). Trinity College Bulletins and Catalogues (1824 - present). 22. https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/bulletin/22 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Trinity Publications (Newspapers, Yearbooks, Catalogs, etc.) at Trinity College Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Trinity College Bulletins and Catalogues (1824 - present) by an authorized administrator of Trinity College Digital Repository. TRINITY COLLEGE BULLETIN (NEW SERIES) VOLUME VI. NUMBER 3 ADMINISTRATIVE NUMBER HARTfORD, CONNECTICUT JULY, 1909 TRINITY COLLEGE BULLETIN Issued quarterly by the College. Entered January 1!, 1904, at Hartford, Conn., as second class matter, under the Act of Congress of July 16, 1894. The Bulletin includes in its issues: the College Catalogue, Reports of the Pr&ident, Treasurer, and Librarian; Announcements and Circulars of Information. REPORT OF THE LIBRARIAN OF TRINITY COLLEGE HARTFORD, CONN. JULY, 1909 The Reverend F . S. Luther, LL.D., President, Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut. Sir :-In accordance with Title XV., Section 3, of the Statutes, I beg to submit herewith the annual report of the work and progress of the College Library, and the · tenth which it has been my privilege to make. · No event of striking or unusual importance has marked the work of the year. Our activity has, as usual, been of a quiet, busy, effective nature, and largely and necessarily of a routine character.
    [Show full text]
  • July 1909 : Bulletin of the United States Bureau of Labor, No. 83
    DEPARTMENT OP COMMERCE AND LABOR BULLETIN OF THE BUREAU OF LABOR NO. 8 3 -JULY, 1909 ISSUED EVERY OTHER MONTH WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING * OFFICE 1909 Digitized for FRASER http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Digitized for FRASER http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis CONTENTS. Page. Women’s trade union movement in Great Britain, by Katherine Graves Busbey, A. B.: History of the movement........ ........................................ .............................. 1-5 Obstacles to organization of women................................................................. 5-10 Occupations temporary..................... ...................................................... 6 Low wages and low standard of living.................................................... 6,7 Class distinctions........................................................................................ 8,9 Liability to victimization and apathy...................................................... 9,10 Attitude of male trade unionists to organization of wom en ........................ 11-18 Growth of organization among women workers............................................ 18-22 Results of organization of women workers......................................................22-32 Aid secured through legal proceedings....................................................22,23 Recent legislation.........................................................................................23-25 Crusade against living-in and truck
    [Show full text]
  • Causes and Consequences of the 1909--1910 Steel Strike in the Wheeling District
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by The Research Repository @ WVU (West Virginia University) Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports 1999 Causes and consequences of the 1909--1910 steel strike in the Wheeling District Louis Charles Martin West Virginia University Follow this and additional works at: https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/etd Recommended Citation Martin, Louis Charles, "Causes and consequences of the 1909--1910 steel strike in the Wheeling District" (1999). Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports. 824. https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/etd/824 This Thesis is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by the The Research Repository @ WVU with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Thesis in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you must obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/ or on the work itself. This Thesis has been accepted for inclusion in WVU Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports collection by an authorized administrator of The Research Repository @ WVU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Causes and Consequences of the 1909-1910 Steel Strike in the Wheeling District Louis C. Martin Thesis submitted to the Eberly College of Arts and Sciences at West Virginia University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History Ronald Lewis, Ph.D., Chair Elizabeth Fones-Wolf, Ph.D.
    [Show full text]
  • Pageants, Parades, and Patriotism: Celebrating Champlain in 1909
    Pageants, Parades, and Patriotism: Celebrating Champlain in 1909 The event that all this rhetoric celebrated, Samuel de Champlain’s voyage up the Richelieu to bitabagw in 1609, was the pivotal point in the tercentenary orators’ story—prehistory’s surrender to history. With Champlain’s arrival, ten thousand years were compressed into a vague aboriginal mist that served only as prelude to the region’s seminal event: the struggle for empire between Great Britain and France. By KEVIN DANN The last 300 years represent a period of discovery, conquest, and development. On the 4th day of July, 1609, the great Champlain discovered what I believe to be the most beautiful body of water whose ripples in response to the gentle breeze were ever kissed by the sun-light . Is it any wonder then, when we stop to contemplate this great progress and development during the last 300 years, that we should assemble here together, to help celebrate in a fitting manner that great event? . I believe that our mission is only just begun . I believe the future is to be brighter yet; I believe that the destiny of this great nation of ours is to continue on and lead in the achievements of those great things which make for the material advancement and the uplifting of the human race of the whole world. — Mayor John Burke, Burlington, Vermont, July 8, 19091 . KEVIN DANN is the author of Across the Great Border Fault: The Naturalist Myth in America, Lewis Creek Lost and Found, and, with Robert Powell, Christ and the Maya Calendar: 2012 and the Coming of the Antichrist.
    [Show full text]
  • 1910-1911 Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University
    BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Seventh Series, No. 9 July, 1911 OBITUARY RECORD OF YALE GRADUATES 19IO—191 I PUBLISHED BY YALE UNIVERSITY NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Entered as second-class matter August 30, 1906, at the post- office at New Haven, Conn., under the Act of Congress of July 16, 1894. The Bulletin, which is issued monthly, includes: x. The University Catalogue 2. The Reports of the President, Treasurer, and Librarian. 3. The Pamphlets of the Several Departments. THE TUTTLR, MORHHOUSE ft TAYLOR COMPANY, NEW HAVEN, CONN OBITUARY RECORD OF 6RADDATES OF YALE UNIVERSITY Deceased during the year ending /, INCLUDING THE RECORD OF A FEW WHO DIED PREVIOUSLY HITHERTO UNREPORTED No i of the Sixth Printed Series, and No 70 of the whole Record The present Series will consist of five numbers ] OBITUARY RECORD 01 GRADUATES OF YALE UNIVERSITY Deceased during the yea?- ending JUNF i, J911, Including the Record of a few who died previously, hitherto unreported [No I of the Sixth Printed Series, and No 70 of the whole Record The present Series will consist of five numbers ] YALE COLLEGE (ACADEMICAL DEPARTMENT) 1839 AUGUSTUS GRELLE ELIOI, eldest son of Daniel Eliot (Dartmouth 1813) of New York City and Marlborough-on- the-Hudson, and of Abigail (Greelc) Eliot, was born July 18, 1821, at Woodstock, N Y, where his parents were spending the summei He entered Yale in Senior year from New York Univeisity After graduation he took the course in the New York College of Physicians and Surgeons (Columbia University), receiving his
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to Marianne Moore Series VI Family Correspondence
    Series VI: Family Correspondence Family correspondence is arranged chronologically. Beginning in 1848, it includes letters to and from the Rev. John Riddle Warner (MM’s maternal grandfather) from the time of his early pastoral work in Pennsylvania. Most of these letters (1848-1859) are written by or to Henry and Mary Warner (his parents), Henry Warner (his brother), and Annie Warner (Mrs. Robert) Armstrong (his sister). Other letters addressed “Dear Brother: ae from his ministerial colleagues. Beginning about 1859 there are added letters to and from Jennie Craig, who became his wife in 1860; her brother, George Craig; and the Eyster family, relative of the Craigs. Many letters are addressed from Laurel Hill, Pennsylvania, home of Jennie Craig and her family near Gettysburg. Jennie and John Warner lived near Gettysburg after their marriage. Mary Craig Warner was born to John and Jennie Warner in 1862. In September 1863, Jennie Warner died as a result of the disease which infested the Gettysburg area after the Civil War battle there. Infant Mary went to live with her Warner grandparents in Allegheny, Pennsylvania (now part of Pittsburgh). Letters from her to her “Pa” begin about 1870. About 1865, her father moved to Kirkwood Presbyterian Church. When Mary Warner reached high school age, she joined him, and attended the Mary Institute in St. Louis. She married John Milton Moore in 1884 and moved with him to Newton, Massachusetts, where their son, John Warner Moore, was born in 1886. While there, her husband suffered a nervous breakdown, and Mary Warner Moore returned to her father’s home in Kirkwood.
    [Show full text]
  • Biennial Report of the Oyster Commission of Louisiana, Covering a Period from April 1St, 1908, to April 1St, 1910
    Jfaurtlj Itftwtal import — . OF . (§%bUx (Eommtaaum of Smttatatta TO ©fj? tgmtmtor anb <g?n?ral Aaa*mblij 0 OFFICERS L. J. DOSSMANN, PRESIDENT C. S. E. BABINGTON, SECRETARY FRANK T. PAYNE, CHIEF SURVEYOR THOMAS SHANNON, SR CHIEF INSPECTOR JOHN. C. WICKLIFFE, ATTORNEY 0 COMMISSIONERS L. J. DOSSMANN H. H. HARVEY CLEMENT STORY F. E. GUIDRY A. E. HOFFMAN To His Excellency, Governor Jared Y. Sanders and the Honorable Members of the General Assembly of the State of Louisiana : In conformity with Section 4 of Act 167 of 1908, we have the honor to submit herewith the fourth biennial report of the Oyster Commission of Louisiana, covering a period from April 1st, 1908, to April 1st, 1910. The members comprising the present Commission are : Mr. L. Jr Dossman, St. Landry Parish ; Mr. Clement Story, St. Bernard Parish; Mr. Horace H. Harvey, Jefferson Parish; Mr. A. E. Hoffman, Lafourche Parish; Mr. F. E. Guidry, Terrebonne Parish. These gentlemen were appointed to their positions by your Excellency, and, after taking Oath of Office, met in the City of New Orleans on October 31st, 1908, for the purpose of effecting an organization, and this they proceeded to do by electing the following officers, to-wit : President — L. J. Dossman, St. Landry Parish. Secretary — J. W. Hyams, West Baton Rouge Parish. Chief Surveyor — Frank T. Payne, Orleans Parish. Chief Inspector — Harry Cage, Terrebonne Parish. Attorney — John C. Wickliffe, Orleans Parish. Two vacancies have occurred among the officers of this Board ; that of the Chief Inspector, due to the regretable death of Mr. Harry Cage on September 14th, 1909, and the resignation of Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Bibliography of Child Study for the Years 1908-1909
    UNITED STATES BUREAU OF EDUCATION BULLETIN, 1911, NO. 11 WHOLE NUMBER 457 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF CHILD STUDY FOR THE YEARS 1908-1909. By LOUIS N. WILSON, LIBRARIAN OF CLARK UNIVERSITY WORCESTER, MASS. WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1911 BULLETIN OF THE BUREAU OF EDUCATION. - ■ : . - ' ' - - 1906. No. 1. The Education Bill oi 1906 for England and Wales, as it passed the House of | Commons. By Anna Tolman Smith, of the Bureau of Education. 2d edition^ 1907. pp. 48. No. 2. German views of American education, with particular reference to industrial development. Collated from the Reports of the Royal Prussian Industrial Com¬ mission of 1904. By William N. Hailmann, Professor of the History and Philoso- i phy of Education, Chicago Normal School. 2d edition, 1907. pp. 55. No. 3. State school systems: Legislation and judicial decisions relating to public j education, October 1, 1904, to October 1, 1906. By Edward C. Elliott, Professor , of Education in the University of Wisconsin. 2d edition, revised, 1907. pp. 156. 1907. | No. 1. The continuation school in the United States. By Arthur J. Jones, Fellow \ in Education, Teachers College, Columbia University, pp. 157. j No. 2. Agricultural education, including nature study and school gardens. By James Ralph Jewell, sometime Fellow of Clark University. 2d edition, revised, 1908. pp. 148. No. 3. The auxiliary schools of Germany. Six lectures by B. Maennel, Rector of Mittelschule in Halle. Translated by Fletcher Bascom Dresslar, Associate Pro¬ fessor of the Science and Art of Teaching, University of California, pp. 137. No. 4. The elimination of pupils from school. By Edward L. Thorndike, Professor of Educational Psychology, Teachers College, Columbia University, pp.
    [Show full text]
  • Table of Contents, 1904-1912
    The Suburbanite, Tables of Contents Article Issue Date Page Suburban Versus City Life Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 2 Jersey-The Automobilist's Paradise Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 3 The Suburban Home Garden Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 4 Picturesque Cranford Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 6 A Suburbanite to Some Purpose Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 7 Advantages to Children of a Suburban Home Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 8 Atlantic City at Easter Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 10 Features for the Suburban House Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 12 Building a Suburban Stable Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 13 Social Life in the Suburbs Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 15 A Formal Garden on The Jersey Central Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 16 Editorial Notes Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 18 Jersey Central Nuggets Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 19 April and May at Atlantic City Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 19 Horse Show at Lakewood Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 20 New Boat to Atlantic Highlands Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 20 A New Tug for the Jersey Central Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 20 New Railroad Bridge at Newark Vol. 1 No. 1 April 1903 20 MISSING May 1903 The How of Civic Improvement Vol. 1 No. 3 June 1903 3 Living Room of a Plainfield House Vol. 1 No. 3 June 1903 5 Central Avenue, Plainfield Vol. 1 No. 3 June 1903 6 The Attractions of Plainfield Vol.
    [Show full text]