The Great Round World and what is Going on in it, Issue 186W. B. Harrison, 1900 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 5
Page 261
... side of the town , and bullets flew fast and thick in the streets . Colonel Baden - Powell at once decided that the attack was a feint , intended to conceal a more serious onslaught in another quarter , and the sound of cheering from ...
... side of the town , and bullets flew fast and thick in the streets . Colonel Baden - Powell at once decided that the attack was a feint , intended to conceal a more serious onslaught in another quarter , and the sound of cheering from ...
Page 280
... side . But the action of the American Ice Company has been so flag- rantly unfair to purchasers at large , and so evidently in vio- lation of the laws requiring just relations between compet- ing companies , that there is no question of ...
... side . But the action of the American Ice Company has been so flag- rantly unfair to purchasers at large , and so evidently in vio- lation of the laws requiring just relations between compet- ing companies , that there is no question of ...
Page 281
... side , which was trying to put prices up , just when the commodity began to go down . The Danish West Indies . We told last week of the plan of the Danish government to place the Danish West Indies in the hands of a chartered company ...
... side , which was trying to put prices up , just when the commodity began to go down . The Danish West Indies . We told last week of the plan of the Danish government to place the Danish West Indies in the hands of a chartered company ...
Page 285
... side by side in the tents and beneath the flies in two long rows that would reach from Fourth to Fifth ave- nue in New York City . The boys bore their pain with cheerful cour- age - sometimes with merriment . " Ain't that a purty hole ...
... side by side in the tents and beneath the flies in two long rows that would reach from Fourth to Fifth ave- nue in New York City . The boys bore their pain with cheerful cour- age - sometimes with merriment . " Ain't that a purty hole ...
Page 286
... side of Washington . But the weather was hot and rainy . Gangrene had invaded the hospital . Some whom I dearly loved were even then past hope . I could but say a last word and hasten back with the conveyances , which were sorely needed ...
... side of Washington . But the weather was hot and rainy . Gangrene had invaded the hospital . Some whom I dearly loved were even then past hope . I could but say a last word and hasten back with the conveyances , which were sorely needed ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
150 Fifth Avenue 52 weeks accept this offer-No American Ice Anticosti armies attack Boer Envoys Boer forces British bubonic plague Canal Bill Captain Christmas cents Christianity Clark Colonel Baden-Powell COLUMBIA Commandant Eloff copies Count Tolstoi Cuba Cuban Danish West Indies Director-General of Posts doubtless Dreyfus expiration notice Famine in India fighting Filipinos fill blank fresh-air garrison Germany Governor Smith hope Ice Trust insurgent islands last week letter Manua Ménier Montana natives Neely Neely's Nicaragua Canal Nuketch offices operations Pago Pago Panama Canal Company paper peace Philippines Post 14 kt postage prepaid present President Quackenbos relief column Relief of Mafeking remittance ROUND WORLD Schwan Secretary Hay secure Senate sent siege South South Africa South African Republic statement Street subscribers subscription will expire surrender town Transvaal Turkish Tutuila United vacation schools vote waist Wanamaker's WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP WORLD for 52 wounded York City
Popular passages
Page 270 - The President sympathizes heartily in the desire of all the people of the United States that the war which is now afflicting South Africa may, for the sake of both parties engaged, come to a speedy close: but, having done his full duty in preserving a strictly neutral position between them and in seizing the first opportunity that presented itself for tendering his good offices in the interests of peace, he feels that in the present circumstances no course is open to him except to persist in the...
Page 271 - Constitution, was conferred and held, solely in accordance with the terms of that instrument and laws passed pursuant thereto, so that, in respect of an elective office, a determination of the result of an election, in the manner provided, adverse to a claimant, could not be regarded as a deprivation forbidden by that amendment.
Page 272 - ... citizen has been deprived, without due process of law, of an office held by him under the constitution and laws of his State.
Page 271 - Louisiana by an apdent's excuse. peal to the "guarantee clause" of the Constitution, under which the United States guarantees to every State a republican form of government, and protection against domestic violence. But he declared that while he felt bound to intervene, he found it an "exceedingly unpalatable...