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The Age, Melbourne, Australia, September 16, 1947
..a mushroom shade with a green velvet chain which fastens to the lapel of the coat with a real padlock.
A collection of old photographs, historic newspaper clippings and assorted excerpts highlighting the parallels of past and present. Featuring weird, funny and baffling headlines, articles and advertisements! Visit www.yesterdays-print.comĀ
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The Age, Melbourne, Australia, September 16, 1947
..a mushroom shade with a green velvet chain which fastens to the lapel of the coat with a real padlock.
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The Day Book, Chicago, December 31, 1914
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The Graphic, London, February 23, 1907
This picture, representing a female acrobat descending from the trapeze after her performance has just been added to the collection of the City of Paris, and will be exhibited at the Petit Palais, which is to be reopened shortly.
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The Times, Philadelphia, August 13, 1900
Boston Post, Massachusetts, December 10, 1920
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Boston Post, Massachusetts, December 8, 1920
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Boston Post, Massachusetts, December 19, 1920
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Smoggy Fleet Street, London, December 6, 1952
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Advice and Guide to Emigrants, 1834
The Decatur Daily Review, Illinois, September 17, 1933
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The Leavenworth Post, Kansas, May 23, 1910
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The Times, Shreveport, Louisiana, December 2, 1916
It’s too bad that The Times prediction did not come true when they went on to say that Katherine Mary Davies was “a heroine who’s name would go down in European history”. It took me a little bit of digging to find this one website with a mention of Miss Davies, and I haven’t really found any others.
From the website Inspirational Women of WWI:
Mary Davies was born on 8th December 1874. Her parents were Sir Robert Henry Davies (1824 – 1902), Governor of the Indian Province of the Punjab from 1871 – 1877, and his wife Mary Frances nee Cautey.
Mary was training to be a bacteriologist at the Pasteur Institute in Neuilly, France when the First World War broke out. The American Hospital was established at the Pasteur Institute and there Mary worked with Dr. Kenneth Taylor, who was a bacteriologist who qualified at Minnesota University. Dr Taylor was working on a serum of Quinine Hydrochloride to treat Gas Gangrene, experimenting initially on guinea pigs.
In October 1915, Mary deliberately injected herself with the bacteria used to infect the guinea pigs and asked Dr. Taylor to treat her. The treatment was successful and after some days in hospital, Mary was sent home to England to recuperate. She wrote a treatise suggesting that if the cloth used to manufacture British Army uniforms were treated with Quinine Hydrochloride, the incidences of Gas Gangrene might be reduced.
It is perhaps worth noting here, that the Canadian Army Doctor, artilleryman and poet, John McCrae, commented upon his shock on discovering that the heavy use of manure used to fertilise the fields in Flanders and northern France, contributed to the infection of wounds sustained by soldiers on the battle fields of the Western Front in the First World War.
Mary, a member of the Bath Club in London, died in Cannes on 31st March 1928.
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The Daily Republican, Monongahela, Pennsylvania, March 26, 1896
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The Daily Republican, Monongahela, Pennsylvania, March 3, 1896
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The Daily Republican, Monongahela, Pennsylvania, February 29, 1896