Image from page 124 of “Charles Eliot, landscape architect : a lover of nature and of his kind who trained himself for a new profession, practised it happily and through it wrought much good /Charles William Eliot” (1902)

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Image from page 124 of “Charles Eliot, landscape architect : a lover of nature and of his kind who trained himself for a new profession, practised it happily and through it wrought much good /Charles William Eliot” (1902)
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Identifier: charleseliotland00elio_0
Title: Charles Eliot, landscape architect : a lover of nature and of his kind who trained himself for a new profession, practised it happily and through it wrought much good /Charles William Eliot
Year: 1902 (1900s)
Authors: Eliot, Charles William, 1834-1926
Subjects: Eliot, Charles, 1859-1897 Landscape gardening
Publisher: Boston :Houghton
Contributing Library: Getty Research Institute
Digitizing Sponsor: Getty Research Institute

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s, he made the fol-lowing memorandum, headed, Some curiosities of Paris : Sharp-cracking whips; cabmens white glazed hats; hatlesswomen; funeral processions ; also les noces; fried potatoes ;public cigar-lighting gas jets; fish-women with a basket oneach arm, and perhaps three fish in each; hand-carts drawnby harnessed men; womens hand-carts loaded with fruit,vegetables, beans, and flowers, the women enormous, strong,wooden-shod; monstrous three-horse omnibuses; long andnarrow high two-wheeled carts ; huge horses; processions ofschool-children ; pack-men who are also bootblacks; funeraldecorations at house doors ; countless small newspapers ; vastarray of trashy books prettily got up; square yards of pho-tographs of Salon pictures of the nude hung up in shopwindows ; acres of sharply worded manifestoes, political andsuch, posted up on walls ; also whole speeches in the Cham-ber or the Senate, and innumerable public notices headed4 Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite ; pretty theatre posters.

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Short driveways — French, CHAPTER V LANDSCAPE STUDY IN EUROPE. THE RIVIERA Let our artists be those who are gifted to discern the true natureof beauty and grace ; then will our youth dwell in a land of health,amid fair sights and sounds ; and Beauty, the effluence of fair works,will meet the sense like a breeze, and insensibly draw the soul even inyouth into harmony with the beauty of reason. — Plato. The excessive variety of which some European gardeners are sofond in their plantations, the Chinese artists blame ; observing that agreat diversity of colors, foliage, and direction of branches must createconfusion and destroy all the masses, — they admit, however, a mod-erate variety. — Sib, W. Chambers. On the 3d of March he left Paris for the south, wishingthat he had left some time earlier. To his mother he wroteon the 3d of March : — I have bought my ticket, and propose to take the nighttrain to Lyons. The continued bad weather, and the stateof mind it has got me into, are

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Image from page 113 of “The Lotus” (1919)
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Identifier: lotus1919peac
Title: The Lotus
Year: 1919 (1910s)
Authors: Peace Institute
Subjects: Peace Institute–Students–Yearbooks. Peace Institute–Periodicals. College yearbooks–North Carolina–Raleigh.
Publisher: Raleigh, N.C.: Peace College
Contributing Library: Peace College
Digitizing Sponsor: North Carolina Digital Heritage Center

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■K- 3 1 -^-%. isMMd The Seekers Name Seeker of— , Ambilion LUCY COOPER A noted voice To be a Prima donna ELIZABETH ELLIOTT The ballot To excel Mrs. Pankhurst CATHERINE BREWER . Sompthin teat To get thin MARY BLUE Sophistication To be sophisticated DOROTHY ALDERMAN Fame To have picture in N. Y. Times EFFIE MAE SPIVEY Adoration : … To have the world at her feet MAE BELL NEAL Listeners To make stump speeches GRACE HENRY Happiness To make others happy EUGENIA FAIRLEY Long hair To have flowing tresses MARY C. HOWARD Mail (male) To be Mrs.- ? KATIE GLENN McLAURIN Higher Athletics To make Annette Kellerman look like a never was—CLARIBEL FOUNTAIN Quick a minute fertilizer To grow tall

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The Cotillion Club PHIL PHILLIPS Presidcnl QUIN JOHNSTON Secretary and Treasurer PATMORISEY – – Floor Mar,ager DOC MERCER Bus mess Mar^ager Members MISS MARY STEELE F. E. PHILLIPS MISS MARY C. HOWARD A. F. FOY MISS MARGARET MOORE E. M. HALES MISS ANNABEL SLOAN M. H. LINDSEY MISS LENA LINEBERGER J, P. YOUNG MISS ELIZABETH ANDERSON S. F. FOUNTAIN MISS MABLE WELLONS M. E. HOLDINGMISS ANNIE ELIZABETH JOHNSON B. L. UPCHURCH MISS QUINNIE JOHNSON L. C. LEWIS MISS ESTHER PATE E. L. BELK MISS RACHEL WITHERINGTON M. W. TUCKER MISS SALLIE JOHNSON N^ R. BUCHANAN MISS ELIZABETH GIBSON M. B. NEAL MISS SARAH FLETCHER BRYAN M. J. STANLEY Stags E. F. NICHOLSON DOC MERCER PAT MORISEY BAT FRENCH Chaperones MRS. HORACE DOWELL MISS ELEANOR CORNICK : furnished by Weidermyer Orchestra (a ■ Talent)

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