Who: Louise Gladstone Lee
Relation: father's mother
Categories: vaudville
Here is the text from some playbills and flyers about The Gladstone Sisters, which my grandmother Louise Gladstone Lee was a part of.
BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE, 29 JAN 1909, PG 2
TITLE: AT THE GEM
The Gem theatre has an exceptional bill in vaudeville for this end of the week, and at both performances last night the two acts were generously applauded.
The Gladstone Sisters, Louise & Hazel, the juvenile sunbeams,are stars,rarely equalled, and they are certainly big winners. Their harmony singing and acrobatic dancing, are new features in vaudeville acts....
RENO EVENING GAZETTE, RENO, NEVADA, 3 SEP 1910, pg 5
MECHANICAL DOLL TO BE EXPOSED AT WIGWAM TONIGHT
Tonight the mysterious mechanical doll will be taken up from the audience in full view of all, and the trick that has been so mystifying during the past week exposed.
This will be the last night you will have to hear that clever msical team, Stanley & Scanlon, alos that dainty little soubrette Minnie Baldwin.
Commencing tomorrow afternoon the GLADSTONE SISTERS, the child acrobatic wonders, the GREATEST child act ever seen in this city, will open a week's engagement at the Wigdom. This act is considered a GREAT FEATURE.
THE NEWARK ADVOCATE, 29 NOV 1906, pg8
NEWARK, OHIO
THE ORPHIUM Theatre Beautiful.
Fouth St., Between Main and Church.
MAKE NO MISTAKES. FOLLOW THE CROWD
For ladies, gentlemen, children.
____________________________________
Week
Commencing NOV.26
_____________________________________
"CREO"
European Novelty
____________________________________
GLADSTONE CHILDREN
SINGERS AND ACROBATIC DANCERS
_____________________________________
TOMMY HAYES
Refined Musical Artist.
____________________________________
FRANKLIN A. BROOKS,
Song Illustrator
_____________________________________
THE MARION DAILY STAR, 30 OCT 1907, pg.9
MARION, OHIO
MARION FAMILY THEATER
___________________________
WEEK OF OCTOBER 28,
THE BARRINGTON CO.
High Class Spectacular & Musical Comedy,
TIPPLE AND CLIMENT
Comedy Musical Artista
THE GLADSTONE SISTERS Singers, and Acrobatic Dancers,
THE GREAT GAYLOR A Contortionist,
EP ROWE
Illustrated Song,
POWERS MOVING PICTURES
Wonderful Flames
Matinees Monday, Wednesday and Sunday. 10 cents
Children's Sat. Matinee under 12 5cents
MANSFIELD NEWS, 5 NOV 1907, pg 7
MANSFIELD OHIO
EXCERPT
TITLE PLAY AND PLAY PEOPLE
... The juveniles get a good showing on the Orphium bill this week, the Gladstone Sisters and three of the five Benningtons coming under this classification and the bill of the week is one that will undoubtedly prove a winner, particularly with the ladies and the children.
The Gladstone Sisters, two clever little ladies, come on with a song and dance after which they give an excellent exhibition of acrobatics, their good humor during the act being contagious.
Later, my grandmother and grandfather, and my uncle and father, joined up with the Tom Mix Circus. I know there’s either a LOOK or LIFE cover of The Gladstone Sisters on it; my grandmother showed it to me when I was a teenager.
A cousin recently shared with me that another cousin “ran off” when she was a teen-ager, returning home a few years later, married to a fire-eater!
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Masons: Photograph of William H. Galvani
Who: William H. Galvani
Relation: grandfather, mother's side
Categories: Masons,Shriners, photographs
I am almost certain, but need to confirm, that this image is of my grandfather William H. Galvani, showing Shriners from 1888 to 1936.
6th one in, from the left. From the Al Kader Masonic website.
Relation: grandfather, mother's side
Categories: Masons,Shriners, photographs
I am almost certain, but need to confirm, that this image is of my grandfather William H. Galvani, showing Shriners from 1888 to 1936.
6th one in, from the left. From the Al Kader Masonic website.
The Name Game: Gladstone
Who: John Gladstone Lee
Relation: father
Categories: the name game, Portland, Oregon, Masons, Wm. H. Galvani
My father's family's name, on his mother's side was Gladstone. (His mother, my grandmother, Louise Gladstone Lee.) My father's middle name was Gladstone: John (Jack) Gladstone Lee.
The first annual Al Kader Masonic picnic was held in 1914 in Gladstone Park, Portland, Oregon. My mother's father, William H. Galvani, was a 32nd degree Mason in the Al Kader Order.
Image of picnic at Gladstone Park here.
Relation: father
Categories: the name game, Portland, Oregon, Masons, Wm. H. Galvani
My father's family's name, on his mother's side was Gladstone. (His mother, my grandmother, Louise Gladstone Lee.) My father's middle name was Gladstone: John (Jack) Gladstone Lee.
The first annual Al Kader Masonic picnic was held in 1914 in Gladstone Park, Portland, Oregon. My mother's father, William H. Galvani, was a 32nd degree Mason in the Al Kader Order.
Image of picnic at Gladstone Park here.
1897 Annual Report to Oregon Vegetarian Society
Who: William H. Galvani
Relation: Grandfather, mother's side
Vegetarian Federal Union 1889-1911
Internet source here.
Relation: Grandfather, mother's side
Vegetarian Federal Union 1889-1911
ANNUAL REPORT 1897
OREGON VEGETARIAN SOCIETY
The past year's work of the Oregon Vegetarian Society has been a year of of marked progress. On January 18th, we shall celebrate the beginning of the seventh year of continuous activity. During all this time we managed to hold up high the banner of Vegetarianism by monthly meetings, press reports, controversies, and by every other method that was best calculated to advance the claims of a bloodless diet on every thinking mind. At present we can number among us eminent professional men and women skilled in arts and sciences, as well as mechanics and labourers, all of whom unite in bearing the best kind of testimony to the superiority of the products of the plant world as the source of Nature's food supply for the human species.
My own experience, as well as that of many others whose opinion is fully deserving of serious consideration, is still on the side of maintaining at all times the principle of the sacredness of all life, including all animals, other than man, as the basic principle for our claims. Of this too we are reminded by the Son of David and King of Israel in his declaration: "A man hath no preeminence above a beast " - Eccles. iii. 19. This ought ot be sufficient for all such as justify the slaughter of animals for food upon theological interpretations of man's supposed right to claim special privileges above all other organized representatives throughout creation's domains. As to those whose reasoning faculties do not always accept the interpretations of theology, this will also do, since they cannot upon any logical grounds reject the declaration just quoted.
Among our most successful efforts in Vegetarianism are:
(1) We prevented the two packing companies in this city and state from carrying out a most brutalizing exhibit in form of a beef killing contest for which they made all necessary arrangements, after having obtained from the constituted authorities special permission to proceed with so monstruous a show. It was a Vegetarian who first entered a protest in the columns of the local press, who interviewed the leading ministers of the principal religious denominations, obtaining a promise for a sermon on this monstrosity on the Sunday evening immediately following first protest, and who convinced the municipal authorities of the justice of his claims, so that notice was given to the packing companies. ordering them to give up the project of exhibiting butchering skill in the killing of animals more useful than themselves. Thus the hog and beef-eating heirs of immortality where given a lesson which must have set them to thinking, at least some few of them, since the vast majority, seldom, if ever, thinks. It also gave rise to a newspaper controvery on the merits of Vegetarianism, which resulted in silencing the carnivorous portion of the community, who prefer the morgue to the fields and gardens for their food supply.
(2) Another cause for congratulation is the establishment in this city of a medical mission under the management of Dr. W. F. Hubbard, where medical advice and medicines if necessary, will be furnished free to the poor, and where they will be provided with lodgings, baths night garments, etc., for, ten cents per night, and with meals at ONE CENT per per dish. This establishment is on absolutely Vegetarian principles, all animal foods being most positively excluded, and so stated in all advertising matter of the institution. All credit for this excellent enterprise is due to the Vegetarians from among the Seventh Day Adventist denomination who have taken upon themselves the establishment and maintenance of this institution.
I cannot bring this report to a close without expressing the grateful acknowledgement of the O.V.S. to Dr. D. W. Reed, formerly head physician of the Portland Sanitarium, and now of Colorado, and to Dr. W. F. Hubbard, his successor, for their active cooperation in maintaining our public meetings, and to Mrs. Lucy A. Mallory, at whose house the O.V.S. has had its home ever since its organization.
With greetings to all Vegetarians, wherever found, and especially to the Men and Women of England, whose Spirit of Justice and Love of Freedom - the source of all that is truly great and noble among humankind - have ever been their chief traits, I beg to close this report of our efforts for the year 1897.
WILLIAM H. GALVANI,
President, Oregon Vegetarian Society.
Portland, Oregon, U.S.A.
January 1, 1898.
Internet source here.
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