Quarterly Illustrator, Volum 1,Utgaver 1-2H. C. Jones, 1893 |
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Side 31
... thing to do , and few indeed are they who can do it . This is what one cannot help looking for in Life , and that one is rewarded at times is highly encouraging . The high aim set before Life's contributors , and the wide scope given ...
... thing to do , and few indeed are they who can do it . This is what one cannot help looking for in Life , and that one is rewarded at times is highly encouraging . The high aim set before Life's contributors , and the wide scope given ...
Side 46
... is only a cat , but he has learned a thing or two from association and travel ; he is a very cultivated cat , indeed . Mrs. Scott does the most of her pic- tures in her summer home . In the winter she. 46 The Quarterly Illustrator.
... is only a cat , but he has learned a thing or two from association and travel ; he is a very cultivated cat , indeed . Mrs. Scott does the most of her pic- tures in her summer home . In the winter she. 46 The Quarterly Illustrator.
Side 47
... things that go toward the education of an artist in every direction . They have an entertaining little club of a dozen or so ladies and gentlemen , who meet fortnightly and criticise unsigned work . Of course each piece is torn to ...
... things that go toward the education of an artist in every direction . They have an entertaining little club of a dozen or so ladies and gentlemen , who meet fortnightly and criticise unsigned work . Of course each piece is torn to ...
Side 48
... things of America , that he set sail for this country in 1873. At all events , the trend of his thoughts changed radically as soon as he touched these shores . War and soldiery com- pletely fled his mind , and very soon after his ...
... things of America , that he set sail for this country in 1873. At all events , the trend of his thoughts changed radically as soon as he touched these shores . War and soldiery com- pletely fled his mind , and very soon after his ...
Side 51
... things . In the representation of soldiery and horses the story Mr. de Thulstrup has to tell is invariable , engaging , and curiously dissimilar to his renderings of other animated subjects . Especially in the violent action of the ...
... things . In the representation of soldiery and horses the story Mr. de Thulstrup has to tell is invariable , engaging , and curiously dissimilar to his renderings of other animated subjects . Especially in the violent action of the ...
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
A. B. Frost A. B. Wenzell Alice Barber Stephens Alphonse de Neuville American Art American Artists answering advertisements Beard beautiful book-keeping brush C. D. Gibson Century Charles charm Club copy Copyright Cosmopolitan decorative Demorest's dollars drawings Drawn E. W. Kemble Edward Moran engraving etchers etching exhibition Fifth Avenue Frank Leslie's Weekly Galleries George Wharton Edwards Godey's Magazine graceful Greatorex half-tone Harper & Bros Harper's Magazine Harper's Weekly Harry hundred illus Illustrated American illustrative art Illustrator when answering interesting landscape Maria Brooks ment mention The Quarterly Monthly Moran family Nimmo Moran painter painting by Edward paper pen and ink Peter Moran photographs pictorial PICTURESQUE plates portrait printing published Quarterly Illustrator reproduced Rhoda Holmes Nicholls Scribner's Sketch by Rhoda Society story style talent Thomas Moran Thulstrup tion W. T. Smedley Water Color Sketch Wide Awake Wilson de Meza woman women York zines
Populære avsnitt
Side 93 - ... that came into the room in a passion, and threw down the table that stood before them : ' Every one,' says he, ' has his calamity, and he is a happy man that has no greater than this.
Side 137 - Without the aid of a teacher, I studied your book just eight weeks, sent my work to you for examination, and succeeded in obtaining your 'audit.' I then came to this city, without ever having seen the inside of a set of books, and immediately took control of a set of double-entry books for this firm, whose receipts during 1890 were about $1,500,000. I am now the firm's chief accountant and have five direct assistant book-keepers under me. It is said— and I do not think exaggerated — that I have...
Side 137 - ... audit.' I then came to this city, without ever having seen the inside of a set of books, and immediately took control of a set of double-entry books for this firm, whose receipts during 1890 were about $1,500,000. I am now the firm's chief accountant and have five direct assistant book-keepers under me. It is said— and I do not think exaggerated — that I have the largest set of books in Indianapolis. The above surely stand as self-evident facts that the channel of success was opened to me...
Side 137 - When you can learn it at home, within ' 100 hours' study, without the aid of a teacher, from Goodwin's Improved Book-keeping and Business Manual. Guaranteed! ... " I spent $2OO for a courseiiv* a Business College and got more information out of your book l»taidU* of four i\«-« Ks than in the entire course at that college.
Side 137 - Any Book-keeper who hopes to obtain a situation in a large wholesale or retail house, or any person who is in any way connected with such a house, will find this book to be of inestimable value to him.
Side 137 - Without the aid of a teacher, I studied your book just eight weeks, sent my work to you for examination and succeeded in obtaining your 'audit.
Side 93 - has his calamity; and he is a happy man who has no greater than this." We find an instance to the same purpose, in the life of Doctor Hammond, written by Bishop Fell. As this good man was troubled...
Side 20 - can be said of it, is, that it has also been unusually free from " corrupt jobbery." — NY Times (independent), I2th May, 1888. " At the close of the Legislative session at Albany to-day, Sena...
Side 137 - I knew nothing about Double Entry Book-keeping before I purchased your book, and had had no office experience. By following the instructions in your book...
Side 71 - In obedience to the parental wish, Paul went about the world searching for an education and a vocation, but finally returned with the conviction that he would rather be a poverty-stricken artist, if need be, than make money in any other profession, and now father and son are working side by side. Paul is essentially a painter of American subjects, believing there is ample opportunity for the native brush in the varying types of different sections.