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Cerckel Leon Achille Vital<p>The Evening Times<br />Publication : Washington, District of Columbia, USA<br />Date : 2 juin 1900<br />Texte : "...all the efforts he made was unable to discover them I News comes now from Brussels that Lieut 1 Leon Cerckel of the Congo State troops succeeded in locating these caverns Ac i cording to a report published..."<br />À propos de cette sourceThe Evening Times first appeared on August 5, 1895 as an addition to the Morning Times, which had begun publication the previous year. Within a few years, this late afternoon edition competed with the Evening Star as the largest daily in the capital city, both of them recording a circulation of over 40,000. The politically Democratic Evening Times covered local stories as well as foreign news culled from wire services. It often featured a society or crime article on the front page and included a daily weather map, sports, gossip, women's news, and news of sundry federal agencies and the activities of civil servants. Beginning in 1901 the newspaper also published fiction, Sunday comics, and true adventure stories. That year, advertising moved to the forefront, often appearing prominently on the front page. The newspaper claimed to have the timeliest coverage of national elections and foreign news reports. Local issues dominate the news beyond the first page, but sports and business news were also featured. The Times reported heavily on the changing landscape in Washington at the turn of the twentieth century, with frequent stories on city planning and urbanization activities, the development of the national Mall, alley and tenement reform, sanitary improvements, road building and repairs. C. G. Conn sold the morning and evening editions in late 1896 to Washington Post founder Stilson Hutchins (1830-1912). Frank A. Munsey (1854-1925), known for his consolidation practices and within the newspaper business as the destroyer of the dailies, owned the paper 1901-1917 and ran the paper from the Munsey Building built in 1905. Under his ownership the morning edition ceased November 29, 1902 and the paper (published only in the evening and Sunday) became the politically-independent Washington Times (not to be confused with the present-day paper of the same title). William Randolph Hearst gained control of the Washington Times in 1917 through his agent Arthur Brisbane. Five years later Hearst also took over the Washington Herald. A combined Sunday edition of both papers was published as the Washington Times-Herald in 1922 and 1923, and then a combined Sunday edition was published as the Washington Herald until 1937. A combined daily and Sunday edition, called the Washington Times-Herald, began publication February 1, 1939. That paper merged with the Post in 1954</p> |
<p>Marietta Daily Leader<br />Publication : Marietta, Washington, Ohio, USA<br />Date : 12 juin 1900<br />Texte : "...unable to discover them. News comes now from Brussels, says the Philadelphia Record, that Lieut. .Leon Cerckel, of tho Congo state troops, auo-cceded In locating these caverns. According to a report published..."<br />À propos de cette sourceThe first issue of the Marietta Daily Leader appeared on April 1, 1895. George M. Cooke, a local printer, had purchased the paper’s predecessor, the Marietta Leader , in 1890. The Marietta Leader began as a triweekly paper, before transitioning to a semiweekly and finally a daily under Cooke’s editorial watch. As the editor, Cooke continued the practice of his predecessors in conveying events of the community and its newsmakers alongside national and state news. The Marietta Daily Leader was noted as a “handsome eight-column paper, of newsy character,” that provided “insight on local communities and their townspeople.” The Daily Leader was the only morning paper published in the city and had a circulation of over 5,000.The Daily Leader had its beginnings in the late 1800s, with the Republicans of Marietta concerned with the state of newspaper coverage for their party. On February 23, 1881, Frank A. Crippen and Will S. Knox founded the Marietta Weekly Leader , a paper aimed at the Republican base in Marietta. Crippen came to the paper after having worked in the Cincinnati newspaper business and having served as editor for the Marietta Times for two years prior to 1881.While the Daily Leader catered to national and state news on the front page, it was filled to the brim with local news from the second page on. It provided the residents of Marietta with news from the Associated Press, as the only paper in Marietta featuring the wire. The Daily Leader was also the first paper in southeast Ohio to purchase and employ a linotype machine, enabling the editors to set the type for the pages in a more efficient manner. With commitments to providing the best possible resources for its readers, the Marietta Daily Leader stayed at the forefront of the publications in southeast Ohio. The Daily Leader was absorbed by the Marietta Register in 1906, forming the Marietta Register-Leader</p> |
<p>Tazewell Republican<br />Publication : Tazewell, Tazewell, Virginia, USA<br />Date : 28 juin 1900<br />Texte : "...unable to discover them. News comes now from Brussels, says the Phila? delphia Itecord, that Lieut. Leon Cerckel, of the Con-yo state troops, suc? ceeded in locating these caverns. Ac? cording to a report published..."<br />À propos de cette sourceFounded in 1892, the Tazewell Republican was published weekly, on Thursdays, in a four-page format, varying from 20-by-26 to 18-by-24 inches. Annual subscriptions were offered at one dollar. Tazewell, the seat of Tazewell County, rests in the highlands between the Appalachian and Allegheny Mountains, 22 miles southwest of Bluefield, West Virginia. In 1900, Tazewell and the surrounding area were home to a vibrant coal mining industry, lumber mills, and grain and cattle farms. The Ayer and Son's American Newspaper Annual in 1894 noted that theRepublican’s circulation was 720. By 1900, it had risen to 1,300--sharp evidence that the paper’s readership stretched well beyond the town of 550. The circulation held steady until 1909, when it dropped to 1,000; by the next year it had fallen to 900.The Tazewell Republican’s first editor, J. N. Harman, had in 1884-85 edited the Tazewell Times, a paper devoted to the “Readjuster” program to repudiate a portion of Virginia’s considerable debt and to refinance the remainder. Harman had also edited the Tazewell Index, in 1890–92. After less than a year at the helm of the Republican, Harman was replaced by W. I. Boone, also a former editor (1886–90) of the Index. Boone edited the Tazewell Republican from 1892 to 1893 and again from 1896 to 1898. C. H. Pruett took over from 1893 to 1896. William C. Pendleton purchased the paper from Boone in August 1898 and acted as editor and proprietor until 1910 when he sold it to W. G. O’Brien; Pendleton continued to serve as associate editor until 1912. Under O’Brien, circulation began to rise again and peaked at 1,415 in 1911. O’Brien continued with the paper until it ended in 1919.In contrast to its Democratic rival, the Clinch Valley News, the Tazewell Republican, as its name suggests, promoted a Republican agenda. The Republican endorsed tariffs to protect domestic production as well as the expansion of the nation’s global influence to stimulate trade. Under Pendleton’s editorship, the Democratic Party and William Jennings Bryan came under constant, strident attack. Editorials dealt with the merits of the Populist Party, the currency question as argued by Gold versus Silver Democrats, and local issues including the need for better roads. The newspaper also reported on the smallest specifics: visitors, traveling businessmen, and the sick. Finally, the Republican reprinted articles of state, national, and international news from other newspapers and published agricultural advice columns, poetry, short stories, and advertisements from Tazewell and regional merchants.Communities in Virginia served by the Tazewell Republican included Pounding Mill, Freestone, Pocahontas, Horsepen Cove, Thompson Valley, Cove Creek, Lebanon, Richlands, Graham, Laurel Creek, Baptist Valley, Burkes Garden, Whitewood, Swords Creek, Tannersville, and Skeggs, and Bluefield in West Virginia. Yet with Virginia firmly in the Democratic fold (six consecutive Democratic governors were elected since the paper’s inception), the Republican had become a lonely voice and in 1919 it ceased publication</p> |
<p>The Iola Register<br />Publication : Iola, Allen, Kansas, USA<br />Date : 29 juin 1900<br />Texte : "...unnble to discover them. News comes now from Brussels, RnyB the Philadelphia Itecord. that Lieut. Leon Cerckel, of the Congo state troops, succeeded In locating these envcrns. According to a report published..."<br />À propos de cette sourcePublication of the weekly Iola Register began on January 2, 1875. The town of Iola was elected seat for Allen County in 1865. The first editorial stated that "The Register will be independent in all things, and will be radical in the support of freedom, justice, and equal rights to all." As the official paper of the county, the Iola Register circulated 850 copies in 1880 when the population surpassed 11,250. By 1890, circulation reached 1,500, and the county population reached 13,500. When the last issue was published on August 22, 1902, circulation still hovered at around 1,500, even though the population soared to over 19,500 thanks to the discovery of natural gas in the area. The days of publication and the number of pages per issue varied frequently, as did the editors and publishers. The history of the Iola Register can be traced to the Allen County Courant, founded in 1867. Its name changed in 1868 to the Neosho Valley Register and changed again in 1870 to the Kansas State Register before being restored to the Neosho Valley Register that same year. Beginning on January 2, 1875, the paper was called the Iola Register. On October 6, 1882, the Register's new publisher, Scott Bros. & E.E. Rohrer, introduced a staunch Republican affiliation with the "confidence to believe that the party that has been on the right side of all questions of principle and policy with wonderful uniformity for the last twenty years, has within itself the power and the will to rectify these abuses and to cleanse its own machinery." Charles F. Scott, an Allen County native, had just graduated from the University of Kansas before joining the Register, and in January 1886, he became the paper's sole editor and proprietor. Scott went on to serve Kansas in the House of Representatives from 1901 to 1911 and unsuccessfully ran for Senate in 1918 and 1928 before returning to the Iola Register. The Register absorbed the Democratic Allen County Courant in April 1889, and at the end of 1892, it acquired both the Elsmore Eagle and the Savonburg Progress. The weekly Iola Register changed its title in 1902 and was eventually discontinued. In the meantime, a daily edition, called the Iola Daily Register began in 1897. It went through several name changes before it evolved into the current daily newspaper, the Iola Register. Following Charles F. Scott's death in 1938, his son Angelo C. Scott succeeded as editor for the Iola Register, which continues under the same family of publishers</p> |
<p>The Banner-Democrat<br />Publication : Lake Providence, East Carroll, Louisiana, USA<br />Date : 4 août 1900<br />Texte : "...the efforts he made, was unable to discover them. News comes now from Brussels that Lieutenant Leon Cerckel, of the Congo State troops, succeeded in locating these caverns. According to a report published..."<br />À propos de cette sourceThe Banner-Democrat, a four-page Democratic weekly published in Lake Providence, Louisiana (the seat of East Carroll Parish), was formed in 1892 by the merger of the Carroll Banner and the Carroll Democrat. It was owned and published until 1941 by James Nelson Turner (1859-1943). David Llewellyn Morgan (1820-1893) was the paper’s first editor. Born in Swansea, Wales, Morgan began working as a levee contractor in Louisiana around 1850. During the presidential election of 1859-60, he published a campaign newspaper, the True Issue, which supported Constitutional Union Party candidate John Bell, a former Whig who sought to avoid disunion over the issue of slavery. In the mid 1870s, Morgan was the secret editor of James Turner’s True Republican, a “conservative” (i.e., moderate) Republican newspaper formed to oppose George C. Benham, an Ohio carpetbagger and publisher of a Radical Republican newspaper, the Elton Eagle. As editor of the East Carroll Democrat, Morgan was perhaps the most outspoken proponent of the economic development of northeast Louisiana, a role he continued to play as editor of the Banner- Democrat. Upon Morgan’s death, Turner himself served as editor from 1893 to 1899, when he engaged the services of Samuel Blakely Kennedy (1867-1935), formerly of the Carroll Banner. Kennedy remained editor until 1901. The Banner-Democrat called for moderation in politics, sought to expose vice and corruption in all parties, and promoted a progressive political and social agenda. Civic improvement was a major topic of discussion. Much of Lake Providence was destroyed during the Civil War by vandalism, fires, and unchecked flood waters. It was rebuilt in the late 19th century, but in general the population of East Carroll Parish--a rural, cotton-producing parish located along the Mississippi River fifty miles north of Vicksburg, Mississippi--had fallen into a slow decline. The Banner-Democrat encouraged immigration to the region and advocated construction of roads and railroads. An agricultural column offered practical advice to farmers, while almost every issue carried articles on the construction and improvement of levees, without which the parish’s farms would have been regularly inundated by floodwaters. The paper’s front page carried a mix of domestic and international news, brief articles on art, science, and literature, and a mix of fiction and religious material. By about 1900, women’s and children’s columns had appeared. Also of interest are the minutes of the East Carroll police jury (the governing body of the parish) and the proceedings of the Lake Providence town council. The Banner-Democrat is still in publication as of 2010</p> |
<p>The Silver Messenger<br />Publication : Challis, Custer, Idaho, USA<br />Date : 14 août 1900<br />Texte : "...unable to discover them. News comes now from Brussels, says the Phila! delphia Record, that Lieut. Leon Cerckel, of the Congo state troops, succee{ l e( J i n locating these caverns. According to a report published..."<br />À propos de cette sourceRoyal A. Pierce first published the Idaho Messenger on May 21, 1881, in Challis, Idaho, the largest town in the newly formed Custer County. Pierce, an attorney by trade, had followed the mining rush to the mountains of central Idaho. He published the first issue of the paper on a half sheet because of lack of supplies. Pierce worked to expand the publication, and in 1888 sold the Idaho Messenger to Milton Melvin Sweet.In July 1890, its name was changed to the Silver Messenger with the slogan, "Free and Unlimited Coinage at the Ratio of 16:1."This new name represented the interests of the mining community, which supported the Populist Free Silver movement. At this time, the federal government had stopped producing silver coinage, which decreased the amount of money in circulation and tightened the country's money supply. Proponents of the Free Silver movement, mostly in rural farming or mining regions of the country, sought to reintroduce silver coins to make the money supply more flexible. Back in 1837, Congress had established that 16 ounces of silver would be equal in value to one ounce of gold. The movement was ultimately unsuccessful, however, and in 1912, the Silver Messenger became the Challis Messenger, wherein Sweet noted, "This change is made because silver is no longer an issue and has not been for several years past." The new slogan of the Challis Messenger became, "Covers Central Idaho Like the Mountains Do."Published weekly on Wednesdays, the Messenger consisted of eight pages with six columns. In 1894, a fire burned the printing office and publication briefly ceased during June and July of that year. Beginning in 1906, each issue of the Messenger included a quarter-page promotional advertisement for Custer County. This plug included the history of the area and a descriptive section of the county's resources, including, "mines, mills, and mining," "agriculture and stock raising," and "climate, timber, school, etc." It also stated that the population of Custer County was 5,000, although this same number was used for nearly ten years. This clip appeared weekly in the Silver Messenger, and later the Challis Messenger, until August 1915, when Melvin Milton Sweet died after 25 years as editor and proprietor. Milton Andrew Dillingham took over the paper and no longer included the promotional clip for Custer County.Columns that appeared frequently in the Messenger included "Idaho Budget," "In the Gem State," and, "Items About People You Know." A large portion of space in every issue was dedicated to mining, including claims, sales, and patents. Also, the timber industry was a dominant topic in the Messenger, as was the surrounding Sawtooth Forest Reserve, established by Theodore Roosevelt in 1905 and renamed the Sawtooth National Forest in 1907. For years, the National Forest was proposed to become a National Park, but this move never gained the full support of the Idaho Legislature.The Challis Messenger remains in publication to the present day</p> |
<p>The Silver Messenger<br />Publication : Challis, Custer, Idaho, USA<br />Date : 4 août 1903<br />Texte : "...unable to discover them. News comes now from Brussels, says the Philadelphia Record, that Lieut. Leon Cerckel, of the Congo state troops, succeeded in locating these caverns. According to a report published..."<br />À propos de cette sourceRoyal A. Pierce first published the Idaho Messenger on May 21, 1881, in Challis, Idaho, the largest town in the newly formed Custer County. Pierce, an attorney by trade, had followed the mining rush to the mountains of central Idaho. He published the first issue of the paper on a half sheet because of lack of supplies. Pierce worked to expand the publication, and in 1888 sold the Idaho Messenger to Milton Melvin Sweet.In July 1890, its name was changed to the Silver Messenger with the slogan, "Free and Unlimited Coinage at the Ratio of 16:1."This new name represented the interests of the mining community, which supported the Populist Free Silver movement. At this time, the federal government had stopped producing silver coinage, which decreased the amount of money in circulation and tightened the country's money supply. Proponents of the Free Silver movement, mostly in rural farming or mining regions of the country, sought to reintroduce silver coins to make the money supply more flexible. Back in 1837, Congress had established that 16 ounces of silver would be equal in value to one ounce of gold. The movement was ultimately unsuccessful, however, and in 1912, the Silver Messenger became the Challis Messenger, wherein Sweet noted, "This change is made because silver is no longer an issue and has not been for several years past." The new slogan of the Challis Messenger became, "Covers Central Idaho Like the Mountains Do."Published weekly on Wednesdays, the Messenger consisted of eight pages with six columns. In 1894, a fire burned the printing office and publication briefly ceased during June and July of that year. Beginning in 1906, each issue of the Messenger included a quarter-page promotional advertisement for Custer County. This plug included the history of the area and a descriptive section of the county's resources, including, "mines, mills, and mining," "agriculture and stock raising," and "climate, timber, school, etc." It also stated that the population of Custer County was 5,000, although this same number was used for nearly ten years. This clip appeared weekly in the Silver Messenger, and later the Challis Messenger, until August 1915, when Melvin Milton Sweet died after 25 years as editor and proprietor. Milton Andrew Dillingham took over the paper and no longer included the promotional clip for Custer County.Columns that appeared frequently in the Messenger included "Idaho Budget," "In the Gem State," and, "Items About People You Know." A large portion of space in every issue was dedicated to mining, including claims, sales, and patents. Also, the timber industry was a dominant topic in the Messenger, as was the surrounding Sawtooth Forest Reserve, established by Theodore Roosevelt in 1905 and renamed the Sawtooth National Forest in 1907. For years, the National Forest was proposed to become a National Park, but this move never gained the full support of the Idaho Legislature.The Challis Messenger remains in publication to the present day</p> |
Leon Achille Vital CERCKEL & Marguerite Leonie Melanie HUYBRECHT<br>Type de document : Mariage<br>Mariage : 11 sept 1909 - Brugge, Flandre-Occidentale, Flandre, Belgique<br>Épouse 1 : <br>Nom : Leon Achille Vital CERCKEL<br>Père : Joseph Constantin CERCKEL<br>Mère : Jeanne Catherine AERTS<br>Conjoint 2 : <br>Nom : Marguerite Leonie Melanie HUYBRECHT<br>Père : Pierre Charles Joseph HUYBRECHT<br>Mère : Marie Leopoldine Jeanne RENERS<br>Reference Number : 213420005435120076<br>Source : CHGW Genealo 59-62-B |
Leon Achille Vital Cerckel & Marguerite Leonie Melanie Huybrecht<br>Mariage : 11 sept 1909 - Brugge, Belgium<br>Paroisse : Brugge<br>Commentaires : SCAN 182 GSU<br>Marié : Leon Achille Vital Cerckel<br>Jeune mariée : Marguerite Leonie Melanie Huybrecht<br>Père du marié : Joseph Constantin Cerckel<br>Mère du marié : Jeanne Catherine Aerts<br>Père de la mariée : Pierre Charles Joseph Huybrecht<br>Mère de la mariée : Marie Leopoldine Jeanne Reners<br>Source : View the original record here visit site. Record matches with this collection are provided by MyHeritage free of charge, as a beneficial service to the genealogy community. The data is provided by Les archives de l'État en Belgique. |
Ces pages ont été fabriquées avec le logiciel Oxy-Gen version 1.41c, le 16/03/2024. Vous pouvez le télécharger sur ce site.