Looking Back
Published 12:00 am Friday, January 16, 2004
Press Release
The following news items appeared in newspapers across Louisiana between Sept. 14-20, 1903:
Cyclist Breaks Record
Cyclist Van R. Hunt beat the record yesterday afternoon by making a wheel trip around the “horseshoe” road in 58 minutes.
He started a point on Second Street and returned to that point in less than an hour. He made the trip alone. This is a distance of about 14 miles.
Alexandria Town Talk
Jan. 19, 1904
Lake Charles Mischief-Maker Now a Piano Virtuoso
All of the Calcasieu seediness of a heavy-footed lumbering farmer that seemed so inseparable from his very self when we knew him about four years ago at LSU has given way completely to the dudish and sparkling appearance of a vivacious Brighton Beach debonair.
Lake Charles American
Jan. 19, 1904
Blanchard Wins Gubernatorial Primary
The result of yesterday’s gubernatorial primary, which was easily foretold all along, places in the chief executive seat of this commonwealth one who, from ability, training and experience in public life is perhaps the best equipped for the place since the Civil War.
Shreveport Journal
Jan. 20, 1904
Lighting Company to Illuminate Mardi Gras
The illumination of Canal Street, from Liberty Monument to Liberty Street, during the Carnival season has been one of the features of the Mardi Gras, and the indications are that it will be continued this year and for many to come.
New Orleans Picayune
Jan. 21, 1904
A Visit to Ruston
This is a place where a fine climate and a fine people are blended and where a critical observer of the situation would delight to settle down with a beautiful Southern wife and grow old gracefully.
Shreveport Journal
Jan. 22, 1904
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New Iberia Enterprise
Jan. 23, 1904
Board of Trade Plans a Mexican Invasion
During the first part of March, a special train bearing the heads of about 30 of the largest houses in New Orleans, will leave this city for a 9,000-mile trip through the great Latin American republic, and before it shall have returned, businessmen of many of the large cities of Mexico will have had an opportunity to meet socially and talk business with the progressive commercial men of the Crescent City.
New Orleans Picayune
Jan. 24, 1904
LOOKING BACK is compiled by the Manship School of Mass Communications, LSU, and distributed by the Louisiana Press Association to its members.