Sunday, June 23, 2024

Marguerite & Company: An Outrageous And Vile Tale Of The Early 1900s In Montmartre, ~ Part 3...

Well, it turns out that Simon had a son from dalliance with a much older woman. This son was called Silas, and he was what anyone would call a "bad seed". He wasn't just deviant and unwholesome and a liar and thief like Marguerite. Silas was a psychopath... Yes, truly, truly a psychopath, for who but a psychopath would willfully murder his mother because she wouldn't sell the heirloom ring she got from her mother, ~ the only thing her mother left her when she died, to buy her son a bag of candy? Oh, yes, Silas murdered his mom for not selling his grandma's ring. Then, Silas dug a shallow grave for the corspde in the dirt basement floor of the hovel in the very poorest section of Paris, where they lived. Silas had no income other than the ring, which he sold immediatelty to Pierre Violette, or Violet Purple Peter, a local barkeep and fence. Since the ring was only set with a large zircon, and not a large diamond, as Silas had hoped, it didn't bring as much as he desired. So, Silas, who was just ten years old, began his career of pickpocketting. That didn't bring him wealth, of course, so he hired himself out for any vile job, and by vile, I mean truly disreputable and dispicable; he was like a sewer rat, living off anything he could get him paws, or ~ er, hands on.

10 Old Home Features That Have Faded Into History...

Belladonna Eyedrops...

They didn't make your eyes THAT DARK!!!... Lol!!!... >>>

"Wuthering Heights," ~ We ALL Know it...

Sunday, June 16, 2024

DON'T FORGET!!!...

You can read 2 chapters of my novella, "The Casebook Of Lorraine Rokket, Victorian Detective: Part One, ~ The Ripper & The Slum Roses". Just type in "Rokket" in the Search Box, below. Most of the details in the story are true, taken from actual London Police records of the time.

The Tapeworm Diet & Things Victorian Women Subjected Themselves To & Peeing Like A Victorian!!!...

Friday, June 14, 2024

PRETTY INTENSE: Did The Original Coca Cola Have Cocaine???... :O

The claim: The first bottle of Coca-Cola contained 3.5 grams of cocaine Claims that Coca-Cola contains the illicit drug cocaine have existed since the company's founding. Now, they're circulating on social media. “The first bottle of Coca-Cola from 1894 contained around 3.5 grams of cocaine,” the Facebook post, shared by 3,000 people, reads. “Explains why our parents & grandparents could walk to & from school, uphill, both ways, in the snow, barefoot.” The person who posted the meme did not respond to USA TODAY’s request for comment. Early Coca-Cola contained cocaine... Coca-Cola did, in fact, once contain cocaine, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. When the popular drink was invented, it was first marketed as a “patent medicine”; cocaine was legal at the time and was a common ingredient in medicines, according to the institute. The cocaine in the drink – and later, its removal – presented a "delicate public relations problem" for the company in its early years, according to the book "For God, Country and Coca-Cola." “If the company responded to attacks by telling the truth, they would be admitting that the drink did once have cocaine in it," author Mark Pendergrast wrote in “For God, Country and Coca-Cola." "The implication would be that they had removed it because it was harmful, which might even open the door to lawsuits. Besides, it was unthinkable to admit that Coca-Cola had ever been anything but pure and wholesome.” The kola nut, from which Coke, Pepsi and so many other soft drinks derive, is not American. It's African. It comes from the kola tree, indigenous to Nigeria and other parts of West Africa. According to the book, John Candler, grandson of Coca-Cola founder Asa G. Candler, attempted to rewrite history by denying the drink ever had cocaine in it. Company spokesmen told The New York Times in 1988 that the original recipe, brewed in 1886, included cocaine, but the drug was eliminated from the recipe just after the turn of the century. In response to USA TODAY's request for comment, Ann Moore, a spokesperson for Coca-Cola, said the drink "does not contain cocaine or any other harmful substance, and cocaine has never been an added ingredient in Coca-Cola." The cocaine in the drink was more specifically ecgonine, a precursor to cocaine, according to Snopes. It was derived from extract from the coca plant. Although coca leaves are illegal in the United States, the company still uses them to make their famous drink after they’ve been “de-cocainized” by Stepan Chemical Co. in Maywood, New Jersey, according to Scientific American. The cocaine formerly in the drink was likely much less than 3.5 grams. (While there’s no way to know for sure exactly how much cocaine was once in the popular soda, it’s unlikely the amount reached 3.5 grams.) According to Snopes, which examined the claim in 1999, there was just 1/400 of a grain of cocaine per ounce of syrup by 1902 and the drink was cocaine-free by 1929, when the de-cocainization process was perfected. ~ From "USA Today. Our fact-check sources: Coca-Cola Great Britain, Oct. 1, 2020, Does Coca‑Cola contain cocaine? Snopes, May 19, 1999, Did Coca-Cola Ever Contain Cocaine? Scientific American, July 27, 2015.

Evelyn Nesbit: The Tragic Beauty & The Trial Of The Century, ~ Fame, Jealousy And Murder...

Evelyn Nesbit And ‘The Trial Of The Century’ — A Sordid Tale Of Sex, Jealousy, And Murder Among Manhattan’s Elite, ~ By Kaleena Fraga | Edited By Maggie Donahue Published May 9, 2023 Updated September 19, 2023 >>> The tumultuous relationships of early-1900s supermodel Evelyn Nesbit proved to be deadly when her husband murdered her former lover in what was called the “crime of the century.” >>> At the beginning of the 20th century, Americans could hardly go anywhere without seeing the face of Evelyn Nesbit. The beautiful young model’s likeness appeared on magazine covers, works of art, and advertisements for toothpaste. And in 1907, she became the star of the “trial of the century” after her husband murdered one of her former lovers. The trial captivated Americans across the country and revealed the dark underbelly of Nesbit’s seemingly glamorous life. Her story was not one of champagne and parties — but sexual assault, manipulation, and violence. This is how Evelyn Nesbit became one of the most famous woman in America, and what happened to her after her illustrious star began to dim... Evelyn Nesbit’s Rise To Fame: Born on December 25, 1884 in Pennsylvania, Florence Evelyn Nesbit found fame at a young age. After the death of her father left her family destitute, Nesbit was able to make money as an artist’s model starting around the age of 14. “The work was fairly light,” Nesbit wrote in her memoirs, per PBS. “The poses were not particularly difficult. In the main they wanted me for my head. I never posed for the figure in the sense that I had posed for the nude. Sometimes I would be painted as a little Eastern girl in a costume of a Turkish woman, all vivid coloring, with ropes and bangles of jade about my neck and arms.” In 1900, Nesbit moved to New York City to pursue modeling further. She was a smash hit, and her likeness proved so popular that she appeared in works of art, as one of the original “Gibson” girls, on the cover of magazines like Vanity Fair, and in advertisements for everything from tobacco to face creams. Evelyn Nesbit in 1900: Her likeness appeared on everything from works of art to advertisements...
Before long, Nesbit was able to convert her celebrity into an acting career. She appeared in the chorus line for the Broadway play Florodora, and soon snatched up a speaking role in the play The Wild Rose. As an in-demand model and actress, Evelyn Nesbit was able to comfortably support herself, her mother, and her younger brother. But she soon learned that the glitter and glamor of fame had a dark side. >>>

She WasThe Gibson Girl...

1800s-1900s Mourning >>>>>> Modern Goth???...

OOPS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!... :O

When it was scandalous to show ankles >>>

Tuesday, June 11, 2024

He Was NEVER FOUND!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!...

In spite of the best efforts of BOTH of London's divisions of Police, Jack The Ripper was NEVER brought to justice. One day, he just stopped murdering, or maybe, he died...
Those murders of London's prositutes have fascinated folks since the killings began in 1888...
Have you READ the two chapters of my novella "The Casebook Of Lorraine Rokket, Victorian Detective"???... (Posted here. Just type "Rokket" in the Search Box, ~ scroll down, on this page. I think you'll enjoy the sample. I did a lot of careful research, so there's quite a bit of historical detail to the story.) Gorgeous Lorraine Rokket
comes from a wealthy American family, the pampered only child of a Parisian journalist and a New York fashion model, a six foot, one inch stunner, with a pushy manner, who definitely rattles Deputy Commisioner Martin Lowery Of The London Metropolian Police. ;)