Word: austen
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...LOOSE RIB-Austen Allen-Kinsey ($2). Mr. Ferring, tycoon of crime, murders cleverly, leaves many false clues, and finally escapes the Yard...
...Bayard Colgate was elected president of Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co. He rushed from Manhattan to Chicago to take command. Colgate Co. was ruled till a few years ago by five brothers (Sidney Morse, Austen, Richard, Gilbert and Russell-all now dead except Russell), grandsons of William Colgate who founded the company in 1806. In 1928 they sold out to Palmolive-Peet. After the merger Sidney Morse Colgate was chairman of the new company till his death in 1930, but the old family's influence passed into the background. S. Bayard, son of Sidney, though handicapped by ill health, ably...
...Jane Austen," Professor Maynadier, Sever...
Also ill last week lay: Sir Austen Chamberlain, of food poisoning, in London; Governor Charles Wayland Bryan of Nebraska, of a heart attack, in Lincoln, Neb.; Leon Trotsky, of a heavy cold, in Copenhagen; Air Minister Paul Painlevé, of collapse after speaking lengthily in the Chamber of Deputies, in Paris...
...Boswell, Joshua Reynolds and David Garrick. The talk is not of the Yankee rebellion but of women?how silly, superficial, lacking in humor and the ability for "true creation'' they are. Just to show up the testy lexicographer. Playwright Hinkley implies, Divine Providence was at that moment bringing Jane Austen into the world. She appears in person on the stage at the age of 23. No one in the audience would realize it, but according to her historians she had already written Pride & Prejudice, Sense & Sensibility, was busy with Northanger Abbey. As impersonated by Actress Josephine Hutchinson, Jane...