Word: bartonized
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...article in the June issue of the Good Housekeeping magazine entitled "Sheepskin Blues." Bruce Barton discusses that ever present question of what shall the college graduate do after graduation. For once it seems this topic is intelligently treated and the usual gloomy outlook that most of our pessimistic magazine writers inject in a discussion of this kind is lacking...
...over to next year's convention, at Birmingham, Ala. Happily exalted, many of the departing Baptists could not restrain themselves from impromptu prayer meetings in the railroad stations. As they traveled to their homes they carried with them two vigorous inspirations-on Prohibition, on Evangelism. Dr. Arthur James Barton of Atlanta had told them: "There is no neutral ground in this [ Prohibition] war. It is a 'war to the knife and knife to the hilt' between the forces of sobriety and orderly government on the one hand and the forces of liquor and lawlessness on the other...
...attack, and G. S. Robinson '31 on the defense. SYRACUSE HARVARD Gidlow, g. g., Gulick., Salmon, Hurvich Fivaz, c.pt. c.pt., Myerson, Boldt Fogarty, pt. pt., Robinson Obst, 1d. 1d., Henderson, Marshall Brophy, 2d. 2d., Brinckley, Amazeen Reeve, 3d. 3d., Faude, Dunn Tarbor, c. c., Pope Aikers, 3a. 3a., Cochrane Barton, 2a. 2a., Johnson, Hobbs, Gulick Pierce, Priddle, MacClurg, 1a. 1a., Glenn, Foshay, Davidson Cross, Morris, o.h. o.h., Murphy, Kuhl, Keck Weich, Reen, i.h. i.h., Sanders, Kuhl, Keck...
Previous to the opening, considerable resentment was aroused by the fact that Dean Cornwell, famed U. S. illustrator, was being permitted to hang one of a series of Biblical paintings which had appeared, with text by Manhattan Adman Bruce Barton (Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osborn), in Good Housekeeping magazine. But those who had objected so noisily to this indignity paid little attention to the bright decorative scene, in which the feet of Jesus were being washed by the tears of a sinner, once it was on view...
Last week the Hoover conservation policy received a severe legal jolt when Associate Justice Jennings Bailey of the District of Columbia Supreme Court ruled that Secretary Wilbur had exceeded his authority under the Act of 1920. Two oilmen, Richard D. Vedder of California and Roy C. Barton of New Mexico, had asked Secretary Wilbur for a prospecting permit on U. S. lands. Secretary Wilbur had refused to receive their application. They sued for an order (mandamus) compelling him to consider their application as the law required...