Word: bathes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Illinois and two (still in use) in Wisconsin. It would appear that the report that I had 100 responses from the Gazette advertising is an attempt to make it appear that red flannels still abound in Iowa. The title of the painting is to be The Bath-1880 not Farm Life. This further inaccuracy seems to be an even more flagrant attempt to wed Iowa to the red flannels and thus make the article more salable...
...come to ripe fruit. Just as the air is about to be like wine tonight, the castle menage, an enchanting crew of Italian peasants, bustle on the scene. It is a real pleasure to watch them become completely disrupted over the performance of a sinister English rite-the hot bath. Moments like this are heightened by handsome sets and adroit low-key photography. But alas, the story creaks back to the laborious business of restoring Miss Harding to the arms of her repentant husband...
...meeting of the National Association of Manufacturers. If they were as constant readers of TIME as I they would know that to enjoy a crack at Big Hearted (with other people's money) Harry Hopkins and Honest Harold Ickes we must learn to take one ourselves occasionally. Mr. Bath is as weak on hitching his quotation to the right person as the schoolgirl who thought that Laurel was the man who said, "Kiss me, Hardy...
Packard's president is Alvan Macauley, a courteous cultured gentleman of 62 who heads the Industry's trade association. He likes to whittle period furniture and part models in his basement workshop, likes skeet shooting, likes to read in his bath. He is also a smart salesman who learned his trade under the late great John Patterson of National Cash Register. Months before the Show he began to hint broadly at a new low-priced edition of Packard's swank eights, super-eights and twin-sixes-but he kept his public guessing. Packard had dipped into...
...week. Evenings he helped his father who had the candy concession at the Academy of Music on 14th St. One day the boy was picked up by the New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. He spent the night in the Society home, was given a bath. After that he was careful not to sell candy while Society members were looking. Twelve years later he borrowed some money and with friends started a small lithograph company, which prospered mightily when the War cut off imports of lithographic material from Germany. In 1926, at the head...