Word: borings
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...unepiscopal relations - "Been barred from two London restaurants for accosting waitresses - "Embraced Betty Beach, an actress, while she was clad only in her nightie - "Taken Rose Ellis on a trip to Paris." Each of these points was taken up by the Bishop's prosecutor, a gentleman who bore the high chivalric names of Charlemagne's champions: Roland & Oliver. Only two women were in court: the rector's wife, who sat among the witnesses, and a dark mysterious woman in scarlet who sat in the balcony, never spoke, fascinated the gentlemen of the Press. White-haired...
...During the House debate, proponents of the Sales Tax did their best in its defense. But their words lacked fervor and conviction. They explained how, broadening the Federal tax base, it bore on all equally, how it did not discriminate like an excise tax among industries, how it could be easily collected and. above all, how it would bring in enough money to balance the Budget. They also argued that the tax would be absorbed by competing manufacturers and middlemen, would not be actually felt by consumers...
...unfavorable elements on Monday night to welcome George back to his "home town" in the revival of George M. Cohan's comedy, "The Song and Dance Man," at the Copley theatre. The members of the Copley company supported him adequately enough, and only occasional slips in the dialogue bore out his statement in curtain speech that the performance was studied and staged in the short space of five days...
...shining and great clouds trundle away or crumble in the blue like fallen ramparts. A housewife wipes her red hands upon an apron and smiles down at the first bewildering crocus. Horses in the shafts steam and try to forget their winter coats. Old gentlemen on Marl bore Street hang up their Chesterfields and derbies. Little boys go shouting into a tumbled house and little girls wear blue...
...esophagoscope, like Dr. Jackson's famed bronchoscope, is essentially a narrow-bored tube. The bronchoscope goes down the windpipe into the lungs. The esophagoscope goes down the gullet. Dr. Jackson developed both after he got the initial idea from two German professors. They derived their method from sword-swallowers. Jugglers learned long, long ago that by throwing their heads far back and depressing their tongues, their opened mouths were brought into a direct line with their straightened gullets. By getting his patients to do the same, the late Dr. Alfred Kirstein found that he could see far down...