Word: bread
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...socialist propaganda, but even zeal without knowledge may be better than no zeal at all. Like all zealots, the socialists magnify their cause out of all proportion to its real significance, and imagine that it alone represents a serious interest in problems of human welfare. The poem on "The Bread Line" by L. G. Painter helps to point a moral on the subject of socialism. It presents a crude but sympathetic picture of one phase of our social life
Arrived at the fair, Busy warns the Littlewits to beware of the "heathen," and all enter Ursula's booth to partake of pig. Justice Overdo enters, still preserving his incognito, and the extravagant Cokes begins to buy up all the toys and ginger-bread at the fair. He has his purse cut by Edgworth while Nightingale creates a diversion by ballad singing, and Justice Overdo, suspected of the theft, is given into custody. The Puritanical Busy then tries to seize Leatherhead's toys on the ground that they are "idols" which must be "torn down," and is arrested...
...number of specimens of U. S. government standard teas, together with illustrations of the plant and descriptions of the process of tea-making, have recently been acquired by the Botanical Museum. An interesting collection of pre-historic grains, with several specimens of fruits and bread, which were completely charred in the conflagrations by which the lake dwellings of the stone and bronze ages were destroyed, are also on exhibition. Seventy illustrations of a few wild flowers from the eastern United States, painted by Mrs. C. D. Murdoch, and specimens of "Silver Sword" collected from the brink of the volcano Holeakala...
Judge Grant, after graduating from Harvard, took the degree of Ph.D. in 1876 and graduated at the Law School in 1879. He is the author of many well-known books, the last, "Unleavened Bread," being published...
...Living," by G. W. D. Gribble Sp., is an interesting and careful study of too often seen characters, who curiously reveal themselves and learn their moral lesson while listening to Sudermann's play. Those who prefer stories that suggest, rather than explain, will enjoy "The Bread of Wickedness," by P. Perkins...