Word: bread
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...DAILY BREAD-Gosta Larsson- Vanguard...
...Farm near Eaton, Ohio gathered 8,000 Dunkers, the men in black coats and broad-brimmed hats, the women in poke bonnets and long capes. Watched by 12,000 spectators, they held mass communion in a big tent, first washing their feet, then sitting at long tables to break bread and pass the wine goblet from hand to hand. By the tenets of their faith, sinful Dunkers refrained from partaking. Later all dined on ten head of cattle. Unitarians of the American Unitarian Association and allied societies met in the centre of their stronghold-Boston. From Rev. Maxwell Savage...
...Press. But no dour cleric is he, for he heartily aims to amuse, soothe and edify his parishioners, especially at Sunday night services. Every summer Dr. Reisner holds a snow service, with scrapings from an ice plant. He has held whistling services, given away apples, oranges and bread in literal demonstration of scriptural tenets. Other Broadway Temple entertainment includes newsreels, secular singers, bell-ringers, trumpeters and Mr. & Mrs. Vanderbilt Shrump, bird imitators. Before a mirror Dr. Reisner fancies he sees a resemblance between himself and George Washington; once a year he likes to dress up like the Father...
...himself and his Administration, not even the staunchest Democrat could honestly deny. But the fact that Gifford Pinchot chose to identify, for lack of a more dramatic tag, his liberal politics with the New Deal did not alter the fact that he was still a Republican. The friendly bread-breaking with Governor Pinchot at the White House cost the President nothing. It is part of the Presidential policy to remain on good terms with Republicans of the Norris-Cutting-Johnson-Pinchot stamp, while always reserving the hope that a good Democrat may trim them in an election...
...part of this book is a preliminary twenty pages in which the Secretary-Treasurer of the Organized Unemployed, Inc., of Minneapolis--an outgrowth of Dr. Mecklenburg's work at Wesley Church-tells us how the author has grappled with the depression. 400,000 meals served, 400,000 leaves of bread baked and sold for 2 1-2 cents scrip, 10,000 pairs of shoes repaired, 8,000 cords of wood sawed, etc. . . . Mr. Mecklenburg feels that the answer of American religion to Russia must be as concrete as the challenge. To his credit be it said that his faith, apparently...