Word: cautions
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...however your administrative duties do not permit such festivities. I shall prevent any untoward disaster from the furniture I have posted the articles so offensive to the Caretaking people with this notice. Maids a hazard, approach with caution. Further in view of the objecting of the Caretaking people to the low bottoms of the articles. I have posted them as follows. "MAIDS, do not crawl under, low clearance." Other matters prevent me from buying, selling or conveying furniture at this time. I shall he free in two weeks to examine the market for used furniture so that I shall...
...Plymouth dealer in San Francisco took orders for 45 new and used cars in a single day, his best in five years. But no big crowds turned up for furniture or household appliances. One reason: the banks, which ultimately set the credit terms offered by retailers, were proceeding with caution. The American Bankers Association asked member banks to go slow on "easy credit" terms. Warned A.B.A.: the terms should at least be strict enough to force the purchaser to pay for his item before it wears out. California's Bank of America cut its 15% down payment...
Perhaps the trouble is editorial caution. Though its emphasis is supposed to be on new talent, New World Writing sticks to such well-established figures as Tennessee Williams, Thomas Merton and Christopher Isherwood. Moreover, the idea seems to have been to pick the most sedate examples of advance-guard writing that could be found. The result is that, while highbrow esoterica is avoided, so is highbrow boldness. Only one piece is downright bad: Tennessee Williams' tasteless closet drama about D. H. Lawrence. The rest read comfortably enough, but seldom sparkle...
...trend was unmistakable, and the stock market took due note of it. With the Dow-Jones industrial average off 6 points, the watchword in Wall Street last week was "Caution...
...spokesman added the official Roman Catholic caution on psychoanalysis: only "its excesses and deformations" must be avoided. These specifically include the Freudian's habit of labeling all human virtues "sublimated sexual emotions" (Monsignor Felici, in his article, had noted the same evil). Concluded the Vatican: "Should psychoanalytic treatment be judged harmful to the spiritual health of the faithful, the church would not hesitate to take adequate steps to brand it as such. Nothing, so far, indicates that such steps are about to be taken...