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Word: chalks (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Next day and for three days thereafter there was peace. The Embarcadero became a No-Man's-Land for strikers. All the steel doors of the docks were flung wide; the Belt Line moved 203 cars; trucks ran back & forth with impunity. Only weapons used by the strikers were chalk and flowers. On the pavement where Sperry and Bordloise had fallen strikers chalked "POLICE MURDER. 2 I. L. A. MEN KILLED, SHOT IN THE BACK" and around the inscription they laid roses and wreaths. A few doors away at the headquarters of the International Longshoremen's Association the bodies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: On the Embarcadero | 7/16/1934 | See Source »

...turning his brick into the treasury at $20.67 Per ounce. Eggs, butter, lard and other farm products have long had speculators to assume future risks. Largest butter & egg market is in Chicago but handy for Wall Streeters is the second largest-Manhattan's old Mercantile Exchange, where chalk marks on the butter board have made many a fortune and where some 450 brokers trade eggs as "Fresh Gathered Firsts," "White Standards," "Dirties." Unit of futures trading is a carload lot-300 tubs of butter, about 19,200 lb.; 400 cases of eggs of 30 dozen each. Margin requirement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Commodities | 6/25/1934 | See Source »

...comfort of animals, not humans. Visitors must hike along fenced or ditched paths while animals roam at will through acres of field and forest. The royal party had tea on a clipped, sloping bit of" turf with lions lolling just below them in a huge, sandy-bottomed chalk pit. "Their Majesties expressed themselves," reported the Illustrated London News, "as specially pleased with the tameness of the animals." Last week a visitor's hat blew over the low double fence around the lion pit. Obligingly after it hopped one Stanley Stenson, 25, a zoo truck driver. His ami was stretched...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: At Whipsnade | 6/18/1934 | See Source »

...motor ship of 5,113 gross tonnage, Leningrad built in 1931, trimly painted, carrying a cargo of cement, mica, chalk, fuller's earth, Caucasian wine, oil of apricots, juniper (gin) berries. All her officers and able seamen had individual outside cabins amidship. She carried two young stewardesses to feed and amuse her picked crew of young cadets. Even her name KNM (Kim} was chosen for pronunciation by non-Russian tongues. Aside from the motto "Ahead To World's Revolution" inscribed in the crew's game room (equipped with piano and radio) she took every precaution...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CABINET: Kim and Congress | 4/16/1934 | See Source »

...reveal that such fears were mere tommyrot among the full grown men at Harvard. Although residents of Revere and Malden have been sure that the Minnesota Ford V-8 seen on the parkways and sidestreets of those towns belonged to the Indiana sheriff-slipper, Apted was inclined to chalk such accounts up to profit and loss, and took the opportunity to tell of his ideas for the country's need of a national unified police force. "If this country had a unified police system, men like Dillinger would never exist," the famous detective is quoted as saying...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: APTED HAS NO FEAR OF VISIT TO YARD FROM DILLINGER | 4/12/1934 | See Source »

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