Word: chesterfields
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...been entertaining to wonder whether the next young woman to appear under the auspices of Lucky Strike or Chesterfield on the bill-boards of the land would be a Greta Garbo or a Clara Bow type. The country may have benefited by the redistribution of funds produced by wagers, won and lost, on the next sport to be glorified by the versatile female athlete who posed for a gasoline company as "Power," "Speed," and "Balance," in successive months. Undoubtedly bill-board advertisements, like traveling salesmen and muddy weather, being unpredictable, have added glamor to life, and being thoroughly vexing, strength...
Anyone visiting this loan exhibition of the volumes of undergraduate and graduate book collectors will be struck by the wide range of tastes represented. There are choice editions of such Eighteenth authors as Lord Chesterfield. Joseph Addison, and William Shenstone from the libraries of W. A. C. Miller, III, '34 and H. S. Glazier, Jr. ocC., together with one or two items of incunabula. Especially noteworthy are the special groups, each containing a number of choice items of a particular writer. One of these is the selection from the Rupert Brooke collection of R. W. Baker, Jr. '34, which includes...
Nathaniel Shilkret's Orchestra and Baritone Alexander Gray, sponsored by Chesterfield Cigarets. Every weekday night...
...Lorillard got a thorough shaking up and Belt for president. When he took hold he found the company had everything except a popular cheap cigaret. Beech-Nut, Lorillard's first venture into the blended field, had failed. American Tobacco Co. had its Lucky Strike, Liggett & Myers its Chesterfield, R. J. Reynolds its Camel. Fat and quick-tempered, Ben Belt is still an excellent horseman, a better salesman. He decided Lorillard should have its Old Gold, in fact must have it if it would stay in the race. The name Old Gold then belonged to a Lorillard brand of smoking...
Warren Delano Robbins '34, of New York, has been declared the winner of the Freshman crew managership competition, which closed yesterday, and will be the manager of the 1934 crew. Richard Lawrence Stites '34, of Narberth, Pennsylavania, has been appointed assistant manager. David Dexter Tiffany '34, of Chesterfield, Missouri, will be the manager of the first year 150-pound boat...