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Word: colyumists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Every quarrel has its roots in misunderstanding, as the Good Book says. What Good Book? I fancy you'll find it on the police docket. And that there may be no misunderstanding. I am not the man who stuffs birds, nor the Crime colyumist who stuffs Harvard. I came in here while the real poseur was out astonishing the natives of Hanover, and I haven't the manner, no, nor the acquaintance with Central Square duennas, required to write this column...

Author: By R. K. L., | Title: THE CRIME | 6/1/1926 | See Source »

...life of the intimate colyumist must be a hard one. All the little idiosyncracies which make him delightful must be expended, paraded, with none of the fine brave martial music which excuses so must exhibitionism. His is no uniform but motley, and the whole Cambridge store of that is down Plympton Street, at the corner of Mount Auburn. And now Lampy, not satisfied with being thought bats in his belfry, has belled his belfry. It's like belling the cat, to keep him from nodding off to sleep, no doubt. And so all the caps and bells...

Author: By R. K. L., | Title: THE CRIME | 6/1/1926 | See Source »

...ethics. He filled teeth with tin and copper instead of gold. Trembling with apprehension the parents read on, ons not a long storyd for reasons which were not explained had been allowed to accumulate the dust of a quarter century. It had not been written by H. L. Mencken, colyumist, lexicographer, magazine editor, the man who named the Baptist Belt and who derides his less accomplished countrymen as "snouting yokels." It had been written by an H. L. Mencken, aged 20, reporter on the Baltimore Morning Herald; a lad who had informed the Youth's Companion that he contemplated working...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Start | 1/25/1926 | See Source »

Indeed, it is this peril of the ill found pen which alarms F. P. A. in his "Conning Tower". Disturbed by the statement from Mayor Hylan that he is to ornament his already colored career with an attempt at writing, the genial "colyumist" warns the writing profession to stand by its guns--or pens. No writer can at will become a Walter Johnson or a Paderewski or a Chaliapin; why should the leaders in every profession, great or small, attempt to meet the muses on equal terms? The answer is apparent. One has but to read the published prattle...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PULL OF THE PRINTED PAGE | 10/15/1925 | See Source »

Married. Franklin P. Adams ("F. P. A."), 43, colyumist for The New York World, to Miss Esther S. Root, 30; at Stamford, Conn. He was divorced privately, last month, from Mrs. Minna Schwartze Adams...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: May 18, 1925 | 5/18/1925 | See Source »

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