Word: conways
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...picture "Stingaree", new showing at R. K. O. Keith's, is, unlike the fish, innocuously poisonous. Mr. Richard Dix gives his dashingly middle-aged performance, while Miss Irene Dunne "takes everything in her stride". The part of Sir Julian Kent is played by Conway Tearle with refined restraint; there was nothing else he could do with it. Mary Boland enlivens the highly improblematic plot by a too realistic portrayal of the Colonial dowager aspiring to be a prima donna and pictorial shots of sheep grazing and the Stingaree galloping into the night add to the effect. The remainder...
HARVARD HOLY CROSS MacIntosh, 1b. ss., Kelley Mahoney, rf. c., Army Owen, 2b. rf., Walsh Bilodeau, ss. lf., Conway McTernen, cf. 2b., Daughters Regan, 3b. cf., Duffey Olney, lf. 1b., Shaw Blackwood, c. 3b., Masiello Avon, p. p., Bruninghaus or Callaghan...
...more cheering decors of the Potomac shore-line is the vision of that veteran inflationist, Senator Thomas of Oklahoma, in cahoots with Mr. Carl Conway, the president of the board of the Continental Can Company. Normally, one would suppose them to be separated by intellectual and political incompatibilities too great to be reconciled. That these should have been forgotten, even temporarily, is a beautiful tribute to the power of an ideal. Human frailties, vanities, all the pathetic weaknesses of politicians and capitalists recede into the deep diminuendo of momentary oblivion. Oklahoma and Continental Can are at one! Osanna...
What deep in the Senator has cried unto deep in Mr. Conway? With infinite regret, we must record that it is merely silver. Senator Thomas desires the remonetizing of silver, a desire not unnaturally shared by a number of his colleagues from the silver states of the West. Many are their converts, like Mr. Conway, who see in silver the pillar of flame which shall lead us out of the Egypt of depression...
...dungeon-like room with high dirty windows. A long table, two incredibly battered desks, a telephone booth and a chipped enamel cuspidor make up its office equipment. Around the walls are photographs of unidentified prizefighters and film actresses, a framed obituary of Variety's late Slangster Jack Conway, a yellowed clipping of a newspaper sermon entitled "Success," a picture of a nude dancer with a large ostrich-plume fan, inscribed: ''To the reporters of West Side Court, gratefully and sincerely, Sally Rand...