Word: cooking
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...depreciated dollar provided, reported the best business in two years in automobiles, machinery, radios, tools. Sales of cotton goods were well in excess of production, something seldom true of that unhappy industry. Wholesale trade was reported above normal. From London came reports that the travel business of Thos. Cook & Son-Wagons-Lits Co. was 10% above last year. For the time being, observers last week agreed there was little doubt that U. S. Business could hold the thin black line of last year's level...
...following men were chosen to active membership in the Sodality: E. C. Acomb '35, A. O. Allen 2G, W. S. E. Baer '34, R. F. von Briesen '35, R. S. Chafee '36, F. F. Conant 1G., Ed., L. A. Cook, Jr. '34, F. R. Dickerson 2L, D. R. Freni '36, R. S. Greene '34, E. S. Holden '34, H. J. Kumin 1G. Edward Meilman '36, J. R. Pappenheimer '36, Jacob Patt '36, R. B. Preble '83, F. G. Ross 1G. Michael Sarapoff 4E.S. D. A. Sistare '86, I. A. Stone '86, A. R. Sweenwy, Jr. '35, B. K. Therogood...
...face-off, whipped through the Toronto defense on the left side of the rink, made a pass all the way across the ice of which he later said: "If I hadn't seen that Bill was there, I would have kept the puck myself." Bill was Bill Cook, oldest active player on the Rangers, leading scorer of the National League, finishing what he thinks may be his last season of hockey before he retires to his Saskatchewan wheat farm. He took the puck without breaking his stride, feinted to bring tall Lome Chabot away from the Toronto net, then...
...members of the team are: E. M. Cook, Josiah Derby, T. M. Feldman, R. M. Fisher, W. B. Glunts, J. P. Farquhar, J. J. Gianino, T. J. Keary, A. O. Lindstrum, William Maltzman, David Rome, H. E. Robbins, and R. D. Sard. Derby is a Freshman...
...more unusual in that he is a member of a second-string forward line that was supposed to be weak. In the preliminary series against the Montreal Canadiens and the Detroit Red Wings, he had helped eclipse the Rangers famed first-string forwards (Frank Boucher and the Cook brothers. Bill & Bun). Almost as surprising as the performance of Dillon last week was the work of the Rangers' youthful, mop-haired, talkative goaltender, Andy Aitkenhead. A recruit this year, replacing convivial John Ross Roach, he had stopped all but nine of 137 shots in five games. To defend their championship...