Word: dis
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Howdy, Brer Rabbit,' sez Brer Fox, sezee. 'You look sorter stuck up dis mawnin', sezee, en den he rolled on de groun', en laughed en laughed twel he couldn't laugh...
...went to the Mirror (TIME. July 22, 1929). There he could print at least some legitimate news along with sex and crime. There he was permitted to write a .column called "Now and Then," on the pattern of Brisbane's "Today." There too he found opportunity to dis- gorge some of the bile which his pornoGraphic experience had secreted within him. He wrote, in his office after working hours nearly every night for a year, a version of his five mad years on the Graphic. Last week the story appeared as a novel, Hot News (Macatdey...
Died. Ralph Harman Booth, 57, U. S. Minister to Denmark; of heart dis ease and a kidney ailment; in Bad Gastein, Austria. An oldtime journalist, he be came editor and publisher in 1904 of the Detroit Tribune, founded Booth News papers Inc. with his brother George G. Booth. As president of the chain he con trolled eight Michigan newspapers...
President Parson, 58, fits well in the fancy office. He prides himself on keeping his desk clean, never appearing busy. He has taste. He likes the opera and dis likes tobacco. In both his $1,000,000 Long Branch, N. J. home and his $1,200,000 Paris residence are pipe-organs, tapestries. A link between Mr. Parson and the Founder is Charles Sumner Woolworth, 74, now chairman of the company his brother founded. He lives in Scranton, is seldom in Manhattan except for board meetings...
Died. Edward Thomas Bedford, 82, president of Corn Products Refining Co., oldtime associate of Oilmen John Davison Rockefeller, Col. Henry Huddleston Rogers and Charles Pratt; of heart dis ease; in Green Farms, Conn...