Word: faithful
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...pyre was drenched with ten gallons of kerosene and ignited. When it had burned for eight hours and a wind had fanned the embers almost to white heat a scrawny young Hindu named Kuda Bux and a group of respectable-looking Britons appeared. Kuda Bux had promised that by faith he would walk barefooted across the glowing...
...work. She regularly has 25 reporters assigned to cover Sunday sermons, bombards the city desk with memoranda urging additional coverage of religious events. Armed with a capacious handbag she personally reports important gatherings like the Presbyterian General Assembly-dear to her heart because she is devoutly of that faith. Indomitable Miss McDowell hates swearing, sends out a memorandum every New Year's Eve reminding the staff of the existence of the New York Times Pure Language League...
...Superintendent Gerling saw his fear come true early in 1933. Two of the smaller State banks in St. Louis failed, tying up $96,000 in school deposits. Promptly Dr. Gerling pledged $25,000 of his own savings to make up any possible loss and "prevent the children from losing faith in their elders who encouraged the savings...
...Meeting for a three-day session at Atlantic City, the Financial Advertisers Association fairly oozed Faith, Confidence & Recovery. President Leslie G. McDouall of the New Jersey Bankers Association keynoted: "I am satisfied that the opportunities are just as great today as they were in the so-called boom period." From President Frank F. Brooks of Pittsburgh's First National Bank popped a curious suggestion for the "most gigantic advertising campaign America ever saw, regardless of expense, to promote economic literacy. . . . a campaign that will draw the sharp line between right and wrong economics...
Indeed, the Morgan announcement was construed marketwise as having almost as bullish implications as President Roosevelt's later pronouncement (see p. 11). In the little grey house at the corner of Broad & Wall Streets there was evidently considerable faith in the future of the securities business if not in the future of the whole U. S. Rival firms which have been industriously collecting business scattered by New Deal legislation were not so pleased, and stock in First Boston Corp., currently the leading U. S. investment bankers, dropped $4 per share on the announcement. But the stanch and stolid New York...