Word: fetched
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Gone were the old days when Press Secretary Steve Early would fetch a presidential answer to a routine question (including "what did the President eat for breakfast?"). In Steve Early's chair now was serious, sober, 59-year-old Charles Griffith Ross of the St. Louis Post Dispatch, who does not like to answer personal questions about his boss...
...details about a lynching out of a sour, close-mouthed town official was about to stamp out when in minced the cherubic Woollcott, pencil poised. "Mr. Shallcross," he piped to the official, "I represent the New York Times, which must insist that you take immediate measures to fetch the perpetrators of this wholly unnecessary outrage to book or justice or whatever your quaint custom may be here...
...will be happy to sit in front of our fireplaces and let [our wives and sweethearts] fetch us Old-Fashioneds and fried chicken. But not, please God, with the look of a trapped and frightened doe, waiting for the blow to fall...
...shall have all the tanks that you can fetch...
...long revues, down to the dancing and the decor. His method never varies: each summer he plows through newspapers and magazines for topical material; each fall he locks himself in to write; each winter his revue runs for two or three months in Montreal and Quebec. The revues now fetch some 130,000 customers - in Montreal ten times the audience of any other show. They cost him a reputed $75,000 to produce, net him around $50,000 profit - and shut down the minute the house falls below 90% of capacity...