Word: forgiven
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When the War was over Janet brought what was left of Carl back to England and was happy to be his attendant. John had married a Canadian nurse and gone with her to Canada; he had never forgiven his father...
...women and the stock-market have been among the vital interests of Bishop James Cannon Jr. of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. All of his brethren deplored his gambling in stocks, and at the Dallas convention of his church last spring, he tearfully promised to gamble no more, was forgiven (TIME, May 26 et seq.). But four of his brethren in the South still deplored his conduct in general, which they felt unfitted him for the service of God. While he was honeymooning in Brazil with the second of the two women who have been dear to him, these Southerners...
...largely on the strength of his agitation that Governor Coolidge was nominated for the Vice-Presidency. President Coolidge later rewarded his boomer with a nomination to the U. S. Circuit Court. More disturbances followed in the Senate, where the vengeful opposition of Senator Johnson, who had not forgiven Mackintosh's 1920 desertion, was sufficient to keep Nominee Mackintosh off the Federal bench. He was serving as Chief Justice of the Washington Supreme Court when President Hoover appointed him to the National Commission on Law Observance and Enforcement...
...French-speaking province of Quebec has been Canada's "Solid South," steadily returning all but a handful of its 65 seats in the Liberal column. Reason for Quebec's Liberalism is Wartime conscription. French Canadians have little desire to die for the dear old Empire, have never forgiven the Conservative party for drafting them into the trenches. Through Montreal's La Presse ran scare headlines last fortnight-MENACE DE CONSCRIPTION, LA CRISE FORMIDABLE ... EN EGYPT-As a last minute appeal to Liberal prejudices, Quebec gave 25 of her 65 seats to Conservative Bennett...
...shrinks physically from her physically horrible husband. When Jean has given up hope of getting her love, he deliberately contracts tuberculosis and dies. She remains faithful to his memory and reveres him as if he had been a saint. But if he had recovered, she would never have forgiven him. Second part: Fernand Cazenave, cousin of Jean Pelouéyre, has been his widowed mother's darling from infancy. They quarrel, however, almost continuously. The mother is a frightful old woman, whose one fear is that her son will marry and thus get away from her. Eventually, a middle...