Word: froelicher
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...What typewriters they forgot to destroy they took with them, sold for 50? each. Next night they came back. This time they were greeted by a policeman who was surprised to discover that the pillage and wreckage had been done by six barefooted, dirty-faced moppets, twins Chester & Leo Froelich, 9; John Rudecki, 9, and his 8-year-old brother Walter; Walter Miranda and his 6-year-old brother Norbert. John Rudecki, the only one who tried to escape, was extricated with difficulty from between the blades of a ventilating fan. Bundled off to the station house, they were lined...
...John Hay Whitney's three-year-old Singing Wood: the Withers Stakes; when the favorite, Mrs. Isabel Dodge Sloane's High Quest, stumbled at the start and threw his jockey; on a sloppy track, at Belmont Park. ¶ S. L. Froelich's Sealyham terrier Gunside Babs of Hollybourne: Best in Show against 2,827 entrants in the Morris and Essex Kennel Club's dog show, biggest outdoor all-breed event ever held in the U. S.; at Madison...
...Bahamas, where they were pursuing a small guinea-pig-like redent. The expedition was headed by Dr. Thomas Barbour, director of the muscum of comparative zoology and professor of zoology. He was accompanied by his family and by Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Greenway of the museum staff; Mr. Froelich Rainey of Yale was the archeologist...
Burly Sheriff Farley, openly called "grafter" by Inquisitor Seabury, admitted he had spent $14,000 bailing out 30 prisoners arrested in a raid on his political club, but denied knowing any of them, denied that "Baldy" Froelich or any of the other professional gamblers arrested there were actually gambling. He said they were busy packing 30,000 baseballs & bats, 5,000 skipping ropes and some May poles for the club's outing. His $360,660 bank deposits, he said, were made from "money I had saved." Most of it was kept in a tin box in a big safe...
...cases have banks ever carried the case to a finish because of community sentiment. Monger O'Connell's conviction would be the first in New York State since the passage of the law in 1912. Indicted recently for the same offense were Mr. & Mrs. Monroe Froelich of Woodmere, L. I., who one sunny morning are alleged to have telephoned a dozen friends to tell them that Hewlett-Woodmere National Bank would surely close its doors next day. Hewlett-Woodmere National's doors are still open...