Word: fulle
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...just the moment for such an exhibition. Of recent weeks the Manhattan press had been full of controversy over the desirability, from the standpoints of health, traffic, economics and art, of steepling and peopling further that rock-bottomed little island upon which whole new cities have been superimposed annually for a decade. The Chicago press, after months of extravagant paeans about Chicago's towering new hotels, newspaper cathedrals and dizzy spires for housing jewelers, oil men, furniture merchants, athletes, chicle-venders, and to support a Methodist cross, had not yet quieted down sufficiently to overhear the murmurs of reaction...
...York City. With Paul D. Cravath (see p. 22) he is one of Manhattan's greatest corporation lawyers. Obedient to the request of Patrick Cardinal Hayes he sat down recently and wrote and wrote and wrote. Last week the New York Times published in twelve and one half full newspaper columns an abbreviated version of Lawyer Guthrie's scathing opinion of the Mexican Constitution and President Calles. Soon this will be distributed with a pastoral from Cardinal Hayes and four other prelates to every Catholic priest in the U. S., all of whom will read it to their...
...source of life in strong, recurrent phases. The first two dozen pieces of this volume evidently reflect a summer spent on Cape Cod with or near a loved woman, whose presence is more felt than seen. Besides these spans, which are briny and refreshing as a dory full of mackerel, are some painful subjective pieces, some not too happy reflections in the classical manner and several lyric miniatures of priceless rarity, "The Toadstool's Defense," "I Heard the Marvellous Music of the Birds" and "Rain Children," which opens with the lines: With all its little silver feet...
...full personnel of the clubs will play. The members who will make the Christmas trip have not yet been definitely chosen, but the most of those present an tonight's concert will probably...
...midst of the howling desert, at that time of the year, with little food and less fuel and no medical attention is hard to imagine. But the laconic narrative proceeds, with the reader's breath bated, until Jayne is disposed of in the care of Dr. Kao, "full of Christianity and antiseptics." This leaves Mr. Warner free but lonely to make his scheduled dash to Tun Huang, the second objective of his journey, where lie the caves of the Thousand Buddhas. The aspect of these ancient gods fills Mr. Werner with poetic reverence. However, "obviously, some specimens of these paintings...