Word: gladly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...enough of their favorite reading matter to buy it in hook form, Gal Reporter should do nicely. More intelligent readers may enjoy it for other reasons. By special permission from Washington she was allowed to make a trip with the Coast Guard Cutter Mojave. She admits the crew were glad to see her go. As the Mojave steamed in to New London observers rioted Authoress Lowell's pink bloomers fluttering from the flag lanyard. Says Authoress Lowell: "Honest, I don't know who put them up there. . . ." The Record editor plastered Boston with pictures of his Gal Reporter...
...years. Then the 13 good men & true went home to pick up the threads of private lives dropped seven months before. An insurance salesman, who had amazingly managed to keep up his business during holidays, recesses and at night, found his daughter engaged to be married. A violinist was glad to have had the $3 a day fee during the winter, but his chances of summer engagements had been ruined. A butcher had lost many customers. A Liggett traffic manager had somehow managed his work at night and in the early mornings. A book agent was sorry to have missed...
Tartly retorted Bishop Perry: "I am glad ... to state very plainly that it is my purpose to act as the presiding Bishop of the whole Church, including . . . every school of thought within her membership...
...Ambassador-at-Large Norman Hezekiah Davis, come to report that in spite of all his efforts, the Geneva Arms Conference had adjourned to October. Its 14-year record of accomplishment still o, many pronounced the Conference a dead fish. But President Roosevelt, bland, told a Campobello crowd: "I am glad to have Norman Davis here with me. He can go back to Geneva and say he saw with his own eyes what a boundary without fortifications means." That same day his Secretary of the Navy promised to build a U. S. navy "second to NONE"(see col. 3). A destroyer...
...Cross relying upon a platitudinous survey of present conditions, and urging a portion, at least, of Mr. John Dewey's theory of educating the electorate. It is scarcely too much to say that Mr. John Dewey's views owe most of their publicity to politicians who are only too glad to remain impervious to the suggestion that those in power exercise control over education, that they realize their advantage, and that they will naturally refuse to disseminate the truth about themselves. It was slightly stupid of Governor Cross to advocate this hackneyed nostrum before a presumably intelligent audience...