Word: gossiped
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Guild's dwindling deficit: nothing but a membership drive would restore the deficit to its former whopping dimensions. 2) Fellow Pumper Richard Whitney, president of the New York Stock Exchange, had promised to have the Guild's diplomas listed on the exchange. 3) Despite the venomous gossip of enemies, the Guild was in no way responsible for the burning of convents in Spain; unbiased, the Guild would have burned all kinds of churches if it were burning anything. Somewhat more rational speeches were made by Pumper Benjamin Franklin Affleck of Chicago, president of Universal Portland Cement...
...store's rear. The proprietor was not busy. He rarely is these days. The exploring business is at low ebb. And that is strange. Heretofore during business depressions idling executives and fortune seekers have packed off to far wildernesses. But not this year. They visit Mr. Fiala, gossip wistfully a while, then go mooning home. He has perforce reduced his advertising. The exploring business this season is mainly professional. Mr. Fiala's big customers are the Wilkins and Williams expeditions into the Arctic, the Dickey expedition through the Orinoco country. A goodly number of U. S. amateurs, notably...
...School Days, Hello Hawaii, Glimpses of Yosemite, Working for Dear Life. (Films.) 4 p.m. Benridge Orchestra 4:30 p.m. Speech Correction (lecture) 6 p.m. Enchanters Trio 6:30 p.m. Theatrical Gossip 6:45 p.m. Sports Talk 7 p.m. Manhattan String Trio...
...quiet upper-middle-class residential oases in the roaring metropolitan desert. Like Manhattan's Gramercy Park, the Square has a sacred enclosure to which only residents have a key, and within the pale stands the statue of some respectable and forgotten person. Children play there while their nurses gossip; from most of the Square's houses sober citizens go daily forth to do the work of City or Empire. Chronicler Mackail, more classic than Dickens, never leaving the limits of Tiverton Square, lets you watch its life for just a year. Long before you turn the 48th page...
...During the last few weeks . . I have ignored the unfounded and slanderous attacks that have been running in the gossip gazettes. . . . Every man and woman of sense and sensibility in New York this beautiful morning experienced a shock in their ordinarily clean newspaper. Thanks to the Sunday clerk of a committee of the National Republican Club, this committee, with no constructive program, no civic pride, no regard for the fair name of the city, labored and brought forth a shower of hydrogen gas,* offensive alike to decent Republicans as well as Democrats and independents. As for my private life...