Word: happiest
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...both the Queen and myself this- my Silver Jubilee Year-will ever remain one of our happiest memories. ... I rejoice that it has been possible for my Government ... to grant substantial relief to the small taxpayer. I am gratified to observe a further steady increase in employment among my people. . . . Important postal, telegraph and telephone concessions have been made during the year. . . . Measures have been enacted for further assistance to the agricultural industry ... the herring industry . . . tramp shipping...
...Exalt Women!" Fifty thousand German women and girls marshaled by hard-bosomed Gertrude Scholtzklink, No. 1 female Nazi, hailed Herr Hitler with bursts of wild, ecstatic cheering which kept up for the whole 45 minutes that he addressed them in his happiest mood...
...five years of misery and woe" during which "hunger was my true comrade", he worked in Vienna as common laborer, carpenter, housepainter, picked up a little money decorating Christmas cards. In 1912 he went to Munich and his spirit lifted into the "two happiest years of my life." Though he still had scarcely enough to eat, he did drawings for the newspapers, had them accepted, prowled through the museums, observed the most leisurely, tolerant culture of pre-War Germany. In these fine years he did four of the water colors on view last week in Munich, including well-rendered "architectural...
...Wethered and Helen Hicks. Good golf is not a male monopoly. My own case proves it. Two years ago I took up golf for the first time. I placed myself in the hands of competent professionals and I find myself shooting consistently in the 70's. . . . I'm the happiest girl in the world today and I'm going to work my head off playing." Last week, in Chicago, Babe Didrikson, 22, made her first appearance as a professional golfer in the Western Open Championship for Women, attracted a large gallery who hoped that she and onetime Amateur Champion Helen...
...lyrics composed by Victor Herbert so many years ago stand the strain of repetition remarkably well. It is in the chorus songs of the lighter sort that the picture achieves its happiest moments. When the Princess tosses off a lilting melody in the music shop, or when she sails with the "casket brides" sent to bewive the men of New France, the effect is bright, colorful and joyfully inane. The damp scenes occur when things attempt to become serious. A Gilbert and Sullivan opus maintains a strain so consistently absurd that it is convincing; "Naughty Marietta" is only sporadically...