Word: hatefully
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...engaged to marry a Miss Verle Low. Vines's father owns nine meat markets in Seattle and elsewhere. His mother (separated) has a job in a Pasadena department store (F. C. Nash Co.). Remembering how her son wheedled money to buy tennis rackets, she says, "Oh, my! I hate to think about it.'' Vines now earns his own rackets as clerk in the San Francisco branch of Logan & Bryan (stockbrokers). Next year he may earn more by becoming a tennis professional. A high-school student of journalism, he hopes some day to write advertising for his father's markets...
...electric chair is warming for its prey when the girl turns and saves her brother by pretending on the witness-stand to be an abandoned hussy, devoid of feel ing of any kind. This draws the jury's hate to herself, the brother is acquitted, as was youthful Edward Allen in Philadelphia...
...remotely, with a congregation of bona fide, rotogravure society figures in a cause about which she may or may not have profound convictions. The weakness of the W. O. N. P. R. lies in the populous class of rural women who also vote and who bitterly suspect, envy and hate the ground that ladies like Mrs. Sabin walk on. Crusaders. A companion organization to Mrs. Sabin's is the Crusaders, which numbers a million militant male members (chiefly young) and which was founded in the same month and year. Last week. two days after the Roslyn convention, the Crusaders...
...heads of cultural organizations, educational schools and colleges, whom do they invite as dance instructors? Persons who have graduated from charlatan schools in New York, who have received gold medals and diplomas for a few weeks or months of work? What do they know? These people must hate the ballet, for it requires many and many years of study, and one should begin at an early age and one must have talent...
...Appeal under its Editor Fred D. Warren, revelled in his new work. But with the approach of the War the Appeal began to lose its audience. Interest in Socialism was becoming unfashionable, and the anti-Catholic Menace, somewhat imitative of the Appeal in format, furnished a brand of hate-reading at once more violent and safer politically...