Word: hayed
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...annually opens the Gridiron Club's dinner was explained this time as: "That's the American people vindicating Mr. Hoover at the polls." General fun-making included a song: "Oh, the moon's behind a cloud along the Wabash, for the Democrats are making all the hay; in the sycamores the G. O. P. is hiding, on the banks of the Wabash hell's to pay." President Hoover, present as No. 1 guest as usual, as usual addressed his news-gathering hosts, as usual eased his feelings in reply to their horse play, as usual...
...Best Hay: George J. Sauerman of Crown Point...
...Americas have left him plenty of time to work up a four-goal polo game-good enough to get him into Long Island's intersectional tournaments and the Waterbury Cup matches. He used to go to Belmont and Aqueduct with his father sometimes but, unlike his cousin John Hay ("Jock") Whitney who goes abroad to watch his horse run in the Grand National, "Sonny" Whitney seldom traveled far from home to see a horse race. Last Spring for the first time he began to talk about the family stable with enthusiasm. He will keep his father's shrewd...
...John Hay ("Jock") Whitney;Robert Tyre ("Bobby") Jones...
...wound. His torn brain pulses, partly exposed-like a red brown overcrusted cushion filling and deflating in frantic recurrence. . . . His head is a black lump with bloodstreams trickling down. His skin hangs in ribbons; it is scorched and smells of burning. . . . Thus they lie, rows of them, on hay, on mattresses-ravaged entrails, burst bladders, shattered lungs, lacerated throats, iron-studded skulls-the irretrievable ones. . . . Let it not be thought that these are just isolated horrors, sensational but only occasional instances of pain and suffering, and not essentially significant. These examples represent but a shabby trickle. Taken in its entirety...