Word: michaels
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Michael J. Kelly was a big, shambling, jovial Irish baseballer who played with Cincinnati, the Chicago "White Stockings'' and Boston from 1879 to 1893. Awkward on the field, he was smart and nervy enough to become one of the best players of his time. He was almost uncatchable on the bases, became celebrated in the song ''Slide. Kelly, Slide." In a Boston hospital, fatally ill of pneumonia, he slipped off a stretcher. Cried Kelly: "This is my last slide." Said Mrs. John Masefield, in New York, of her crossing aboard the S. S. Mauretania with...
...Political Economy, August 1929: an article by Clague & Couper in the Quarterly Journal of Economics, February 1931: studies by Elizabeth F. Baker in the American Economics Review, 1930, by Paul H. Douglas in the American Educationist 1930, by Franklin Hobbs in the American Bankers Association Journal 1930 and by Michael Scheler in the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science...
...officer did his duty. Thus last week, for the fourth time in ten years, Manager Ballinger, who first met Harry F. ("Mike") Gerguson (alias Prince Michael Alexandrovitch Dmitry Obolensky Romanoff) in Dunhill's London shop, had set the Law on his slick little customer. As of yore, Mike's craving for Royal Yacht pipe tobacco, at $10 per lb., had gotten him in trouble. He simply cannot keep a.way from Dunhill's and its fragrant mixture, which was first recommended to him, he claims, by his royal friend "David" (Prince of Wales...
...Father Frederick Sill. Tall, thin, startled-looking, with thick black eyebrows and black hair. Author Cozzens could pass as much younger than his 29 years. No novice at his trade, he has free lanced since his undergraduate days at Kent. The Last Adam is his sixth book. Others: Confusion, Michael Scarlett, Cockpit, Son of Perdition...
...asylum for aggrieved authors," a paper dedicated to ''the reception of new ideas."' No contributions are paid for, but manuscripts have found their way to Editor Buttitta's offices from many a famed U. S. writer, including William Faulkner. Malcolm Cowley, Countee Cullen, Michael Gold, Sinclair Lewis, Lynn Riggs, Upton Sinclair, Lincoln Steffens...