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Word: milked (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

Over 1,000,000 families in the rural South eat nothing but salt pork, corn meal and molasses. Their members are frequent victims of that painful deficiency disease, pellagra, with its attendant diarrhea, dementia, dermatitis. Physicians have known for nearly 25 years that small amounts of green vegetables and milk will forestall the disease. But still pellagra continues. In its advanced stages it has been considered incurable, since the patients are unable to ingest the necessary kinds of food...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Pellagra Cure | 8/22/1938 | See Source »

Died. John May Warren, 8, whose photograph, grotesquely retouched, was released by Acme syndicate in 1933 as a baby picture of Adolf Hitler (TIME, March 5, 1934); when he fell from his bicycle, pierced his heart on a milk bottle; in Lakewood, Ohio...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Aug. 8, 1938 | 8/8/1938 | See Source »

Seven months ago Alfred joined the class and began turning out pictures at the rate of three a day. He ran home from P.S. 42, where he was in the fourth grade (he would have skipped a grade except that he got scarlet fever), drank a glass of milk, and hurried across the street to paint, using an old muffin tin for a palette. "His talent," said his awed teacher, Philip Bibel, "is accompanied by the most amazing energy I have ever encountered.'' He painted cowboys, G-Men, scenes from movies, elevated trains, football players, his playmates, views...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: A. Cohen Pinxit | 7/25/1938 | See Source »

...Pitchenik is not interested in the child market, still hopes to get his dish onto hotel and night-club menus, where it would be served in place of a cordial, act as a "combination of cocktail and dessert," contain all the elements of both "with the ingredients of a milk punch" thrown...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOOD & DRINK: And Milk Punch | 7/25/1938 | See Source »

...This is not a punitive investigation," declared Senator Joseph C. O'Mahoney, chairman of the joint Congressional-Executive Monopoly Investigation, last week. Whereupon the committee began planning its probing of the steel, rubber, cement and milk-marketing industries, and many a Big Businessman felt none too sure of the literalness of Chairman O'Mahoney's assertion. This week, something of a sedative for nervous executives was administered by the Brookings Institution in Washington, which published the fifth volume of its famed series of studies of the basic economic maladjustments in U. S. industry. The first four volumes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: The American Way | 7/18/1938 | See Source »

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