Word: minerly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...palms often are due to infected teeth, tonsils, ulcer or other disease of the digestive tract, observed Dr. George Clinton Andrews Jr. & associates of Manhattan. A normal adult has very nearly 1/20 of an ounce of sand in his lungs. Dr. William Duncan McNatty of Chicago calculated. A coal miner's lungs contain about 1/6 oz., a zinc miner's 2/5 oz., a stone cutter's 3/5 oz., a granite cutter's 1 1/10 oz. Dr. William James Gardner of Cleveland described the fate of a young woman who had one-half of her brain...
...winnings. Said he: ''The only publicity I would object to would be outright advertisement of the lotteries. The law says we can't have that. The papers can go ahead, though, and print all the news there is about the poor chambermaid or the unemployed coal miner who bought a ticket for a shilling or two and won $1,000,000 in cash money. I think that is a great story always and if it is going to impair our morals to know what goes on in the world that is a problem for our pastors...
...yard dash--F. J. Lane '36 and N. P. Dodge '33; 440-yard dash--Warner (Y) and J. M. Morse '34; 880-yard run--J. B. White '34, Sutherland (Y) or J. M. Morse '34; Mile run--Turley (Y) and A. B. Hallowell '34; two-mile run--Miner (Y), Arthur Foote '33 or R. S. Playfair '36; 120-yard high hurdles--Lockwood (Y) and J. C. Grady '33; 220-yard low hurdles--J. C. Grady '33; and Dunbar (Y); shotput--J. J. Dean '34 and Jackson (Y); discus throw--J. J. Dean '34 and Crowley (Y); pole vault--Brown...
...book, "The New Dentistry" Dr. L. M. S. Miner, Dean of the Harvard Dental School, describes tooth decay as the most ancient of all diseases. It has been found in the so-called Rhodesian man of 125,000 years ago. Dr. Minor points out that about 100,000,000 people in this country suffer from this disease, that $45,000,000 is spent for dental care a year, and that tooth diseases are steadily increasing. "The New Dentistry," published by the Harvard University Press is to be a popular and yet authoritative treatment of recent developments in dentistry...
...head and chest. The crowd bar racked (jeered) him. In the fourth, Australian batsmen began to dodge Larwood's pitches and after the fifth, an Australian mob surrounded his boat train. Fellow-passengers said he was "lucky to get away with his life." Last week Larwood, a Nottinghamshire miner, turned down all publishing offers until the whole team, now in New Zealand, returns home. "Anyway," he said, "nobody knows what I know...