Word: mouthfuls
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...light of comparative scores, Penn reigns a heavy favorite as Dart-mouth merely nosed out the Quakers 30 to 29 Thursday night after defeating the Crimson five...
...Green '28, R. L. Hatch '28, and R. J. O'Connell '29, who have been kept out of play by injuries since the Dart-mouth game have recovered and are expected to go into action tonight...
Songs are all right. They go handily from mouth to mouth. But certainly the sovereign states of the U. S. have matters of more permanent value than dithyrambs. Texas has. What does it do with them? It puts them into a new magazine called Bunker's Monthly, 160 pages of eye-easy type. Does Vermont (native state of Calvin Coolidge) fill as many pages each month with readable material of its own efforts? No. Does Iowa (home state of Average American Citizen Roy Lewis Gray) do as well...
...city's original name was fantastically Losantiville-L for Licking; os, the Latin word for "mouth"; anti, the Greek word for "against"; and ville, the French word for "city...
Cincinnati, situated on the north bank of the huge Ohio River and opposite the mouth of the small Licking River that runs north through Kentucky,* was for decades the commercial gateway from the North to the South. Traders, some Jews, from Cincinnati were the first businessmen to settle in many a southern hamlet, village and town. So thriving was Cincinnati that when private developers would not build a railroad to Chattanooga, Tenn., the city itself provided funds and built the Cincinnati Southern Railway, 336 miles long, the only first class railroad owned by a U. S. municipality. Cincinnati...