Word: muench
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Like a Heathen Land. Last week's convention showed that Catholics do not mean to sit still while this happens. Fourteen bishops attended, the most ever. Many another prelate sent a personal representative, and for the first time a bishop, the Most Rev. Aloisius Joseph Muench of Fargo, was elected president. This was significant, because no Catholic movement can prosper unless it is backed by the hierarchy...
...York City: Robert F. Kolkeback, Brooklyn, New York, Donald E. McNicol, Flushing, Long Island, Alexander D. Mebane, New York City, Peter H. Muench, Bergenfield, New Jersey, Alan G. Skelly, Brooklyn, and Adam Yarmolinsky, New York City. Philadelphia: Allen D. Sapp, Jr., Haverford, Pennsylvania...
...Russell Hackford, Lawrence Pereival Hall, Jr., John Michael Harrington, Jr., Robert Alexander Hawkins, John Walter Hewitt, David Richard Howard, Chester Walton Jenks, Howard Arthur Joos. Milton Wallace Kelly, Horace Goodwin Killam, Jr., Robert Frederick Kolkebeck, Warron Julian Loring, Donald Edward McNicol, Alexander D. Mebane, Berkeley Davis More, Peter Hans Muench, James McGee Phillips, Allen Dwight Sapp, Jr., Richard Blaisdell Seymour, Alan Gregory Skelly, Paul Southwick, Oliver Rowland Blanchard Statler, Edmund John Steytler...
...creation. In 1911, having been everything from a high-speed typist to freight-rate counselor, he found himself vice president of Minnesota & Ontario Paper Co. One of its by-products was a rigid insulating board called Insulite. Dahlberg, several M. & 0. associates and Insulite's inventor, one Carl Muench, next devised a similar board made out of bagasse, the fibrous residue of chewed-up sugarcane, named it Celotex and began making it commercially in 1921. By 1929 annual sales of their brown insulating board had reached $1,479,000 and President Dahlberg was rich...
...Federal Judge George W. English of East St. Louis. Four years later Rogers rescued Dr. Isaac D. Kelley from mysterious St. Louis kidnappers. All St. Louis wondered about the Kelley case. Reporter Rogers solved it early in 1934 when a "pipeline" produced news that implicated Mrs. Nellie Tipton Muench and others (TIME...