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Word: scalps (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Barbers everywhere claim that Noonan's Hair Petrole gives the scalp and hair renewed life. Irritated scaly scalps become heated and the hair takes on a healthy appearance. The dry, thin hair stops falling out and a marked improvement is apparent in a short time after the use of Noonan's Hair Petrole...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WHY BARBERS USE HAIR PETROLE | 11/17/1920 | See Source »

Noonan's Hair Petrole will soon rid the scalp of scales and dandruff, will give tone and renewed life to hair that is slowly dying from neglect. Rub a little in the scalp every night for seven nights and note how the hair appears to take on new life...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MEN WITH THIN HAIR SHOULD TRY THIS FOR ONE WEEK | 11/12/1920 | See Source »

Enter the Bulldog! With blood in his eye he invades the Stadium this afternoon to wipe out the sting of early season defeats and carry back to the elmbowered streets of New Haven the scalp of John Harvard. Anyone who knows the Bulldog of old knows that he is a fighter; that the words of the prophets are likely to be violently upset, and that the game is not won till the final shrill blast of the whistle...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE GAME. | 11/22/1919 | See Source »

...driven by Miss Alice McDermott, 26 Porter Road, at 4.45 o'clock yesterday afternoon. The accident occurred as Tuckerman was running to catch a car in Harvard square. He was taken immediately to the Cambridge Relief Hospital on Prospect street, where he was found to have suffered a bad scalp wound, a broken collar bone and several broken ribs. His injuries though serious will not prove fatal...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Tuckerman Run Over by Automobile | 5/7/1915 | See Source »

...Circuity of Action," as exemplified by a corporal's arm and a trim maiden's waist; its reverse, by a diagram of a gentleman birching a boy, gave a good illustration of "Quarter Merited." A second displayed a picture of Austin Hall. A third had cartoons of a gory scalp, labeled, "The First Fee," a Puritan demolishing an Indian, thereby illustrating the "Ancient Action of Conversion;" a convict suit labeled "Livery of Seizer," and a bargain between a poco and an aborigine, representing the "Ancient Action for a Suit." A fourth showed a gentleman being killed vigorously in "Joint Action...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE GREAT PARADE | 11/9/1886 | See Source »

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