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Word: skies (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...airplane soaring overhead writ silently in the sky over the Capital, "Keep Coolidge," and then, as i make the point doubly strong, writ again "Keep Coolidge." ¶ ThePresident wrote to Mr. and Mrs. James N. Cooke of Morrisville, N. Y.: "My good friend, John A. Stewart, has written to me of your long life together, telling me that you have within a few days celebrated the sixty-fifth anniversary of your marriage. This is a most interesting and impressive record, and I cannot refrain from writing to congratulate both of you, and to extend my earnest hope that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Mr. Coolidge's Week: Aug. 25, 1924 | 8/25/1924 | See Source »

...given nightly. The principal singers and comedians are imported; the choruses are local talent - St. Louis boys and maidens, trained throughout the Winter months. Velvet Summer twilights in St. Louis thrill to the strains of Verdi, Mascagni, Gilbert and Sullivan; the moon, that vision of still music in the sky, looks down upon declamatory stars in tinsel and brocade...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: St. Louis & Atlanta | 8/25/1924 | See Source »

...Army airplane from Mitchell Field, L. I., flew above Central Park, Manhattan. The airplane carried a sending and receiving set and a similar set was erected in the park beneath. An officer in the sky then chatted with an officer on the ground. The receiving station on the ground amplified the aeronaut's words and the entire conversation of both men was sent by wire to the radio casting station of WJZ in Aeolian Hall, three miles away, and there put again on the air for radio fans to hear...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Voices from Heaven | 8/25/1924 | See Source »

Blue water-the hulk of a smudgy oiler-the sails of little boats, like petals fallen on an azure field-the Summer sky. This is the setting that frames Marblehead, Mass., and this, in Marblehead's annual Art exhibition, is painting No. 1, by John P. Benson. Once port of call for East Indiamen, rich and important, with tea, silks and spices piled in its warehouses, the old town drowses now, lost in the hush of a dream. Wharves rot; rats squeak in deserted storerooms ; tiny pleasure-craft have replaced the tall schooners, rich Summer residents the bustling Tory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Arts: At Marblehead | 8/18/1924 | See Source »

Wembley Stadium and some 60,000 Britons basked beneath a cloudless August sky. Out in the centre of 26 the arena, on a platform hedged with ropes, a creature with a "splendidly white skin and a figure that would suggest a Greek god to a woman novelist," lay flat upon the canvas and basked with them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Basking | 8/18/1924 | See Source »

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