Word: sox
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...play might have been a success if it has been well written: in fact, it might have been three successes, all different in type, for it contained that many distinct elements full of possibilities in themselves but discordant when bound together. There is Clive dressed in kilt, sox, spats, and sporran; and Clive never fails to make the most out of that costume. There is a third act bedroom scene which might have been made pleasantly risque if the cast, mindful of its audience, had not continually hedged away from the issue unitl the curtain suddenly drops before anyone realizes...
...successfully represented Armour & Co. in defense of its acquisition of Morris & Co. which the U. S. Government contended was a violation of the Clayton Anti-trust Act. Among his other clients were Lumberman James Stanley Joyce (divorced by Peggy); the late William Wrigley Jr.'; Erlanger theatre interests; White Sox baseball club; the Chicago Tribune...
...plan of revenge against Judge Landis. For dissuading him from a course of action which might have destroyed organized baseball, gossip credited Clark Griffith, part owner of the Washington "Senators," Colonel Jacob Ruppert, owner of the New York ''Yankees," and Robert Quinn, owner of the Boston "Red Sox...
Died. Charles Albert ("Old Roman") Comiskey, 73, president of the Chicago American League Baseball Club (White Sox); of heart disease; in Eagle River...
...Bobby Burke, tall, thin, usually erratic left-handed relief pitcher for the Washington Senators: a no-hit, no-run game, in which his team made no errors, against the Boston Red Sox, in Washington, 5 to o. C. St. Brideaux, three-year-old race horse owned by Mrs. Payne Whitney: the Saratoga Handicap, feature at the opening of the Saratoga Springs, N. Y., race meeting. Two days prior, a violent wind, rain and thunder storm had carried away the roofs of two stables, part of the roof of Saratoga's Grand Union Hotel, felled hundreds of trees...