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Word: steele (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...first of the steel cargo ships built by the Government, since the declaration of war, to increase the available tonnage, will be launched in Seattle next Saturday. It has taken only four months to construct her, and already a large number of standardized sister ships are in various stages of completion. Whatever delay there may be in turning out cargo ships is not due to lack of workers or supplies, but to the lack of those enormous plants which are necessary for the construction of even a relatively small vessel. Lloyd George has again urged us to increase our shipbuilding...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE NEW SHIPS | 11/22/1917 | See Source »

...fought hill, which we came to one evening about sunset. It was a battlefield but freshly taken from the enemy; the stench of the dead was still in the air, and the ground was torn and churned,--one horrid mass of blood-soaked earth, of twisted barbed wire and steel shell fragments, timbers and bits of concrete gun emplacements, pieces of personal clothing, shrapnel, broken rifles, unexploded bombs, rifle shells, human bones,--all shattered and ghastly and horrible. We were in front of the English batteries and could hear the English shells go singing and hurtling through the air over...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Y. M. C. A. WORKS IN THICK OF FIGHTING IN FRANCE | 11/14/1917 | See Source »

...Railroads are the only ones at the present moment which cannot increase their prices proportionally to their expenses. And when by the Adamson law the hours of labor have been cut down, when labor itself is ever scarcer and ever higher paid, and when at the same time coal, steel, and other commodities are soaring in price, a net loss will be inevitable, if the railroads' revenues cannot be increased...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: IN RE EASTERN RAILROADS. | 11/7/1917 | See Source »

INFORMAL UNIVERSITY. FRESHMEN.Whitney, Bowen, Perkins, l.e. r.e., Lee, Davis, FinelyWoods, Peet, l.t. r.t., Sedgwick, HookerStubbs, l. g. r. g., Roberts, GastonColeman, c. c., Havemeyer, Cabot McAdamsThorndike, Lewis, r. g. l. g., Olmstead, HendersonPhilbin, r. t. l. t., Frothingham, Faxon HamiltonHiggins, Wason, Steel, r. e. l. e., King, Anderson, De FordCoolidge, Hoffman, q. b q. b., Jenney, Wales, SmithBlanchard, Hoffman, Hallowell, l. h. b. r. h. b., Stillman, PanteleoniHorween, Crosscup, r. h. b. l. h. b., McDonnell, Aimner, DouglasWeden, Works, f. b. f. b. Humphrey, Sweeney, Butterfiel

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INFORMALS DEFEAT FRESHMEN | 10/10/1917 | See Source »

...people." Germany has had so much to do with brave little peoples in the past three years that she may pass as a judge. Her sympathies, it must be admitted, have been for Finland, Ireland, and Greece. She has seen with no overburdening woe the desolation by brand and steel of Serbia, the destruction of Belgium, the extinction of half of the Armenian race by the Turks for the honor of Islam. Yet now her ethics may not allow her to see without agony the deposition of Tino, alien king of Greece...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE KING OF GREECE | 6/16/1917 | See Source »

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