Word: stoves
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...Mont., the L. A. Otters watched a grouse fly into the house through a closed window, fly out through another. In Centerville, Iowa, a loaded coal truck entered the house of Mrs. Blanche Heck, pushed her, abed, through the wall into the next room, left her against a hot stove, uninjured. In Hammonton, N.J., a train wrecked a truck driven by Jules Press, who flew into the air accompanied by four blankets, on which he landed, slightly bruised...
...with less alarm than did Allied strategists. Allied calculations are based on China's holding out indefinitely, or at least until the U.S. and Britain can get around to helping her. And there were signs that something for China was cooking on the back of the Roosevelt-Churchill stove...
...hull was just off the ways of a little Newfoundland town. Half an hour after she slipped into the smooth bay she was outward bound, hitched to a tugboat, for a short haul to her outfitting port. The four men aboard her had food for two days, a small stove, a teakettle, an ax, lamp, nails and some rope...
...Green quintet, which won its sixth successive crown last winter and went to the finals of the national inter-collegiate tournament, is studded with veterans, and no amount of hot stove speculation can point to anything but a Dartmouth victory...
Simmering on the financial stove last week was one of the biggest airline mergers in U.S. aviation history: sprawling, 16-year-old Northwest Airlines and fledgling, compact Mid-Continent Airlines. As a single unit the two lines would have 22,000 daily flight miles radiating from Minneapolis-St. Paul (giant American Airlines has over 90,000 miles), a man-sized fleet of big transport planes and more than 5,000 employes. Besides, it would have a strategic "X" route-major lines running north-south and eastwest...