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...midway-a span that moved like a pacemaker in front of the chasing horses with the tiny bright-colored jockeys pressed against their necks. The crowd that had been yelling Iliad home stared as a new horse moved out of the pack-Blenheim, the Aga Khan's second-stringer. Surely, easily, Blenheim, ridden by Harry Wragg, who won the Derby in 1928 with Felstead, crept up, then moved in front, by a shadow, by a nose, then by a good length, crossed the line, with Iliad second, Diolite a staggering, gasping third...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Horses | 6/16/1930 | See Source »

...Captain Francis and Pilot Frank Moran, last to slide down one horizontal side, were hauled by rescuers out of the Fort Victoria's sinking whorl. All the crew and 255 passengers-everyone aboard-had been saved without accident except a fainting spell which overcame a Mrs. Nellie Stringer of Brooklyn who suffers from sleeping sickness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: All Hands Saved | 12/30/1929 | See Source »

Brick masons at East Chicago, Ind., slashed at mortar with their trowels last week, plumped bricks down to form the stringer courses of a 500-foot surface tunnel; pipe fitters twirled threads onto gas lines with their tap-&-die threader; freight gondolas dumped clay and ganister-Harbison-Walker, $36,000,000 brickmaking corporation, was having constructed a new type of kiln to burn silica brick. Corporation President J. E. Lewis had heard of the kiln operating at Dusseldorf, Germany, and after a talk with his Board Chairman H. W. Croft in their Pittsburgh offices had hurried to Dusseldorf...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Better Bricks | 10/10/1927 | See Source »

Empty Hands. Readers of the novel by Arthur Stringer, from which this film was fashioned, hold that its chief interest lies in the development of the devices by which the man and the woman existed and finally made themselves comfortable in a hidden wilderness. When they arrived, via a gorge of rapids, the woman had no standard equipment at all (her bathing suit had been torn off by the torrent's claws) and the man had only a coat, trousers, undershirt and a hunting knife. Before the rescue, a good many weeks later, they were living...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures Aug. 25, 1924 | 8/25/1924 | See Source »

From Bishop Stringer comes the request for a medical missionary to work among the Indians of Selkirk, Yukon Territory. The salary for this position would be $1200 a year, including house and travelling expenses. Furthermore, the Canadian government is now considering the appointment of an Indian agent, perhaps for the whole Yukon Territory. Providing the medical missionary for Selkirk is capable, there is every reason to believe that he could secure this appointment also...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Opportunities in Mission Work | 3/8/1909 | See Source »

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