Word: stuarts
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...sale and use of narcotics throughout the world is one of the rare activities of the League in which the U. S. takes a willing, effective part. Last week when the League of Nations' Opium Advisory Committee met in Geneva to deplore the state of narcotic affairs, Stuart Jamieson Fuller, U. S. spokesman, rose with special pride to report about the thoroughgoing efforts U. S. citizens are making to discover some drug which deadens pain as effectively as does morphine but creates no morphine-like habit...
...Lewis, lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 Stevens, rf 3 0 0 0 0 0 Gray 1b 1 0 0 2 0 0 Connolly, ss 3 1 1 3 1 0 Regan, 2b 3 2 0 3 1 0 Sullivan, J., 3b 4 1 2 2 3 0 Stuart, cf 2 0 0 0 1 0 Mahoney, G., cf 0 0 0 0 0 1 Sullivan, R., 1b 2 0 0 7 0 1 Herman, rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 Linchitz, c 3 0 0 6 0 0 Mahoney...
Excellent but unnewsworthy were examples of other famed members of the Society, Walter Pach, John Sloan, Stuart Davis, Rockwell Kent, Leon Kroll. Maurice Sterne and the late George Bellows, Maurice B. Prendergast. Glenn O. Coleman, "Pop" Hart and Alfred Maurer...
HEAD O' W-HOLLOW-Jesse Stuart-Button...
When homespun Kentucky Poet Jesse Stuart sat down and wrote a big stack of "sonnets ' (Man With a Bull-Tongue Plow -TIME, Oct. 15, 1934), a few critics sat up, called him a modern Bobbie Burns. Others just laughed at his unconscious, bull-tongued humor. Last week Poet Stuart made the scoffers scratch their heads over a book of stones that were partly funny, partly serious, in the main tantalizingly good. These tales of Kentucky farmers were written in racy Kentucky dialect, with a wild-eyed, straightforward outrageousness that reminded readers more than once of Erskine Caldwell, at times...