Word: sunday
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Famed playground for Manhattan's proudest, where charming matrons pose for Sunday supplements in shimmering white creations, white hats, white parasols, where the soughing heather of the Shinnecock Hills creeps cautiously down to the Atlantic billows...
...wish to advise the gentleman from Yucatan that Montana is always to be found on the map, and is not in the "slow" class by any means. Your issue of Aug. 2 was received by me at 9 a. m. this morning, Aug. 1. It happened to be Sunday, which accounts for the delay. As it is, I am answering your letter of tomorrow, today. HARRY A. VAGG- Saco, Mont...
Plaster. A month ago Rev. J. Frank ("Killer") Norris shot D. E. Chipps to death (TIME, July 26 et seq.). Last week on Sunday, while the pastor shook the rafters with his transcendental, logical harangue, the plaster fell on his hearers, injuring two seriously, 200 slightly, the pastor...
...Motors Corp., had told him that the stock "should and will sell at least 100 cents higher." Potential millions lay in the darkness of Reporter Nicholl's pocket. Unabashed, he went to his New Jersey home. If he was excited, only his wife and small baby knew it. Sunday being a day of rest, he rested. Monday morning he helped his brother obtain a position in uptown Manhattan. Not until then did he remember that he ought to report his interview with Mr. Cochran to his city editor. He telephoned the story. At 11:55 a. m. innocent looking...
...only 4.7% that you skidded. Of New York's 47,128 accidents in 1925, only 148 occurred at railroad crossings. Pedestrians figured in 30,811 cases; 58,444 vehicles were involved. Pleasure cars were over three times as destructive as trucks, almost four times as destructive as taxicabs. Sunday ran Saturday a close second for "death day." Friday was third and Tuesday safest of all. Said the Scientific American: "If every one would cease 'jay-walking,' if children would keep off the roadways and streets, if young men would pet in parlors and drivers would obey...