Word: tides
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Crimson tide is turning, Gaining more and more...
...when the tide-rises and sharks are around...
...Prince stepped off the Berengaria, and Lord Renfrew stepped on the Machigonne, then onto the Black Watch, then, owing to the low tide, into a small launch which whisked him away to Glen Cove, L. I. Thousands and thousands of people who had assembled to see him were disappointed...
...introduction of vegetable oils, however, turned the tide abroad. Yet the product failed of wide acceptance until the War, when butter was rationed in England. Many who had to eat margarine or nothing, ended by liking it as well as butter...
...Firth of Forth is a dour, great inlet where the tide rushes in and out from the North Sea at great velocity and where the sixth longest bridge in the world supplies "see-ers" with a "sight." Britain's battle fleet uses it as a base. Scotsmen, particularly Edinburghers who dwell near its troubled expanse, boast of its majesty and dangers. But few think of swimming across it; and none of those who have tried have ever succeeded-until last week. Then W. E. Barnie, an Edinburgh science teacher, girded up his loins, plunged in at Burntisland...