Word: warning
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...admitted that the Whites still held the Alcázar, asked whether he should shell it. On Aug. 4 tentatively and one by one at intervals Reds popped 60 4-in. shells at the Alcázar without result, telephoned into the fortress to tell Commandant Moscardó: "We warn you heavier shells will come." On Aug. 11 cadets shot a cavalry mount for meat and mobsters standing at a safe distance shrieked at the military academy: "You fools! Why don't you surrender...
...Thus the rate of cure is comparatively high for cancers of the skin, breast, uterus. From those sites the surgeon usually can excise the offensive tumor or the radiologist can shrivel it with x-ray or radium. The great difficulty with cancers of internal organs is that they seldom warn the victim of their presence until it is too late to get rid of them. Nonetheless, surgeons can save the lives of an appreciable number of victims. Radiologists, guided by Dr. Gioacchino Failla of Manhattan and Dr. Henri Coutard of Paris, both of whom spoke in Madison last week...
...Globe-Democrat no money. In fact, if contest advertising were figured as an expense, the Globe-Democrat was $38,296 out of pocket. If the Globe-Democrat loses its case, it could be exiled from Missouri. Actually, the Attorney General, if he wins, may do no more than warn its publisher to conduct no more name games...
...promoter was Wallace Groves, now in possession of Phoenix Securities Corp., which rose appropriately from the ashes of still another trust. Truster Groves's method was to use one trust to buy another, but his deals were so involved that one of his directors once felt impelled to warn him: "We may seem to you unduly sensitive to public, or rather informed financial opinion. The reason is that those who disregard this opinion seem, in the end, to be 'unlucky.' . . . The aspect of dealing with oneself will be more obvious to outsiders than to those...
...prose poems is to suggest the shifting point of view of the author as he turns his imagination on the characters who fill his book and the combination of influences that have made him the individual he is and given him the point of view he holds. Like fragmentary warnings scattered through the volumes, they constantly remind the reader of the author's bias, warn him that Dos Passes' picture of reality has been colored by his personal experiences. After the chapter in The Big Money describing Charley Anderson's return to the U. S., The Camera...