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Word: waxes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Billy Murray was brought up in Denver, ran away at 16, sang in traveling medicine shows and San Francisco honky-tonks. He made his first records in San Francisco in 1896-wax cylinders for which he was paid $1 a batch by an Edison dealer. Soon Victor was calling him the "Denver Nightingale." In 1907 Lee De Forest, experimenting in a Manhattan office building, played Billy's record of College Life. The broadcast was accidentally picked up by the chief electrician at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. It scared the daylights...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: January Records | 1/13/1941 | See Source »

When he began to croon, Lewis Reid of the Morris agency asked Character Actor Irving Kaufman to assume the role. Plump, pink-faced, freckled, balding, Kaufman, who as a small boy once played a spurious Russian midget in vaudeville, has portrayed Lazy Dan for Old English Floor Wax, Happy Jim Parsons for Air Conditioning Training Corp., Johnny Prentiss for Gruen Watch Co. He boasts that he has made more phonograph records than any other singer, having worked for 22 companies under ten different names. On the radio he has played as many as twelve characters in one sketch. But until...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Gaston, the Patriot | 12/30/1940 | See Source »

Most common parental excuse for hooky-playing was the need to secure shelter space. By 9 every morning swarms of ferret-eyed, wax-skinned youngsters lined up with piles of bedding outside the tube shelters, waiting to go underground to hold the family "pitch" till nightfall. Inside they played on the long platforms of the subway stations, kept an eye open for the chance to steal a better sleeping space. Said one experienced moppet: "School? I got to get the seats ain't I? ... Ma goes home to do her work and sends me back to keep her place...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GREAT BRITAIN: War Babies | 12/23/1940 | See Source »

...steel-&-gunite walls. Such walls have never before been built-they are made of steel props interwoven with flexible laths of steel and paper, on which is sprayed gunite (cement shot from guns)-the whole only 2¼-in. thick. Architect Wright's plan for the Johnson Wax plant at Racine, Wis. in 1938 similarly set the Wisconsin State Industrial Commission on its ear. Its columns were neither pillars nor posts but tall stem forms, tapering from a concrete disk 20 ft. in diameter at the top to a shaft 8 in. thick at the floor. By ordinary reckoning...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Something New in Churches | 12/2/1940 | See Source »

Much of Architect Wright's early work looked familiar to last week's visitors, because nearly every apartment-house designer today uses ideas that Wright thought up more than a generation ago. More startling were designs of buildings erected in the past ten years like the Johnson Wax factory at Racine, Wis., whose flimsy-looking mushroom pillars (broad at the top and narrow at the base) involved a brand-new contribution to engineering...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: A City for the Future | 11/25/1940 | See Source »

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