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Word: wilderness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...plump and gentle little body of 58, Mrs. Mahnkey's journalism is only a sideline. What she is really interested in is her poetry, which Missouri literary folk like Rose Wilder Lane would like to see properly published. A contributor of verse, letters and farm gossip to Country Home for years, Mrs. Mahnkey was partly responsible for the magazine's contest, having suggested such an event last spring. Editor Wheeler McMillen, once director of an Ohio country paper, and Editor Russell Lord, who takes more pride in his Maryland farm than in the fact that he edited...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Crossroads Correspondents | 7/29/1935 | See Source »

Five thousand strong, a hopeful delegation of Croat peasants meanwhile cheered sexagenarian Croat Leader Vecheslav Wilder who cried: "We have endured seven lean years, given us by the Belgrade Dictatorship, but seven fat years lie ahead!" Seasoned old Croat rebels, such as famed Svetozar Pribitchevitch who now lurks in Paris, meanwhile slipped warning letters into Yugoslavia by secret courier. They feared that the Regent of Yugoslavia, Prince Paul, has developed Nazi leanings and chose M. Stoyadinovitch to be Premier for the purpose of shifting Yugoslavian policy a few points away from Paris and several points nearer Berlin. "Beware!" warned Rebel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: YUGOSLAVIA: Toys; Tactics; Tide | 7/15/1935 | See Source »

...uniform, called them "Garibaldi suits." Within a year they had opened an office in New York and by 1869 had moved their shop from Fitchburg to Brooklyn and were making patterns for women's clothes as well. The patterns were sold through agents. One of these, John W. Wilder, an aggressive and imaginative hawker, joined the firm with a brilliant idea. He wanted Butterick to make the masses pattern-conscious with a fashion magazine. Result was Metropolitan, founded in 1869, later changed to Delineator. By 1871 the firm was selling 6,000,000 patterns annually. Ten years later aggressive Salesman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Patterns | 7/15/1935 | See Source »

...Life on the Frontier is its spectacular version of an old Western childhood. When Miguel Antonio Otero was a boy his father was a commission merchant, following the Kansas-Pacific Railroad as it was being built into Denver. He moved his business and family from wild Ellsworth, Kans., to wilder Hays City, where little Miguel saw Wild Bill Hickok kill one man, heard stories of his killing three more. He moved them from wicked Sheridan to the hunters' paradise of Kit Carson, at a time when Indians harried construction crews, burned bridges, sometimes attacked trains and towns. Merchant Otero...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: Wild West Boyhood | 7/15/1935 | See Source »

...Scott, J. L. Senior, E. N. Silverman, D. A. Sistare, A. R. Snell, D. B. Straus, W. P. Swett, R. B. Trainer, R. A. Uihlein, S. Vincent, O. J. Van Dyk, S. Ware, B. G. Weil, B. Welles, R. E. Wernick, S. Wessler, E. F. Whitney, R. D. Wilder, G. Winter, H. Wood, B. Yucht...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Members of Class of 1938 Admitted to Adams, Eliot, Leverett Are Listed | 6/10/1935 | See Source »

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