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												Cially Opened Last Monday; List Jot Entrant* for > $3^00 Prizes
Popular Treasure Chest Qtrt- cially Opened Last Monday; List jot Entrant* for > $3^00 Prizes OPM --m §^^^S^^^0^$00^&^^&^&tk^MMA mmmm W dqtomctit facing .">• I MANY LIVES DEPEND table. • ,• •; .-;::/.:.r-'<:--ft.<-f 1 SUDBURY PLANS TO PIRACY IN PACIFIC TAKE "How do yon *now,^ 1>* asked aa ' UPON OLD RECLUSE CURBED BY MEXICO they came out oo M*) street, "that I rFEATHERHEAD wont be right oar tMt car with your r FROM 'l-'tonX Jil.-_JM ba** to trust H. Guard. Ow Bv Bridge Gulf of Californi. FoUt Ar« .A .•.:..... r. Xi^B^.. -sTrBarvJaLl' ' ' '• j^^.eaate.^"***!*'*"*'-'*""^ Part^/«rtb«Arfla>auatlorin dinner and_for being a gentleman so. fa r." Kbe looked sansrely «p.. Uto •' Ancestral Home. IU Del nio, Texaa.—Far from diUIxa- Mexico CUTsr-Plract and other con- la»«0k b ndon.—fail i .traband ifrtlvltles In- M«lcin Pacllle />] , r r _ tfvilllaS 'waters, fflnclpally in the cilf If taU iti*. corner Dot Ibnjry, inlTolkv .s^dTW.sall lforola, /re decreaslng.;/due to meas- to be nulled. dow»,,nls baUa_bla hand. America. In 1039 one. of hla descend- urea wken' by the government, ac- .'&::/? in the solitude <rf»xgorge which' T »0<l But when she «ot oflr-(at h/r own anta, Gen. Charle* Cafes pawevleft cording to Jose, Lorento Sepulved*. dl- 1 rival* the Grand canyon in size and. hi* home In Ajberfca and i* jnt beabtf»Jj n :.'•»•*;**•- -i-tt-Vi-i-'—tl hla borne In America and set sail for. -fect6r, of ftaherfe*; V' : I tf England sa American aibai™#r.% jJF$fajk Wi ,t,Se •• ,*ord I-i water, L m. - 
												
												Papéis Normativos E Práticas Sociais
Agnes Ayres (1898-194): Rodolfo Valentino e Agnes Ayres em “The Sheik” (1921) The Donovan Affair (1929) The Affairs of Anatol (1921) The Rubaiyat of a Scotch Highball Broken Hearted (1929) Cappy Ricks (1921) (1918) Bye, Bye, Buddy (1929) Too Much Speed (1921) Their Godson (1918) Into the Night (1928) The Love Special (1921) Sweets of the Sour (1918) The Lady of Victories (1928) Forbidden Fruit (1921) Coals for the Fire (1918) Eve's Love Letters (1927) The Furnace (1920) Their Anniversary Feast (1918) The Son of the Sheik (1926) Held by the Enemy (1920) A Four Cornered Triangle (1918) Morals for Men (1925) Go and Get It (1920) Seeking an Oversoul (1918) The Awful Truth (1925) The Inner Voice (1920) A Little Ouija Work (1918) Her Market Value (1925) A Modern Salome (1920) The Purple Dress (1918) Tomorrow's Love (1925) The Ghost of a Chance (1919) His Wife's Hero (1917) Worldly Goods (1924) Sacred Silence (1919) His Wife Got All the Credit (1917) The Story Without a Name (1924) The Gamblers (1919) He Had to Camouflage (1917) Detained (1924) In Honor's Web (1919) Paging Page Two (1917) The Guilty One (1924) The Buried Treasure (1919) A Family Flivver (1917) Bluff (1924) The Guardian of the Accolade (1919) The Renaissance at Charleroi (1917) When a Girl Loves (1924) A Stitch in Time (1919) The Bottom of the Well (1917) Don't Call It Love (1923) Shocks of Doom (1919) The Furnished Room (1917) The Ten Commandments (1923) The Girl Problem (1919) The Defeat of the City (1917) The Marriage Maker (1923) Transients in Arcadia (1918) Richard the Brazen (1917) Racing Hearts (1923) A Bird of Bagdad (1918) The Dazzling Miss Davison (1917) The Heart Raider (1923) Springtime à la Carte (1918) The Mirror (1917) A Daughter of Luxury (1922) Mammon and the Archer (1918) Hedda Gabler (1917) Clarence (1922) One Thousand Dollars (1918) The Debt (1917) Borderland (1922) The Girl and the Graft (1918) Mrs. - 
												
												Brief History of English and American Literature
Brief History of English and American Literature Henry A. Beers Brief History of English and American Literature Table of Contents Brief History of English and American Literature..........................................................................................1 Henry A. Beers.........................................................................................................................................3 INTRODUCTION...................................................................................................................................6 PREFACE................................................................................................................................................9 CHAPTER I. FROM THE CONQUEST TO CHAUCER....................................................................11 CHAPTER II. FROM CHAUCER TO SPENSER................................................................................22 CHAPTER III. THE AGE OF SHAKSPERE.......................................................................................34 CHAPTER IV. THE AGE OF MILTON..............................................................................................50 CHAPTER V. FROM THE RESTORATION TO THE DEATH OF POPE........................................63 CHAPTER VI. FROM THE DEATH OF POPE TO THE FRENCH REVOLUTION........................73 CHAPTER VII. FROM THE FRENCH REVOLUTION TO THE DEATH OF SCOTT....................83 CHAPTER VIII. FROM THE DEATH OF SCOTT TO THE PRESENT TIME.................................98 CHAPTER - 
												
												The Irish in Baseball ALSO by DAVID L
The Irish in Baseball ALSO BY DAVID L. FLEITZ AND FROM MCFARLAND Shoeless: The Life and Times of Joe Jackson (Large Print) (2008) [2001] More Ghosts in the Gallery: Another Sixteen Little-Known Greats at Cooperstown (2007) Cap Anson: The Grand Old Man of Baseball (2005) Ghosts in the Gallery at Cooperstown: Sixteen Little-Known Members of the Hall of Fame (2004) Louis Sockalexis: The First Cleveland Indian (2002) Shoeless: The Life and Times of Joe Jackson (2001) The Irish in Baseball An Early History DAVID L. FLEITZ McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers Jefferson, North Carolina, and London LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGUING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA Fleitz, David L., 1955– The Irish in baseball : an early history / David L. Fleitz. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-7864-3419-0 softcover : 50# alkaline paper 1. Baseball—United States—History—19th century. 2. Irish American baseball players—History—19th century. 3. Irish Americans—History—19th century. 4. Ireland—Emigration and immigration—History—19th century. 5. United States—Emigration and immigration—History—19th century. I. Title. GV863.A1F63 2009 796.357'640973—dc22 2009001305 British Library cataloguing data are available ©2009 David L. Fleitz. All rights reserved No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying or recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. On the cover: (left to right) Willie Keeler, Hughey Jennings, groundskeeper Joe Murphy, Joe Kelley and John McGraw of the Baltimore Orioles (Sports Legends Museum, Baltimore, Maryland) Manufactured in the United States of America McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers Box 611, Je›erson, North Carolina 28640 www.mcfarlandpub.com Acknowledgments I would like to thank a few people and organizations that helped make this book possible. - 
												
												Een State University U3bary 31^^71 Ii 428619
no./Zfi AN ANALYSIS OF TIME IN THE POETRY OF THOMAS HARDY John F. .Noonan A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate School of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY August 1969 Approved by Doctoral Committ \dvi s Department of English EEN STATE UNIVERSITY U3BARY 31^^71 II 428619 ABSTRACT The presence of gloom in the poetry of Thomas Hardy has been noted by critics since the appearance of his earliest volumes. His occasional buoyancy has also been verified in critical studies. This dissertation has explored this range of responses to life in Hardy’s poetry using his treatment of time as the central reference. In those poems that take a dim view of reality, time is often seen as the villain. It is the invisible force which separates men from the joys of childhood and the boundless aspirations of youth, and it is nearly always part of the reason why the present is painful. A regular cycle can be observed: men move in time from faith and felicity to skepticism and sadness. The future, too, is frequently colored gray by Hardy, as he sees there one more threat to the human quest for happiness and contentment. But Hardy’s attitude toward the future is not consistently gloomy. Throughout Collected Poems one can find numerous instances where he reveals a glimmer of hope that life will eventually take a turn for the better. These poems show clearly the redemptive role played occasionally by time In Hardy’s poetry, and argue the invalidity of applying the label "pessimistic” to all of his work. - 
												
												Christina Recounting Computers Mid-Term Elections' Tuesday
.+. r _~ ~-.-"... " Newspaper Since 1910 +:+ j 97th Year, 41st Newark, Del. UpFRO"'-~- Christina recounting Make Tuesday important computers By MARTY VALANIA School board requested NEWARK POST STAFF WRITER another look at options udging by the abundance to save money j of signs, advertisements, commercials and stories BY MARY E. PETZAK that have inundated us over the late summer and fall, you NEWARK POST STAFF WRITER would think that Thesday is a he Christina District school board pretty important day. T has requested that District admin Tuesday, of course, is istrators postpone the Computer Election Day. It's a mid-term Removal Project, part of this year's election nationally and there budget, and any related action until a is a good deal of important more public, collaborative method of local and statewide races as addressing computer age and usage in well. schools can be developed. Starting this U nfortunatel y, week, staff from the District's technolo based on past gy services department is meeting with results, there individual schools to gather additional more than likely information. won't be a run on At a meeting held on July 11, the the polls. school board approved Christina's pre Mid-term elec liminary 2007 budget. According to tions historically Kathy Dick-Frederick, the District's draw fewer vot finance manager, District adminis- ers than do presi- Valania dential elections. See ,22 And it seems only the race for Attorney General (Beau Biden and Ferris Wharton) has gen erated any buzz in the state. Mid-term There appears to be a handful of interesting local races like the ones between Stephanie Ulbrich and John Kowalko, elections' Terry Spence and Mike Barbieri and Vince Lofink and Earl Jaques, but turnout Tuesday is generally not spurred by local races. - 
												
												Bert Blyleven
Marty Andrade's Ballplayers! A Medley of Interesting Characters PDF generated using the open source mwlib toolkit. See http://code.pediapress.com/ for more information. PDF generated at: Tue, 08 Mar 2011 23:11:23 UTC Contents Articles Bert Blyleven 1 Bill Phillips (first baseman) 6 Bob Uecker 10 Dernell Stenson 14 Dick Ellsworth 16 Dick Stuart 18 Ed Delahanty 20 Firpo Marberry 23 Germany Schaefer 26 Glenn Williams 29 Hiram Bithorn 31 Iván Calderón (baseball) 33 Jack Quinn (baseball) 35 Jeff Bronkey 38 Jeremy Brown 39 Jim McCormick (pitcher) 41 Joe Garagiola, Sr. 44 Joe Quinn (second baseman) 48 Jumbo Brown 50 Lady Baldwin 52 Lip Pike 54 Lou Limmer 58 Luke Easter (baseball) 60 Mark Fidrych 63 Pat Neshek 69 Randy Kutcher 72 Rick Sofield 73 Scott Loucks 74 Shanty Hogan 75 Steve Staggs 77 Ted Lewis (baseball) 78 Tom Sullivan (catcher) 79 Tony Conigliaro 80 Tony Solaita 83 Walter Young (baseball) 85 References Article Sources and Contributors 87 Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors 89 Article Licenses License 90 Bert Blyleven 1 Bert Blyleven Bert Blyleven Blyleven in 2008 Pitcher Born: April 6, 1951 Zeist, Netherlands Batted: Right Threw: Right MLB debut June 5, 1970 for the Minnesota Twins Last MLB appearance October 4, 1992 for the California Angels Career statistics Win–Loss record 287–250 Earned run average 3.31 Strikeouts 3,701 Teams • Minnesota Twins (1970–1976) • Texas Rangers (1976–1977) • Pittsburgh Pirates (1978–1980) • Cleveland Indians (1981–1985) • Minnesota Twins (1985–1988) • California Angels (1989–1992) Career highlights and awards • 2× All-Star selection (1973, 1985) • 2× World Series champion (1979, 1987) • 1989 AL Comeback Player of the Year • Pitched no-hitter on September 22, 1977 • Minnesota Twins #28 retired Incoming Member of the National Baseball Hall of Fame Induction 2011 Vote 79.7% (14th Ballot) Bert Blyleven 2 Bert Blyleven (born Rik Aalbert Blijleven, April 6, 1951 in Zeist, Netherlands) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher who played from 1970 to 1992, and was best known for his outstanding curveball. - 
												
												"Oracles": 2014
Oracles Previous postings from the Wm. Thomas Sherman Info Page 2014. By Wm. Thomas Sherman 1604 NW 70th St. Seattle, WA 98117 206-784-1132 [email protected] http://www.gunjones.com ~~~~~~*~~~~~~ TENETS *If we ever experienced a problem anywhere, it came about, in some degree, due to certain wrong assumptions, either co-present with, or just prior to the given problem’s actually taking place. * Unless you believe in God, the One, and or the infinite, every assumption is contingent. * PROCESS (or if you prefer spirit, or activity) PRECEDES IMAGE. Image may, to some extent, (and sometimes almost perfectly) represent process. But process is always superior to and always more real than image. If process precedes image this might suggest also that mind precedes matter and energy. * Everything we believe, or say we know, is based on a factual or value judgment. Both kinds of judgment always entail the other to some extent, and nothing can be known or exists for us without them. * No fact or purported fact is true or false without someone to assert and believe it to be such. If an assertion or claim is deemed true or false then, and we are thorough, we should ask who is it that says so (or has said so), and what criteria are (were) they using? There is no such thing as “faceless” truth or reality -- at least none we are capable of knowing. * You can’t escape reason. If you aren’t rational yourself, someone else will be rational for you; nor do their intentions toward you need to be friendly or benevolent. - 
												
												Lions Charter Night. Big Republican Rally Footbaltplayer Hurt Back to His Homeland Red Bank's Tax Sale Gift of Health Center. Tw
BANK REGISTER liiuad W.«ldy, taunt u BHond-Clwf Mattar tt tin Poit- VOLUME LII, NO. 17. oOtu it Bod Bulk, N. J, ond.i tb. Aat et M§rab «. 1819. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1929. $1.50 PER YEAR PAGE'S 1 TO 16. LIONS CHARTER NIGHT. BIG REPUBLICAN RALLY \}BAND JURY DINNER. RED BANK'S TAX SALE GIFT OF HEALTH CENTER. A PRIZE WINNER. AN ANNIVERSARY DINNER. Members of April Term Will Gather Red Bank Register Hanks Second in NEW LIGHTS MDST WAFT. at tho Molly Pitcher Hotel. Classified Advertising. : BANQUET TONIGHT AT MOIXY I HOBTMANlft<IE'S FROM TWENTT-NINE PROPERTIES A MEMORIAL BUH-DING FOR YOUNG MEN'S ASSOCIATION IS MONMOUTH STREET CAHT QE1J riTCHER HOTEL. WASHINGTON TO LINCBOF1'. The April grand Jury term will hold The Red Bank Register was award- a dinner an Saturday night, Novem- SOLD LAST WEDNESDAY. MIDDLETOWN TOWNSHIP. ed second prize in the classified ad- 24 YEABS OLD, THEM THIS YEAH, ber 2d, at the Molly Pitcher hotel on vertising division in the contests held Charter Will be Presented to the He Was the Main Speaker at Mrs. Over a Hundred Properties Had It Will bo Given by Mrs. Robert Rev. Daniel A. Pol.'ng I*rlnclprtl It Stands a Chance of Getting Them Rumson Lions Club—Speeches by Riverside avenue. Gctrgo A. Steele, at tho annual institute of the New Thompson'* Farm Friday—Mora foreman of tho jury, has appointed Been Advertised for Bale for Tax- Hartshorne in Remembrance, of Jersey.Press association held recent- Speaker at Dinner Friday Night lit Next Year—Assessment Comml*- Prominent Men—Club Organized Than Three Hundred Wero I'rcs- es, but Most of tho Owners o Her Husband—It Will Serve as Molly Pilchor Hotel—Tivelvo Coun- slcini'rs Appointed—Other Town in April—Active in Civic Affairs. - 
												
												(Albuquerque, NM), 11-04-1915
University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Albuquerque Evening Herald, 1914-1922 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 11-4-1915 The veE ning Herald (Albuquerque, N.M.), 11-04-1915 The veE ning Herald, Inc. Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/abq_eh_news Recommended Citation The vE ening Herald, Inc.. "The vE ening Herald (Albuquerque, N.M.), 11-04-1915." (1915). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ abq_eh_news/553 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Albuquerque Evening Herald, 1914-1922 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Buy Your Ticket to the Commercial Club Get-togeth- er Dinner. No Live One Can Afford to Misc It dcubtlesj would just suffrage amendment as soon not be the ONE will be enough for capital of Mexico. most congressmen. TitiitiM-.-- t ni.i;. t ii. ao. Nil no. ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1915. THK KVFAIXO IIFIIAM VOL. S. 0. I to. President Will SUSAN B. ANN N ZAIMIS GOVERNMENT DRIVEN FROIVI OFFICE faces opcatz lontght 'sitsztmm AMENDMENT WILL inNewYork Set UEW IN STRUGGLE OVER GREEK FOREIGN POLICY Aside UPiBlS BE ONLY ONE TO Subjtct Address of Before South Dakota Supreme .Court Manhattan Club Will Be Today Holds Legislature SUPPOBTEO 8T Administration's National GO BEFORE THE Has Power to Repeal Any BULGARIANS HON Vcnizelos Forces VON BUELOW PUIS Defense Program. Initiated Legislation. PUIITEIS Again Control B Knlnc llrlS tMJ Wlm NEXT CONGiiESS ft? Evntn( Haralil Lam4 Wn IF I Wil-uft- Svw Nov. - 
											
Sport Eye, an Encyclopedia of Sports
GV 741 .T4 Copy 1 ORT CYC JIN JShTCrCJLOPEDM OF SPORTS Containing All the World's Records in all the World's Sports ^Jtfceso ceJYTS FOREWORD IN compiling Sport-Cyc the author has endeavored to place before the sport-loving public a book that will be both versatile and interesting at the same time. Records, perhaps, that are not known to the generation of today have been given the greatest consideration, and this little volume, the reader must admit, holds every con- ceivable record one would care to know in the well- known sports. It has eliminated the con- sultation of dozens of books, some rather incomplete inso- far as fulfilling the purposes for which they are meant. Every record herein con- tained is authentic and accu- rate, having been obtained from sources which are affiU- ated very closely with that very sport. If the reader obtains as much enjoyment and pleasure from the perusal of Sport-Cyc as the author had in compil- ing same, the purpose of this little volume will not have gone amiss. The Author — ——. 7 INDEX BASEBALL Page World's Pitching Records Most games pitched during a season 17 Most games won during a season , . 17 Most games lost during a season 17 Highest percentage of games won 17 Most times at bat by opponents 17 Most innings pitched 17 Most hits by opponents 17 Hit most batsmen , 1 Most bases on balls in one season 18 Most bases on balls in one game 18 Strike-out records—game 18 Strike-out records—season 18 Most consecutive shut-out innings 19 Most consecutive games won season.... - 
											
Brief History of English and American Literature
Brief History of English and American Literature By Henry A. Beers Brief History of English and American Literature CHAPTER I FROM THE CONQUEST TO CHAUCER 1066-1400 The Norman conquest of England, in the 11th century, made a break in the natural growth of the English language and literature. The old English or Anglo-Saxon had been a purely Germanic speech, with a complicated grammar and a full set of inflections. For three hundred years following the battle of Hastings this native tongue was driven from the king's court and the courts of law, from parliament, school, and university. During all this time there were two languages spoken in England. Norman French was the birth-tongue of the upper classes and English of the lower. When the latter finally got the better in the struggle, and became, about the middle of the 14th century, the national speech of all England, it was no longer the English of King Alfred. It was a new language, a grammarless tongue, almost wholly 2 stripped of its inflections. It had lost a half of its old words, and had filled their places with French equivalents. The Norman lawyers had introduced legal terms; the ladies and courtiers, words of dress and courtesy. The knight had imported the vocabulary of war and of the chase. The master-builders of the Norman castles and cathedrals contributed technical expressions proper to the architect and the mason. The art of cooking was French. The naming of the living animals, ox, swine, sheep, deer, was left to the Saxon churl who had the herding of them, while the dressed meats, beef, pork, mutton, venison, received their baptism from the table-talk of his Norman master.