Word: goldenly
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Ends Charles Bancroft, A. S. Bigelow, E. C. Roots, W. B. Bradbury, W. R. Brine, G. N. Burns, S. C. Burns, A. G. Churchill, H. G. Crosby, E. W. Danielson, R. H. Dorr, E. L. Fitzhugh, J. S. French, T. S. Gay, W. Geissler, W. A. Golden, C. C. Gray, C. B. H. Hollister, D. R. Kroell, James Lawrence, Robert Leeson, H. A. Lewis, I. H. Light, R. F. Mahady, J. H. Marshall, S. A. Martin, P. W. Meadows, W. W. Neff, H. H. Newell, R. H. O'Connell, John Prior, G. C. Richard, T. W. Robinson, W. E. Roys...
...that is interesting, for they are usually born teachers of an efficient, 20th Century kind. This month, the opening of a new preparatory school, The Milford School of New York, was an illustration of the "shark" type's capabilities. Thereby also hangs a story about stepladders to the golden apples of learning...
...student, if he be of the true breeds, burns with enthusiasm and determination to accomplish great things. He is entering upon the last stage of his preparation to begin life on his own account. His plans are vague, but full of hope. The present is his immediate jewel. Four golden years confront him--years embellished in his imagination with the gilt and tinsel trappings gleaned from books on college life. And out of the brightness of the vision emerges a youth in cap and gown, a hale of glory about his head, a scroll of parchment in his hand...
...last week, when Sir Edmund was being congratulated and interviewed upon his golden wedding anniversary. An Oxonian newspaper reporter had shown ignorance of those same Pre-Raphaelites and of how he, Edmund Gosse, son of a penurious naturalist, had been "privately educated in Devonshire", had slaved over solemn religious tomes in his invalid mother's library, tutoring himself afterwards by. night when he was a young curator at the British Museum, until his scholarship and verses won him the friendship of Poets Swinburne and Rossetti, the comradeship of Robert Louis Stevenson, the hand of Painter Alma-Tadema...
This magazine embodies an attempt to share the fat profits of the Golden Book, (TIME, Dec. 29) a publication which furnishes its readers with a monthly selection of stories, essays, poems, whatnot, reprinted from the works of classic and modern authors. About 75% of the material of the Golden Book is classic?25% culled second hand from the works of contemporary authors. The Famous Story Magazine bids for popularity by the simple process of inverting this formula...