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Word: networks (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...Butte the arrival of the strangers?financiers, lawyers, rail-roaders?will prepare for the opening of perhaps the greatest auction sale in history, the knocking down, under the hammer of a U. S. special master, of the $750,000,000 St. Paul system, the system which stretches from a network of roads anastomosing over Wisconsin, Iowa, North and South Dakota, Michigan, Minnesota, and Illinois, then in a thin line over Montana, Idaho and Washington to Puget Sound?11,000 miles of trackage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: To Butte | 5/10/1926 | See Source »

CYNTHIA CODENTRY?Ernest Pascal?Brentano ($2). The psychological network that entangles Cynthia Codentry and causes her retreat from metropolitan philanderings to the dumb worship of Dirt-Farmer Swedge of Long Island, all unravels to the old copybook line about him who hesitates. In his wisdom and mercy, Author Pascal makes manifest some reasons for Cynthia's hesitations ? unnatural home life with her divorced actor-father; the enervating effect of life among rich school girls; a sophisticated girl's natural fear of being prematurely pigeonholed by life. But these extenuations do not suffice to save Cynthia from standing indicted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FICTION: Tory Tension | 4/19/1926 | See Source »

...conning tower hatch was raised, a tall, thin, cadaverous Irishman with thick black hair and a pointed beard looked out. His complexion, deeply tanned during the long years he had spent serving the British Crown in the tropics, was now grown sallow and his forehead showed a network of tiny lines. Though Edward VII had knighted him, he was now about to commit the last act in a conspiracy of high treason against the realm of George...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Thomson Disgraced? | 12/28/1925 | See Source »

...France, Camille Flammarion, 83, famed French astronomer, felt a chill in his side, slipped to the floor. Many hours later, footsteps rang on the stone stairway. The servant who entered found Flammarion where he had fallen. One arm was twisted under his body. His face, scribbled with an extraordinary network of fine lines, was curiously dis- ordered under the bush of his white hair. He was dead. When Camille Flammarion was 9, he saw an eclipse. It was not the spectacle of the little moon lying like a black penny in the huge dead eye of the sun that astounded...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Flammarion | 6/15/1925 | See Source »

...strength of the project lies in the fact that no stock is to be sold publicly: "the promoters regard the project as partly a business venture, partly a national development which will help place the U. S. in the very forefront of aviation and pave the way to a network of routes covering the entire country." Plans have been very carefully made. The strong interest and friendship of the American Express Co. ensures express matter in large quantities-at $2 a lb., according to Chairman Keys. The U. S. Air Mail's night line between Manhattan and Chicago spells...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AERONAUTICS: Giant Airline | 6/1/1925 | See Source »

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