Word: newarks
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...shown too much bitterness and given too much time to the campaign of 1928; his untutored informality and ponderous wit have precluded serious attention to affairs of great import; his reference to the Democratic standard bearers has been to casual, too brief to win them support. Finally, his Newark and Boston speeches have come too late in the game to produce anything in the way of response at the polls...
Smithized Finish, Last week Governor Roosevelt definitely got the promise of Alfred Emanuel Smith's campaign support when it was announced that Citizen Smith would speak for the national ticket in Newark (Oct. 24), Boston and Providence (Oct. 27), Buffalo (Oct. 29), Brooklyn (Nov. 4). As a climactic close for the campaign Democrats Roosevelt and Smith will appear together on the same platform at Manhattan's Madison Square Garden Saturday night before election...
...score was 7-6 in the ninth inning, with none out. Woody Jenson of the Newark Bears stood with one foot on third base rubbing a knee he had skinned sliding in. At bat was Third Baseman Marvin Owen, whose home run four days earlier had started the International League Bears on their victorious way for the Little World Series against the Minneapolis Millers, American Association pennant winners. Another home run now by Baseman Owen, in the Millers' home park, would put the Bears ahead, give them the series, four games to two. Owen watched one ball...
Little World Series, In Minneapolis, Col. Ruppert's Newark Bears, pennant winners in the International League, drew even in the Little World Series by winning the fourth game, 5 to 2, against the Minneapolis Millers, American Association pennant winners. The day before, four trunks containing Bear uniforms and equipment were pushed off the Bears' train by one W. J. Chipman, who was riding illegally in the baggage car and said he needed more room...
...made out by Paul Bern in favor of Mrs. Dorothy Bern. An insurance broker said that ten years ago "Bern told me of his wife who was then ... an inmate of an institution for the insane in New York State." Paul Bern's brother Henry, who flew from Newark to Hollywood to attend the inquest, declared that Miss Millette had been a sanitarium patient. His sister, Mrs. William Marcus, said Paul lived with Miss Millette. "brought her into the family as his wife," but never married her. Fat-faced Brother Henry revealed that the real name of the Bern...