Word: supplemental
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Besides the regular bi-monthly literary supplement. "The Bookshelf" the CRIMSON runs from time to time, under the above heading "Bookends' and always on the editorial page, reviews of current literary efforts as they appear...
When Star readers picked up the Sunday comic supplement last fortnight they were more amused than usual. A startling thing had happened. There on the front page, in Cartoonist H. J. Tuthill's "The Bungle Family," was-not one little snake -but a long, fat, wriggling rattlesnake in bright green, yellow & red, in 15 different poses. When Mr. Bungle saw it he shouted in half-inch letters: "A SNAKE!" He then fought and wrestled gruesomely with it through four cartoon panels before it was revealed to be a dummy snake, the practical joke of another character in the strip...
...marine engines, boilers, propeller shafts and replacing them with great General Electric turbogenerators and Westinghouse condensers. When their work of renovating the Jacona was done, they would turn over to Central Maine Power Co. not a new-fangled freighter but a floating power plant with which the company could supplement its electrical production in cases of emergency along the New Hampshire and Maine coast. Inspiration for this translation was, of course, the emergency use of the Navy's aircraft carrier Lexington as a power plant at Tacoma, Wash., last winter (TIME, Dec. 2). Central Maine Power officials decided...
Arthur Brisbane, No. 1 Hearstman, last week met Henry Ford in Ginsburg & Levy's antique shop on Madison Ave., Manhattan. Mr. Brisbane told Mr. Ford he ought to advertise his cars in the American Weekly (Hearst Sunday Supplement). Said Mr. Ford, "I guess you're right" and pulling a knife from his right trouser pocket, slipped it into his fob pocket. "That's how I make myself remember things," he said...
...Sargent, Homer, Burchfield, Hawthorne, Davies, Demuth. etc., etc.); a collection exhibiting the history of costume in the U. S.; the 461 famed water-colors of the Life of Christ by the late James Joseph Jacques Tissot. Friendly, white-haired William Henry Fox, director since 1913, has wisely chosen to supplement rather than ape the Metropolitan Museum. He admits no exhibitions, for instance, which have previously been shown in Manhattan. He provides that Brooklyn Museum shall pay close attention to modernity, not a Metropolitan specialty...