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"lathers" Synonyms
froths foams suds spume bubbles heads surf soaps soapsuds cream effervescences fizzes mousses sprays spindrifts scums sparkles waves yeasts soapiness dithers stews twitters tizzies pothers sweats frets fusses flaps flutters huffs swivets panics states swelters agitations frenzies twits fevers anxieties hubbubs commotions tumults hullabaloos bustles turmoils hooplas clamors(US) storms clamours(UK) confusions turbulences ructions uproars pandemonia furores disturbances ruckuses rumpuses rows perspirations moistures diaphoreses hidroses sudor sudations exudates wetnesses sweatings dampnesses transpirations exudations secretions fluids egesta excreta excretions transudations furors feverishness stirs furies excitements rages rampages flurries tantrums irritabilities petulances miffs peevishnesses passions resentments impatiences annoyances tempers angers irascibilities irritations ires cholers cleansers detergents cleaners disinfectants purifiers scourers solvents abrasives abstergents antiseptics cathartics deodorants fumigants polishes purgatives washes cleaning products stain removers bewilderments puzzlements perplexities bafflements mystifications wonders befuddlements disorientations wonderments discombobulations discomfitures distractions doubts muddles uncertainties bamboozlements discomposures disconcertion cleanses shampoos deterges scrubs disinfects sanitizes(US) sterilizes(US) sanitises(UK) sterilises(UK) washes down launders cleans sluices douses swills laves flushes rinses aerates burbles effervesces froths up lathers up soaps up ferments spumes creams churns seethes roils bubbles over produces a head boils beats thrashes whips belts pounds batters lashes flogs thumps wallops bashes hammers pummels(US) tans whales pelts buffets drubs birches clubs trounces routs clobbers pastes annihilates defeats crushes overwhelms flattens licks skunks shellacs conquers lays spreads layers smears coats covers plasters slathers smothers applies daubs rubs lays on puts smooths glosses butters paints perspires sudates breaks out in a sweat drips with sweat exudes sweat secretes sweat breaks a sweat pours with sweat More

113 Sentences With "lathers"

How to use lathers in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "lathers" and check conjugation/comparative form for "lathers". Mastering all the usages of "lathers" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The product comes out as gel, but lathers up nicely.
The natural formula lathers up nicely and leaves young, delicate skin super clean.
It lathers in a luxuriously rich cream and smells like fresh, uplifting mint.
The Reaper Ranch Fries take Taco Bell fries and lathers them in Reaper Pepper sauce.
The Power Calm Hydrating Gel Cleanser ($28) is a gel cleanser that lathers into a foam.
That's it — the policemen, the firemen, the construction workers, the lathers, the sheetrock workers, the electricians, the plumbers.
It comes out of the tube smoothly and gently lathers without abrasive microbeads, artificial fragrances, or chemical tingling.
Mr. Murray lathers him in cymbals and pattering snare drum, giving the music an elevated, almost celestial air.
Like all shampoo bars, it'll require newcomers to adapt slightly to a new process, but this bar lathers well.
It lathers up nicely, and because it's a degreaser, it handles just about anything you'd spill on your deck.
The powder lathers really well, so you have kind of, like, a very silky, smooth wash on your hair.
Also, any soap will work as long as it lathers and successfully washes off the dirt and grime, says Tetro.
Even though it's formulated without any sulfates, one dollop lathers beautifully, cleansing the hair without stripping it of natural oils.
Admonishing those who skip the post-bathroom break sanitary step, Haddish eventually steps in and lathers up her own hands.
I love the way it lathers up in my hands, and then, it just does a good job of cleaning my hair.
Every morning and night, she lathers herself with lightening soap and smooths on lightening lotion, readily available at drugstores throughout the Philippines.
Per her instructions, I always go from the lightest to the heaviest, starting with the cleanser, which lathers into a silky foam.
It lathers, lubricates, and shaves exceptionally well while being gentle on the skin, making it the gold standard for wet shavers new and old.
Mitchell's Wool Fat lathers, lubricates, and shaves exceptionally well while being gentle on the skin, making it the gold standard for wet shavers new and old.
Mitchell's Wool Fat is oft considered the gold standard for shaving soap with its lanolin-rich formula that lathers and lubricates while staying gentle on skin.
"I've done everything I could to work with them," said Terry Moore, the business manager and financial secretary-treasurer for Local 46 of the lathers union.
That means she closes herself inside her house until she has to go to work, and then she puts on long sleeves and lathers on the repellant.
The developer also said it would no longer work with the laborers, lathers and electricians unions because they had refused to live up to the labor agreements.
The oil-based (but not greasy!) formula takes off everything from mascara to foundation, and then lathers up to wash everything away as soon as you add water.
Jim's lathers Whiz on both the top and bottom of the roll and then adds a final drizzle across thinly chopped steak and a mix-in of onions.
While most liquid lathers are free of drying agents (we're talking about you, sulfates) and full of nourishing ingredients, some of them can leave your hair feeling (and looking) parched.
After much research, Puracy Natural Shampoo came out on top as the best shampoo for most kids because it has great ingredients, lathers well, and works on many hair types.
Then, to build extra body, Robin lathers on his Cleansing Volumizing Paste ($53), a mask-like shampoo infused with mineral-rich rhassoul clay, an ingredient that he says adds density to strands.
This results in a brush that lathers extremely well with creams and softer solid soaps, but it's perfectly suitable for harder soap pucks as well without requiring too much extra wrist work.
Westworld lathers on puzzles at such a decadent rate, it's hard to imagine the season won't answer, or at least retcon, half of its biggest questions, lest it collapse under its own weight.
China's Xi and his autocratic Russian ally, Vladimir Putin, must be lapping up this election cycle as Trump lathers faux sympathy on Biden, labeling him "Poor" Joe Biden over allegations of inappropriate conduct with women.
Among the group's other members are the Metallic Lathers and Reinforcing Iron Workers Local 46, the Building and Construction Trades Council of Westchester and Putnam Counties, the local chapter of the N.A.A.C.P. and a local Presbyterian church.
Early in his TV career, Smith got the nickname Screamin' A. (His middle name is Anthony.) When the other voices are not enough, Smith pulls a hoarse yell from somewhere near his sternum and lathers out his judgment.
Pros: Ideal for all hair types, made for build-up from hard water, lathers wellCons: Can dry out hair if used too frequently, not available in a smaller size, some reviewers say their hair feels a bit dry after using
Drybar On The Rocks Clarifying Charcoal Shampoo has Pros: Activated charcoal deep-cleans without stripping natural oils, lathers well, ideal for many hair typesCons: Pricey, some shoppers didn't like the smell, pump is not included, not ideal for use more than once a week 
This month, in the most visible skirmish yet, thousands of union lathers, electricians, laborers, ironworkers and carpenters from work sites across Manhattan poured into the intersection of 250th Street and Seventh Avenue near Times Square for a rally against the city's largest developer, Related Companies.
And yet what is fascinating about the narrator — who forces hats on his son out of fear that sunlight will darken his birthmarks and who lathers whitening creams on his skin that burn even as they "fix" it — is how carefully and precisely he defends his behavior.
Studies going as far back as 1965 show that even when scientists intentionally contaminate their hands with disease-causing E. coli and Staph, and bacteria are transferred to the surface of a bar of soap, those microorganisms aren't detected on the skin of a second person who lathers up with the same slimy bar.
Unlike other traditional sulfate-free shampoos, the cream scrub satisfyingly lathers, melding into a frothy, luscious foam that smells like the most complex, sophisticated citrus mixture, made up of orange, rosemary, and peppermint — heavy on the orange and rosemary, with a barely-detectable touch of minty freshness — which is both soothing and invigorating at the same time.
Lathers was born 12 January 1889 near Detroit, Michigan, in Nankin Township. His parents were William Lathers and Sarah Elizabeth (Swift) Lathers. Lathers grew up and spent his childhood in and around the Dearborn area.
Lather's high school diploma Lathers' college degree Swift Lathers' 60-year- old typewriter Swift Lathers (January 12, 1889 – 1970) was a businessman, newspaper publisher, teacher, and poet of Mears, Michigan.
In December 1912, Lathers was traded by the Detroit Tigers to the Indianapolis baseball team run by Mike Kelley. In return for Lathers, the Tigers were to have received Charley O'Leary—the same player whose starting job Lathers had sought in 1911. Lathers was expected to play in the outfield for Indianapolis. However, in February 1913, the trade was cancelled after Lathers said he would not play baseball in 1913.
Oceana Historical Park and Museum Celia Lathers' kitchen stove Lathers bathroom at their home The Swift Lathers Museum was the home and property of Swift and Celia Lathers that is now the main part of the Oceana Historical Park in Mears, Michigan. In 1971 the home was given to the Oceana County Historical & Genealogical Society on the proviso that it be turned into a museum in memory of newspaper publisher Swift Lathers.
It was reported that Lathers had quit baseball permanently to become an automobile salesman. Lathers reported that he was attached to the Kalamazoo, Michigan, store of the Ford Motor Company as a salesman. Lathers said of the new job that he "likes it so well he proposes to stick to it." Lathers served in U.S. Army as an ordnance officer during World War I. After the war, Lathers returned to work at Ford Motor Company as a branch manager.
Detroit Tigers coach Hughie Jennings (pictured) signed Lathers upon his expulsion from the University of Michigan. As soon as Lathers was expelled from Michigan, Detroit Tigers manager Hughie Jennings announced that Detroit had "first claim" on his services. Jenning said that he intended to take Lathers south for spring training and described Lathers as "an unusually promising player" whose "only fault" is base running, a skill at which Jennings was an expert teacher. After joining the Tigers for spring training, Lathers made the team and had his major league debut on May 1, 1910.
Early in the 1910 season, Lathers was touted as a future star. The Washington Post in late May 1910 published Lathers’ photograph with a caption describing him as "'Chick' Lathers, last year's star of the University of Michigan nine." However, with Jim Delahanty, Donie Bush, and George Moriarty holding down the starting jobs at second base, shortstop and third base, Lathers did not find his way into Detroit's starting lineup. As a result, Lathers spent most of the 1910 season, as one newspaper put it, "on the Tiger bench learning the rudiments by observing." Lathers played in 41 games for the 1910 Tigers, playing games at second base, shortstop and third base.
In 1945, Lathers was living in Petoskey, Michigan, and was one of the principal forces pushing a plan to raise $50,000 to partially finance the reconstruction of the inland water route from Cheboygan, Michigan, to Conway, Michigan. Lathers and a group of northern Michigan businessmen formed a non- profit corporation to raise the funds from local residents and tourists. Lathers believed the route, which was known as Michigan's "forgotten water route," would promote tourism in northern Michigan. Lathers was also a longtime member of the Cheboygan County Road Commission.
In 1962, Lathers sold his dairy farm. In his later years, he spent his winters in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. Lathers died in 1971 at age 82 at Little Traverse Hospital in Petoskey, Michigan. He is buried at Greenwood Cemetery in Petoskey.
Located on 28351 Marquette Street, Lathers houses preschool and kindergarten. Its principal is Susan Ford.
West and Lathers added four points each (two field goals each), and Wilson had two points on one field goal. Michigan's lineup in the game was Farquhar (left forward), West (right forward), Lathers and Raiss (center), Wilson and Cox (right forward), and Hayes (right guard).
The Mears Newz was published by Swift Lathers, its founder and editor. Lathers was well-skilled in English and grammar, benefiting from training by his mother, an English teacher. Lathers worked as a stringer for a Detroit newspaper, where he grew to dislike the constant editing of his writing by others. He was then motivated to start his own newspaper where no one else could edit his writing. Moving from the Detroit area to Mears in 1909, Lathers started The Mears News (he initially spelled the word News in the name with an s) and believed it was his life's calling to report on items related to Mears, his adopted hometown.
Lathers would hand deliver the newspapers himself locally. The newspaper, printed and published from Lathers' home, was known as The Smallest Newspaper in the World. It was published on a paper that was smaller than the normal size bond. Its size was approximately that of a postcard at about five by seven inches and consisted of four pages. The weekly newspaper was published every Friday from 1914 to 1970. Lathers had paid subscribers in 38 states.
Lathers had homesteaded a tract of land of some on the shores of Lake Michigan in Western Michigan near Hart. Here he developed a small village as a retreat for himself and guests. The group of buildings constructed by Lathers was called Dunes Forest Village because there were trees in the area. The boards and construction material for his village were transported by Lathers by hand, as these was no public access to the remote area.
Time ranked Lathers as one of six outstanding weekly newspaper editors. Lathers wrote his own editorials and social notes. He steadfastly defended human rights, even to the point of his own personal detriment. For example, he defended the rights of migrant workers and attacked proposed school tax increases.
Press accounts suggested that, if the injured legs of Delahanty and Bush had healed, there was "no chance" of Lathers taking their starting spots. However, one newspaper opined that Lathers "is a much better batter than O'Leary and if he could learn some of the fine points of the game while South, would have the call" at second base. As the spring progressed, Detroit manager Hughie Jennings tried moving Lathers to first base to find a spot for him in the starting lineup.
Lathers had a vision of a simple lifestyle and continued to work on building the village until 1957.
Lathers had a circulation at one time of over 2,700 when he voluntarily cut the list. Those whose name started before D and all those after S no longer received his newspaper. This way then he could keep his subscription circulation manageable. Lathers had forthright remarks and candid comments in each of his newspapers.
The Lathers communicated long distance through letters. The north-west corner of the house was "off limits" to everyone, as it was dedicated to publishing of Lathers' newspaperthe Mears News. Swift did all the writing and editing himself. On display in the house is his desk and printing press with its original type pieces.
The first problem occurred in July 1930, when the lathers union struck to win a $2 per day (16.7 percent) pay increase, halting work for a short period of time on the Archives, Interstate Commerce, Justice, Labor, and Post Office sites."Strike of Lathers May Be Adjusted At Meeting Today." Washington Post. July 10, 1930.
He constructed a "ballroom", which Lathers used as a conference room, for meetings with his wealthy Yankee connections. His associations were unpopular and the townspeople forced him out of Charleston. According to the current owner, who operates the house as a bed and breakfast: "Charlestonians eventually told Lathers he was unwelcome so he took his Yankee blood money with him and left." Lathers used his conference room to meet with such notables as New York Governor and Presidential Candidates John H. Seymour and William Cullen Bryant, seeking sectional reconciliation.
Lathers was born in Dearborn, Michigan. At age 16, Lathers played for the 1905 Cass club baseball team that won the city championship of Detroit, Michigan. The 1905 Cass club team also included two other future professional players -- Bert Lerchen, who played for the Boston Red Sox, and Harvey Bussey, who played eight seasons in the minor leagues.
Lathers handset the type himself for each of the newspapers he printed. He was a one-man newspaper publisher and likely the last of these in Michigan. Time magazine rated the newspaper as one of the six outstanding rural weeklies in the nation. Lathers, as the journalist of The Mears Newz, was entered into the Michigan Journalism Hall of Fame.
Celia, Lathers' wife, sold crocheted garments for the people of Oceana County. She cooked meals for her family on a wood- burning stove, where she also baked cakes and pies. She died in 1965 at the age of 59. Lathers most of his adult life wore green pants, a blue shirt with a white detachable collar and a red tie.
314 in 53 plate appearances. In 1912, Lathers tried for a regular position in the Tigers outfield, but failed to make the team. He was then shipped to the minor leagues by the Tigers to play with the Providence Grays in the International League. Lathers was joined in Providence by two other Detroit cast-offs, catcher Boss Schmidt and outfielder Delos Drake.
Lathers House This house was originally built in 1843 for Samuel S. Stevens. Devereux was hired after the Civil War by its next owner, Colonel Richard Lathers, a Southerner who fought for the Union Army. He wanted the house at 20 South Battery to be remodeled in the popular Second Empire style. Devereux also added a library, with a mansard roof.
Circa 1960 Lathers married Celia Vern Spooner on 25 November 1923 in Spring Lake, Michigan, when he was thirty-four years old. The couple raised six children from their home in Mears. Their names were Thelma Celine, William Rush, Forest Glen, Nathan Quick, Sylvan Dale and Fleet Birch, showing Lathers' love of nature. They all helped in the family newspaper business, producing and distributing The Mears Newz.
Typical front page Lathers' poem "The Harvest Moon" The Mears Newz (earlier known as The Mears News) was a twentieth-century newspaper published in Mears, Michigan.
He dragged the lumber and material for construction across the dunes. Lathers, considered a romanticist, envisioned his own island where he could go to for peace and quiet away from the hustle and bustle of the real world. He made his "island" in the sand dunes on the shores of Lake Michigan at the village of Mears near Hart. Lathers started construction of his small buildings in 1939.
He joined the Wood, Wire and Metal Lathers International Union (now part of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America). He became his local union's business manager in 1962 and an international union representative in 1964. Georgine's ascent in the union hierarchy was meteoric. After becoming a staff representative, he was appointed an assistant to the president of the Wood, Wire and Metal Lathers in 1965.
Eli and Diadama Beecher House (also known as the Beecher-Quinby-Allen-Lathers House) is a historic home located at 2 Military Road in Beecher Hollow, Saratoga County, New York.
He compiled a .230 batting average and .300 on-base percentage in 93 plate appearances during the 1910 season. In February 1911, Lathers returned to the Tigers for spring training.
His simple meager lifestyle sacrificed personal financial gain to keep his newspaper going. Lathers wrote all his own stories and reports. He printed the newspapers on a foot-operated printing press.
The press reported that Jennings planned to have both a right and left hand batting first baseman, with Del Gainer or Ness getting the start when a left-hander was pitching and Lathers getting the start against right-handers. In the end, Jennings moved Delahanty to first base in 1911, and Lathers saw even less playing time than he had in his rookie season. He played in only 29 games and compiled a batting average of .222 and an on-base percentage of .
After graduating from high school, Lathers enrolled at the University of Michigan where he played as a third baseman for the Michigan Wolverines baseball team. He was enrolled at Michigan in the engineering program from 1907 to 1910 and was described as "a major contributor" to the success of the 1909 Wolverines baseball team. The 1909 team finished with a record of 18–3–1 and outscored its opponents 140–59. Lathers was the leading hitter on the 1909 team with a batting average of .383.
The Lathers bought the house in 1935. The property the house was on originally had 8 lots, which also included a garage and barn. The house basement is a Michigan cellar. The round brick walls of the cellar stored potatoes and apples.
Lathers was a member and the secretary for several years of the Mears Civic Association. He was a Baptist and associated himself with the Democratic political party. He was also a member of the Oceana County Historical Society and the Eastern Michigan University Alumni Association.
After retiring from baseball in 1913, Lathers worked for the Ford Motor Company for several years, served in the U.S. Army during World War I, and operated a dairy farm in northern Michigan from 1925 to 1962. He was also active in local government in northern Michigan.
Luppino then took over the unions, who were demanding wage increases that Rommanilli did not want to give them. At the same time, the Mafiosi Paul Volpe was hired by A. Gus Simone of Local 562 of the International Lathers Union to help "persuade" other construction unions to join the Lathers union. Accordingly, to Toronto police reports, between 1968 and 1972 at construction sites in Toronto there occurred 234 cases of major "willful damage", 23 cases of arson, 15 cases of mob- related assault, 5 explosions, and numerous cases of the theft of construction materials. Bruno Zanini, a journalist investigating Mafia influence in the construction industry was wounded in 1972 in an assassination attempt.
The house was originally constructed in 1892-3\. The original two-story wood-framed four-room house has an addition of a front porch for sitting and separate sun- room. The house interior looks like as it did when the Lathers family resided there. It has the same 1935 to 1970 furniture style.
In his two-year major league career, Lathers played in a total of 70 games, all with the Detroit Tigers. He played games at all four infield positions (22 games at 3rd base, 16 games at 2nd base, and 8 games at shortstop). He had a career batting average of .228 with a .
Lathers was an entrepreneur, school teacher, handyman and landlord. He was the city editor of The Dearborn Independent from 1904 to 1907. He wrote for this newspaper in lieu of his high school English class. He was a teacher at a one-room school as one of his first jobs in Oceana County, Michigan.
Because of his plainspoken approach the newspaper had enthusiastic readers interested in this type of journalism. Lathers often would have one large paragraph of advertisements in the newspaper written end-to-end. Occasionally there was poetry written in the newspaper. The subscription cost for the newspaper was 50 cents per year and 1 dollar for a six-month subscription.
Lathers' wife canned hundreds of jars of fruit and vegetables each summer that were stored in the cellar to feed their family during the winter months. There is a spiral staircase from the first floor to the basement. The sand floor basement has coal bin for the "octopus" furnace. A telephone was never installed in the home.
Many grisettes worked as artist's models, often providing sexual favours to the artists in addition to posing for them. During the time of King Louis-Philippe they came to dominate the bohemian modelling scene.Marie Lathers, 'The social construction and deconstruction of the female model in 19th-century France', Mosaic, June, 1996. Retrieved via subscription 9 March 2008.
Lathers founded The Mears News in 1914 at the age of twenty-five. He was chief and only editor of The Mears Newz (as it was more commonly identified). It was known as "The Smallest Newspaper in the World." He reported news about West Michigan and Northern Michigan, mostly pertaining to the town of Mears, Golden Township and Oceana County.
Charles Ten Eyck "Chick" Lathers (October 22, 1888 – July 26, 1971) was an American baseball player. With a .383 batting average, he was the third baseman and the leading hitter on the 1909 Michigan Wolverines baseball team that finished with a record of 18–3–1. He later played two years of Major League Baseball as an infielder for the Detroit Tigers.
Lathers' home garage with outhouse The garage displays vintage tools like antique saws, hammers, drill bits, axes and shovels. The old logging tools on display were used in the construction of houses and barns. The garage also has nineteenth century farm machines like corn shellers, planters, bean sorters, and scales. It also displays an unusual ladder specially designed by a local man for picking fruit.
By late July, newspapers reported that the three former Tigers playing in Providence were "fairly burning up the International League with their hitting." At the time, Schmidt was hitting .364 and Drake .330. Lathers spent much of the 1912 season on the "sick list," causing his batting average to slump, but by late July, his batting average had started to climb and stood at .304.
Lathers graduated from Dearborn High School in 1905 at age sixteen. He graduated and received a Life Certificate from Michigan State Normal College, now known as Eastern Michigan University at Ypsilanti, where he attended from 1906 to 1908 to become a teacher. He attended University of Michigan Law School in 1909, earning a Bachelor of Law degree, but never took the bar exam to become a licensed attorney.
Lathers owned several summer cabins at the resort village of Silver Lake near Hart, Michigan. He called the group of cabins Dunes Forest Village and had one of the last homesteads in lower Michigan with this property. He carried the lumber for construction on foot across the dunes that he started building in 1939. He wrote a book in 1942 on his family's life at the hamlet, Village in the Dunes.
Georgine was elected president of the Wood, Wire and Metal Lathers in 1970. He served only one year: In 1971, he resigned union office after being elected secretary-treasurer of the Building and Construction Trades Department (BCTD) of the AFL-CIO In 1974, Georgine was elected president of the Department. In 1985 he was elected to the AFL-CIO Executive Council. Georgine proved a highly effective and very popular BCTD president.
The 19th and 20th century congregants, for whom the windows were dedicated, include such names as Iselin, Weyman, Davenport, Thorne and Lathers. The old bell originally in the French Huguenot Church, Eglise du St. Esperit, on Pine Street in New York City, is preserved as a relic in the tower room. In 1823, it was presented to Trinity Church, New Rochelle, and hung up in the tower of the wooden church erected in 1823 - 1824.
The strike ended on July 19 after both labor unions agreed to allow the Building and Construction Trades Department (BCTD) of the AFL to arbitrate the dispute. A third strike hit the site on August 2. This jurisdictional strike involved 180 plasterers and cement finishers, who walked off the job in a dispute over who would install more than of acoustic ceiling tile. The strike didn't idle many workers, just 60 lathers and plasterers' assistants.
He stressed the need for protection of handloom workers who couldn't compete against the modern mechanized textile industry. He spoke about the brass metal industry especially about he ignorance and lack of usage of labour saving devices like lathers, hammers, cutters, planing and milling machines. He was a close associate of Lokmanya Tilak since 1880s. After the foundation of Indian national congress in 1885, Namjoshi complained about the lack of representative committee.
Lathers was once insulted when he first started publishing his Newz paper when a local businessman told him that his publication would not last even six months and offered him 25 cents. Then and there he set his subscription fee at 50 cents a year, 1 dollar for six months and 2 dollars for 3 months. The newspaper was in production for 56 years and the subscription cost never changed. The Mears News made its debut July 24, 1914.
The Construction Maintenance and Allied Workers Canada (CMAW) is a construction trade union headquartered in Vancouver. CMAW negotiates pay and work conditions on behalf of its 4,000 members in British Columbia and Alberta. Union members include carpenters, shipbuilders, scaffolders, pipefitters, millwrights, lathers, cabinetmakers, display technicians, industrial workers and school board employees. The union, which has 9 local units in B.C. and two in Alberta, holds about 100 certifications, mostly in B.C. It is affiliated with the independent Confederation of Canadian Unions.
Soap does not lather well with hard water and can leave a sticky feeling. Soft water lathers better than hard water but feels slippery for a longer time during rinsing of soap, even though the soap is coming off faster, because the soap remains soluble. High concentrations of salts increase the density of the water and increase buoyancy, which makes the body feel lighter in the bath. Very high concentrations of salts in water are used in many isolation tank therapies.
When she is not painting herself she generally paints other women, still lifes, domestic scenes or "riotously spiky and rip-roaring" vases of flowers. Art critic Michael Glover says "There's something mad, wild and thuggish about this work, such is its total lack of restraint. It seems to be gulping at colour... She lathers and slathers on the paint with a kind of unrestrained glee. No wonder the eyes of the model are always slightly bulbous with a kind of childish wonderment".
In 1992 land was acquired four miles north of the Yale boathouse, just over the Oxford Town line, on the Housatonic River. Over the next two years the boathouse was built by its members using a design by architect and fellow member Stuart Lathers. New Haven Rowing Club hosts two annual regattas, the Derby Sweeps and Sculls and the Head of the Housatonic. Derby Sweeps and Sculls is a sprint race along a straight 1000 meter long course that is held in June.
Other Davis designs were built inland including Winyah Park, the country estate of Colonel Richard Lathers, and the investment homes "Tudor Villa", "Pointed Villa", "Gothic Cottage" and "The Rambler" of 'Lather's Woods'. In 1892 the artist Frederic Remington purchased one of Lather's Woods homes situated on a estate. Industrialist Adrian G Iselin purchased land on Davenport Neck in 1858. The Iselin family built homes across the Neck and nearby Premium Point, several of which were designed by leading architect Stanford White and landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted.
In addition to rock lath, there were various types of metal lath which is categorized according to weight, type of ribbing, and whether the lath is galvanized or not. Metal lathing was spaced across a 13.5 inch center, attached by tie wires using lathers' nippers. Sometimes, the mesh was dimpled to be self-furring. Lath and plaster has been mostly replaced with solid drywall or plasterboard (also a type of gypsum wall board, although a bit thicker), since it is faster and less expensive to install.
In both Winyah and Grace Hill, broad octagonal towers serve as visual anchors for the taller square towers. Lathers later employed Davis to design four additional "investment houses" on his property which became known as "Lathers's Hill". The homes included two Gothic cottages and "Tudor Villa" constructed in 1858, and "Pointed Villa" constructed in 1859. In 1890, the artist Frederic Remington purchased one of these cottages from which he created his estate "Endion", which served as the studio for most of his artistic career.
The Remingtons' substantial Gothic revival house was situated at 301 Webster Avenue, on a prestigious promontory known as Lathers Hill. A sweeping lawn rolled south toward Long Island Sound, providing views on three sides of the beautiful Westchester County countryside. Remington called it "Endion", an Ojibwa word meaning "the place where I live." In the early years, no real studio existed at "Endion" and Remington did most of his work in a large attic under the home's front gable where he stored materials collected on his many western excursions.
The Iron Workers soon found themselves at war with the AFL and, in particular, the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America. The Carpenters claimed that pile-driving work, which was done primarily by Iron Workers in many areas, belonged to them and convinced the Building Trades Department to go along with them. When the Iron Workers refused to relinquish this work the AFL suspended it from membership in 1917. Other unions, such as the Lathers, then claimed that work that had historically been done by iron workers belonged to them instead.
On July 22 a scheduled game against the Detroit Athletic Club was cancelled because "the majority of Deneau's men are busy at the race track this week and are unable to get away to play ball.""No Game at D.A.C. Today," Detroit Free Press, July 22, 1909. On the 28th they were drubbed by Detroit's Cass team, with Delaney and the hitless Deneau again alternating at first base and the pitcher's mound."Lathers and Vick Go Mad," Detroit Free Press, July 29, 1909. On the 31st, they beat Detroit Business Institute 2-1, attendance 225.
Colonel Mulberry Sellers: An eccentric white-headed old man who becomes the rightful heir to the Earl of Rossmore after the death of his relative, Simon Lathers. According to his wife, Sellers is a "scheming, generous, good-hearted, moonshiny, hopeful, no-account failure" who is well beloved for his generosity and approachability. Although many of his eccentric money-making schemes are failures, he occasionally "makes a strike," as he calls it, and makes quite a bit of money. One such strike is an exceedingly popular toy, "Pigs in the Clover," which he invents and patents.
The construction is a quadrangular tower dominating the beneath extending "Vallata del Torbido", of which remains the ruins of the basement containing four buttresses. On the ground floor, on the left side of the accessing door, it can still be seen the evidence of the ‘barrel-volt’ ceiling that must have covered the inside rooms. The tower was made of stones consisting in one only square shaped room, in which were billeted the corps of guard and the horses. On the higher level it was divide horizontally by wooden scaffoldings interconnected by step lathers also wooden.
She falls in love with Howard Tracy (Viscount Berkeley) at first sight and later renounces her aspirations of aristocracy in order to be with him. Berkeley Rossmore (Howard Tracy): The only son and heir of the Earl of Rossmore. According to the narrative, his full name is the Honourable Kirkcudbright Llanover Marjoribanks Sellers Viscount-Berkeley, of Cholmondeley Castle, Warwickshire(which the narrative tells us is pronounced "K'koobry Thlanover Marshbanks Sellers Vycount Barkly, of Chumly Castle, Warrikshr"). At the beginning of the novel, Berkeley announces his intention to go to America and "change places" with Simon Lathers, the man he considers the rightful heir.
As part of the project, the upper passageway was moved to within fare control to allow passengers to go between the subway mezzanine and the entrance to Grand Central Terminal at the shuttle without paying a fare. This was accomplished by moving the turnstiles at the eastern end of the passageway. In March, members of the Metallic Lathers Union Local 46 sought to halt construction on the project, which was 80 percent complete, as the union objected to having the work done by city employees who made less than union workers. The rebuilt passageway opened on March 18, 1946. Track 2 between this station and Times Square–42nd Street was removed in 1975.
Deus grisettes et deux soldats by Constantin Guys In the first quarter of the 19th century, grisette also came to refer more specifically to the independent young women, often working as seamstresses or milliner's assistants, who frequented bohemian artistic and cultural venues in Paris. They formed relationships with artists and poets more committed than prostitution but less so than a mistress. Many grisettes worked as artist's models, often providing sexual favours to the artists in addition to posing for them. During the time of King Louis- Philippe, they came to dominate the bohemian modelling scene.Marie Lathers, "The social construction and deconstruction of the female model in 19th- century France", Mosaic, June, 1996.
The mysterious moves of bureaucrats have exiled Maigret to a small town in the coast of Normandy where it rains all the time and there is nothing to do except for playing billiards in the local pub and sniff the gel that the local inspector lathers into his hair. Then an old woman shows up with a story about a body in the house of a judge in the fishing village of l'Aiguillon and things get interesting. A young woman with a mysterious ailment (something to do with being over-sexed but Simenon never explains what exactly is wrong with her), a young man with a temper, a hotel waitress with a secret, and an ex-judge with taste and style.
" Journalist and Buenos Aires bureau chief for Dow Jones Newswires Michael Casey reviewed Exposing the Real Che Guevara in his 2009 book Che's Afterlife: The Legacy of an Image. Casey described it as "an art form of mixing frustration with ridicule." Casey said that Fontova's prose was a marriage of Ann Coulter with the Gonzo journalism of Hunter S. Thompson, and that Fontova "basically yells at his readers, mixing a sarcastic wit with a touch of self-deprecation until it is overwhelmed by disdain for his opponents." Lastly, Casey observed that Fontova often "lathers himself into a rage" when it comes to the issue of Che Guevara, noting that his barrage of hyperbole leads him to describe Guevara as an "assassin", "sadist", "bumbler", "fool", and "whimpering- sniveling-blubbering coward" who is "revered by millions of imbeciles.
Downtown Garden City Welcome Sign The origins of Garden City started with the transfer of the property to John Lathers from Andrew Jackson for in October 1835. The city was patterned after the "garden city" concept that became popular in England during the 19th century, with most home sites sectioned off into plots to allow adequate farming area to support the family with fruit and vegetables. Most sites are now considerably smaller, some as small as 40 feet by 135 feet, with little room for gardening of fruits and vegetables, though the city maintains some large lots where an extra street has not been placed between two of the older streets, such as between some parts of Bock Street and John Hauk Street where Donnelly Avenue does not cut through. In June 1927, Garden City became a village, with Arnold Folker as Village President.

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