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164 Sentences With "saloons"

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

Its luxury saloons remain desirable and returns have been decent.
Everyday pubs and saloons begin to pop up after Lexington.
Not many Vietnamese can afford a fleet of blacked-out saloons.
She wandered the streets, visited saloons and theaters and vaudeville shows.
Drinking also moved from public spaces like saloons into the home.
Saloons were once everywhere in America, from urban alleys to rural crossroads.
As for the saloons, some experimented with juices and nonalcoholic mixed drinks.
Such saloons represent about 5 percent of the 750 bars that are recommended.
AMERICAN SALOONS from the 1950s and Chinese-brand cars still fill Havana's streets.
There aren't many saloons where you can get into a decent pistol duel nowadays.
C Street's old-fashioned saloons make pedestrians feel like they're in the Old West.
How did businesses like saloons or breweries try to adapt to the dry age?
Motorists worldwide have for years been abandoning four-door saloons in favour of bulkier SUVs.
They used to race old cars, some specials, some saloons, using old bits of scaffolding.
And older social institutions like saloons, constructed to cope with such instability, are long gone.
The flophouses and nickel-a-drink saloons have given way to nightclubs and luxury condos.
Saloons filled it until Prohibition, when they were converted to speakeasies, then later to clubs.
The streets were lined with haunted brothels and restored saloons, little museums and souvenir shops.
Real estate developers and landlords expected rents to rise as saloons closed and neighborhoods improved.
Even the names of its finest saloons — El Dorado, Coupe de Ville — had a certain flair.
In the 19th century, adults talked politics with kids at home, in schools and in saloons.
Saloons became salons, where survivors of the Industrial Revolution could drink and debate, politick and speechify.
He spent his youth drifting between saloons and ports, and tried to kill himself in 1912.
Baltimore ordered churches and schools closed, but not saloons, citing the putative "medicinal" uses of alcohol.
Black bartenders, prohibited from going into white saloons, founded the exclusive "Colored Mixologists Club" in 1898.
Now Americans buy over 12m pickups and SUVs each year, more than twice the sales of saloons.
The plants that GM is winding down make the Buick LaCrosse, the Chevrolet Cruze and other saloons.
Instead of picking fights in emails like Kasowitz, he prefers picking fights in old west saloons. pic.twitter.
Their hunger exposes what today's retro-saloons, packed with faded photographs and old-timey cocktails, get wrong.
For generations, taverns and saloons were largely places for men to gather, drink, gamble and chew tobacco.
It has visited unheated barns and calorie-rich Pizza Ranches, overstuffed church pews and saloons in unincorporated towns.
Neighbourhood saloons closed, home distilleries opened and drinking moved underground, to homes and speakeasies and even athletic clubs.
I've typically been a fan of Jag's saloons, so I wondered earnestly how the XE would stack up.
It's effective—within a minute the road is deserted, while the four pubs seem like hastily abandoned saloons.
By 1897 there were roughly a quarter of a million saloons, or 23 for every Starbucks franchise today.
But the parched prairies and old-timey saloons of the first two seasons feel like a distant memory.
Prohibition converted saloons to speakeasies, which, after repeal, morphed into nightclubs, where Nashville Sound sidemen moonlighted as jazzmen.
And many saloons would introduce vices like gambling and prostitution into their businesses to help them turn profits.
It's an hours-long jaunt from hilltop viewpoints to side-street saloons that your guidebook won't find for you.
But as these practices spread among the working classes, saloons and amusement parks sprang up to earn their business.
In 1897, San Francisco saloons reportedly ran out of Napa Soda, necessitating overnight shifts at the factory to restock.
America's saloons once served as boisterous "poor man's clubs," where 19th-century laborers could make their political voices heard.
Continuing into the twentieth century, saloons served as ersatz campaign headquarters, where trades of votes for hooch were common.
The brewing industry was also thriving at the time, which meant saloons were becoming increasingly prolific throughout the country.
"The new Ford Mondeo went on sale in Britain with a range of saloons, hatchbacks, and estates," it says here.
Blair writes in her biography that Friedrich Trump went on to establish several saloons and hotels that doubled as brothels.
By the Gilded Age, saloons were places for slow, social imbibing, a beer drinker's republic blending immigrant and American cultures.
What was once Peter Stuyvesant's farm became synonymous with saloons and sex, then devolved into the embodiment of Skid Row.
It proved that bars and saloons were an integral part of the community, one people weren't willing to give up.
The Sicilians operated small businesses, saloons, and general stores or worked hard labor jobs, but some in their number wanted more.
Some saloons proclaimed middle-class respectability, packed with pianos and chandeliers; others were more honest, serving beer in old tomato cans.
Between 1890 and 1920, Prohibitionists closed saloons on Election Day, then in whole counties, then states, and finally across the nation.
For their part, many upwardly mobile laborers joined in a historic bargain, trading saloons for the promise of the middle class.
Six years ago, annual sales of pickup trucks and sport-utility vehicles were roughly 7.5m in America, equivalent to sales of saloons.
Towns sprang into existence, in order to accommodate the saloons and the hotels and the man camps required to service the roughnecks.
As Buenos Aires' original speakeasy, what do you think about the city's current thirst for themed saloons that pretend to be unlicensed?
" So reformers moved to crush saloons, knowing that when "removed from the beer keg and the tap, local political clubs die young.
A Saturday morning race will feature pre-'66 Jaguars, including the XK series, C-, D- and E-Types, MkI and MkII saloons.
Alexiou informs us that it was the shuttering of saloons during Prohibition that turned the street into a symbol for seedy ruin.
The raging fire also destroyed the town of Taft — its wooden saloons, brothels, construction buildings and sawmill — and scattered its itinerant laborers.
After prostitution in Storyville was prohibited in 1917, its seductively furnished brothels and raucous saloons gradually disappeared, with most demolished by the midcentury.
Instead of making just two or three models they could make twice as many, including the saloons and hatchbacks that are now imported.
Parties set up headquarters in saloons, and saloonkeepers often ran political machines, trading on their intimate knowledge of the drinkers in their districts.
Only 291 of the "Oscar India" V8 Saloons were made, and a further 167 convertible versions — both of which feature in the film.
I found a half-dozen art galleries, three coffee shops, a smoothie bar, eight restaurants and two boutique saloons on North James Street alone.
Before the speech, the debate in D.C. saloons and watering holes was concerned how long Trump would survive as President of the United States.
But lighter beer also was a good fit for the long hours of American factory workers, many of whom ate at saloons between shifts.
While boys were considered delinquent when they violated laws, girls were considered delinquent for general "immorality," which included using profanity and going to saloons.
With a rare unpotholed road now at its disposal, APEC's poorest member flew in 40 Maserati saloons and three Bentley Flying Spurs for delegates' use.
Several evenings later, temperatures plummeted, and undeterred would-be artists came in for a drink and draw, an event now ubiquitous in North Brooklyn saloons.
Although South Pass City's population peaked at only about 2,000 in 1869, the town was home to two breweries, a dozen saloons and several brothels.
They're slaves who don't know they're slaves, providing immersive—and ultraviolent—entertainment to paying customers, in settings such as saloons and a dusty frontier wilderness.
A violinist formerly with the San Francisco Symphony, Whiteman had become fascinated with the sensuous, unpolished sounds he heard from musicians in Barbary Coast saloons.
Ford has decided to phase out saloons altogether in its home market, for example, while GM has left Europe and is consolidating its North American operations.
Mesfin assembles Geely's CK1 and SL sedans, Belayab Motors puts together FAW Vela saloons, while Betret International in partnership with BYD makes the BYD-F13 sedan.
According to the book "The Trumps: Three Generations That Built an Empire," Friedrich Trump went on to establish several saloons and hotels that doubled as brothels.
From pre-Prohibition saloons to rum-drenched tiki bars, San Francisco is the home to every sort of cocktail spot your thirst-addled gourd could imagine.
Past and present When it comes to saloons, high-stakes card games and the inevitable shootouts, history is best experienced firsthand in this South Dakota town.
Ragtime was being born in these smoky saloons across the Mississippi Valley, but the genre did not thrive until Joplin composed "Maple Leaf Rag" in 1899.
Though many of its elements are familiar to the point of being worn out — saloons and wagon trains, Indians and gold prospectors — the novel is not.
Standing in the middle of a Wild West film set, models Binx Walton and Jean Campbell are unfazed by the 1940s-style saloons and towering cacti.
During Prohibition, Mexicans built saloons that straddled the border, so that patrons could drink so long as they were on the correct side of the building.
This did nothing to curtail betting because the pool boxes simply reset nearby, in saloons and billiards halls, using runners to bring news back from the diamond.
While women weren't typically allowed in men-only saloons, speakeasies were among the first spaces outside of church where men and women could gather and socialize together.
And sometimes the heartfelt songwriters, the ones capable of moonshine lullabies and Christmases that are both merry and bright, come from Lower East Side flophouses and saloons.
Recently, the sprawling city has seen new hotel openings, as well as a growing nightlife scene in its historical Gaslamp Quarter, formerly home to saloons and brothels.
When the 18th Amendment banning the sale of alcohol was passed in 1919, it was targeted at the saloons where men gathered after work for beer and conversation.
"If you're into travel or 'bright lights, big city,' you're out of luck," said Kris Wagner, 261, a bartender at the Glacier Inn, one of Hyder's two saloons.
The area (those who live there call it Turtle Bay) has long specialized in rowdy white-collar hookup joints, expensive wine bars and paint-by-number Irish saloons.
"NFL football is an institution here at McFadden's," said Kristi Paris, chief marketing officer for East Coast Saloons, which owns McFadden's, a prominent Buffalo Bills bar in Manhattan.
More than the beer, saloons provided a gathering place in a nation with little public space for working-class men to argue the issues or meet the candidates.
Fans of "Westworld" will be distressed to learn, however, that Old West saloons had no swinging batwing doors, while the working girls usually provided nothing saucier than conversation.
As any moviegoer knows, at the end of the cattle drive, the buckaroos celebrate at the saloons, gambling, drinking and being entertained with barrelhouse piano and dancing girls.
Hoping to make liquor less desirable by shutting saloons, the anti-liquor crusaders ushered in the mixed-sex, alcohol-laced, night-life leisure Americans have known ever since.
Even Ford, which is moving out of low-margin saloons often made abroad in order to focus on SUVs and pickups like the F-150, has reason to worry.
They hosted horse races, opened saloons, a hotel, and bathhouses known for prostitution — all of which thrived until the city grew around the park, and Angelinos began to complain.
From subterranean cocktail bars with no menu and a laboratory aesthetic, all the way to recreations of pre-Prohibition saloons, our guide to Boston's best cocktails has you covered.
It harkens back to an earlier time—pre-Prohibition saloons to be more exact—when cocktails and spirits, specifically whiskey, were taken seriously, and a meal was a meal.
Rather than joining the mass market, BMW, along with its German counterparts, Daimler's Mercedes marque and VW's Audi, all but cornered the worldwide market in expensive, high-performance saloons.
San Diego did have a thriving beer population prior to Prohibition, which amounted to seven breweries and 210 saloons; post-Prohibition, there were just three breweries in the city.
Early to the spot the craze for SUVs, BMW has failed to exploit it; for every ten cars it makes, six are saloons, the market for which is shrinking fast.
Women who advocated for temperance in the 19th century did so, in part, because they'd had enough of seeing men come home from saloons and take fists to their wives.
In between, you can stroll along the sidewalks past plenty of other saloons, a day spa or two, a wine-tasting room or two, and any number of souvenir shops.
IN THE SPRING of 1899 a committee was convened in New York to investigate the city's police force—and the "protection" it might be offering to Gotham's saloons and brothels.
Retail sales of its Jaguar saloons and Land Rover sport utility vehicles (SUVs) fell 13.2 percent to about 130,000 units, hurt particularly by tariff changes in China and escalating trade tensions.
In the early 20th century, police departments started sending out female employees to monitor dance halls and saloons, places where women might engage in prostitution or be preyed upon by men.
The performer Elaine Stritch died in 2014 at 89 after over 70 years appearing in plays, musicals, film, television, cabaret and newspaper gossip columns, telegrams and Twitter, saloons and recovery meetings.
He builds guitars from what he calls the "bones" of New York: centuries-aged pine planks from establishments like Chumley's, the Chelsea Hotel and squalid former Bowery saloons like McGurk's Suicide Hall.
The environment of docks, saloons, hotels, baths and shipyards that once nourished elaborate networks of queer love and support was abolished to develop suburbs, and the memory of these networks was erased.
They refused to rent to saloons, restaurants or theaters, and once held up a lease until they could verify the tenants' first aid kits wouldn't include more than a pint of whiskey.
It may come down to Members checking their smart phones at the door, just as cowboys had to check their revolvers at the door before entering some saloons in the Old West.
Almost all the ballrooms and clubs from 1920s Chicago, like the Royal Gardens, the Dreamland Café, or the Pekin Inn, and New Orleans clubs and saloons like Tom Anderson's, are long gone.
It was in 1914 that Trinity's leaders decided to close the chapel, which was now surrounded by the bad elements of the Tenderloin, a shadowy realm of hotels, saloons, gambling dens and whorehouses.
Retail sales of its Jaguar saloons and Land Rover sport-utility vehicles were up 5 percent on the same quarter last year, as an increase in sales in China helped offset lower UK sales.
When British financier Barney Barnato arrived in Johannesburg, not long after miners struck gold there in 1886, it was little more than a tent city, with a single hotel and a handful of saloons.
A light rain was falling when we reached the valley's administrative center, Dawar, where a small bazaar — with dry goods shops, produce sellers and a few "hair saloons" — is surrounded by houses and fields.
On this day — Comey Day — Washington was in full character, and thousands turned up in saloons across the city, ready to watch the latest installment of a reality show known as the Trump presidency.
Some of them had been here a week, and the resultant pop-up village was a baffling, haphazard medina of humongous live-aboard vehicles, grilling setups, cornhole games, improvised saloons, and chain-link fence.
The maker of the sleek Jaguar saloons and sporty Range Rovers sold 521,571 vehicles in the fiscal year 2015-2016 - its highest ever annual sales, Jaguar Land Rover said in an emailed statement on Thursday.
Posted 03 July 2016 In the late 1800 and early 1900s, coin-op machines began were finding their way into bars, saloons and shops, and coin-op arcades were popular destinations in many major cities.
It is not that he cannot "think"—it is that he cannot touch: for all that fine "experience" of his young manhood—sea and saloons and sanitariums—the immediacy of life has never reached him.
In the latter half of the nineteenth century, nickelodeons and dime novels had featured the "lawless towns" of the West, and stories of cowboys, saloons, gunfights, and outlaws had become part of the collective imagination.
They had two children and lived in Europe before settling in Greenwich Village, where Mr. Markson socialized with his fellow writers at home and at the Lion's Head and other saloons favored by the literati.
Like today's coffee shops offering free Wi-Fi, saloons provided drinkers with a free lunch: cheese, crackers and bologna, but also pigs' feet and pretzels, liverwurst and sardines, more raw onion than any man would want.
There was Roman World, for bacchanalian debauchery; Medieval World, for jousting, mead, and those silly cone hats with chiffon in them; and finally West World, a gun-slinging, whiskey guzzling sandstorm of saloons, prostitutes, and shootouts.
Of perhaps more urgent importance, however, was that saloons in the nearby towns of Grass Valley and Nevada City—both still firmly entrenched in California—had refused to sell alcohol to the "foreigners" from Rough and Ready.
Saloons were not manly haunts for mutton-chopped gods; rather they were havens for economic refugees, coming from Ireland or Poland, North Carolina or South Dakota, harried men fleeing the enormous social disruptions of the Gilded Age.
An effort by reformers to clamp down on another vice, Sunday drinking, by limiting it to hotels with 10 or more rooms inspired saloons to divide their barrooms into a bunch of "bedrooms," becoming de facto brothels.
"Though many of its elements are familiar to the point of being worn out — saloons and wagon trains, Indians and gold prospectors — the novel is not," Lawrence Downes wrote in a profile of Díaz for the Times.
Nineteen-nineteen was also the year that a young cornetist named Louis Armstrong, who had been electrifying patrons of New Orleans saloons and honky-tonks with his distinctive sound, began to set his sights beyond his hometown.
Tesla's classy design and nifty technology—a touchscreen instead of an instrument panel, and autonomous-driving capabilities—have ensured that only the Mercedes S-Class, which Daimler-Benz has spent decades refining, outsells it among large luxury saloons.
Through live music and recordings, the Tenement Museum offers a chance to hear and learn about the sounds of the New York tenements, from what was played at beer saloons to what women sang while doing house chores.
It wasn't unusual for saloons to display anti-suffrage posters and keep a pile of leaflets on the bar; the promise of a free beer in exchange for a no vote on a suffrage referendum was common practice.
The crumbling four-story building is one of the last of the cheap single-room-occupancy hotels that lined the Bowery a century ago alongside brothels and saloons and defined the area as a symbol of urban despair.
Mr. Gomberg's family owns Gomberg Seltzer Works in Canarsie, the last seltzer factory in the city; his business, Brooklyn Seltzer Boys, delivers seltzer to both longtime fans and new customers, like upscale saloons and restaurants in the borough.
Crossing the road in a big Chinese city three decades ago the few cars you would have seen in the sea of bicycles would almost all have been either official limousines or beaten-up Japanese saloons touting as taxis.
Jaguar Land Rover, maker of Range Rover 4x4s and sportier luxury saloons, will drive the initial models on a new 41-mile (66 km) test route on motorways and urban roads near its headquarters and plants in central England.
And in the years after Willard became what the newspaper of record called "a 'White Hope' who at last made good," the photograph of him standing over a fallen Jack Johnson became a common decoration in speakeasies and saloons.
"Horse-racing and saloons!" claimed Sinacori, skimming some highlights of the pre-Prohibition times at Billy Klenk's Lighthouse Inn, and the access to liquor during the Prohibition era, facilitated by the neighborhood's complex canal systems and proximity to Canada.
Finance chief P.B. Balaji told reporters he expected Chinese sales of its sleek Jaguar saloons and Land Rover sport-utility vehicles (SUVs) to return to growth "a quarter from now" but many analysts were not convinced of a quick turnaround.
In Togliatti, a city of more than 700,000 named after a former Italian communist leader where the roads are filled with the boxy Lada saloons churned out from the Avtovaz plant, there is a more immediate reason to dislike foreign influence.
Some 238,22017 were its sleek Model S saloons and about 23,453 were the firm's new SUV, the Model X. This puts Tesla on track to produce the 245,26.7 vehicles it has promised to make in the first half of this year.
To heighten the contrast between the dusty prairie town of Sweetwater and the sterile, glass-walled control center, Djawadi chose entirely different instruments: acoustic guitars and harmonicas for the saloons and plains of the park, synthesizers for the futuristic laboratories.
This sound—coupled with a party-hard attitude and booze-soaked lives shows which have seen fans going so far as to pleasure themselves on stage—prove that Dusty Tucker still lives in the western saloons they take inspiration from.
As America expanded the right to vote during the 1800s, most states adopted mass-distributed paper ballots, but left it to the parties to print those ballots and get them into the wooden ballot boxes sitting in town squares or saloons.
The castle was built into a hillside in 1870 by John Hamlin Burnell, an English immigrant who planned on using the castle to run a brewery that could supply the 800-plus saloons that dotted the city at the time.
So they went out, to parks and dance halls, saloons and restaurants, nickelodeons and penny arcades—to the streets themselves, teeming centers of working-class social life—where they could have a good time and meet men on their own.
They'll be available in the new generation of Audi A8 saloons in 2017, but for the moment the German company is testing these features in a much more compact model — specifically, a model car 1/8th the size of the real thing.
Despite superhuman efforts by workers and managers (Mr Musk is personally supervising production of the new model and claims to be sleeping at the factory), on April 3rd Tesla confirmed that it is producing only around 2,000 Model 33 saloons a week.
Retail sales of its Jaguar saloons and Land Rover sport utility vehicles (SUVs) fell 3.8 percent over the period, coming off record sales in 2017, amid tough conditions in Britain due to Brexit uncertainty and a planned diesel tax rise on new cars.
The "noble experiment" had failed to deliver on supporters' promises of sober blue-collar husbands, attentive fathers, and a productive workforce spared the depredations of booze-soaked saloons and "gin joints" by caring political elites backed by the coercive powers of the state.
Immediately upon King Ying Low's opening, the restaurant became an integral part of the heart of downtown Des Moines, then an area of never-closing saloons and pool halls that were home to the region's most diverse, marginalized, and often criminalized populations.
In the latest quarter, retail sales of its sleek Jaguar saloons and Land Rover sport utility vehicles rose 3.5 percent, while the EBITDA margin (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) rose 80 basis points, driven by higher volumes of its Velar and Discovery models.
What we need, more than tweets or memes, is the kind of civic life that transpires when men and women gather face to face and, as a fan of old saloons put it, "political matters ebb and flow free as froth on the beer."
Situated in the stark center of Wyoming's energy-rich but otherwise empty Powder River Basin, Gillette grew up around wildcat wells and coal mines—dry as a bone except in its saloons, prone to spontaneous combustion from the underground fires burning perpetually beneath it.
LONDON (Reuters) - The usual mix of sports cars, offroaders and family saloons will be on display at the Geneva motor show this week, but with one big difference from previous years - they may be about to become harder and costlier to make, and more expensive to buy.
As a well-known member of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union at the time, Nation had earned coverage as far away as the New York Times for her activism in favor of Prohibition — and was widely seen as a threat to bars and saloons across the country.
The resulting dossier of abandoned negatives (originally slated to be dumped into the Hudson Bay) brings together mug shots, press clippings, and panoramic views of the city in transition between tenement and skyscraper, carriage and automobile, the fall of the saloons and the rise of Prohibition.
The Chicago press, in the nineteen-tens, included journalists doing serious work as muckrakers or as war reporters, but Hecht was fascinated by the male subculture of crime and politics reporting, with its cigars and spittoons, its saloons and brothels, and its sour views about women.
Like so many disciples of Carry Nation, the temperance advocate who took a hatchet to United States saloons at the turn of the 2200th century, village women are taking matters into their own hands, enforcing a prohibition law in Bihar, one of India's poorest, most agrarian states.
Perhaps the most famous example is the Firefly universe, in which we see rapid and presumably faster-than-light space travel and a thriving interstellar economy, sitting alongside dozens of "border worlds" akin to the American West making their way with horses, carts, and shootouts in backwater saloons.
Another popular claim is that the neighborhood is named for a similar one that existed in Manhattan at the turn of the 20th century, a red-light district also known as "Satan's Circus" that ran from the Flatiron to Times Square, full of saloons, gambling halls, and brothels.
Another gloomy, even bitter, study in Americana, its most distinctive bit of orchestration is a part for honky-tonk piano (ideally a detuned upright, but on Thursday conjured electronically, and far too weakly) that evokes the saloons — and, implicitly, the chauvinistic illusions — of Hollywood westerns, while coming across as a devilish shadow of the "real" solo piano.
Indeed, a clearer taxonomy might have been helpful, given that Carrie Nation's hatchet-swinging attacks on saloons during the temperance movement are a different kind of angry expression from Rosa Parks's steady refusal to leave her seat, and both are different still from the teenage girl who survived the Parkland shooting and tweeted "I don't want your condolences you [expletive] [expletive]," in response to Trump.

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