72 examples of savers in sentences

Naow, I got a red an' green plaid what belonged to my second stepson, Henry O. He never would 'a' died o' pneumony, either, ef he'd a-took my advice an' made himself a newspaper nightcap last time he substituted with the 'Savers.

And the pleasant prospect of being shut in at the beach with the cast-iron Abraham and these husky life-savers for the remainder of the winter!

" "The government life-savers, I s'pose you mean.

The more the community as a whole saves now, the less in the near future will be the aggregate consumable income of the whole community: but not of the remainder of the community, exclusive of the savers.

Door in this is ajar at rise of curtain, and through this door BRADFORD and TONY, life-savers, are seen bending over a man's body, attempting to restore respiration.

(Closing the door and sitting on a bench built into that corner between the big sliding door and the room where the CAPTAIN is.) BRADFORD: They're a cheerful pair of womenlivin' in this cheerful placea place that life savers had to turn over to the sandhuh!

To this house that had been given up; on this shore where only savers of life try to live.

MRS PATRICK watches them from sight.) MRS PATRICK: (bitter, exultant) Savers of life!

You savers of life!

I've been told by life savers that often they have to strike a man and knock him senseless to save themselves from being dragged down.

It may not be fashionable to compare these savers of human life with those who destroy life on the battle-field, but the valor and endurance of the former is at least as conspicuous and meritorious as the daring and suffering of the latter.

And the third class which has immediate interests antagonistic to bold reconstructions of our national methods is that vaguer body, the body of investing capitalists, the savers, the usurers, who live on dividends.

THE LIFE-SAVERS AND THEIR APPARATUS

Climbing up into the rigging, the sailors waited for the vessel to strike the beach, and the life-savers put for shore again to get the apparatus needed for the new situation.

The beach apparatus has received the greatest attention from inventors, since that part of the life-savers' outfit is depended upon to rescue the greatest number.

Over hummocks of sand and wreckage, across little inlets made by the waves, in the face of blinding sleet and staggering wind, the life-savers dragged the beach wagon on the run.

At last the line stopped uncoiling and the life-savers knew that the shot had landed somewhere.

Then with a joy that comes only to those who are saving a fellow-creature from death, the life-savers saw a man climb into the stout canvas breeches of the hanging buoy, and felt the tug on the whip-line that told them that the rescue had begun.

One after the other the crew were taken ashore in this way, the life-savers hauling the breeches-buoy forward and back, working like madmen to complete their work before the wreck should break up.

The life-savers' work is not over when the crew of a vessel is saved, for the apparatus must be packed on the beach wagon and returned to the station, while the shipwrecked crew is provided with dry clothing, fed, and cared for.

[Illustration: LIFE-SAVERS AT WORK The two men in the center are burying the sand-anchor; of the two at the right, one is ready with the crotch support the hawser and the other carries the breeches-buoy; the other three men are hauling the line which has already been shot over the wrecked vessel.

Roughly, it is true that the product of industry is divided between the workers who carry it on, and the savers who, out of the product of past work, have built the workshop, put in the plant and advanced the money to pay the workers until the new product is marketed.

The workers and the savers are at once partners and rivals.

If the workers are to succeed in this competition and secure for themselves an ever-increasing share of the profit of industryand from the point of view of humanity, civilization, nationality, and common sense it is most desirable that this should be sothen this is most likely to happen if the savers are so numerous that they will be weak in bargaining and unable to stand out against the demands of the workers.

England has lent money abroad because she is a great producer, and certain classes of Englishmen are savers, so that there was a balance of goods available for export, to be lent to other countries.

72 examples of  savers  in sentences