And suddenly she produced a crannied snapshot photograph, of postcard size, of the Crown-Prince in his polo-playing garb, and with him a smartly-dressed young woman, whose features were in the shadow.
"The Secrets of Potsdam"
William Le Queux
Lilly, with the mysterious tenacity of a crannied flower, was pulling from her soil toward the light.
"Star-Dust A Story of an American Girl"
Fannie Hurst
For, if that Return to Simplicity means anything, it must mean the sweeping away of immemorial rookeries of talk-such crannied hives of gossip as the professions, with all their garrulous heritage of trivial witty ana: literary, dramatic, legal, aristocratic, ecclesiastical, commercial.
"Prose Fancies"
Richard Le Gallienne