Word: bartlette
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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HARVARD '34 M. I. T. '34 Clapp, g. g., Williams Eagleton, e.p. e.p., Wright Holsapple, p. p., Spencer Rodgers, 1d. 1d., Muther Lowe, 2d. 2d., Kunz Rabinovitz, 3d. 3d., Borger Levan, c. c., Asch Althouse, 3a. 3a., Smith Housen, 2a. 2a., Bartlett Golde, 1a. 1a., Graves Lowery, i.h. i.h., McCaughan Lessig, o.h. o.h., Wilson...
...with utilities fitted him for the position. Much of this was gained in Electric Bond & Share, itself an expert master in the ballet of utilities. Mr. Howard's Bond & Share connection has brought co-operation between that company, United and Superpower. His first position was with Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett, attorneys, when Dwight Whitney Morrow was a partner. This probably led to his connection with the Morgan group. In addition to his position with United, he is chairman of Niagara Hudson's executive committee, a director of U. G. I. and of Chase National Bank. Hence he has little...
...York Sun). Or if the present-day lawmakers and tax experts are to be taken to task, it is yet true that New Hampshire, one of the 13 Original States (which-neighboring Maine & Vermont were not) has given the U. S. many a famed statesman. Among them: Josiah Bartlett, "Signer"; Salmon P. Chase, Secretary of the Treasury under Lincoln; Governor John A. Dix of New York; Governors Butler, Cox of Massachusetts ; Secretary of War John Wingate Weeks; U. S. Supreme Court Justice Harlan Fiske Stone; Major General Leonard Wood...
Died. William James Arkell, 74, onetime owner of Judge and Leslie's Weekly, which he sold in 1905, founder of George Washington Coffee Co., turf man, brother of President Bartlett Arkell of Beech-Nut Packing Co.; in Los Angeles. Legend is that he once staked Leslie's Weekly against $150,000 on one of his horses...
Lost Tribe. With much-publicized Capt. Robert Abram ("Bob") Bartlett in command, the schooner Effle Morrisey picked her way carefully along the northeastern coast of Greenland between ice floes as large as Manhattan Island. She carried Harry Whitney, Philadelphia financier-naturalist,* and Junius Bird, archeologist. Mr. Bird had gone on the cold 15,000-mi. trip because he had a mystery he wanted to solve. In 1823, the British explorer, Capt. D. C. Clavering had visited a highly civilized Eskimo settlement along the eastern coast. Since Clavering, no explorer had been able to find the town again. Captain Bartlett landed...