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...with the duty of deciding for his Back Bay votes which among the contestants was the least of four evils, Republican Leader Henry Parkman, Jr., who in the last mayoral election came in a poor fourth with 29,000, finally settled on Candidate Tobin. That many another anti-Curley Bostonian had done likewise appeared when young Maurice Tobin rolled up 105,212 votes to old Jim Curley's 80,376, left Candidates Nichols and Foley trailing surprisingly far to the rear...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ELECTIONS: Curley Cue | 11/15/1937 | See Source »

Aside from speeches, resolutions and fun, major business of most conventions is electing new officers. Last week, I. B. A. chose to succeed President Hall a distinguished, white-haired Bostonian with a gentle voice named Francis Edward Frothingham, vice president of Coffin & Burr, Inc. since 1916. Born in Brooklyn in 1871, President Frothingham investigated utilities for years for Stone & Webster, was head of the public utilities division of War Finance Corp. An ardent yachtsman and traveler, he lives quietly in Cambridge, Mass, with his wife and daughter, enjoys riding, being vice president of the Boy Scouts of Boston. Said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: I.B.A. | 11/15/1937 | See Source »

...election on November 2 is non-partisan in form, and every Bostonian, of whatever political faith, should remember that in voting for Nichols he may not be opening the door of Utopia, but he is at least writing "finis" to a disgraceful chapter in the history of Massachusetts. This fact makes all the more deplorable the recent disaffection of a number of prominent Republicans in Ward 5. Basing their action on a personal quarrel of ten years' standing they have put personal sentiment before the good of the city in a manner which the average voter will do well...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BEST APPPLE | 10/26/1937 | See Source »

...Your Father, an illustration by Jean Chariot for Paul Claudel's book on Mexico. By a characteristically Bostonian accident, this print was entitled in the exhibition Motherly Care...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Stone Stuff | 10/18/1937 | See Source »

...Civil War made Paul Smith's remote lodge famous when many a gilded young New Yorker and Bostonian hid out there to avoid conscription. Paul was an expert and talkative guide and his wife cooked such bounteous dinners of venison, flapjacks and trout that the lodge grew into an immense rambling structure with 216 rooms. It had such guests as Phineas Taylor Barnum, Mark Twain, Grover Cleveland, Edward H. Harriman. When Paul Smith, an alert, erect oldster of 87 with snowy hair, a Vandyke beard and broad-brimmed hat, died in 1912 he left his three sons the largest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Apollos' Fortune | 4/5/1937 | See Source »

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