Word: chubb
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...plot deals with the struggle of three budding young geniuses a doctor a lawyer and a financier to ward off the wolf till their respective ships come in. The first two have never had a client and the tried. Chubb has only ideas And very excellent ideas they turn out to be. For instance, the doctor's ailing landlady, who has let him keep his room because of professional services rendered, brings in her parrot to he cured of some undetermined malady. Chubb thereupon conceives the brilliant stunt of pawning the parrot to buy breakfast for the three. No sooner...
...Percival Chubb of the St. Louis, Brooklyn, and Boston Ethical Societies, who led the discussion, was not at all optimistic concerning the future of the youth of today, who are becoming more and more engrossed in the material things of life...
...Beale, 28 Miss Blodgett, 7 Miss Bosler, 8 Miss Boyce, 12 Miss Braddock, 12 Miss Brown, 39 Miss Bruce, 19 Miss Buleman, 23 Miss Burgess, 24 Miss M. Burgess, 15 Mrs. Campopiano, 33 Miss Campopiano, 33 Miss Carey, 22 Miss Carter, 34 Mrs. Carter, 34 Miss Cobb, 18 Miss Chubb, 27 Miss Choryrenning, 34 Miss Cole, 40 Miss Coolidge, 15 Miss G. C. Cotton, 12 Miss Councilman, 15 Miss Cottrell, 36 Miss Cumnock, 27 Miss Cumner, 26 Miss Damrosch, 24 Mrs. Davis, G Miss DeCrow, C Miss de Gersdorff, 36 Miss Dexter, 26 Miss Dewey, 18 Miss D. Dill...
...Percy Catton, 12R. R. Cawley, 39R. W. Chubb, 27W. H. Claflin, Jr., 42M. H. Cochran, 34R. Cohn, 9H. Cohn, 35D. C. Cottrell, 36H. D. Curween, 19J. Davis, GW. Demelman, 6R. W. Dixon, 34H. W. Dwight, 20G. L. Elken, 21A. Etinger, 35F. H. Evans, 31P. C. Fahmey, 31W. P. Fay, 16D. F. Fenn, 41H. E. Fitzgibbons, 17C. E. Floya, IJ. S. Fleek, 40S. Foster, 18H. G. Fourneaux, 33S. E. Fourneaux, 33H. Francke, 27B. J. Frenkel, 35K. G. Freund, 8H. A. Friedlich, 35R. P. Kelley, 34J. S. Keohane, 17J. L. Kimberly, 22J. M. Kingman, 14W. L. Langer, 31J. T. Lananan...
...Chubb, in his "Harvard on the Defensive," convincingly refutes recent and wearisome attackers of Harvard, showing with pleasantly satirical arguments that Harvard has the virtues and defects of our country and time--a condition she cannot escape, and be human. Mr. R. D. Skinner tries to answer the dicult question: "Can Harvard be Non-Sectarian"? and though he sucseeds in proving the expected answer, his statements are not always clear. It is a stimulating subject calling for broad treatment. The undergraduate as spoken of by Mr. Skinner is perhaps too sensitive and narrow-minded, and the sooner he can absorb...