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Middle Schoolman. Between the old school of Hill and Harriman and the new school of the Van Sweringens, railroading had its middle school of able, hardheaded, now somewhat old-fashioned gentlemen. Last week when William Benson Storey, 75, resigned his job as president of Atchison. Topeka & Santa Fe. one of the biggest members of the Middle School retired from railroading. Born in San Francisco eight years after the gold rush, initiated in transportation by loading gold on a stage coach of which his father was freight agent. Mr. Storey-six feet tall, broad-shouldered, mustached and amply goateed...
...City, Donald Frederick Cutler, Jr., of Dover, John Francis Ducey, Jr., of Boston, George Wilfred Harris of West Roxbury, Howard Allen Hoffman of Newark, New Jersey, Alvin Josephy, Jr., of New York City, Francis Keyes of North Haverhill, New Hampshire, William Davis Locke of Concord, Deric Nusbaum of Santa Fe, New Mexico, Charles Eliot Pierce of Milton, Edwin Howard Baker Pratt of Glen Cove, New York, Gardner Edward Prouty, Jr., of Littleton, Joseph Foster Robbins of Weston, George Thorn Skinner of North Wales, Pennsylvania, and Robert Stevenson Wolcott of Milton...
...Santa Fe, Governor Arthur Seligman last fortnight signed a bill legalizing horse racing with pari-mutuel betting...
Deric Nusbaum, Editor-in-Chief, of Santa Fe, New Mexico, prepared at Loomis, and has written several books on various subjects concerning New Mexi can Indians. The Editorial Chairman, R. W. Drury, prepared at St. Paul's, coming from Concord, New Hampshire. Bernard McDonald, of Winthrop, Photographic Chairman, prepared at Worcester. The Business Chairman, A. A. Bliss, from Long Island, New York, prepared at Groton. The Art Chairman, C. F. Sampson, prepared at Westminster, comes from Scarborough...
Defeat did not completely crush the sober spirits of the plump, brown little man whose grandmother was a Kaw princess. He got his first taste of vice-presidential privacy when, morning after election, he alighted from the Santa Fe's crack train, The Chief, in Chicago and was ignored by two newshawks and three cameramen sent to the station to cover Cinemactress Joan Bennett's arrival on the same train. Back in Washington he put on a brave smile and went about his business as usual. After his first call on his unlucky running mate at the White...