Word: hendrix
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...summary: HARVARD MIDDLEBURY Slocum, Connell, r.f. l.g., Casey Wenner, l.f. r.g., Palmer Green, c. c., Hendrix Barbee, Burns, r.g. l.f., Sorensen Hatch, Harper, l.g. r.f., Franzanl...
Score, Harvard 59 Middlebury 35, Goals from floor Slocum 6 Wenner 8, Green 4, Barbee 2, Hatch 3, Harper 1, Johnson 2, Sorensen 3, Hendrix 1, Heuneston 1, Palmer 3, Casey 2, Goals from fouls, Slocum 3, Wenner 4, Green 2, Barbee 1, Hatch 1 Sorensen 3, Hendrix 1, Casey 1, Referee, MacDonald...
...been said that in New York the Century is thought of as "just a train" while in Chicago it is an institution. If that be true, perhaps Conductor Frank V. Hendrix will seem even more of a personage than Conductor Kennedy, when he officiates at the Chicago end of the anniversary run with his colleagues, Conductor Frank A. Jefferey and John S. Lund.* Gruff as a Southern colonel and as proud of tradition, Conductor Hendrix lacks but a few days of Conductor Kennedy's seniority. Both joined the road in 1873 when Commodore Vanderbilt was its president. Both retire before...
...runs. Nevertheless, should Calvin Coolidge or George V or Charles Augustus Lindbergh signify a desire to travel as a private citizen (i. e. not in a private car) between Chicago and Manhattan, he would undoubtedly be assigned space on the section conducted by Conductor Kennedy or Conductor Hendrix, the section called "first" only for convenience, perhaps, but invariably attended at one end of the run or other by George Joseph Warner, a gentleman of 63 who looks, in his bat tie and wing collar, precisely like a modest bank president seen through brown-smoked glasses. George Joseph Warner...
...Literature, of "two stout, elderly, ruddy nabobs . . . the two rotund conductors, Tweedledum and Tweedledee" whom he, during a Chicago-to-New York trip on the Century, saw conferring on the LaSalle Street and Elkhart, Ind., platforms. N. Y. Central men are agreed that Mr. Morley must have seen Conductors Hendrix and Jefferey, of whom only one, however, might be called stout, rotund? Conductor Jefferey. (Conductor Lund may have been Tweedledee to Conductor Jefferey's Tweedledum; he is heavier than Conductor Hendrix. But between Conductors Lund and Jefferey there has long been a "feud"; they rarely confer...