Word: henriettas
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...because he wanted to see what they were doing with electric lights at the Chicago Columbian Exposition. In 1919, after getting a D. S. M. for War work, he returned to General Electric, surprised everyone when he was made president of the company in 1922. His daughter Henrietta is as studious as her father was. She works in the Harvard Astronomical Observatory. His brother Herbert Bayard never was particularly studious. Nine years younger than Gerard, Herbert went to Harvard, returned to his hometown, St. Louis, to work for the Post-Dispatch. The family, which still owns one of the biggest...
Married. George Huntington Hartford II, Harvard sophomore, heir to Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. millions; and a Miss Mary Elizabeth Epling, of Welch, W. Va.; secretly, at Covington, Va. in April. The bridegroom's mother Mrs. Henrietta Guerard Hartford of Newport and New York was sued last fortnight for $100,000 by a Miss Mildred King of Boston who asserts she was hired to protect young Hartford from a New York adventuress and received no pay for her successful efforts (TIME, Sept...
Alone in a shack on the White River, Ariz., four miles from the Apache reservation, lived Henrietta Schmerler, 23, a New York girl who wanted to learn Indian tribal secrets. A brilliant student of anthropology and ethnology at Columbia University under famed Professor Franz Boas, she had been granted a fellowship to go west and study red men in situ...
...sign a long-term contract with an obscure author. He repudiated the contract. The author, who was starving, killed himself. Notterdam had a peck of trouble hushing up the story, was first helped, then hindered by the author's disreputable wife. Notterdam was in love with his secretary, Henrietta Felise, and it was mutual, but when he found his wife had been for years in love with Kratch it seemed to complicate the situation. He tried to cut out drinking and could not. Coming back from a business trip to Europe he decided there was only one feature...
Author Ford's subject is not humorous and he never tries to be funny with it. but occasionally comedy descends on him unawares, as in this passionate whisper from Henrietta Felise: "You must take care of me. . . You must never leave me. . . You don't know how sick at heart. . . You don't know how I long. . . We must try out. . . Even if it were only passing S. A. it might be ... oh, very beautiful. . . ." The Author- Ford Madox Hueffer changed his name to Ford in 1919, "for family reasons." Born in England (1873) of a German...