Word: marylanders
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...advertising sensation of 1934 was the color photograph of Gentleman Jockey Crawford Burton, twice winner of the dangerous Maryland Hunt Cup, posing in his racing silks as an endorser of Camel cigarets' recuperative powers. By a horrible mischance, the photograph of Mr. Burton, holding his saddle and girth, reproduced in such a manner that to a prurient or imaginative eye it appeared to show Mr. Burton indecently exposed as only a man could be exposed...
...spent a month duck-hunting along the shores of Maryland, while in his time off from the ducks has been spending ten hour sessions with the movies of the football games. One trip was made to Cambridge for the Harvard Club dinner and one to New York during the month where he attended the Football Coaches Meeting...
Ralph Lowell '12, of Boston, former director of the Alumni Association, and member of Clark, Dorge, and Co.; George C. Cutler '13, of Baltimore, Maryland, president of the Safe Deposit and Trust Co.; Francis C. Grant '14, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, professor of Neurosurgery at the University of Pennsylvania; and Theodore Sizer '16, of New Haven, Connecticut, professor of art at Yale, and associate director of the Yale Gallery of Fine Arts...
...years ago near Baltimore a bus bearing Divine "angels" bound for Manhattan collided with the automobile of a Mrs. Nina I. Bayless of Aberdeen, Md. She brought suit against Father Divine and his lieutenant in whose name the bus was registered. A Maryland court awarded her a judgment of $6,000. Seeking to collect the money for Mrs. Bayless, Lawyer William W. Lesselbaum of Manhattan examined Father Divine and several "angels," could get none to admit that the cultist had any funds. Lawyer Lesselbaum began sleuthing. Last week in Manhattan he obtained an order to show cause why Father Divine...
...account of the found ing of Rhode Island, moves through a realistic explanation of the liberal charter of Connecticut, the rivalry between the colonies and their intrigues in England, the collapse of the ill-fated New Haven col ony, and ends with the fall of the absolute lordship in Maryland in 1691. Its high point is in its account of the confusion in the New England colonies that followed the restoration of Charles II, the masterly diplomacy that saved them from punishment for their support of Cromwell. In 1643, Roger Williams had sold his trading house in Narragansett, which earned...