Word: merritts
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Fabulous is the story of U. S. iron ore, legendary its characters. In the early 'gos two brothers, Alfred and Leonidas Merritt, borrowed $420,000 from John D. Rockefeller to exploit Minnesota's famed Mesabi iron range, overextended themselves financing transportation facilities, building up a $29,400,000 corporation. During the '93 panic, John D. called his loan, took over the property at a $29,000,000 profit. Meanwhile, in 1892, another U. S. steel pioneer was at work on the Mesabi-Henry W. Oliver, who joined up with Andrew Carnegie's right-hand man, Henry...
...tons of metal that make up the bells of Lowell House will not ring out next Sunday morning to shatter the exam period silence, guaranteed Arthur T. Merritt, associate professor of Music and present incumbent of the office of bell-ringer, yesterday...
...mounted flower specimens from all over the world were added to the Gray Berbarium of Harvard last year, bringing the University's study collection of flowering plants and ferus to a total of 1,033,850 sheets of specimens. It was announced today in the annual report of Professor Merritt 1. Fernald director of the institution...
Among famed writers of scientifiction are Edgar Rice Burroughs, Eric Temple Bell (penname: John Taine), Abraham Merritt, editor of the American Weekly, and onetime Wisconsin State Senator Roger Sherman Hoar (penname: Ralph Milne Farley). Pay is 1? to 4? a word. Many a well-known author who commands higher rates in slick-paper magazines writes these stories for fun. But writers as well as readers take their predictions seriously. Ray Cummings, a veteran pseudo-fictioneer who once was Thomas Edison's secretary, claims to have originated in his stories the word Newscaster and the phrase The World of Tomorrow...
Motoring is a Plugge passion; he once drove every foot of the way from New York to Los Angeles and back. Captain Plugge greatly admires U. S. mechanical ingenuity. Last week, while driving over Connecticut's Merritt Parkway, a highspeed, four-lane artery paralleling the cluttered old Post Road, Captain Plugge greatly admired the glass curb reflectors which outline the road at night. He stopped, got out, examined the reflectors minutely with a flashlight. Later he asked the Connecticut Highway Department for samples and manufacturing details, saying he intended to urge installation of the reflectors on English highways...